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The Great Salt Lake Trail, by Colonel Henry Inman, Late Assistant
Quartermaster, United States Army Author of The Old Santa Fe Trail, Etc.,
and Colonel William F. Cody, "Buffalo Bill", Late Chief of Scouts
Published: New York, The Macmillan Company, 1898
Includes stories of trading posts, Mormons, pony express, Indian tribes,
Blackfeet folk-lore, 1863 Sioux War, Buffalo Bill, Custer, Kit Carson,
Union Pacific Railroad, frontier and pioneer life, and more
THE GREAT SALT LAKE TRAIL
By COLONEL HENRY INMAN
Late Assistant Quartermaster, United States Army Author of The Old Santa
Fe Trail, Etc.
And COLONEL WILLIAM F. CODY, "Buffalo Bill"
Late Chief of Scouts
New York
The Macmillan Company
1898
Full-page plates by F. Colburn Clarke
Initials and tailpieces by Thompson Willing.
CONTENTS:
PREFACE
CHAPTER I. EXPLORING EXPEDITIONS
CHAPTER II. THE OLD TRAPPERS
CHAPTER III. JIM BECKWOURTH
CHAPTER IV. CAPTAIN SUBLETTE'S EXPEDITION
CHAPTER V. TRADING-POSTS AND THEIR STORIES
CHAPTER VI. THE MORMONS
CHAPTER VII. MOUNTAIN MEADOWS MASSACRE
CHAPTER VIII. THE PONY EXPRESS
CHAPTER IX. THE STAGE ROUTE TO THE PACIFIC
CHAPTER X. SCENERY ON THE TRAIL
CHAPTER XI. INDIAN TRIBES ON THE TRAIL
CHAPTER XII. SIOUX AND THEIR TRADITIONS
CHAPTER XIII. THE CROWS
CHAPTER XIV. FOLK-LORE OF BLACKFEET
CHAPTER XV. SIOUX WAR OF 1863
CHAPTER XVI. BUFFALO BILL'S ADVENTURES
CHAPTER XVII. MASSACRE OF CUSTER'S COMMAND
CHAPTER XVIII. IN A TRAPPER'S BIVOUAC
CHAPTER XIX. KIT CARSON ON THE YELLOWSTONE
CHAPTER XX. BUILDING THE UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD
FOOTNOTES
PREFACE
There are seven historic trails crossing the great plains of the interior
of the continent, all of which for a portion of their distance traverse
the geographical limits of what is now the prosperous commonwealth of
Kansas.
None of these primitive highways, however, with the exception of that
oldest of all to far-off Santa Fe, has a more stirring story than that
known as the Salt Lake Trail.
Over this historical highway the Mormons made their lonely Hegira to the
valley of that vast inland sea. On its shores they established a city,
marvellous in its conception, and a monument to the ability of man to
overcome almost insuperable obstacles—the product of a faith equal to that
which inspired the crusader to battle to the death for the possession of
the Holy Sepulchre.
Over this route, also, were made those world-renowned expeditions by
Fremont, Stansbury, Lander, and others of lesser fame, to the heart of the
Rocky Mountains, and beyond, to the blue shores of the Pacific Ocean.
Over the same trackless waste the Pony Express executed those marvellous
feats in annihilating distance, and the once famous Overland Stage
lumbered along through the seemingly interminable desert of sage-brush and
alkali dust—avant-courieres of the telegraph and the railroad.
One of the collaborators of this volume, Colonel W. F. Cody ("Buffalo
Bill"), began his remarkable career, as a boy, on the Salt Lake Trail, and
laid the foundations of a life which has made him a conspicuous American
figure at the close of this century.
It is not the intention of the authors of this work to deal in the
slightest manner with Mormonism as a religion. An immense mass of
literature on the subject is to be found in every public library, both in
its defence and in its condemnation. The latter preponderates, and often
seems to be inspired by an inexcusable ingenuity in exaggeration.
Of the trials of the Mormons during their toilsome march and their
difficulties with the government during the Civil War, this work will
treat in a limited way, but its scope is to present the story of the Trail
in the days long before the building of a railroad was believed to be
possible. It will deal with the era of the trapper, the scout, the savage,
and the passage of emigrants to the gold fields of California—when the
only route was by the overland trail—and with the adventures which marked
the long and weary march.
Great Salt Lake Trail - End of Introduction
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