Donner Party - Facts & Summary - HISTORY.Com This Website Would Like to Remind You: Your Browser (Chrome 44) Is out of Date

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Donner Party - Facts & Summary - HISTORY.Com This Website Would Like to Remind You: Your Browser (Chrome 44) Is out of Date 3/29/2016 Donner Party - Facts & Summary - HISTORY.com This website would like to remind you: Your browser (Chrome 44) is out of date. Update × your browser for more security, comfort and the best experience on this site. DONNER PARTY In the spring of 1846, a group of nearly 90 emigrants left Springfield, Illinois, and headed west. Led by brothers Jacob and George Donner, the group attempted to take a new and supposedly shorter route to California. They soon encountered rough terrain and numerous delays, and they eventually became trapped by heavy snowfall high in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Purportedly reduced to cannibalism to survive through the winter, only half of the original group reached California the following year. Their story quickly spread, and before long the term “Donner Party” became synonymous with one of humanity’s most ingrained taboos. The Donner party left Springfield, Illinois, in April 1846. Led by two wealthy brothers, Jacob and George Donner, the emigrants initially followed the regular California Trail westward to Fort Bridger, Wyoming. From there, however, the emigrants decided to leave the established trail and take a new and supposedly shorter route to California laid out by an unscrupulous trail guide named Lansford Hastings. Hastings was not at Fort Bridger at the time–he was leading an earlier wagon train along his new route. He left word for the Donner party to follow, promising that he would mark the trail for them. DID YOU KNOW? http://www.history.com/topics/donner-party/print 1/3 3/29/2016 Donner Party - Facts & Summary - HISTORY.com Donner Pass, in the Sierra Nevada of northern California, is named for the Donner party. The pass now represents the most important transmontane route (rail and highway) connecting San Francisco with Reno. It lies within Tahoe National Forest, and Donner Memorial State Park is nearby. Reassured, the group of 89 emigrants left Fort Bridger with their 20 wagons and headed for Weber Canyon, where Hastings claimed there was an easy passage through the rugged Wasatch Mountains.When they reached the head of the canyon,they founda note from Hastings attached to a forked stick. Hastings warned the Donner party that the route ahead was more difficult than he had thought. He asked the emigrants to make camp there and wait until he could return to show them a better way. Hastings’ note troubled the emigrants. To return to Fort Bridger to pick up the established route would have meant wasting several days. They decided to wait for Hastings. After eight days, when Hastings had still not arrived, the emigrants sent a messenger up the canyon to find the guide. The messenger returned several days later with instructions from Hastings to follow another trail, and the emigrants complied. The alternate route, however, turned out to be even worse than the Weber Canyon road, and the emigrants had to carve a fresh road through thick trees and boulder-strewn ground. The Donner party finally made it through the Wasatch Mountains and arrived at the Great Salt Lake. Hastings’ route had cost them 18 valuable days. Unfortunately, their difficulties were only beginning. The “shortcut” to California had cost them many wasted days, and the Donner party crossed the Sierra Nevada Mountains late in the season. On October 28, a heavy snowfall blocked the high mountain passes, trapping the emigrants in a frozen wilderness. Eventually reduced to cannibalism to survive– at least according to legend–only 45 of the original 89 emigrants http://www.history.com/topics/donner-party/print 2/3 3/29/2016 Donner Party - Facts & Summary - HISTORY.com reached California the following year. Article Details: Donner Party Author History.com Staff Website Name History.com Year Published 2010 Title Donner Party URL http://www.history.com/topics/donner-party Access Date March 29, 2016 Publisher A+E Networks This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. © 2016, A&E Television Networks, LLC. All Rights Reserved. http://www.history.com/topics/donner-party/print 3/3.
