The Oregon Trail was a 2,170-mile (3,490 km) east–west, large-wheeled wagon route and emigrant trail in the United States that connected the Missouri River to valleys in Oregon. The eastern part of the Oregon Trail spanned part of what is now the state of Kansas and nearly all of what are now the states of Nebraska and Wyoming. The western half of the trail spanned most of the current states of Idaho and Oregon.
Map of Seasonal and Year-Round BLM Public Land User Limitations in the BLM Rock Springs Field Office area in Wyoming. Published by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM).
Map of the Oregon National Historic Trail (NHT) in Idaho, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
The National Historic Trail route across Nevada. Published by the National Park Service (NPS).
https://www.nps.gov/oreg/index.htm
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oregon_Trail
The Oregon Trail was a 2,170-mile (3,490 km) east–west, large-wheeled wagon route and emigrant trail in the United States that connected the Missouri River to valleys in Oregon. The eastern part of the Oregon Trail spanned part of what is now the state of Kansas and nearly all of what are now the states of Nebraska and Wyoming. The western half of the trail spanned most of the current states of Idaho and Oregon.
Imagine yourself an emigrant headed for Oregon: would promises of lush farmlands and a new beginning lure you to leave home and walk for weeks? More than 2,000 miles of trail ruts and traces can still be seen along the Oregon National Historic Trail in six states and serve as reminders of the sacrifices, struggles, and triumphs of early American settlers.
More than 2,000 miles of trail ruts and traces can still be seen along the Oregon National Historic Trail in six states- reminders of the sacrifices, struggles, and triumphs of early American settlers.
National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center
The National Historic Oregon Trail Interpretive Center is managed by the Bureau of Land Management in Baker City, Oregon. The large interpretive center contains exhibits that tell the story of the Oregon Trail and the emigrant experience. In addition, the center contains a theater that hosts films, lectures, and dramatic presentations. On the grounds of the site are four miles of interpretive hiking trails, an amphitheater, a wagon encampment for living history demonstrations, and scenic views.
Guernsey Ruts, Wyoming
A wagon swale is cut deep into limestone rock with trees in background.
The Guernsey Ruts in Wyoming feature deeply eroded rock from wagon traffic.
Devil's Gate, Wyoming
A rock buttress with a notch in it surrounded by sagebrush flats.
Devil's Gate was an important emigrant landmark in Wyoming.
Alcove Spring Park Wayside
An exhibit with an illustration in front of green trees and a rock ledge.
Alcove Spring Park is located in Kansas near Blue Rapids and Marysville.
Split Rock, Wyoming
A large yellow flowering desert shrub in front of sagebrush and a large rock buttress.
Split Rock was an important emigrant landmark in Wyoming.
Fort Laramie, Wyoming
Two people walk on a green lawn in front of historic fort buildings.
Fort Laramie National Historic Site features a replica fort with exhibits, located in eastern Wyoming.
Circle of Life for an Apple Tree
Vancouver’s Old Apple Tree, nearly 200 years old and historically associated with Hudson Bay Company’s Fort Vancouver, died in late June 2020 from natural causes. It was the oldest apple tree in the State of Washington—maybe the oldest in the Pacific Northwest—maybe the oldest on the West Coast.
A large, twisted apple tree behind a steel fence.
The Lands of the Overland Trails: Protests against the Mexican American War
Almost every movement in American history has a corresponding counter movement. The Mexican American War (1846-48), which resulted in Mexico ceding much of the modern-day American Southwest to the United States, is a good example. With the stroke of a pen, parts of the Santa Fe, California, Oregon, Pony Express, Mormon Pioneer, and Old Spanish trails, as well as El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro, suddenly became American territory.
A dirt road snakes down a steep cliff face in the desert.
Fourth of July on the Overland Trails
For many travelers on the overland trails, the Fourth of July was just another day of trekking through sand and sagebrush. For some it was a day of melancholy, thinking of how their loved ones at home might be celebrating. For others, especially the Fortyniners, it was fun a day of celebration, usually involving the firing of “salutes” with their handguns and rifles, energetic flag-waving, and a feast.
A covered wagon sits in front of a vast rocky landscape
Cholera: A Trail Epidemic
In the early years of the California gold rush, cholera struck each spring at the thronging jumping-off towns along the Missouri River where thousands of gold seekers and Oregon-bound emigrants gathered to outfit. The deadly disease claimed many lives before the victims even had a chance to start across the prairies of Kansas or Nebraska. It claimed many more along the trail corridor to Fort Laramie, Wyoming, and in American Indian encampments and villages, as well.
A stone grave monument, stands in a field of tall grass.
Oregon and California Trails Fall 2020 Newsletter
Read the latest news from the National Trails Office - Regions 6,7 and 8. Topics include: welcome new staff, Oregon Auto Tour Route Guide in review, updates on Historic Research Associates project, signing updates, and more!
A picture of a newsletter containing text and photos.
What Happened to the Bison?
Crossing the Southern Plains in 1806, Zebulon Pike described herds of bison that “exceeded imagination.” Yet by the 1850s, many of the Native nations that relied on bison for sustenance—such as the Kiowas, Comanches, Cheyennes, and Arapahoes—were seeing fewer bison than ever before. What happened?
A bison stands and eats grass.
The Platte Experience
Otoe Indians called this region “Nebrathka,” meaning “flat water,” and the French word “Platte” means the same. The defining flatness of the broad Platte River Valley, which averages five to seven miles wide, made it ideal for animal-powered travel on both sides of the stream. The long Platte River also provided plenty of water and native grasses for game and livestock. Many emigrants later recalled it as the easiest, most pleasant part of their westering journey.
A statue of a bison in front of a large museum.
Gateway to the West: National Historic Trails Across the Continental Divide
The Rocky Mountains stretch like a jagged spine between Alaska and Mexico, splitting North America into East and West. The Continental Divide is not a simple line of peaks, easily threaded by tracks and roads, but a complex of overlapping mountain ranges and treeless sagebrush steppe, hundreds of miles wide. In the days of covered wagon travel, the Rockies were an imposing barrier to the movement of people, commerce, and communications. South Pass was the gateway to the West.
Historic image a covered wagon train meeting tall mountains.
War on the Oregon & California Trails
Once-friendly Western tribes watched with mounting anger as emigrants helped themselves, often wastefully, to their game, grass, water, and wood. Indian agents warned of bloody conflicts ahead if the issues between native peoples and emigrants were not soon resolved. In response, the U.S. government called for a treaty conference to be held near Fort Laramie, Wyoming, in September 1851. Some 12,000 members of 11 different Northern Plains tribes answered the call.
A green lawn stretches back to a distant historic fort.
A Gathering Storm: American Indians and Emigrants in the 1830s
As American settlers surged westward across the eastern woodlands and prairies in the early 19th century, they pushed American Indians out of their ancestral homes. The U.S. government resettled many of those displaced Eastern tribes —the Kickapoo, Delaware, Potawatomi, and others— in congressionally designated Indian Territory west of the Missouri River and south of the Platte. The resettled Eastern tribes were among the first Indians encountered by emigrants through Kansas.
Hike on a National Historic Trail
Hiking a National Historic Trail isn't always what people expect. Like the National Scenic Trails, the historic trails pass through multiple states and travel across a variety of land ownership. Unlike the National Scenic Trails, the historic trails can't be traversed on one long walking trail. You can plan a weekend adventure or an afternoon outing on a National Historic Trail. The following trips will give you the opportunity to hike pieces of the historic trail routes.
A brown trail sign stands next to a trail that leads through the forest.
“Thicker than Stars in the Firmament”: Bison along the Platte River Corridor
Emigrants heading west along the Platte River in the early years of the overland emigration wrote excitedly in diaries and journals about their first sightings of buffalo and the wild hunts that typically followed. Some wagon trains got caught in buffalo stampedes, and some lost cattle that ran off to join the unimaginably enormous herds of wild bison. But as commercial hunters and sport-slaughter thinned those herds that part of the overland experience changed.
