No actually, the Oregon trail split off in the rockies, and a large number of wagon trains ended up in California.
It was used by many settlers as they moved west.
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.
Wagon trains of '49ers on their way to the California gold fields-
It was the route west for people going west in wagon trains.
The Oregon Trail
by covered wagon
St. Louis Missouri is the American 'Gateway to the West'. The Gateway Arch in St. Louis symbolizes the many wagon trains that left Missouri for Oregon and California.
The first wagon arrived in 1841.
The first to lead a wagon train into Oregon were Marcus Whitman, his wife Narcissa, and about 20 others. There they set up the Whitman Mission, an area that became a stopping point for many wagon trains on their way to Oregon City.
Wagon trains led by ox and horses and they also walked
They are people who led wagon trains in 1843 of The Oregon Trail.Somebody who pioneers something; starts a fad off.