The Donner Party
Essay by 24 • October 19, 2010 • 564 Words (3 Pages) • 1,878 Views
Forty-six survivors out of an original 87, reached California starving,
tired, and traumatized for life from the experience they had just been
through. A year of suffering was spent on a time that was thought to have
been only a few months of easy traveling on a shortcut routed by a man named
Lance Hatings.
The journey began on May 12th from Springfield Illinois. A train of nine
wagons, filled with members of the Donner and Reed families, set out in
hopes of reaching California for free land and a new life. The families had
heard of a route that would get them to this great new country taking
350-400 miles off their planned trip. It seemed to be a good idea to follow
the lead of Hastings if his promise of a shorter, easier trip was true.
The first portion of the trip went smoothly as planned and they reached
Fort Laromy on June 27. There, a man by the name of James Climan thought
that the shortcut Hastings had come up with was unpractical. He thought the
old way was safer. But Reed the leader of the group didn't take the advice.
George Donner was elected leader of the party, even though Reed was the
obvious best person for the job. The short cut was supposed to have taken
350-400 miles off the original route. In fact it was 125 miles longer. On
August 6, there was a note left from Hastings saying the party shouldn't
continue. The group didn't listen to the warning though. They kept going and
soon were traveling only 2 miles a day.
On August 22 they reached The Great Salt Lake. It had taken them a month
instead of a week. So they were way behind schedule. On Aug 30 they began
the trip across the Salt Desert according to Hastings, it should have only
taken 2 days but it took five and was very difficult. Thirty oxen were lost
and people almost died of heat exhaustion.
Soon after the desert, Reed murdered a
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