An illustration of a group of covered wagons and American Indians on horseback.
Traveling the Emigrant Trails
Learn a little bit about what life was like for the emigrants traveling west by covered wagon.
Wagons on the Emigrant Trails
Emigrants along the western trails had several options when it came to wagons.
Three covered wagons are seen in front of a distinctive rock formation.
Places to See Oregon Trail Ruts
Over the years, thousands of wagon wheels and hooves churned the earth as they traveled west. Their traces are often referred to as wagon ruts and they can appear a variety of ways depending on the type of soil and the continued effects of water erosion. One of the best ways to experience the Oregon Trail is by taking a step back in time while visiting a trail rut. Luckily, there are still places where you can have that experience today. Take a look and plan your visit today!
A highly eroded channel through thick, light colored rock.
Overlanders in the Columbia River Gorge, 1840-1870: A Narrative History
Most who followed the Oregon Trail did not traverse the Columbia River Gorge, if they could help it, because the gorge posed numerous dangers for travelers unfamiliar with the rugged terrain and raging river. When Samuel Barlow opened a road around the southern side of Mount Hood in 1846, overlanders going to Oregon City more often chose that route, rather than braving the Columbia River.
Looking into a deep, steep-walled rocky canyon with a large river below.
Death and Danger on the Emigrant Trails
There were many life-threatening challenges for the emigrants who traveled the emigrant trails to California, Oregon, or Utah.
A watercolor painting of wagon trains approaching Chimney Rock.
Bloomers on the Trail
Amelia Jenks Bloomer, a suffragist and women's magazine editor from New York, kicked off a dress-reform movement in 1851 by appearing in public wearing puffy pantaloons under a short skirt. Although she was ridiculed for her attire, some young women happily adopted the practical and comfortable "bloomers" outfit for their trip west across the overland trails.
An illustration of a woman in period dress, showcasing her long short pants.
Women Traveling West
The Oregon and California trails traverse lands where women challenged traditional gender roles. In the early 1840s Americans began heading west in large numbers, many traveling in family groups. Women in the nation’s more settled areas were supposed to excel at domestic work, like cooking, cleaning, and raising children; however, as part of a wagon train, women got to showcase a wider range of skills.
An illustration of a string of covered wagons, with an encampment scene in the foreground.
African Americans on the Oregon Trail
African Americans were among the pioneers who crossed the trail to Oregon, some coming willingly as free men and women but others forced to travel as the property of slaveholders. Those who reached Oregon between the 1840s and 1860s probably numbered in the hundreds.
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guides: Oregon Trail
Download one of these booklets and begin your state by state trail adventure! The Auto Tour Route (ATR) guides provide an overview of local trail history while giving driving directions to suggested points of interest along the trail. There are auto tour route guides available for the trail across MO, KS, NE, CO, ID, WY, WA, & OR.
The cover of a travel guide that has an illustration of a covered wagon train in the plains.
Become a Junior Ranger for National Historic Trails
Learn about the National Historic Trails and earn junior ranger badges! These activities can be completed virtually or after visiting a site along the National Historic Trails. Booklets can be submitted either electronically or by mail. Take a look and start exploring the trails today!
small photos of different trail sites with junior ranger badges.
Historic Valentine's Day Cards
Valentines day cards rose to popularity in the United States in the mid-1800s. Victorian cards were elaborate, decorative, often-lace trimmed, and mass-produced. Not everyone could afford such cards, so handmade cards were very popular with pioneers and others who couldn't buy an expensive card. You can take your Valentine back in time by making a historic card! Use the provided template, or make a handmade card, and return to the 1800s with your love.
A historic valentines day card with a rose illustration.
Oregon and California National Historic Trails Spring 2021 Newsletter
Read the latest news from the National Trails Office - Regions 6,7 and 8. Topics include: welcome new staff, Oregon Auto Tour Route Guide in review, updates on Historic Research Associates project, signing updates, and more!
A picture of a newsletter containing text and photos.
Series: National Historic Trails Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guides
Interested in planning a trip along a national historic trail? Use these guides to follow the historic routes while learning more about local and trail history.
The cover of a travel guide that has an illustration of a covered wagon train in the plains.
Series: The Emigrant Experience
Have you ever wondered what the experience was like for the emigrants who traveled west on the Great Platte River Road?
A man dressed in period clothing leans on a covered wagon.
Transportation: Cars on the Oregon Trail
The historic Oregon Trail was not abandoned with the advent of the transcontinental railroad and automobiles. Some travelers continued to take wagons over the old trail as late as the 1920s. Why? Usually because they didn’t have the money to buy train tickets to take their families west, or they had livestock that needed herding along, but sometimes just because they loved the old-timey adventure of it.
A man stands next to a historic car with a covered wagon top.
George Washington Bush, the Oregon Trail
George Washington Bush, a free Black Missourian who had become wealthy in the region’s cattle trade, loaded his white wife and their five children onto a wagon at Savannah Landing in the spring of 1844; they joined a train of eighty-four wagons headed towards Oregon Country and the Columbia River Valley led by Michael T. Simmons, an Irish immigrant.
Historic portrait of an African American man.
Robin and Polly Holmes, the Oregon Trail
Robin and Polly Holmes (along with their three-year-old daughter Mary Jane) arrived to Oregon Country after a long journey on the emigrant trail from Missouri in 1844. Brought there by their owner, Nathaniel Ford, the Holmes family had landed on “free soil”—meaning slavery was not legal there. Yet this law was not enforced, and the Holmes’ long journey was only the beginning of their ordeal.
Historical portrait of a woman.
Amanda Gardener Johnson, the Oregon Trail
Amanda Gardener was born in Liberty, Missouri, in 1833 and became a wedding present to her owner’s daughter, Nancy Wilhite. When she was seven years old, she was given to Wilhite’s daughter, Lydia, who had recently married Anderson Deckard. Gardener left for Oregon with the Deckard Family in March 1853 and arrived there six months later. She married a blacksmith and lived in Albany, where she remained close to the Deckards throughout her life.
National Historic Trails: Historical Routes of National Significance
Wondering about National Historic Trails? Check out this infographic with basic information about the trails, their purpose, and where you can go for more information!
Infographic about National Historic Trails featuring a map. Full description available at link.
Child’s Play: Freak Accidents on the Westering Trails
Laudanum is a tincture made from powdered opium, morphine, and codeine. Today it is available in the US only by prescription, but in the 19th century it was an inexpensive patent medicine used to quiet agitated minds, ease fever and pain, and relieve diarrhea. An overdose causes the victim to stop breathing, lapse into coma, and die. That’s what happened to six-year-old Salida Jane Henderson, called “Lettie,” while she camped with her family in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert.
A small green glass bottle with a cork topper.
Can I Eat This: Freak Accidents on the Westering Trails
In 1849, many companies of gold seekers decided to follow the Applegate Trail to a new cutoff, said to be a quicker way to the goldfields. Lassen’s Cutoff turned out to be 200 miles longer than the established routes, extending the trip by weeks. Long before reaching the mines, most companies ran out of food. Starving men desperately filled their empty bellies with anything they could chew- rotting livestock lying trailside, boiled bits of leather, and plants, some poisonous.
Clusters of small white flowers.
Trust Me, I’m a Doctor: Freak Accidents on the Westering Trails
Edwin Bryant, traveling overland to California in 1846, had only briefly studied medicine, and he never claimed to be a physician. But somewhere along Nebraska’s Platte River, a little boy from another party had gotten his leg crushed under wagon wheels. The child, eight or nine years old, survived but desperately needed medical attention. There being no doctor nearby, Bryant reluctantly agreed to examine him.
A wooden wagon wheel with spokes radiating out from the center.
