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About 300,000 traveled on the Oregon trail, however, because of diseases, food shortages, and accidental deaths, only about 90,000 survived the journey.
back then that was one of the only ways of getting there and supplies that they had to live off of
The Oregon Trail was slowly established starting around 1811 until 1840 or so. It was established by traders and fur trappers, and when it began, it could only be traveled by horseback or on foot. By the year 1836, part of the trail had been cleared and widened, and the first wagon trains were using it. Work was done to clear more of the trail and it eventually reached Willamette Valley, Oregon. Improvements made the trail both safer and faster each year. The trail was used by an estimated 350,000 settlers from the 1830s through 1869. Then the railroad came, allowing faster travel, and the trail quickly declined.
Because the Mormons used the Oregon trail as far as it went in the direction they wanted to go. The Oregon trail was a well-established trail that had plenty of good drinking water all along the way. From Nebraska to Wyoming, the Oregon trail was the best route. The Mormon trail turns south in Wyoming and enters Utah, while the Oregon trail continues on to Oregon.
The Oregon Trail helped to change how the United States grew. It helped to move the population westward from the overpopulated East. ... The Oregon Trail completely changed the United States because it was the only possible way to get to the West, other than going all the way around South America.
The Oregon Trail was a way for migrants to go westward to receive land (cheap land, courtesy of the government, called the Homestead Act.) The journey on the Oregon Trail was made on covered wagons during the Westward Expansion time period. The Oregon Trail was only one of many trails to the Western United States.
The Oregon trail was a trip starting at Independence, Missouri to either Claifornia(for gold) of to Oregon (for farming land). The first covered wagon ( used to move things and moved by bison) came to Oregon in 1843. You could only bring what you really needed because the covered wagon could only carry 2,000 lbs.
The Oregon Trail helped to change how the United States grew. It helped to move the population westward from the overpopulated East. ... The Oregon Trail completely changed the United States because it was the only possible way to get to the West, other than going all the way around South America.
Fort Hall was impotant to the pioneers during the Oregon Trail, becuse back thn, the Engilish settlers didn't have a trail route leading to the first colony, and they also were ordered off land by the Europeans, so the only way leading to the first colony was by the trail route.
There was no Oregon Trail during the time of Lewis and Clark's expedition in 1804. The beginnings of the trail, which led from Missouri to Oregon and Washington, date from 1811 but allowed only for travel by foot or horseback. Eventually the path was widened, and in 1836 the first wagon train took that route to Fort Hall, Idaho. The large surge of pioneers heading west did not occur until 1843.
The Oregon Trail at times converges with the Mormon Trail, and most often runs parallel to it.The Oregon Trail and the Mormon Trail began for vastly different reasons. Let's start with the Oregon Trail.The Oregon Trail began as a road for Westward expansion. Fur traders and trappers first set the trail, which was passable only on foot or on horseback. It later was by gold miners, the poor seeking greater opportunity, and even criminals fleeing into the "Wild West." The Oregon Trail represents Manifest Destiny, American Frontierism, and American Expansionism.The Mormon Trail has more in common with the Native Americans' Trail of Tears and far less in common with the American dream. The Latter-day Saints (called "Mormons" because the hold the Book of Mormon as a sacred text and testimony of Jesus Christ) were slaughtered and kicked out of their homes in Ohio, Missouri, and finally in Illinois. After the martyrdom of Joseph Smith and Hyrum Smith at Carthage, Illinois, Brigham Young (then president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles) led the Latter-day Saints westward to escape persecution and slaughter. The course of their exodus is now known as the Mormon Trail.The Mormons settled primarily in what we now know as Utah, Idaho, Arizona, and California, and what was at that time Mexico. During their trek, the United States Army requested Mormon aid in the Mexican-American War, to which the company acquiesced despite the state and federal government's continued "blind eye" toward the injustices committed against them.