Recommended publications
  • "History As a Novel, the Novel As History": David Galloway's Tamsen
    Revista de Estudios Norteamericanos, n! l (1991), pp. 107-130 "HISTORY AS A NOVEL, THE NOVEL AS HISTORY": DAVID GALLOWAY'S TAMSEN JAVIER COY David Galloway has written, to this day, (apart from an important body of critica) work), four novels, besides a fifth one that 1 know only in manuscript. 1 His characters are varied and complex and, excepting those of the second one according to publication dates, they have bonds that unite them, even though sometimes in a subtle and not very obvious manner. His second novel, A Familiy A/bum (1978), also joins the rest of bis work with the use by the author of the narrative "voices," a resource that is present in all his novels and that we will see in detail in Tamsen. In this second novel the author presents a delicate, tender and maybe nostalgic joumey through the lives of the members of a Southem family over a stretch of three generations. The ingenious technical assembly is based on the establishment of a parallelism between the chronology of these lives and that of the invention and development of the camera, from Daguerre's days on. This feature of experimentalism does not interfere at any time with the narrative fluency, so that the reader's attention, even though he might not be an expert in photography, is not blurred by technical details, of a mechanical or scientific nature, aliento the flow of the story itself. Later, in the novel that is the main object of our study, he will also rely on this same resource of using a photograph or daguerreotype as a starting point to begin the physical and psycho­ logical description of his characters, briefly but signficantly, as a resource to start the portrait of the protagonist mother and her three daughters.
    [Show full text]
  • Road to Oregon Written by Dr
    The Road to Oregon Written by Dr. Jim Tompkins, a prominent local historian and the descendant of Oregon Trail immigrants, The Road to Oregon is a good primer on the history of the Oregon Trail. Unit I. The Pioneers: 1800-1840 Who Explored the Oregon Trail? The emigrants of the 1840s were not the first to travel the Oregon Trail. The colorful history of our country makes heroes out of the explorers, mountain men, soldiers, and scientists who opened up the West. In 1540 the Spanish explorer Coronado ventured as far north as present-day Kansas, but the inland routes across the plains remained the sole domain of Native Americans until 1804, when Lewis and Clark skirted the edges on their epic journey of discovery to the Pacific Northwest and Zeb Pike explored the "Great American Desert," as the Great Plains were then known. The Lewis and Clark Expedition had a direct influence on the economy of the West even before the explorers had returned to St. Louis. Private John Colter left the expedition on the way home in 1806 to take up the fur trade business. For the next 20 years the likes of Manuel Lisa, Auguste and Pierre Choteau, William Ashley, James Bridger, Kit Carson, Tom Fitzgerald, and William Sublette roamed the West. These part romantic adventurers, part self-made entrepreneurs, part hermits were called mountain men. By 1829, Jedediah Smith knew more about the West than any other person alive. The Americans became involved in the fur trade in 1810 when John Jacob Astor, at the insistence of his friend Thomas Jefferson, founded the Pacific Fur Company in New York.
    [Show full text]
  • Donner Pdf Layout
    Our Mission The mission of the California Department of Parks and Recreation is to provide for The Donner Party the health, inspiration and education of the people of California by helping to preserve the state’s extraordinary biological diversity, he United States of America was grow protecting its most valued natural and cultural Ting rapidly during the 1830s, when resources, and creating opportunities for American frontiersmen and sailors began to high-quality outdoor recreation. bring back stories about the wonders of Alta California. The political situation was uncer- ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER tain. Mexico still held the area, but it was Governor widely believed that she was losing control of MIKE CHRISMAN her northernmost province. It seemed inevi- Secretary for Resources table that, sooner or later, the U.S.A. would step in. It was “manifest destiny,” they said, RUTH COLEMAN that the United States of America should Director, California State Parks stretch across the continent from sea to shining sea. Interest in California was further heightened in 1841, when word reached the eastern settlements that it was possible to travel directly overland to the West Coast and California State Parks does not discriminate thus avoid an expensive sea voyage. against individuals with disabilities. Prior to Two prosperous Illinois farmers, George arrival, visitors with disabilities who need Donner and his brother Jacob, were among the assistance should contact the park at the phone many who listened to the fabulous stories of number below. To receive this publication in an fine soil, gentle climate and virtually unlim- alternate format, write to the Communications ited opportunity in California.