Mother’s Mortal Mistake: Freak Accidents on the Westering Trails
Joel Hills Johnson started along the trail in April 1857, on his way to serve a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. On Big Mountain, less than 20 miles from the city, his group overtook a party of “apostates” – former Mormon converts who had abandoned their church and were leaving the Mormon realm. As was common practice, a mother of that party had stirred together a pan of bread dough in the morning and set it to rise in the wagon during the day...
A risen bread loaf in a tin pan.
Fatal missteps, Part 2: Freak Accidents on the Westering Trails
Emigrants on the Truckee Route to California typically started across Nevada’s Fortymile Desert in the evening in order to avoid the heat of the midday sun. The one reliable place to find water along the desert trek was a place called Boiling Springs, where travelers could dip out and cool the precious water for their livestock to drink.
Steam rises from a small pond that sits in a desert setting void of much vegetation
Thunder Road: Freak Accidents on the Westering Trails
First comes a sudden stillness, then an unexpected cool breeze. Sunshine dims to darkness as growling, green-black clouds pile overhead, flickering with lightning. The wind rises. A brilliant bolt splits the air with a deafening crr-ACK, followed by momentary silence and then a violent, crashing boom that makes the living earth tremble...
Lightning bolt in a dark sky.
Fatal missteps, Part 1: Freak Accidents on the Westering Trails
Devil’s Gate, near Independence Rock in south-central Wyoming, is a deep, V-shaped cleft cut through a granite ridge by the Sweetwater River. Curious emigrants, including the younger brother of pioneer Ezra Meeker, made side-trips to explore the scenic feature.
A river squeezes through a narrow passage between two sheer rock walls
National Historic Trails Scrapbooks
Imagine if early travelers on the National Historic Trails had a polaroid camera... what would their scrapbooks look like? Though we have many journals describing their experiences, there are obviously very few or no photos at all from these journeys. Cameras didn't exist! Well, we took a crack at it and created scrapbook pages for them! Take a look at what we imagine a trail traveler's scrapbook would like!
A scrapbook page depicting multiple scenes from the trail, and relevant icon images.
Mill Creek Exhibits Audio Description
Listen to the audio descriptions for the exhibits at Mill Creek in Independence, Missouri.
Wayside exhibit audio descriptions for Mill Creek.
Oregon and California National Historic Trails Fall 2021 Newsletter
Read the latest project updates and completions for the Oregon and California National Historic Trails from the National Trails Office of the National Park Service (NPS).
National Historic Trails Fashion Inspiration
During NPS Fashion Week, we are exploring some ways fashion inspiration may be found on National Historic Trails (NHTs). On NHTs you’ll find intriguing colors, shapes, textures, histories, and stories. From golden sunsets to feathered hats, NHTs have diverse natural and cultural environments that can inspire the fashionista in us all!
A red rock cliff with a path winding through it
First Year in Oregon, 1840-1869: A Narrative History
The Oregon National Historic Trail commemorates the arduous overland journey—across rivers, through forests, and over mountains—made by thousands of emigrants in the middle of the nineteenth century. While we know a lot about the trip itself, we know considerably less about what greeted emigrants upon arrival. Where did they live? How did they earn money? What did they do for fun? Perhaps most importantly, did their new home meet their expectations?
Oregon and California National Historic Trails Spring 2022 Newsletter
Read the latest project updates and completions for the Oregon and California National Historic Trails from the National Trails Office of the National Park Service (NPS).
Tabitha Brown, the Oregon Trail
Not wanting to be left behind, Tabitha—by then sixty-five years old—concluded that family ties were stronger than her own fear of the long journey; assisted by her nephew Charles Fullerton, she packed all her belongings into a wagon and prepared to head west toward the Oregon Territory.
Matilda and Elizabeth Sager, the Oregon Trail
Elizabeth and Matilda Sager experienced a harrowing journey on the Oregon Trail that fractured their family; afterward, they faced unimaginable trauma at Waiilatpu. Their recorded memories provide a unique insight into the journey of a single emigrant family from the perspectives of two children.
Historical portrait of three women.
Things to Do in Nebraska
Find things to do, trip ideas, and more in Nebraska.
Steep bluff with pink sky above and yellow leaves below.
Things to Do in Missouri
Find things to do, trip ideas, and more in Missouri.
Purple flowers bloom on a grass-covered landscape under a partly cloudy sky.
Things to Do in Kansas
Find things to do in Kansas.
Single story square building in the distance partially obstructed by a field of golden grass.
Series: Things to Do in the Midwest
There is something for everyone in the Midwest. See what makes the Great Plains great. Dip your toes in the continent's inland seas. Learn about Native American heritage and history. Paddle miles of scenic rivers and waterways. Explore the homes of former presidents. From the Civil War to Civil Rights, discover the stories that shape our journey as a nation.
Steep bluff with pink sky above and yellow leaves below.
Introduction - Sweet Freedom's Plains: African Americans on the Overland Trails 1841-1869
Introduction to Sweet Freedom's Plains: African Americans on the Overland Trails 1841-1869. This study examines African American participation in the great overland trails emigrations that occurred in the nineteenth century. It focuses on the history of African Americans on the California, Oregon and Mormon Trails from 1841 to 1869, when the transcontinental railroad was completed.
Preface - Sweet Freedom's Plains: African Americans on the Overland Trails 1841-1869
Preface to Sweet Freedom's Plains: African Americans on the Overland Trails 1841-1869. This study examines African American participation in the great overland trails emigrations that occurred in the nineteenth century. It focuses on the history of African Americans on the California, Oregon and Mormon Trails from 1841 to 1869, when the transcontinental railroad was completed.
Captivity and Independence: Race and Enslavement in the Trailhead Towns Along the Missouri
Trailhead towns like Westport were particularly inhospitable to Black Americans, even those that were not enslaved. Yes, jumping-off places were diverse communities that offered economic opportunities for people of color, such as Hiram Young and Emily Fisher. However, trailhead towns along the Missouri River carried the same anti-Black attitudes as much of the United States. Learn more...
Methodology - Sweet Freedom's Plains: African Americans on the Overland Trails 1841-1869
Methodology to Sweet Freedom's Plains: African Americans on the Overland Trails 1841-1869. This study examines African American participation in the great overland trails emigrations that occurred in the nineteenth century. It focuses on the history of African Americans on the California, Oregon and Mormon Trails from 1841 to 1869, when the transcontinental railroad was completed.
Sweet Freedom's Plains, Chapter 1: Race, Slavery, and Freedom
Race, Slavery, and Freedom: Chapter 1 Sections, Sweet Freedom's Plains, African Americans on the Overland Trails 1841 - 1869,
Sweet Freedom's Plains, Chapter 2: The Jumping-Off Places
Chapter 2 Sections, The Jumping-Off Places, Sweet Freedoms Plains: African Americans on the Overland Trails 1841 - 1869.
Trip Itinerary: Topeka, Kansas
Visiting Topeka, Kansas and interested in learning more about the national historic trails and other historically significant sites? Check out this trip itinerary for ideas on where to stop and learn more!
Trip Itinerary: Gering, Nebraska
As they followed the North Platte River across western Nebraska, covered wagon emigrants gradually left the prairie behind and entered an area of monumental geological formations: Courthouse and Jail Rocks, Chimney Rock, and Scotts Bluff. These served as milestones to the emigration, but also piqued travelers’ curiosity and served as artistic subjects for many a trailside “Rembrandt.” Check out these places near Gering, and one more not-to-be-missed site about an hour’s drive
Trip Itinerary: Independence Courthouse Square
The location of frenzied outfitting activity throughout the mid-1800s, Independence was the jumping-off point for the Santa Fe and Oregon trails and one of the starting points of the California Trail. Looking to visit other sites near Independence Courthouse Square? Use this trip itinerary to find other historic trail sites!
Stories of the Trail: ASC 2022
Interesting in the American Solar Challenge on the Oregon Trail? Would you like to know more about the history of the trail or technology and innovation? Take a deeper dive into some fascinating stories and history!
