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Paperback Stories of Young Pioneers: In Their Own Words Book

ISBN: 0878424237

ISBN13: 9780878424238

Stories of Young Pioneers: In Their Own Words

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

"Many nights we lay in our tent, or under the wagons, we heard either the loud barking of the gray wolf, or sharp querulous tones of the coyote, snapping and snarling near] our head."
Most people know that traveling the Emigrant Trail in the mid-nineteenth century was hard. They know the pioneers faced danger, disease, and even death. What they may not consider, however, is the endurance and strength of pioneer children. In Stories of...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Stories of Young Pioneers in Their Own Words

Since my early childhood I have been fascinated by stories of pioneers who went west to settle the wilderness. The idea of leaving one's friends, and everything they owned, except a few things they could carry, or put in a wagon or a handcart, and heading west into unknown territory has always seemed almost unbelievable. "What was going on in their minds?" was the question that intrigued me. I think this is an unprecedented work and has no equal anywhere. To be sure she could catch the flavor of the pioneer experience she even traversed every inch of the three major pioneer trails, sometimes riding and sometimes walking. This magnificent compilation of references is the result of researching over 500 documents including letters, diaries, and news reports. An exhaustive piece of research! I marveled at the fourteen-year-old boy who was cutting timber in 1845, hauling it nine miles, then boating it across a river. I laughed at the way eleven-year-old Edwin Petit dressed up as a girl (in Huckleberry-Finn fashion) to stow away on a wagon train. I was awed by the courage of youngsters like the Sager children who became orphans once when their parents died, on the trail in 1844, and again a few years later when Narcissa and Marcus Whitman, who had adopted them, were killed. Many of the children's writings begin with "I can see," or "I can still see", then they paint the most vivid pictures of "shimmering heat waves", dark masses of buffalo", and "empty plains with their rolling land waves". They were incredibly literate and poetic in their descriptions. I spent 37 years in public school work, as a teacher, and later as a counselor, and it is my opinion that this book should be found in every school library, both elementary and secondary. Many adults will also love it, as I do. My hat is off to Mrs. Kimball for a job well done. Richard Rogers, Ed.D

Written for children; interesting for adults, also.

"I can see why this book won three awards. I read "Stories of Young Pioneers, In Their Own Words" in one night. It is a fabulous, swift-moving read. Favorite things about the book: The history of black pioneers: seeing the Native American "threat" into perspective, and the profiles of individuals such as Welborn Beeson, Lizzy Flake, and the Donner, Reed Children. I wonder how much time the author spent finding a photograph of a black pioneer, (Lizzy Flake) I was grateful for the photos of the landmarks, especially Independence Rock, which would have been difficult to picture without the photo. I felt like I was there on the trail. I appreciated how the author incorporated all three trails--The Oregon, California, and Mormon Trails--and that the illustrations enhance the history by putting us there on the trail. She must have had to pare down mounds and mounds of material to create an exciting narrative. I wanted more, more: I wanted to know more about the brave youngsters like eight year old Nicolean Bertlesen who had to stop in St. Louis and earn money to complete her journey, and those like the orphaned Sager children who were adopted by Marcus and Narcissa Whitman; and orphaned again when the Whitmans were killed by the Cayuse. This author has done a great job getting a variety of quotes and using original quotes from those outstanding young pioneers.

Young Pioneers in Their Own Words Rocks!

My mom got me this book and I loved it. I couldn't stop reading it even when I was jumping on the trampoline. I thought it was great to read about kids like me, who were pioneers and had to go through such hard times. My favorite story in the book is one where they took some cows across a river and they had to seperate the moms and the babies and they didn't know how they would get them both across, but the moms and babies wouldn't leave each other and just swam across to stay together. What I liked most is learning how much these kids had to do on their own and how grown up they were. They worked just as much as the adults and some of them even had to take care of their families when their moms and dads died. I thought it was great that this book was made up from things these kids actually wrote and told about, so you could tell what they thought. I wish there were more books about how kids really are and what it was like to live in a different time. I think everyone should read this book.
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