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Matt Field on the Santa Fe Trail

Matt Field on the Santa Fe Trail
Author: Matthew C. Field
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 372
Release: 1995
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780806127163

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In 1839 a journalist for the New Orleans Picayune, Matthew C. Field, joined a company of merchants and tourists headed west on the Santa Fe Trail. Leaving Independence, Missouri, early in July "with a few wagons and a carefree spirit," Field recorded his vivid impressions of travel westward on the Santa Fe Trail and, on the return trip, eastward along the Cimarron Route. Written in verse in his journal and in eighty-five articles later published in the Picayune, Field’s observations offer the modern reader a unique glimpse of life in the settlements of Mexico and on the Santa Fe Trail.


The Santa Fe Trail in American History

The Santa Fe Trail in American History
Author: William Reynolds Sanford
Publisher: Enslow Publishing
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2000
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780766013483

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Presents a history of the trail that became an important commercial route to the southwestern United States during the 1800s.


Bound for Santa Fe

Bound for Santa Fe
Author: Stephen Garrison Hyslop
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 540
Release: 2001-12-31
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780806133898

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The political, military, and social importance of the Santa Fe trail is revealed in this lively historical account of one of the most important roads in American history.


The Santa Fe Trail

The Santa Fe Trail
Author: Colorado Historical Society
Publisher:
Total Pages: 136
Release: 1992
Genre: History
ISBN:

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The Santa Fe Trail survives today in ghostly wagon-wheel ruts that mark the landscape of Kansas, Oklahoma, Colorado, and New Mexico-reminders of a unique highway of commerce between the United States and Mexico, which has recently been granted historical trail status. The enduring story of the Santa Fe Trail, however, has been its central role in the history of the United States and Mexico and in the life of the land between them-the American Southwest. The Santa Fe Trail: New Perspectives is an informative collection of essays highlighting new directions of inquiry into one of the most important overland trade routes of the nineteenth century. Topics features in the essays include poetry of the trail, Bent's Fort and Manifest Destiny, women on the trail, the origin and development of the Mountain Branch, the role of New Mexican traders, buried treasure legends, and more. Contributors include Marc Simmons, David Lavender, Sandra Myres, Janet Lecompte, Barton Barbour, Daniel Muldoon, David Sandoval, David Dary, and Jack Rittenhouse.


Over the Santa Fe Trail to Mexico

Over the Santa Fe Trail to Mexico
Author: Rowland Willard
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Total Pages: 281
Release: 2015-10-15
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0806153288

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One of the first Anglo-Americans to record their travels to New Mexico, Dr. Rowland Willard (1794–1884) journeyed west on the Santa Fe Trail in 1825 and then down the Camino Real into Mexico, taking notes along the way. This edition of the young physician’s travel diaries and subsequent autobiography, annotated by New Mexico Deputy State Librarian Joy L. Poole, is a rich historical source on the two trails and the practice of medicine in the 1820s. Few Americans knew much about New Mexico when Willard set out on his journey from St. Charles, Missouri, where he had recently completed a medical apprenticeship. The growing commerce with the Southwest presented opportunities for the ambitious doctor. On his first day travelling the plains of the Santa Fe Trail, he met the mountain man Hugh Glass, who regaled Willard with stories of his wilderness experiences. Conducting a physical examination of Glass, Dr. Willard provided the only eye witness medical account of Glass’s deformities resulting from a grizzly bear attack. Willard referred to the mountain man as Father Glass, a testimony to his age. He visited Santa Fe, practiced medicine in Taos, then traveled south to Chihuahua, arriving during a measles epidemic. Willard treated patients in Mexico for two years before returning to Missouri in 1828. Willard’s narrative challenges long-accepted assumptions about the exact routes taken by pack trains on the Santa Fe Trail. It also provides thrilling glimpses of a landscape densely populated with wildlife. The doctor describes “a great theater of nature,” with droves of elk and buffalo, and “wolf and antelope skipping in every direction.” With his traveling companions he hunted buffalo by crawling after them on all fours, afterward making jerky out of bison meat and boats out of their hides. Willard also details his medical practice, offering a revealing view of physicians’ operating practices in a time when sanitation and anesthesia were rare. The Santa Fe Trail and Camino Real took Willard on the journey of a lifetime. This account recalls the early days of the Santa Fe Trail trade and westward American migration, when a doctor from Missouri could cross paths with mountain men, traders, Mexican clergymen, and government officials on their way to new opportunities.


The Santa Fe Trail

The Santa Fe Trail
Author: David Dary
Publisher: University Press of Kansas
Total Pages: 384
Release: 2012-08-23
Genre: History
ISBN: 0700618708

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