The Gila trail is the oldes trail because it was estimated to be 15,000 years old.
The Gila Trail was a complex of trails (not a single trail) running roughly parallel to the Gila River, south of the river, from the vicinity of Tucson to Yuma. The trail(s) probabaly originated with Native Americans, and was used by Spanish colonists and Mexicans, and later by people from the USA. Many forty-niners used the Gila trail as part of the "Southwest Trail" from El Paso to southern California. In 1849, land south of the Gila was still part of Mexico. It became US soil with the Gadsen Purchase. Gila trail is a trail that starts at Santa Fe and follows the Gila River to San Diego. The Gila Trail starts at Santa Fe and went to the Gila Mountain, then west to Santa Cruz River and go to Gila river follow it until you get to Colorado River then across deserts and then over mountains until you reach Pacific Ocean. There were many forts along the way.
Gila Trail
The California Trail, Gila Trail, Mormon Trail and The Old Spanish Trail....
1500's
The most southern trail to the West Coast was the Southern Emigrant Trail, which ran through regions that are now part of Arizona and California. It was used by settlers traveling to California during the Gold Rush in the mid-19th century and often connected with other trails, such as the Gila Trail, which followed the Gila River. This route was favored by those looking to avoid the more northern and often harsher conditions of other trails.
Benjamin Butler Harris has written: 'The Gila trail' -- subject(s): Gold discoveries, Overland journeys to the Pacific
Gila-Gila pengantin - 2003 is rated/received certificates of: Malaysia:U
The address of the Gila Valley Library is: 400 Highway 211, Gila, 88038 0085
Gila Almagor's birth name is Gila Alexandrovich.
gold brought some 300,000 people to California from the rest of the United States and abroad.[2] Of the 300,000, approximately half arrived by sea and half came from the east overland on the California Trail and the Gila River trail.
Yes. The "Gila" in "Gila monster" is capitalized, but not the "monster" part. The Gila monster takes its name from the Gila River Basin in the southwestern US where the Gila monster was once found.
There is no 'Gila Desert.'