“We did not meet any sickness nor see any fresh graves until we came in on the road from St Joseph. The leading causes of deaths along the Oregon/ California Trail from 1841 to 1869 were disease, accidents, and weather. Of the estimated 350,000 who started the journey, the trail claimed as many as 30,000 victims or an average of 10-15 deaths per mile. The Oregon Trail is this nation’s longest graveyard. Though 19th-century settlers and much of written history look at the 2,000-mile Oregon Trail as romantic, almost one in ten who embarked on the trail didn’t survive. It is hardship without glory.” - Anonymous Settler writing in the St. He must cease to think, except of where he may find grass and water and a good camping place. He must learn to eat with his unwashed fingers, drink out of the same vessel as his mules, sleep on the ground when it rains, share his blanket with vermin, and have patience with mosquitos. “To enjoy such a trip… a man must be able to endure heat like a Salamander, mud, and water like a muskrat, dust like a toad, and labor like a jackass. Oregon Trail pioneers pass through the sandhills by William Henry Jackson.
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