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Paperback Covered Wagon Women, Volume 4: Diaries and Letters from the Western Trails, 1852: The California Trail Book

ISBN: 080327291X

ISBN13: 9780803272910

Covered Wagon Women, Volume 4: Diaries and Letters from the Western Trails, 1852: The California Trail

(Book #4 in the Covered Wagon Women Series)

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

In 1852 a record number of women helped keep the wagons rolling over the perilous western trails. The fourth volume of Covered Wagon Women is devoted to families headed for California that year. Diaries and letters of six pioneer women describe the rigors en route, trailside celebrations and tragedies, the scourge of cholera, and encounters with the Indians.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Same ole same ole

I loved the first 3 books and i was looking forward to buying and reading the whole series, but by the time i read 4 i was totally bored and burnt out. The diaries are tedious and contain little more then "Found food, no water" "can see indians off about a mile, did not come to our camp" Hundreds of pages of this and little more. i actually prefer the letters home then the diaries. They offer a more compressed form and seem to mention interesting facts and not just the mundane. I also prefer to hear more about what happened to them once they reach California and Oregon not how they got there. i dont think i will be buying another in this series unless it contains more of the letters and less of the diaries.

Courage, spirit and determination

More adventurous accounts from the diaries and letters of six westward women. Braving the dangers of river fordings, cholera, fatigue, food and water shortages, etc. these women write with much ambience and flavor of their trail experiences.Seventeen year-old Eliza Ann McAuley is extremely descriptive and articulate of day to day activities along the way: remedies for cattle after drinking alkali water; ferry boats sinking; intolerable weather; constructing a makeshift road, later charging a toll to increase income; they even had a 'pet' antelope for six weeks while venturing west.Francis Sawyer was another very descriptive writer of daily occurences: first of all, her party traveled at a remarkable speed, many times averaging over thirty miles a day; depredations by Digger Indians along the Humboldt River; insufferable weather conditions, etc.Marriett Foster Cummings shoots from the hip when describing people (such as Jim Bridger and Brigham Young), places and incidents while crossing the country.Lucy Rutledge Cooke's letters read like a novel: very sincere, compassionate and composed in her writing style.These Covered Wagon series of books are an insightful look into our past and give the reader a sense of respect and connectedness to our yesteryears.

Good account of women on the trail west

The way these people had to live is almost unbelivabl.The hardships and the frustrations were real.
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