By A Mystery Man Writer
The 1852 overland migration, the largest on record, was a year in which cholera took a terrible toll on lives. Firsthand accounts, including the words and thoughts of a young married couple, Mary Ann and Willis Boatman, convey the journey’s hardships and heartbreak. “A superb contribution to Oregon Trail scholarship.”—Susan Badger-Doyle, Oregon-California Trails Association Illustrations / photographs / maps / notes / bibliography / index / 256 pages (2001) Listen to an interview with Weldon Rau on TVW's Author's Hour
THE OREGON TRAIL DIARY OF 1852 : Join the Pioneer’s Wagon trains on the adventure of a lifetime! eBook : Vincento, Johnny : Kindle Store
THE OREGON TRAIL DIARY OF 1852 : Join the Pioneer's Wagon trains on the adventure of a lifetime! See more
Surviving the Oregon Trail, 1852: As Told by Mary Ann and Willis Boatman and Augmented with Accounts by Other Overland Travelers
Surviving the Oregon Trail, 1852: As Told by Mary Ann and Willis Boatman and Augmented with Accounts by Other Overland Travelers
Washington State University Press(Publisher) · OverDrive: ebooks
Letters and Journals from the Oregon Trail
Emigrants to Oregon in 1852
Surviving the Oregon Trail 1852 As Told by Mary Ann and Willis
FINAL WARNING A HISTORY OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER - Flipbook by MyDocSHELVES DIGITAL DOCUMENT SYSTEM
Westward Bound: An Exploration into the Presence of Nantucket
Surviving the Oregon Trail 1852 by Weldon Willis Rau (2001
Condition is Very Good.
Surviving the Oregon Trail, 1852