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Seeing the Elephant: Voices from the Oregon Trail

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07/2003. xvi, 260 pages.
0896725049
978-0-89672-504-1

$24.95 cloth



Coming soon: online ordering! In the meantime, please call 800.832.4042 or 806.742.2982 to order.

Seeing the Elephant: Voices from the Oregon Trail

By Joyce Badgley Hunsaker

"The target audience for this book is middle and high school students. However, its information will appeals to a far broader audience. . . . .A useful introduction to trail travel and associated incidents."--Journal of the West

"[A] little gem of a book."--Overland Journal

Theirs has been called America's single largest voluntary, historical migration. From the late 1830's to the mid-1870's—a span of just over forty years—nearly half a million ordinary folk left farms and famalies, friends, and all that was familiar and turned their faces west to Oregon, to California, to the valley of the Great Salt Lake, and to the gold fields of Montana. All "saw the elephant" along the Oregon Trail.

Whether viewed from the perspective of Manifest Destiny or through the vision-dreams of tribal elders, this mass overland migration to the "Land of Milk and Honey" forever changed our nation and forever altered the way Americans saw themselves. The clash of cultures and beliefs that followed left its mark upon the American spirit as indelibly as the Oregon Trail rutted the land over which it crossed.

Seeing the Elephant lets the people of the Trail speak for themselves and their times. Drawn from first-hand accounts in diaries, journals, and letters and interpreted by the author of the much acclaimed Sacagawea Speaks, their voices ring true. From Narcissa Whitman, who made an amazing trek into the unknown in 1836, through Lucy Alice Ide, who proclaimed her own modern passage in 1878, each voice of Seeing the Elephant is infused with character and instruction—and the immediacy that comes only from living history.

Seeing the Elephant leaps from our nation's historic archives into the imaginataion. Timelines, maps, photographs, and historical illustrations enable readers young and old to trace Trail migration chronologically and geographically.


Wagon Train By-Laws, 1849
Articles of Agreement, 1864
Outfit for Oregon, 1847
From Emigrant's Guide to California, 1849
From The Prairie Traveler: Handbook for Overland Travelers, 1859
From Ox Team Days on the OregonTrail, 1852
History and Interpretation
Narcissa Whitman, Into the Unknown, 1836
Thomas Jefferson Farnham, Go West, Young Man! 1839
Jesse Applegate, A Boy's Grand Adventure, 1843
Catherine Sager, Oregon Trail Orphan, 1844
Abigail Scott, Where Many Fond Hopes Have Been Laid, 1852
Ezra Meeker, The Trail Was a Battlefield, 1852
Helen Stewart, Oh Dear, Oh Dear! This is Going to Oregon, 1853
Fincelius G. Burnett, Army Indian Fighter on the Overland Trail, 1865
Mrs. Lucy Alice Ide, Trail's End--Thus We All Are Scattered, 1878

Supplemental workbook for Seeing the Elephant
Teacher's answer key

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