Ø Thousands of settlers followed
trails through the West to gain land and a chance to make a fortune.
Ø This migration brought Americans to
the territories that became New Mexico, Oregon, and Utah.
ONE AMERICAN’S STORY
The mountain man Jedediah Smith was
leading an expedition to find a route through the Rocky Mountains when a grizzly bear attacked. The
bear seized Smith’s head in its mouth, shredded his face, and partially tore
off one ear. Smith’s men chased the bear away. Jim Clyman
recalled the scene.
A VOICE FROM THE PAST
I asked [Smith] what was best. He said, “One or two go for water
and if you have a needle and thread get it out and sew up my wounds around my
head.” . . . I told him I could do nothing for his ear. “Oh, you must try to
stitch it up some way or other,” said he. Then I put in my needle and stitched
it through and through.
Jim Clyman, quoted in The West, by
Geoffrey C. Ward
Ten days after this attack, Smith was ready to continue
exploring. The following spring, he found what he was looking for—a pass
through the Rocky Mountains.
Jedediah Smith was one of the daring fur trappers and
explorers known as mountain men. The mountain men opened up the West by
discovering the best trails through the Rockies. Later, thousands of pioneers
followed these trails.
Mountain Men and the Rendezvous
Mountain men
survived by being tough and resourceful. They spent most of the year alone, trapping small
animals such as beavers. Easterners
wanted beaver furs to make the men's hats that were in fashion at the time. To
obtain furs, mountain men roamed the Great Plains and the Far West, the regions between the Mississippi River and the Pacific Ocean, and set traps in icy mountain
streams. Because of their adventures,
mountain men such as Jedediah Smith and Jim Beckwourth became famous as rugged
loners. However, they were not as independent as the legends have portrayed
them. Instead, they were connected economically to the businessmen who bought
their furs.
One businessman, William Henry Ashley, created a trading
arrangement called the rendezvous system.
Under this system, individual trappers came to a prearranged site for a
rendezvous with traders from the east.
The trappers bought supplies from those traders and paid them in furs. The
rendezvous took place every summer from 1825 to 1840. In that year, silk hats
replaced beaver hats as the fashion, and the fur trade died out.
Mountain Men Open the West
During the height of the fur trade, mountain men worked some
streams so heavily that they killed off the animals. This forced the trappers
to search for new streams where beaver lived. The mountain men's explorations
provided Americans with some of the earliest firsthand knowledge of the Far West. This knowledge, and the trails the
mountain men blazed, made it possible for later pioneers to move west. For example, thousands of pioneers used South Pass, the wide valley through the Rockies that Jedediah Smith had publicized.
Smith learned of this pass, in present-day Wyoming, from Native Americans. Unlike the
high northern passes used by Lewis and Clark, South Pass was low, so snow did not block it
as often as it blocked higher passes. Also, because South Pass was wide and less steep, wagon
trails could run through it.
Smith wrote to his brother that he wanted to help
people in need: "It is for this
that I go for days without eating, and
am pretty well satisfied if I can gather a few roots, a few snails, . . . a piece of horseflesh, or a
fine roasted dog."
The Lure of the West
Few of the people who went west shared Smith's noble motive.
To many, the West with its vast stretches of land offered a golden chance to
make money. The Louisiana Purchase had doubled the size of the United States, and some Americans wanted to take
the land away from Native Americans who inhabited this territory.
People called land speculators bought huge areas of land. To
speculate means to buy something in the hope that it will increase in value. If
land value did go up, speculators divided their land holdings into smaller
sections. They made great profits by selling those sections to the thousands of
settlers who dreamed of owning their own farms.
Manufacturers and merchants soon followed the settlers west. They hoped to earn money by making and selling
items that farmers needed. Other people made the trip to find jobs or to escape
people to whom they owed money.

The Trail to Santa Fe
Traders also traveled west in search of markets. After Mexico gained independence from Spain in 1821, it opened its borders to
American traders, whom Spain had kept out. In response, the Missouri trader William Becknell set out
with hardware, cloth, and china for Santa Fe, capital of the Mexican province of New Mexico. By doing so, he opened the Santa Fe Trail, which led from Missouri to Santa Fe. Once in Santa Fe, he made a large profit because the
New Mexicans were eager for new merchandise.
When Becknell returned to Missouri weeks later, a curious crowd met
him. One man picked up one of Becknell's bags and
slit it open with a knife. As gold and silver coins spilled onto the street,
the onlookers gasped. The news spread that New Mexico was a place where traders could
become rich. The following spring, Becknell headed to Santa Fe again. This time he loaded his
trade goods into covered wagons, which Westerners called prairie schooners.
Their billowing white canvas tops made them look like schooners, or sailing
ships.