    [Show full text]
  • Donner Memorial
    Our Mission The mission of California State Parks is n Donner Memorial Donner to provide for the health, inspiration and I education of the people of California by helping State Park’s lush setting, Memorial to preserve the state’s extraordinary biological diversity, protecting its most valued natural and visitors may camp, picnic, cultural resources, and creating opportunities State Park for high-quality outdoor recreation. hike the trails, and play in the waters of beautiful Donner Lake, surrounded by majestic lodgepole California State Parks supports equal access. Prior to arrival, visitors with disabilities who pines, Jeffrey pines need assistance should contact the park at (530) 582-7892. This publication can be and white firs. made available in alternate formats. Contact [email protected] or call (916) 654-2249. CALIFORNIA STATE PARKS P.O. Box 942896 Sacramento, CA 94296-0001 For information call: (800) 777-0369 (916) 653-6995, outside the U.S. 711, TTY relay service www.parks.ca.gov Discover the many states of California.™ Donner Memorial State Park 12593 Donner Pass Road Truckee, CA 96161 (530) 582-7892 © 2014 California State Parks D onner Memorial State Park, located early SETTLEMENT Pacific Railroad would ease the way for east of Donner Pass in the Sierra Nevada, Beginning in 1841, emigrants began to enter travelers and end the need for a toll road. is surrounded by magnificent alpine scenery California in large numbers. Their last major A MEMORIAL park IS BORN at an elevation of 6,000 feet. The crisp, pine- challenge took them over the Sierra Nevada In 1924, the Pacific Fruit Express, successor to scented air entices visitors to camp, picnic, and down into the Central Valley.
    [Show full text]
  • Elias Adams : the Pioneer
    ANCESTORS DESCENDANTS of Elias Adams : The Pioneer 600-1930 Compiled and Edited by FRANK D. ADAMS (His Grandson) With Illustrations by My Mother ANNIE PENROD ADAMS Published by the Author Printed and Bound by INLAND PRINTING COMPANY Kaysville, Utah To the posterity of ELIAS ADAMS THE PIONEER, who endeavor to make the world better than they find it, this book is gratefully dedicated. -F. D. A. To the Reader You are asked to bear in mind that these are the records of only one descendant or branch of the great Adams family of New England. There are other branches both larger and smaller-notably that of Henry Adams, of Braintree, Massachusetts, and Robert Adams, of Newbury, Massachusetts, whose histories were published by Andrew N. Adams, of Fair Haven, Vermont; also "William of Ipswich," "John of Plymouth," "George of Watertown," as well as several other first comers in Massachusetts, Con­ necticut, Maine and New Hampshire. Andrew N. Adams has compiled extensive lists of all those families which could be published for the benefit of others, if there were sufficient interest among the living descendants to war­ rant the labor and expense. This record of Elias Adams was begun thirteen years ago by the. author. It has been carried forward under many difficulties and discouragements, and is now com­ pleted only through persistant determination and effort. The genealogy has been carefully and accurately gathered and compiled into its present form for the benefit of the living and future generations, as a tribute of affection for him and as a token of love to his posterity.
    [Show full text]
  • Donner Memorial State Park 12593 Donner Pass Road Truckee, CA 96161 (530) 582-7892
    Our Mission The mission of California State Parks is n Donner Memorial Donner to provide for the health, inspiration and I education of the people of California by helping State Park’s lush setting, Memorial to preserve the state’s extraordinary biological diversity, protecting its most valued natural and visitors may camp, picnic, cultural resources, and creating opportunities State Park for high-quality outdoor recreation. hike, bike, snowshoe, or play in the waters of scenic Donner Lake — surrounded by majestic California State Parks supports equal access. Prior to arrival, visitors with disabilities who lodgepole pines, Jeffrey need assistance should contact the park at (530) 582-7892. If you need this publication in an pines, and white firs. alternate format, contact [email protected]. CALIFORNIA STATE PARKS P.O. Box 942896 Sacramento, CA 94296-0001 For information call: (800) 777-0369 (916) 653-6995, outside the U.S. 711, TTY relay service www.parks.ca.gov Donner Memorial State Park 12593 Donner Pass Road Truckee, CA 96161 (530) 582-7892 © 2014 California State Parks (Rev. 2017) D onner Memorial State Park, located EARLY SETTLEMENT A MEMORIAL PARK IS BORN east of Donner Pass in the Sierra Nevada, After 1844, emigrants began to enter In 1924, the Pacific Fruit Express, successor to is surrounded by magnificent alpine scenery California in large numbers. Their last major the Donner Ice Company, gave 10 acres at the at an elevation of 6,000 feet. The crisp, pine- challenge took them over the Sierra Nevada east end of Donner Lake to the Native Sons of scented air entices visitors to camp, picnic, and down into the Central Valley.