Plan Like a Park Ranger on the Oregon National Historic Trail
Plan like a Park Ranger on the Oregon National Historic Trail. Tips for having a safe journey visiting the Oregon Trail.
Trip Itinerary: Grand Island to Kearney
The treeless Nebraska plain made some emigrants feel exposed and vulnerable—especially when black thunderclouds threatened. Other travelers found the flower-freckled prairie a place of beauty and wonder. Travelers also began encountering that great icon of the Plains, the American buffalo. Many later recalled this as the easiest, most pleasant stretch along the combined Oregon-California Trail. Learn more at these stops between Grand Island and Kearney.
Trip Ideas for the American Solar Challenge 2022
Following along with the American Solar Challenge 2022 along the Oregon National Historic Trail? Are you interested in visiting other parts of trail history? Use this trip ideas to visit other historic trail sites as you follow the solar cars.
Travel Itinerary: Casper, Wyoming
By the time their covered wagon caravans reached this area, emigrants had traveled the Oregon Trail for about two months. From here the Great Plains stretch back to the east. To the west loom the Rocky Mountains and the Continental Divide. Now the Oregon Trail leaves its North Platte River lifeline to start up toward South Pass, where it crosses the Continental Divide. Explore the combined Oregon-California-Mormon Pioneer-Pony Express national historic trails corridor.
Trip Itinerary: Lander, Wyoming
The town of Lander is about 42 miles north of South Pass, a mountain crossing so gentle that most emigrants did not even realize they had entered the Pacific watershed — the gateway to Oregon Country! The trek to the Willamette Valley was not yet half over, and the most dangerous miles lay ahead. At this point, many emigrants began to worry whether their provisions would hold out until they reached their destination. Visit these sites and cross the Continental Divide.
Travel Itinerary: Montpelier, Idaho
Are you visiting Montpelier, Idaho and are interested in learn more about the national historic trails? Use this travel itinerary to find places to visit and learn more!
Trip Itinerary: Pocatello, Idaho
Visiting Pocatello, Idaho? Are you interested in learning more about the national historic trails? Use this trip itinerary to find places to visit to learn more!
Oregon and California National Historic Trails Fall 2022 Newsletter
Read the latest project updates and completions for the Oregon and California National Historic Trails from the National Trails Office of the National Park Service (NPS).
Series: Death Came A-Knockin’: Freak Accidents on the Westering Trails
Everyone who’s ever played the Oregon Trail game know that emigrants stood a good chance of dying from disease or drowning at a river crossing before ever reaching the Willamette Valley. Of course, there were other common ways to die on the way to Oregon, Utah, or California. These were the possibilities people knew and worried about as they loaded up their wagons and started their oxen westward. But there were other ways to end one’s trip early. Unexpected ways. Freak accidents.
Steam rises from a small pond in a desert setting.
Birdwatching on the Oregon Trail
Emigrants on the Oregon Trail were introduced to many new plants and animals as they made their journey west. With over 2,000 miles of trail, through countless habitats, there are a number of places where you can have a similar experience! The following places along the trail are noted for their birdwatching opportunities. When planning a visit, please make sure to check with the individual location about visitation hours and other details.
Black bird with orange and yellow stripes on its visible wing tips.
Significant Figures of the Pony Express, California, Oregon, and Mormon Pioneer Trails
Stories collected as part of a 2016–2018 collaborative project of the National Trails- National Park Service and the University of New Mexico’s Department of History, “Student Experience in National Trails Historic Research: Vignettes Project.” This project was formulated to provide trail partners and the general public with useful biographies of less-studied trail figures—particularly African Americans, Hispanics, American Indians, women, and children.
Four images of historic portrait from the mid-19th century.
Oregon and California National Historic Trails Spring 2023 Newsletter
Read the latest project updates and completions for the Oregon and California National Historic Trails from the National Trails Office of the National Park Service (NPS).
Image of an online newsletter with text and pictures.
Series: People of the Oregon Trail
Learn more about significant figures of the Oregon National Historic Trail.
Landscape with a trail running through.
Alcove Spring Exhibits Audio Description
Interested in the Oregon and California Trails at Alcove Spring? Take a look at these interpretive exhibits and listen to their audio descriptions.
Wayside interpretive exhibit, full audio description is available.
National Trails Coloring Pages
Stretching for 28,000 miles over 26 states, the national historic trails are home to many different animals. Learn more about the trails and the animals that people encountered with these great coloring pages. This is fun for all ages, just download, print, and color!
Coloring page with outline of a deer fawn.
Oregon and California National Historic Trails Summer 2023 Newsletter
Read the latest project updates and completions for the Oregon and California National Historic Trails from the National Trails Office of the National Park Service (NPS).
Oregon and California Trails Newsletter Summer 2023
Reconstructed Fort Laramie Emigrant Register, 1850
Nineteenth-century overland migration is one of the best documented processes in American history. Journals, letters, sketches, and guidebooks paint vivid pictures of the varied landscapes and emotions that migrants experienced on their way west. Yet despite this rich body of evidence, there is no official count of how many people undertook the journey. Some of the best data we have comes courtesy of officers at Fort Laramie, who counted passing travelers in the year of 1850.
Line graph showing the number of westbound men and wagons passing Fort Laramie.
Reflecting on 55 years of the National Trails System Act: A Journey Through the Establishment of National Scenic and Historic Trails
In celebration of the 55th anniversary of the National Trails System Act, learn more about these significant trails and their history.
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Ne
83
Kansas River
Crossing/
Pappin’s Ferry
Vieux Cemetery/
Red Vermillion
Crossing
63 St. Marys
Mission
Junction City
r
sou
er
75
99
Manhattan
Mis
Riv
Leavenworth
Tuttle
Creek
Lake
Riv
29
73
Coon Creek/Marshall Grave
Scott Spring
er
N
WY
UTAH
ca
Riv
Hiawatha
36
Atchison
77
Harlan
County
Lake
ST. JOSEPH
KA
RAS
NEB
SAS
KAN
36
Sterling
E
Beatrice
Alcove Spring
80
IC
Blue
Solomon
SAS
G
OMIN
Little
6
34
McCook
r
r
k
ve
OU
NT
A
M
BLU
E
Sna
Ri
IN
S
River
E
G
N
der
v
r
A
Pow
N
YO
Rive
CAN
LLS
ke
HE
Sna
N
lheur
C
S
Co
6
KAN
A
283
r
Fairbury
Rock Creek Station
Rive
Junction of St. Joe and
r
Independence Roads
Hollenberg Station
Marysville
The
Narrows
Holdrege
23
Julesburg
DO
C
de
Thirty-two
Mile Station
Plum Creek
Rep ubli
ve
A
A
O
Fort
Kearny
Susan Hail Grave
and Ruts
Hastings
Lowell
36
35
RI
SOU
MIS
SAS
KAN
C
Ri
nde
Ro
Ma
R
Deschutes
E
S
D
T
IDAHO
r
Rive
Willamette
OREGO
er
Riv
S
E
G
Grande
r
ve
Ri
N
A
R
OCEAN
PA C I F I C
Upper Crossing of the
South Platte River
83
25
80
73
ve
Homestead NM of America
Ayr Ruts
Heart Grove Campground
P l a tt e
Ogallala
Dan Smith’s
West Ranch
RI
SOU
MIS
SAS
KAN
er
Rock Springs
i
Brule
ORA
80
Fort
Bridger
Flaming
Gorge
Reservoir
ur
vi
ED
S
Name Rock
so
Di
h
M
Pl
FORT BRIDGER was a major
supply point on the trail. Here
the Mormon Trail veered off
to the southwest and into Utah.