Becknell could not haul wagons over the
mountain pass he had used on his first trip to Santa Fe. Instead, he found a cutoff, a
shortcut that avoided steep slopes but passed through a deadly desert to the
south. As his traders crossed the burning sands, they ran out of water. Crazed
by thirst, they lopped off mules' ears and killed their dogs to drink the
animals' blood. Finally, the men found a stream. The water saved them from
death, and they reached Santa Fe.
Becknell returned home with another huge
profit. Before long, hundreds of traders
and prairie schooners braved the cutoff to make the 800-mile journey from Missouri to New Mexico each year.
Oregon Fever
Hundreds of settlers
also began migrating west on the Oregon Trail, which ran from Independence, Missouri, to the Oregon Territory. The first whites to cross the
continent to Oregon were missionaries, such as Marcus
and Narcissa Whitman in 1836. At that time, the United States and Britain were locked in an argument about
which country owned Oregon. To the Whitmans’ great
disappointment, they made few converts among the Native Americans. However,
their glowing reports of Oregon's rich land began to attract other
American settlers. Amazing stories
spread about Oregon. The sun always shone there. Wheat
grew as tall as a man. One tale claimed that pigs were "running about, . . . round
and fat, and already cooked, with knives and forks sticking in them so you can cut off a slice whenever
you are hungry." Such stories tempted many people to make the 2,000-mile
journey to Oregon. In 1843, nearly 1,000 people
traveled from Missouri to Oregon.
The next year, twice as many came. "The Oregon Fever has broken
out,” observed a Boston newspaper, "and is now
raging."
One Family Heads West
The experiences of the Sager family
show how difficult the trail could be.
In 1844, Henry Sager, his wife, and six children left Missouri to find cheap, fertile land in Oregon. They had already moved four times
in the past four years. Henry's daughter Catherine explained her family's
moves.
ONE AMERICAN’S STORY
“Father was one of those restless
men who are not content to remain in one place long at a time. . . . [He] had
been talking of going to Texas. But mother, hearing much said
about the healthfulness of Oregon, preferred to go there.”
Catherine Sager, quoted in The West, by Geoffrey
C. Ward
The Oregon Trail was dangerous, so pioneers joined wagon trains. They knew
their survival would depend on cooperation. Before setting out, the wagon train
members agreed on rules and elected leaders to enforce them. Even so, life on the trail was full of
hardship. The Sagers had barely begun the trip when
Mrs. Sager gave birth to her seventh child. Two months later, nine-year-old
Catherine fell under a moving wagon, which crushed her left leg. Later,
"camp fever" killed both of the Sager
parents.
Even though the Sager
parents had died, the other families in the train cooperated to help the Sager
orphans make it to Oregon. There, the Whitmans agreed to
adopt them. When Narcissa met them, Catherine
recalled, "We thought as we shyly looked at her that she was the prettiest
woman we had ever seen."
The Mormon Trail
While most pioneers went west in search of wealth, one group
migrated for religious reasons. The Mormons, who settled Utah, were members of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Joseph Smith had
founded this church in upstate New York in 1830. The Mormons lived in close
communities, worked hard, shared their goods, and prospered. The Mormons, though, also made enemies. Some
people reacted angrily to the Mormons' teachings. They saw the Mormon practice
of polygamy-allowing a man to have more than one wife at a time-as immoral.
Others objected to their holding property in common. In 1844, an anti-Mormon
mob in Illinois killed Smith.

Brigham Young, the
next Mormon leader, moved his people out of the United States. His destination was Utah, then part of Mexico. In this desolate region, he hoped his people would be
left to follow their faith in peace. In
1847, about 1,600 Mormons followed part of the Oregon Trail to Utah.
There they built a new settlement by the Great Salt Lake. Because Utah has little rainfall, the Mormons
had to work together to build dams and canals. These structures captured water
in the hills and carried it to the farms in the valleys below. Through teamwork,
they made their desert homeland bloom.
Next comes Texas
Take out a blank sheet of paper,
number it 1-10, you may use your NOTES from today only.
Write the answers only to the
following questions: Hold onto you paper until everyone is finished.
1.
The Fur trappers and explores that
helped opened up the west were known as ___________men.
2.
______________________was a mountain
man who helped open op the west by finding a pass through the Rocky Mountains.
3. ______________________was an African American who discovered a mountain pass that became the route into California.
4. Land ______________________bought huge areas of land made great profits by selling the land to the
settlers who dreamed of owning their own farms.
5. The ____________________________had doubled the size of the United States.
6. The Santa Fe Trail, led from Independence ______________________to Santa Fe. (New Mexico)
7. The ______________________Trail, led from Independence Missouri to Oregon territory.
8. The first whites to cross the continent to Oregon were ______________________,
9. After Joseph Smith was killed by a mob in 1844, ______________________became the new leader of the
Mormons.
10. The ______________________Trail led form Navuoo, Illinois to Salt Lake City. (Utah)