
- 425 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
"In one very real sense, " David Lavender writes, "the story of the Oregon Trail begins with Columbus." This opening suggests the panoramic sweep of his history of that famous trail. In chiseled, colorful prose, Lavender illustrates the "westward vision" that impelled the early explorers of the American interior looking for a northwest passage and send fur trappers into the region charted by Lewis and Clark. For the emigrants following the trappers' routes, that vision gradually grew into a sense of a manifest American destiny. Lavender describes the efforts of emigration societies, of missionaries like Marcus and Narcissa Whitman, and of early pioneer settlers like Hall Jackson Kelley, Jason Lee, and Thomas Jefferson Farnham, as well as the routes they took to the "Promised Land." He concludes by recounting the first large-scale emigrations of 1843–45, which steeled the U. S. government for war with Mexico and agreements with Britain over the Oregon boundary.
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Information
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Dedication
- Copyright Page
- Prologue to the Bison Book Edition: A Sense of Place
- Contents
- Prologue: The Long Quest
- One: Dreamers and Schemers
- Two: The Route That Didn’t Work
- Three: The Gateway
- Four: Sunbonnets
- Acknowledgments and Bibliography
- Books by David Lavender