Church Butte
80
30
Fort
O’Fallon’s
McPherson
Bluff
Ri
30
Eighty-fifth Street Ruts
e
tal
rt
IN
West End of the
Sublette Cutoff Segment
Sidney
California Hill
Platte
Lexington
6
KA
r
Ash Hollow
Windlass Hill
385
75
COL
ve
Courthouse/
Jail Rock
Lake
McConaughy
Kearney
81
80
470
Blu
Ri
is
nen
30
189
Brigham City
nti
No
TA
Golden Spike NHS
30
Oshkosh
North
North Platte
r
Rive
Grand Island
RAS
Kemmerer
Co
en
372
26
ASH HOLLOW was the entry to
the North Platte River Valley.
Ample supplies of wood, water,
and grass made this a soughtafter camping area.
FORT KEARNY: the U.S. Army
established the fort in 1848 to
provide protection for emigrants.
All trails from jumping off points
along the Missouri River met
here, at the “Gateway to the
Great Plains.”
435
INDEPENDENCE was the pre
ferred jumping off point for
the Oregon and Santa Fe Trails
in the 1840s and early 1850s.
Big
77
National Frontier
Trails Center
MISSOURI
LINCOLN
York
CHEYENNE
N
50 Miles
Segments of the trail
offering the best visitor
experiences
GREAT
SALT
LAKE
Lombard Ferry
191
Crossing
Laramie
80
River
0
50 Kilometers
N E VA D A
Big Sandy to
Green River Segment
re
Gering
Chimney
Rock NHS
Amanda Lamin
Grave
A
IOW RI
SOU
MIS
29
er
85
e
0
Trail interpretive
center
U TA H
28
G
Bayard
Riv
69
35
70
Minor Park/Red Bridge Crossing
New Santa Fe
10 Km.
0
71
0
10 Mi.
34
75
Loup
le
76
Divid
Oregon Trail route
Logan
372
Farson
70
435
I
West End of the
Sublette Cutoff
Fossil Butte
NM
ING
WYOM
UTAH
IDAHO
UTAH
NEVADA
97
Upper
Klamath
Lake
84
30
287
Rawlins
BASIN
Scotts Bluff NM
(Mitchell Pass)
Scottsbluff
FORT LARAMIE: this early Indian
71
trading post quickly developed
into the major resupply point
for emigrants and a major military
post. Old Bedlam, on the fort
Kimball
grounds, is the oldest structure
in Wyoming.
U
93
89
L
85
ie
ar am
M
287
G R E AT D I V I D E
SCOTTS BLUFF was one of
the major landmarks on the
trail, and, with Chimney Rock
35 miles east, it signaled that
almost one-third of the trail
had been traversed.
dd
A
Big
Hill
Bear
Lake
15
INDEPENDENCE ROCK: fur trap
pers named this formation on
July 4, 1824. Many emigrants
later carved or painted their
names on the rock.
KANSAS CITY
80
COUNCIL BLUFFS
INDEPENDENCE
Santa Fe Trail Park Ruts
10
L
30
Cokeville
City of Rocks
National Reserve
Fontenelle
Reservoir
Thomas Fork Crossing
Parting
of the Ways
Little Sandy Crossing
189
H I L L S
385
Torrington
Henry
Guernsey
Ruts
Fort Laramie
R iver
NHS
Horse Creek
Treaty Grounds
Wheatland
Robidoux Pass
O
95
ide
Mi
P
California Trail Junction/
Raft River Crossing
Div
a
T
89
Big Sandy Crossing
Montpelier
The National Oregon/
California Trail
National Trails System
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Historic Trails
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
The Mormon Pioneer Trail
Across Iowa in 1846
Leaving Nauvoo and “Crossing
the Mississippi on the Ice,” by C. A.
Christensen
Reconstructed Latter-day Saints Temple at Nauvoo,
Illinois.
NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAILS
AUTO TOUR ROUTE INTERPRETIVE
GUIDE
The Mormon Pioneer Trail Across Iowa in 1846
Prepared by
National Park Service
National Trails Intermountain Region
324 South State Street, Suite 200
Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
Telephone: 801-741-1012
www.nps.gov/cali
www.nps.gov/oreg
www.nps.gov/poex
www.nps.gov/mopi
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
April 2007
Second Printing September 2010
contents
Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
A New Faith . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Clash of Cultures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Exodus From Nauvoo. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Winter Retreat Across Iowa. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Places to Pause, To Rest…To Die. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
A Far Reaching Impact. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Sites and Points of Interest
Nauvoo, Illinois to Council Bluffs, Iowa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
For More Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Credits. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Regional Map. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inside Back Cover
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Iowa - Nebraska
Introduction
T
he Mormon Pioneer
National
Historic Trail
follows the route
Auto Tour
established by
Brigham Young
Route
to bring his
followers from Nauvoo, Illinois,
to the Valley of the Great Salt
Lake, where The Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
has been based for more than
160 years. That first migration
of Latter-day Saints to the Great
Basin occurred in two stages: in
1846, from western Illinois to
the Missouri River in the area
of today’s Council Bluffs, Iowa;
and in 1847, from the Missouri
River to Salt Lake City. This Auto
Tour Route interpretive
guide covers the
1846 segment of
Mormon Trail from
Illinois through
Iowa. Because
they have not been
designated by Congress
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Iowa - Nebraska
as part of the Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail, routes and
sites used by later Mormon wagon trains and handcart companies are
not included in this guide.
Individual Auto Tour Route interpretive guides such as this one are
in preparation for each state through which the trail passes. As you
follow the guide, watch for Auto Tour Route highway logos marking
the general route of the Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail.
In addition, a National Park Service brochure with a map of the
entire Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail is available at many
trail-related venues, and also can be requested from the trail’s
administrative office at 324 South State Street, Suite 200, Salt Lake
City, Utah.
Historic Nauvoo, pioneer wagon ruts, emigrant camps, and other
places of interest along or near the trail corridor are listed within this
guide. Driving directions are also provided. Entrance and parking fees
may be charged at some locations; hours may vary at the discretion
of the managers —you may want to call ahead. Large groups are
encouraged to make prior arrangements for tours, where available.
2
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Iowa - Nebraska
A New Faith
M
ormons, as Latter-day Saints are popularly called, practice a
unique religion that arose in 1830 from the teachings of church
founder Joseph Smith, Jr. Early converts to the new faith followed
their prophet from New York to Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois through
the 1830s and ’40s. They were driven from each state by threats and
violence.
The reasons for the Latter-day Saints’ early troubles still are debated,
but religious, political, economic, and social practices all were at
issue. Because Mormon beliefs about God and family differed in
important ways from mainstream Christianity, they drew criticism
and scorn. Because the Latter-day Saints created their own separate
towns, religion-based governments, and security forces, their
neighbors became uneasy and fearful. Resentment grew as the
church became involved in local, state, and eventually, national
politics. Disagreements led to legal battles and, in cases, violence
National Trails System Office
Intermountain Region
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Historic Trails
Interpretive Auto Tour
Western Missouri Through Northeastern Kansas
“Westport Landing”
— by William Henry Jackson
Courtesy—William Henry Jackson Collection at Scotts Bluff National
Monument .
R
Driving directions to the sites are provided from major
highways and nearby towns. To follow overland trail routes
between sites, follow the Auto Tour Route highway signs.
Generally, local brochures and guides are also available.
Entrance and parking fees may be charged at some locations,
and hours may vary at the discretion of site administrators.
Large groups are encouraged to make prior arrangements for
tours, where tours are available. Please respect private property
by staying in public areas, and help protect our national
heritage by leaving trail resources undisturbed.
National Trails System Office
324 South State Street, Suite 200
P.O. Box 45155
Salt Lake City, UT 84145-0155
Auto Tour
Route
oadside Auto Tour Route
signs mark the general
routes of the Oregon,
California, and Pony Express
national historic trails through
western Missouri and northeast
Kansas. Actual wagon wheel
ruts, emigrant camps, Pony
Express stations, and other
places of interest can be visited
at the sites listed in this guide.
