20,000
The Oregon Trail was the trail leading out of Independence Missouri to the Oregon Territory ending mainly in the Willamette Valley, the trail was started shortly after the Civil War in the 1860s. ===== actually, the first wagon came in 1843
Davy Crockett was not directly involved with the Oregon Trail, as his most notable activities occurred in the 1830s, particularly in Tennessee and Texas. The Oregon Trail was primarily used by settlers moving westward in the 1840s and 1850s. However, Crockett's legendary status as a frontiersman and his role in westward expansion contributed to the spirit that characterized the migration along the Oregon Trail.
People got to Oregon by using the road called The Oregon Trail.
1200 people travelled the Oregon trail
Approximately 10 of people died while traveling on the Oregon Trail in the 19th century.
Approximately the 1840s through 1860s
Somewhere between 12,500 and 20,000 people. The discrepancy is because accurate records were not always kept and recorded.
The Westward Expansion. Many people moved to California and Oregon for 2 reasons: 1. Gold Rush 2. Oregon Trail
Pioneers mostly used animals as their main means of travel on the Oregon Trail. They stopped to rest at Fort Walla Walla in the 1840s.
No, the Oregon Trail began in the 1830s and 1840s. By the 1880s, the Oregon Trail had long since ended.
The Oregon Trail was the trail leading out of Independence Missouri to the Oregon Territory ending mainly in the Willamette Valley, the trail was started shortly after the Civil War in the 1860s. ===== actually, the first wagon came in 1843
i think it the Oregon trail
People brought their keepsakes to the Oregon Trail. People brought knives to the Oregon Trail.
The Oregon Trail
Oregon Trail...=)
The Oregon Trail
Well, that depends on how you look at it. Officially, according to an act of Congress, it begins in Independence, Missouri, and ends in Oregon City, Oregon. To the settlers, though, the trail to the Oregon Country was a five-month trip from their old home in the East to their new home in the West. It was different for every family. Some people got ready to leave the East, or "jump off" as they called it, in towns like St. Joseph or Council Bluffs, and others jumped off from their old homes in Illinois or Missouri and picked up the Oregon Trail in the countryside. Along the way, they could choose to take shortcuts or stick to the main trunk of the Trail, and the end of their journey didn't really come until they settled a claim somewhere in the vast Oregon Country.