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Paperback On the Santa Fe Trail Book

ISBN: 0700603166

ISBN13: 9780700603169

On the Santa Fe Trail

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

'One of the great strengths of this collection is its diversity; included are writings by an army major, Indian agent, German immigrant woman, and a New Mexican drover.... These travelers offer a wide... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Impressions of the Santa Fe Trail

The journals collected in "On the Santa Fe Trail," arranged chronologically, detail the breadth of experiences travelers had on the Santa Fe Trail. Some were plainly long and boring, others ended tragically. Simmons introduces each journal helpfully. Some of the writers even had a little bit of humor to add. It's a short book and a good starting point for people who want to get an idea of what traveling on the Santa Fe Trail was like.

Diaries of the Trail in Short Stories - and timeless "inequity" Cont'd.

This is a small book, and the history within the covers is a collection of diaries from different persons, including one Mexican peasant - Jose Librado Gurule - who found someone (or someone found him) to write down his memories from the hard-working teamster and laborer aspect. His patient people were virtual slaves of the landmaster, a wealthy Mexican sheepman - Jose Leandro Perea - (who used simple "debt owed" rather than "ownership of" to control his workers, who were in reality life-long indentured servants, never seeming to remove themselves from the debit side of his ledger. This trip was to be no exception to that idea, but rather an extension of it for most. Perea also had a contract to help build a railroad, as well as setting up a frontier supply store, so it's likely he had a lot more in mind for the men to further his monetary benefit once they arrived out there. Since they paid for their own clothing (debit to the rapidly expanding ledger of Senor Parea) and other incidentals for the privilege of working for him, he quite possibly built the whole railroad with what they owed him for the Santa Fe Trip to supply the stuff he would ultimate sell back to them. It would also appear that all Jose got out of this was a new suit of clothes, which he did manage to do with money he "took with him", which had been his goal - his only goal aspired to - against the risks of the journey. I thought his accounting of the Travails of the Trail to be one of the most interesting and effective, since they were from a different culture; which, though mingling on the same journey with the white drovers, wealthier wagon masters, including his own Mexican boss, was nevertheless a world apart though they moved and lived through the same one each day. Each set of eyes beheld the journey individually; each set of circumstances shaped the work load and the end result; but each life was risked in common every day. It was a very, very good read and is worth adding to your Southwest History shelf. Four stars only because of it's short length in relation to it's overall worth, which was vastly important from the individual accounting aspect of it, and deserved more accumulation of the material from other sources and people. I'm sure there were more diaries out there that could have been found but were not and therefore, never added to an important work like this.

Bringing the riders of the Santa Fe Trail to Life

I knew I would be spending part of the summer living in raton, NM exactly on the Santa Fe Trail so I thought I'd try this book. I later found out from my brother in Santa Fe that the author is an extremely respected local journalist and historian.the book are monographs or case studies of some of the people who lived and often died making the long trek. It was sort of an expressway of its day, the hardship and speed depending on whether or not you had the political clout ot have US Cavalry troops as escorts.Anyone who travels anywhere near the Trail, or lives there, should donate this to local schools and libraries.
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