Interpretive Auto Tour
Western Missouri - Northeast Kansas
ACROSS THE WIDE
MISSOURI
ON THEIR OWN
T
N
he story of the American West is not simply a tale of pioneer
courage and vision—of prairie schooners swaying
westward to the strains of heroic music. Rather, it is a complex
weave of plots and subplots, of romance and religion, of politics
and money, and of personal and national tragedy.
Traces of the people, livestock, and wooden wheels that were
part of those stories can still be found on the landscape. There
are traces, too, of native peoples whose lives were changed by
emigration. This guide will provide descriptions of the historic
places where wagon wheels cut into soft stream banks and over
rolling prairie, where lonely trailside graves lie, where missionary
outposts were established for Native Americans, and where Pony
Express stations were, and more.
Pioneers gathered to prepare for their journey at Independence
and St. Joseph, Missouri. From there, they would embark
across the wide and muddy Missouri River into a strange,
windswept land of unfamiliar wonders—and dangers.
ot fit for farming, too windswept and exposed to attract
homesteaders, the “Great American Desert” that
unrolled west of the Missouri River was seen as landscape to be
crossed on the way to a better place. That crossing, travelers of
the mid-19th century knew, was, by turn, exhausting and
exhilarating, and tedious and terrifying. Emigrants’ excitement
and anxiety mounted as they prepared to launch their ox-drawn
prairie schooners from St. Joseph and Independence, Missouri,
bustling river ports at the frontier’s edge. To them, the great, gray
ribbon of the Missouri was the western shore of civilized society.
Once their wagons rolled off the ferry onto the Kansas side,
emigrants embarked into unfamiliar country—trespassers on
Indian lands, and beyond the protection of the government. On
the trail, there were no markets, no hospitals, no laws, and no
second chances.
From there until they reached trail’s end some 2,000 miles later,
the pioneer emigrants were on their own.
Here we were, without law, without order,
and without restraint; in a state of nature,
amid the confused, revolving fragments of
elementary society! Some were sad, while
others were merry; and while the brave
doubted, the timid trembled!
—Lansford W. Hastings,
. . . . I, like every other pioneer, love to live
over again, in memory those romantic
months, and revisit, in fancy, the scenes of the
journey.
—Catherine Haun,
—California emigration of 1849
In the winter of 18 and 46 our neighbor got
hold of Fremont’s History of California and .
. . . brought the book to my husband to read,
& he was carried away with the idea [of
emigrating] too. I said O let us not go!
—Mary Jones,
—California emigration of 1846
Interpretive Auto Tour
Western Missouri - Northeast Kansas
DANGER, DEATH, AND DISAPPOINTMENT
M
ost emigrants lived in fear of Indian attack. Rumors
of—even hoaxes about—trailside massacres drifted
back to Eastern newspapers, and many travelers packed a virtual
arsenal to protect themselves on the road. For the most part,
though, their fears were unfounded. Historians conclude that
more Indian people than emigrants were killed in clashes along
the Oregon and California trails.
A more serious threat to those gathering at the congested
jumping-off places along the Missouri River was a mysterious
killer that could neither be seen nor fought: cholera. In the mid-19th
century, no one realized that this virulent and painful intestinal
infection was caused by bacteria. Spread unknowingly from
waterhole to waterhole by sick travel
National Trails System
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Historic Trails
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Nebraska and Northeastern Colorado
“Approaching Chimney
Rock”
By William Henry Jackson
Chimney Rock, in western Nebraska, was one of the most notable
landmarks recorded in emigrant diaries and journals. Photograph is
courtesy of The Wagner Perspective.
NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAILS
AUTO TOUR ROUTE INTERPRETIVE
GUIDE
Nebraska and Northeastern Colorado
Prepared by
National Park Service
National Trails System—Intermountain Region
324 South State Street, Suite 200
Box 30
Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
Telephone: 801-741-1012
www.nps.gov/cali
www.nps.gov/oreg
www.nps.gov/mopi
www.nps.gov/poex
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
August 2006
Contents
Introduction • • • • • • •
1
The Great Platte River Road • • • • • • •
From Path to Highway • • • • • • •
“A Whiz and a Hail” — The Pony Express • • • • •
A “Frayed Rope” • • • • • • •
The Platte Experience • • • • • • •
Natives and Newcomers: A Gathering Storm • • • • • • •
War on the Oregon & California Trails • • • • • • •
Corridor to Destiny • • • • • • •
2
4
8
11
15
18
21
24
SITES AND POINTS OF INTEREST • • • • • • •
Auto Tour Segment A:
Odell to Kearney • • • • • • •
Auto Tour Segment B:
Omaha-Central City-Kearney • • • • • •
Auto Tour Segment C:
Nebraska City-Central City-Kearney • • • • • • •
Auto Tour Segment D:
Kearney to Wyoming Border • • • • • • •
25
For More Information • • • • • • •
61
Regional Map • • • • • • •
26
35
41
43
inside the back cover
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Nebraska
Introduction
M
any of the pioneer trails and other
historic routes that are important in
our nation’s past have been designated by
Congress as National Historic Trails. While
Auto Tour
most of those old roads and routes are
Route
not open to motorized traffic, people can
drive along modern highways that lie close
to the original trails. Those modern roads
are designated as Auto Tour Routes, and they are marked with highway
signs and trail logos to help today’s travelers follow the trails used by the
pioneers who helped to open a new nation.
This interpretive publication guides visitors along the Auto Tour Routes
for the Oregon, California, Mormon Pioneer, and Pony Express National
Historic Trails as they approach and parallel the Platte River across
Nebraska and cut across the northeastern corner of Colorado. Siteby-site driving directions are included, and an overview map is located
inside the back cover. To make the tour more meaningful, this guide also
provides an historical overview of the four trails, shares the thoughts and
experiences of emigrants who followed those routes, and describes how
the westward expansion impacted native peoples of the Great Plains.
Individual Auto Tour Route interpretive guides such as this one are in
preparation for each state through which the trails pass. In addition,
individual National Park Service interpretive brochures for the Oregon,
California, Mormon Pioneer, and Pony Express National Historic Trails
are available at many trail-related venues, and can be requested from
the National Trails System Office at 324 South State, Suite 200, Box
30, Salt Lake City, Utah 84111. These brochures provide more detailed
information about each of the trails. Additional information on each trail
also can be found on individual trail web sites. Links are listed on the title
page of this guide.
1
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Nebraska
The Great Platte River Road
“Too thick to drink, too thin to plow, too pale to paint.” “A mile wide and
an inch deep.” “A stream flowing upside down.”
C
overed wagon pioneers of the 19th century liked to joke about
Nebraska’s Platte River, a stream unlike any they had known back
East. But the Platte, strange as it looked, was no joke. A summer shower
could send it raging over-bank and through camp; its soft quicksand
bottom could swallow up an ox team. River crossings were ordeals to
dread.
The river’s setting, too, seemed strange. Surrounding prairie, frequently
cleansed by wildfire, was burned bare of trees right up to the water’s
edge, and a line of low sand hills, looking like a storm-wracked beach,
rimmed much of the river valley.
Yet the yellow Platte, that treeless “Coast of Nebraska,” was an emigrant’s
lifeline—a water source that snaked 800 dusty miles between the
Missouri River and the uplands of central Wyoming.
Though a choked and sandy disappointment of a stream, the Platte
always was and still is a natural east-west corridor across the central
plains. Migrating game and moccasin-clad feet wore paths through the
“Fort Kearny & the South Platte River”
by William Henry Jackson.
2
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Nebraska
valley thousands of years before any white man ventured there. Like
those first travelers, covered wagon emigrants and their slow, plodding
oxen found water, grass, and fuel
National Trails System
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Historic Trails
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Along the Snake River Plain Through
Idaho
“Three Island Crossing” by William
Henry Jackson
“Great Falls” on the Snake River. Courtesy of Library of Congress.
NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAILS
AUTO TOUR ROUTE INTERPRETIVE
GUIDE
The Tangle of Trails Through Idaho
Prepared by
National Park Service
National Trails System—Intermountain Region
324 South State Street, Suite 200
Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
Telephone: 801-741-1012
www.nps.gov/cali
www.nps.gov/oreg
www.nps.gov/poex
www.nps.gov/mopi
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
October 2008
Contents
Introduction• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1
THE DESERT WEST• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2
THE SNAKE COUNTRY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4
FINDING THE WAY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 7
WYOMING TO FORT HALL• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 11
THE RAFT RIVER PARTING OF THE WAYS• • • • • • • • • • 20
ON TO OREGON• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 22
‘O FOR MORE PATIENCE’: A SNAKE RIVER SOJOURN • • 29
‘DEATH OR THE DIGGINS’• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 32
‘OUTRAGES HAVE BEEN COMMITTED’• • • • • • • • • • • 35
YESTERDAY AND TODAY• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 41
SITES AND POINTS OF INTEREST• • • • • • • • • • • • •
42
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT A: WYOMING TO OREGON ON THE
SNAKE RIVER ROUTE OF THE OREGON TRAIL
• • • • 45
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT B: THE SOUTH ALTERNATE
OREGON TRAIL ROUTE, GLENNS FERRY TO OREGON
STATE LINE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 78
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 82
Credits:
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 82
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Idaho
Introduction
M
any of the pioneer trails and other historic
routes that are important in our nation’s
past have been designated by Congress as National
Auto Tour Historic Trails. While most of the old roads and
routes still in existance are not open to motorized
Route
traffic, people can drive along modern highways
that closely parallel the original trails. Those
modern roads are designated as Auto Tour Routes, and they are
marked with highway signs and trail logos to help today’s travelers
follow the trails used by the pioneers who helped to open the
American West.
This interpretive publication guides visitors along the Auto Tour
Routes for the Oregon and California National Historic Trails
across Idaho. Site-by-site driving directions are included, and an
overview map is located inside the back cover. To make the tour
more meaningful, this guide also provides a historical overview of
the two trails, shares the thoughts and experiences of emigrants who
followed these routes, and discusses how the westward expansion
impacted native peoples of Idaho.
Individual Auto Tour Route interpretive guides such as this one are in
preparation for each state through which the trails pass. In addition,
individual National Park Service brochures for the Oregon and
California National Historic Trails are available at many trail-related
venues, and also can be requested from the National Trails System
administrative office at 324 South State Street, Suite 200, Salt Lake
City, Utah 84111. Each brochure includes a map of the entire trail
and an overview of trail history. Additional information about each
trail also can be found on individual trail web sites. Links are listed
on the “For More Information” page of this guide.
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Idaho
THE DESERT WEST
A
s covered-wagon emigrants crossed today’s Idaho, they found
the romance of the road wearing as thin as the soles of their trailtorn shoes.
The pioneers’ initial energy
and excitement curdled into
fatigue and crankiness after
three or more months on the
road. Nightly fireside dances
got left behind back down the
trail, next to Grandpa’s clock,
Mother’s good china, and
heaps of souring bacon. Highjinks and horse races grew
rare, quarrels more frequent.
Journal-keepers, when they
“Freighters Grub Pile,” by William
mustered the energy to write at all,
Henry Jackson. Courtesy of Library of
generally jotted terse complaints
Congress.
about fellow travelers, Indians, heat,
exhaustion, dust, mosquitoes, aches and pains, and the “stink” of the
never-ending sagebrush.
It seems the nearer we approach Oregon the worse roads we
have, and a worse more rough looking country.
—Amelia Hadley, 1851 Oregon emigration
Felt today like giving up in despair, the intolerable heat and dust,
together with fatigue makes me almost sick at heart.
—Esther Belle Hanna, 1852 California emigration
[Men] are by turns, or all together, cross, peevish, sullen,
boisterous, giddy, profane, dirty, vulgar, ragged, mustachioed,
bewhiskered, idle, petulant, quarrelsome, unfaithful, disobedient,
refractory, careless,
National Trails System
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Historic Trails
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Across Wyoming
“Rendezvous,” by
William Henry Jackson
NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAILS
AUTO TOUR ROUTE INTERPRETIVE
GUIDE
Across Wyoming
Prepared by
National Park Service
National Trails Intermountain Region
www.nps.gov/cali
www.nps.gov/oreg
www.nps.gov/mopi
www.nps.gov/poex
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
US DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Third Printing December 2016
Historical marker on South Pass recognizing the first “white” women to make
the trek to Oregon in 1836.
CONTENTS
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Gateway to the West . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Blazing the Trail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Approaching the Rockies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
Sweetwater to South Pass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Beyond the Great Divide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Leapfrogging Across Wyoming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Ho for California! Oregon or Bust! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Fire on the Plains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
God Speed to the Boy & the Pony! . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
The End of the Trail Era . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Sites and Points of Interest. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37
Auto Tour Segment A —Nebraska State Line to Casper . . . . . . .
Auto Tour Segment B —Casper to Seedskadee . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Auto Tour Segment C —The Lander Road. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Auto Tour Segment D —Seedskadee to Idaho State Line. . . . . . .
Auto Tour Segment E —Seedskadee to Utah State Line. . . . . . . .
38
50
68
70
71
For More Information/Credits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Regional Map. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Inside Back Cover
Eastern view of the Sweetwater River Valley from atop Independence Rock, by
William Henry Jackson. Image is courtesy of the Brigham Young University Online
Collection.
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Wyoming
INTRODUCTION
Auto Tour
Route
any of the pioneer trails and other
M
historic routes that are important in
our nation’s past have been designated by
Congress as national historic trails. While
most of those old roads and routes are not
open to motorized traffic, people can drive
along modern highways that lie close to
the original trails. Those modern roads are designated as Auto Tour
Routes, and are marked with highway signs and trail logos to help
today’s travelers follow the trails used by the pioneers who helped to
open a new nation.
This interpretive publication guides visitors along the Auto Tour
Routes for the Oregon, California, Mormon Pioneer, and Pony
Express national historic trails as they as they cross the state of
Wyoming from east to west. Site-by-site driving directions are
included, and an overview map is located inside the back cover. To
make the tour more meaningful, this guide also provides a historical
overview of the four trails, shares the thoughts and experiences of
emigrants who followed those routes, and describes how westward
expansion impacted native peoples of the Intermountain West.
National Park Service interpretive brochures for the Oregon,
California, Mormon Pioneer, and Pony Express national historic trails
are available at many trail-related venues, or can be requested via
email to ntir_information@nps.gov. Additional information on each
trail also can be found on individual trail websites. Links are listed on
the title page of this guide.
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Wyoming
GATEWAY TO THE WEST
History is geography set into motion.
—Johann Gottfried Herder, 18th century philosopher of history
T
he Rocky Mountains stretch like a jagged spine between Alaska
and Mexico, splitting North America into East and West. The
Continental Divide is not a simple line of peaks, easily threaded by
tracks and roads, but a complex of overlapping mountain ranges and
treeless sagebrush steppe, hundreds of miles wide. In the days of
covered wagon travel, the Rockies were an imposing barrier to the
movement of people, commerce, and communications.
Early explorers probed the Northern Rockies looking for the
fabled “Northwest Passage” that would open an easy route for
transcontinental traffic. The men of Lewis and Clark’s Cor
National Trails System
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Historic Trails
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Utah — Crossroads of the West
“Wagons Through Echo Canyon,”
by William Henry Jackson
Pony Express Bible photograph is courtesy of Joe
Nardone, — Pony Express History Association.