    [Show full text]
  • New Archaeological Perspectives on the Donner Party Saga
    NEW ARCHAEOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE DONNER PARTY SAGA Donald Hardesty Department of Anthropology University of Nevada, Reno Reno, NV 89557 Susan Lindstrom P.O. Box 3324 Truckee, CA 95734 Richard E. Markley Tahoe National Forest Nevada City, CA 95959 ABSTRACT In 1990 the University of Nevada, Reno, in cooperation with the Tahoe National Forest, began another documentary and archaeological investigation of the Donner party camps near Truckee, California. This study, like the ones which have preceded it - one at the Murphy's Cabin Site at Donner Lake and the other at the Donner-Reed Wagon site in Utah - have shed new light on the Donner Party saga. In addition, these archaeological investigations afforded a superb public education opportunity. Visitors who observed the excavations numbered in the thousands. On-site tours, national media coverage, and the involvement of a volunteer work force from the federal, state and private sector further enhanced these interpretive advantages. The preliminary results of this latest study are discussed. INTRODUCTION The tragedy of the Donner Party is one of the best known events in American history. Trapped in the Sierra Nevada mountains of California during the winter of 1846-1847, nearly half of the group perished. Of the group of 89 taking the ill­ fated Hastings Cutoff south from Fort Bridger, Wyoming, only 47 survived. This so-called "short-cut" was not what Hastings had claimed; in fact it delayed the party enough so that they were unable to cross the Sierra before snowfall and were forced to spend the winter in 2 encampments in the Truckee Basin.
    [Show full text]
  • Virginia City) in the Development of the 1960S Psychedelic Esthetic and “San Francisco Sound"
    University of Nevada, Reno Rockin’ the Comstock: Exploring the Unlikely and Underappreciated Role of a Mid-Nineteenth Century Northern Nevada Ghost Town (Virginia City) in the Development of the 1960s Psychedelic Esthetic and “San Francisco Sound" A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Geography by Engrid Barnett Dr. Paul F. Starrs/Dissertation Advisor May 2014 © Copyright by Engrid Barnett, 2014 All Rights Reserved THE GRADUATE SCHOOL We recommend that the dissertation prepared under our supervision by Engrid Barnett entitled Rockin’ the Comstock: Exploring the Unlikely and Underappreciated Role of a Mid-Nineteenth Century Northern Nevada Ghost Town (Virginia City) in the Development of the 1960s Psychedelic Esthetic and "San Francisco Sound" be accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY Paul Starrs, PhD, Advisor and Committee Chair Donald Hardesty, PhD, Committee Member Alicia Barber, PhD, Committee Member Jill S. Heaton, PhD, Committee Member David Ake, PhD, Graduate School Representative Marsha H Read, PhD, Dean of the Graduate School May 2014 i ABSTRACT Virginia City, Nevada, epitomized and continues to epitomize a liminal community — existing on the very limen of the civilized and uncivilized, legitimate and illegitimate, parochial frontier and cosmopolitan metropolis. Throughout a 150-year history, its thea- ters attracted performers of national and international acclaim who entertained a diverse civic population
    [Show full text]
  • Edward G. Pyle Family Time Line
    Edward G. Pyle Family Time Line (Including a partial timeline of the family of Jehu & Sarah Riddle Pyle Cox.) Compiled by Sandra Smith (Barton) Gwilliam - 4th Great Granddaughter of Edward G. Pyle Sr. Thanks to Kristin Johnson for sharing her research with me. Much of the information for this timeline is from her. "The history of a nation is the history of its people." William F. Boogher, Washington, D. C., April, 1903 "It seems that my ancestors gone on before want me to remember that they're something more than "names" on a tombstone, in census, or book. They want me to KNOW them. They want me to look." Sandra Smith (Barton) Gwilliam This is a work-in-progressCthere are still other dates and records to add. If you have any other records or information, please let me know and I will be glad to add it. THERE WILL BE MISINTERPRETATIONS IN THIS TIME-LINE. When a researcher is dealing with early records, sometimes documents seem to be referring to one person when they are actually another person with the same or similar name. Not all census records are accurateCnot every family tree you will see on the internet or in a book is accurateCeven legal documents have various spellings of people=s namesCsometimes in the same document. Records are only as good as the person who kept the record made them. I have tried in this time-line to give an overview of the Pyle family along with a few American historical facts with as much accuracy as is available.
