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mainly people traveled bu wagon. but if you were in a richer family then you would be traveling by train, in a train cart. mainly people traveled bu wagon. but if you were in a richer family then you would be traveling by train, in a train cart. mainly people traveled bu wagon. but if you were in a richer family then you would be traveling by train, in a train cart.
The wagon trains would be pulled by horses so that is how people were able to use the wagon train as transportation for both people and supplies needed for war.
No because if Canada builds a train track it would make a difference to PEI. If Canada builts a train track it wont even reach PEI.
No, but when pioneers were traveling to Oregon on the Oregon Trail they would stay in wagon trains which are a single file line of different families' wagons.
by carriage. wagon ect..... or if your talking about engines and stuff it would be a train
Canada and California are both abbreviated as CA. If you're talking about a mailing address, it would mean California, as mail going to Canada would be addressed to the province (e.g., AB for Alberta, ON for Ontario, etc).
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You haven't told us where you are starting from or where you are going to. I will tell you that to travel 30 miles by wagon would take 2-3 days.
Miners would often travel to California in the 1800's by horse or wagon. It could take up to a year for them to travel that far.
A wagon train is a group of wagons, typically covered, traveling together along a shared route. Typically used for mutual benefit and assistance, the wagon train fell out of use with the introduction of more secure and reliable forms of transit, such as cars and track-based rail lines. Today, wagon trains are used to provide tourists and travelers with an "authentic wild-west" experience. An accurate count of how many wagon trains are currently in existence would be difficult to obtain.
No, You could get donkeys but a little help with horses. It is very cruel tho i mean who would want to be tied to a train and someone made you pull it.
Many came by ship into San Francisco bay and then boats up the river into Sacramento. From there they would have to go by horse, walk or wagon inland to the gold fields. If they came overland it was all by horse or wagon.