Every Pony Express rider working for Russell, Majors, and Waddell, was
issued a personal Bible to carry with them and obliged to pledge this oath:
“I, [name of rider] - do hereby swear before the great and living God that
during my engagement and while I am an employee of Russell, Majors, and
Waddell, I will under no circumstances use profane language, I will drink no
intoxicating liquors; that I will not quarrel or fight with any other employee
of the firm and that in every respect I will I conduct myself honestly,
faithful to my duties, and so direct my acts, as to win the confidence of my
employers, So help me God.”
NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAILS
AUTO TOUR ROUTE INTERPRETIVE
GUIDE
Utah — Crossroads of the West
Prepared by
National Park Service
National Trails—Intermountain Region
324 South State Street, Suite 200
Salt Lake City, Utah 84111
Telephone: 801-741-1012
www.nps.gov/cali
www.nps.gov/oreg
www.nps.gov/poex
www.nps.gov/mopi
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
September 2010
Contents
INTRODUCTION • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1
A NOTE ON STATE BOUNDARIES • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2
THE BIG EMPTY • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 3
SAGEBRUSH AND SALT FLATS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4
FIRST WAGONS INTO UTAH • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 7
‘A NIGHER ROUTE’: The Hastings Cutoff • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 11
‘THIS IS THE PLACE’: The Mormon Pioneers • • • • • • • • • • • • •18
A HALF-WAY HOUSE ON THE CALIFORNIA TRAIL • • • • • • • • • 28
THE UTAH WAR • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 34
‘THE FORLORNEST SPOT’: The Pony Express Trail in Utah • • • 36
THE WARPATH • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 43
CROSSROADS OF THE WEST• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 47
SITES AND POINTS OF INTEREST • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 49
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT A: Wyoming Border To Salt Lake
City, Utah — (Hastings Cutoff Of The California, Mormon
Pioneer, and Pony Express Trails) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 49
OPTIONAL BACKCOUNTRY ROUTE: East Canyon/Little
Emigration Canyon • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 65
SALT LAKE CITY PIONEER TOUR • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 77
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT B: Salt Lake City To West Wendover,
NV • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 90
OPTIONAL BACKCOUNTRY ROUTE: Skull Valley and Hastings
Pass • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 95
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT C: Salt Lake City To City Of Rocks NR,
ID (Salt Lake Cutoff of the California Trail) • • • • • • • • • • 105
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT D: Pony Express Trail National Back
Country Byway • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 110
For More Information • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 122
Credits • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 122
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Utah
INTRODUCTION
M
any of the pioneer trails and other
historic routes that are important in
our nation’s past have been designated by
Congress as National Historic Trails. While
most of the trail ruts still in existence are not
open to motorized traffic, people can drive
along modern highways that either overlie
the original route or closely parallel it. Those
modern roads are designated as Auto Tour
Routes, and they are marked with highway
signs and trail logos to help today’s travelers
follow the routes used by the pioneers who
helped to open the American West.
This interpretive publication guides visitors along the Auto Tour
Routes for the California, Mormon Pioneer, and Pony Express
National Historic Trails across Utah. Site-by-site driving directions
are included, and an overview map is located inside the back
cover. To make the tour more meaningful, this guide also provides
a historical overview of the three trails, shares the thoughts and
experiences of emigrants who followed these routes, and discusses
how the westward expansion impacted the native peoples of what is
now Utah.
Individual Auto Tour Route interpretive guides such as this one
are in preparation for each state through which the trails pass.
In addition, individual National Park Service brochures for the
California, Mormon Pioneer, and Pony Express National Historic
Trails are available at many trail-related venues, and also can be
requested from the National Trails System administrative office at
324 South State Street, Suite 200, Salt Lake City, Utah 84111. Each
brochure includes a map of the entire trail and a general overview
of
National Trails Intermountain Region
National Park Service
U.S. Department of the Interior
National Historic Trails
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Across Nevada
California National Historic Trail
Pony Express National Historic Trail
By the time they reached the Humboldt Sink, or Forty-mile Desert,
many emigrant pioneers had little food, exhausted livestock, and
broken wagons.
[Cover photo] Forty-mile Desert
NATIONAL HISTORIC TRAILS
AUTO TOUR ROUTE
INTERPRETIVE GUIDE
Across Nevada on the Humboldt Route and
The Central Route of the Pony Express
Prepared by
National Park Service
National Trails Intermountain Region
www.nps.gov/cali
www.nps.gov/oreg
www.nps.gov/poex
www.nps.gov/mopi
NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
U. S. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
April 2012
Table of Contents
‘MOST CORDIALLY I HATE YOU’:
THE HUMBOLDT RIVER
••••••••••••••••••••
2
THE GREAT BASIN
••••••••••••••••••••
4
SEEKING MARY’S RIVER
••••••••••••••••••••
5
APPROACHING THE HUMBOLDT
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 11
PRELUDE TO MURDER
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 15
THE HUMBOLDT EXPERIENCE
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 18
WEST TO STONY POINT
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 21
THE POLITICS OF HUNGER
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 24
A FLASH OF THE BLADE
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 27
‘HEARTILY TIRED OF THE JOURNEY’
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 29
THE HUMBOLDT SINK
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 33
THE Forty-mile DESERT; or,
HOW TO KILL AN OX
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 35
INTO THE SIERRA NEVADA
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 42
THE PONY BOYS
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 44
CHANGE IN THE GREAT BASIN
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 51
Sites & Points of Interest:
Setting Out
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 53
Navigating the California Trail Across Nevada • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 54
Tips for Trailing Across Nevada
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 56
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT A:
WEST WENDOVER AND JACKPOT, NEVADA, TO CALIFORNIA
(California Trail)
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 58
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT B:
BLACK ROCK DESERT, RYE PATCH RESERVOIR TO GERLACH, NEVADA
(Applegate and Nobles Trails)
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 77
AUTO TOUR SEGMENT C:
WEST WENDOVER, NEVADA TO CALIFORNIA BORDER
(Pony Express Trail and Carson and Walker River-Sonora
Routes of the California Trail)
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 86
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 102
Introduction
M
any of the pioneer trails and other historic routes
that are important in our nation’s past have been
designated by Congress as national historic trails. While
most of those old wagon roads and routes are not open
to motorized traffic, visitors can drive along modern
highways that either retrace the original route or closely
parallel it. Those modern roads are designated as Auto Tour Routes.
They are marked with “National Historic Trails” highway signs to help
today’s travelers follow the routes used by the pioneers who helped to
open the American West.
This interpretive publication guides visitors along the Auto Tour
Routes for the California and Pony Express national historic trails as
they cross the state of Nevada from east to west. Site-by-site driving
directions are included, and an overview map is located inside
the back cover. To make the tour more meaningful, this guide also
provides a historical overview of the two trails, shares the thoughts
and experiences of emigrants who trekked to California, and
discusses how the westward expansion impacted native peoples of
what is now Nevada.
Individual Auto Tour Route interpretive guides such as this one are
in preparation for each state that the Oregon, California, Mormon
Pioneer, and Pony Express trails pass through. In addition, individual
National Park Service brochures for the four national historic trails
are available at many trail-related venues and can be requested from
the National Trails Intermountain Region Salt Lake City Branch
Office at ntsl_interpretation@nps.gov. Each brochure includes a
color map of the entire trail and provides an overview of information
about each of the trails. Additional information can also can be found
on individual trail websites. For links see page 102.
Auto Tour Route Interpretive Guide
Nevada
‘MOST CORDIALLY I HATE YOU’:
THE HUMBOLDT RIVER
T
he four great rivers that led covered wagon pioneers into the far
West each had a personality all its own.
There was the gritty prairie Platte, cantankerous but dependable;
the brooding, basalt-shrouded Snake, menacing as a stranger with a
hostile stare; and the broad-shouldered Columbia, the Big River of
the West, confident and athletic, striding purposefully toward the
Pacific Ocean.
But the Humboldt.
The Humboldt was sullen and spiteful, a mocking mean joker that
lured emigrants deep into the desert, swindle