    [Show full text]
  • The Archaeology of the Donner Party's Writing Slate Fragments
    University of Montana ScholarWorks at University of Montana Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers Graduate School 2008 A Clean Slate: The Archaeology of the Donner Party's Writing Slate Fragments Molly Elizabeth Swords The University of Montana Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Swords, Molly Elizabeth, "A Clean Slate: The Archaeology of the Donner Party's Writing Slate Fragments" (2008). Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers. 26. https://scholarworks.umt.edu/etd/26 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at ScholarWorks at University of Montana. It has been accepted for inclusion in Graduate Student Theses, Dissertations, & Professional Papers by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at University of Montana. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A CLEAN SLATE: THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE DONNER PARTY’S WRITING SLATE FRAGMENTS By Molly Elizabeth Swords Bachelor of Arts, The University of Montana, 2003 Thesis presented in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Anthropology, Forensic Anthropology The University of Montana Missoula, MT Spring 2008 Approved by: Dr. David A. Strobel, Dean Graduate School Dr. Kelly J. Dixon, Chair Department of Anthropology Dr. Randall R. Skelton, Department of Anthropology Dr. Hipólito Rafael Chacón, Department of Art History Reader: Dr. Harry Fritz Department of History i ABSTRACT Swords, Molly Elizabeth, M.A., May 2008 Anthropology A Clean Slate: The Archaeology of the Donner Party’s Writing Slate Fragments Chairperson: Dr.
    [Show full text]
  • Researcher's Guide to Sutter's Fort's Collections of Donner Party Material
    James and Margaret Reed, two survivors of the Donner Party tragedy. Researcher’s Guide to Sutter’s Fort’s Collections of Donner Party Material Contact Information: Sutter’s Fort State Historic Park 2701 L Street Sacramento, CA 95816 Phone: (916) 323-8112 Fax: (916) 442-8613 Prepared by: Larry Bishop, CSU Sacramento. Date Completed: November, 2005 Preface In the winter of 2004- 2005 work began on processing the collection of documents and artifacts donated to Sutter’s Fort by the estate of Martha Jayne Lewis, daughter of Martha J. (Patty) Reed Lewis, one of the survivors of the Donner Party’s tragic crossing of the Sierras in the winter of 1846-1847. The purpose of the project was to apply standard archival practices in the processing of the documentary items in this collection and to create a finding aid to aid researchers and Donner scholars in the use of the material. Further, the finding aid was to be published on the World Wide Web through the Online Archive of California, a project of the California Digital Library at the University of California, Berkeley. Since the arrival of the Lewis collection at the Fort in 1946, the material had been in use for museum displays and as a resource for scholars and authors detailing the experiences of the Donner Party, but the material had never been properly stored, arranged or described. This project, managed by Michael Tucker, Curator of the Historic Sites Office and Steve Beck, the Fort’s first Archivist, at last addressed these needs. Graduate students from the Public History Program at California State University, Sacramento, Michelle Atkinson and Larry Bishop, assisted by Megan Landreth and Kirk Nelson completed the project in the fall of 2005.
    [Show full text]
  • THE INTERSECTIONS of the DONNER PARTY and the MORMONS Guy L
    CROSSROADS IN THE WEST: THE INTERSECTIONS OF THE DONNER PARTY AND THE MORMONS Guy L. Dorius The histories written of western migration in the traveled with the Donner Party; (2) Monnons who res- United States have M~cientlytold the story of the ill- cued the survivors of the Donner Party; (3) Monnons fated Donner Par@. Most students of history are well who discovered and took of the remains of the party; acquainted with their entrapment by the snows of th: and (4) the effects of the Donner Party on the Mormon Sierra Nevada Modnsduring the winter of 1846-47. migration This article contains the story of the Latter- The facts of the party's saering, death, and cannibalism day Saints who were at these crossroads. are well documented and have often been recounted. Therefore, the purpose of this work is not to xeiterate that Mormons in the Donner Party history. Instead, this article will examine an area of this Tho Mormon family groups traveled with the history less hwnyet no less si@icant to Latter-day Donner party. The first of these was tbe Murphy family. Saint history. The reader will discover a few moments in This family's status as Latter-day Saints is often called time where the paths of the Donner Party and tbe into question, so an investigation of their history is war- Mormons crossed and mingled to become part of the fab- ranted. ric of both histories. Jeremiah and Lavina Murphy were introduced to the Tbat such intersections occurred in 1846 is fascinat- gospel in 1836 by Elder Wilford Woodruff and Elder ing-considering the vast land traveled by each and tbe Reed Smoot.
    [Show full text]