I live on the Canadian prairies in the year 2020. I look at our winters and I can't even begin to imagine how brutal it must have been to not have modern amenities like a warm car or heated home. Those people were hardcore (not that they knew it at the time).
I grew up in the Willamette Valley of Oregon. My High School friend still had his Great-Great-Grandmother's trunk carried the whole way. They left their piano on the prairie to keep it. BTW, Oregon is absolutely an Eden-like Paradise.
Had an Oregon Trail game in my 4th grade class when we were learning about it. Basically played like a board game over a period of weeks. When my group got our settlers to the Rocky Mountains, winter was looming and we were told to either try and cross or wait it out on the East side of the pass. I asked the teacher if we could try sending the men across, leaving the women and children behind to cross in spring. Got approved and it worked out great! Come spring the men had supplies and a rest stop built on the far side and the women and children made it to it safely.
Growing up in East Oregon, it was always entertaining bringing out of town guests to see the Oregon Trail because they always have this idea of historical preservation grandeur. It inevitably leads to the disappointment of seeing a slight ditch stretching across an alfalfa field.
@@youngrevival9715 Honestly, the main tracks aren't terribly prominent whatsoever. It was a bunch of wagons rolling across the same patch of land and leaving some dents. In the flatter regions they can farm, there will be some markers denoting its existence. If you go out into the rougher and hillier regions, the wagon ruts are more likely to still exist because it's harder to get a plow through. Since the wagon trains went through the most passable terrain, it ends up being the same terrain used by modern folks; in a way it is living history. If you happen to find yourself in Eastern Oregon, I'd recommend seeking out Well's Spring and Fourmile Canyon. They aren't terribly prominent, but serve as permanent reminders of the dry wilderness the settlers faced when they within reach of the Willamette Valley.
I'm sitting in Portland, Oregon, watching this and thinking of my great-great-great-grandmother, who walked behind a wagon all the way to Oregon as a child. Without that track, I wouldn't exist. The people whose lives had to crossed in order to create me would not have met without that trail.
I love the story of the Oregon trail. I live on the eastern Oregon side of the trail. There are markers with stories of people settling where our parks are. We are right before the blue mountains. I couldn't imagine crossing those on foot in a wagon. Amazing what people can do when they set their mind to survive and live free.
I live close to the Applegate Trail that crosses the Warner Mountains (CA) and which is one portion of the overall Oregon trails. It is astonishing the effort the pioneers exercised getting the wagons over the eastern side of Fandango Pass.
The trail at least many parts of it, are not "long gone" you can now drive much of it, it is identified with historical markers and every year people even walk and drive wagons over parts of it. In years with particular historical significance, large groups participate in reenacting the trek, or parts of it. Thanks for covering this piece of geography and history.
The trail goes through my sister and brother-in-laws ranch in eastern Oregon, it's hard not to think of these stories of incredible hardship and death through desert, hellish terrain, and severe weather every time I see it when visiting there. My sister said it took her a couple of years of going by it daily to be able to 'tune it out'. Although it is amazing to still be able to see the wagon ruts after all these years.
Being from Oregon, I remember doing a whole class unit on it. We had families/groups and once a week would meet up to make progress on our journey No one made it all the way
I never played the original but got to play Oregon Trail 2, the sequel growing up. Interestingly enough, I was able to beat it once I understood more about needed supplies and managing food from Boy Scouts (and that I stopped using all my ammo at the first buffalo stampede. Nothing like shooting 836 pounds of meat only to be able to carry back 73!)
_The Organ Trail:_ When the westward journey is less about golden fields, and more about chainsaw windows, fighting though zombie hordes, and keeping LaserFrog from ruining all the mufflers.
Good Video. Some of my Great Grandparents used that trail. One man and his wife come from Aalborg Denmark. He landed not in New York but rather New Orleans. He come up the Mississippi River to the Oregon/California/Utah.trail and ended up in Utah. Others of my ancestors also used the trail.
I have to say this man. I've been absolutely hooked! I have a hunger for more knowledge of history an geography. From your top tenz to today I found out. I absolutely love your content. Ive nearly watched all your videos from all your channels. The way you engage with your audience is nothing to just look over. You do an amazing job, an I look forward to seeing more of your work. Even business blaze, an mega projects are a must watch for me! You an your team do a phenomenal job! An to me this is definitely not a job (however there is much work involved) but an experience if you will! Keep up the great work!
Hello from Oregon! As a girl, I loved the history of the Oregon Trail. My mom even hand sewed at least two pioneer costumes for me. I still really love 19th century history.
1:35 - Chapter 1 - Heading west 5:35 - Chapter 2 - Oregon fever 8:50 - Chapter 3 - Westward ho ! 12:10 - Mid roll ads 13:15 - Chapter 4 - A day in the life 16:55 - Chapter 5 - Death & disaster 20:05 - Chapter 6 - The trail of dreams
I would actually love an RDR2 like remake of Oregon Trail, you could include all the classic features like hunting, river crossings, diseases, etc... all upgraded to modern gameplay and graphics. You could also add a whole bunch of other historical details during the journey like negotiating with/fighting off Native tribes. I’d definitely play that :P
@@TheSenorpierre 1883? Would not the iron horse 🐴🐎 have made journeying West more safe and faster than covered wagon trails by that point in the history of migrating?
@@jamesfracasse8178 not really, because the railroads didnt go to all portions of the country at the time so they'd still end up having to trek many extremely dangerous miles after departing the train if they could even afford a train ticket. The main saving grace in 1883 would be the fact that the wild west was nearly not so wild having towns popping up to take advantage of people traveling west and around mines, thus having places to stop and resupply/rest.
We moved from Maryland to Washington State. That trip gave me a new respect for people that traveled to the Pacific Northwest way back when. I never realized how insanely diverse and suddenly changing a trip like that becomes. Back in the horse and buggy days some of what we encountered would have doomed us. It took us 4 days in the middle of January to make it. That trip used to take months of back breaking work and losing a few along the way.
Haha yeah, we had it on the school computers back when I was a kid Snakebites, dysentery, fording the river The mega 64 parody video is great, trying to barter bacon to a swap meet guy and dying of smallpox
I'm glad to know that most of the settlers made it through all the way! I never made it when I played Oregon Trail so I wondered how California got to being so populated.
Guernsey Wyoming, is where those wagon wheel ruts are. The place where all the settlers carved their names is only a couple of miles away. It was cool. Nice little town.
Wasn't there also a trail that involved crying Indians? I think they were crying cause they also got dysentery, but no access to the strong Charmin that the whities had up in Oregon.
My 3rd Great Grandma came out on the Oregon Trail. I still have the family Bible that made the trip. There was a smaller group of wagons ahead of them and another small group behind them that were both attacked by Natives. When you think about it it really was not that long ago.
“For better and for worse”. The right sentiment and subtle, but very effective, word replacement chosen to describe the historical effects of the topic and to close out the episode.
I remember when I was learning about the Oregon Trail in elementary school that my teacher had the class play a giant boardgame about it. We were all divided into little caravans and sent through a gameboard of the Oregon Trail. I can't remember much of it now, but my caravan ended up with the most children at the end with fourteen of them. The one I remember the most of these fourteen children was an Andre the Giant of a baby that managed to fall out of the wagon and loose a leg to one of the wagon wheels. Still survived the trip despite that.
One of the main branches of the Oregon Trail is just a few miles north of me. There's a grave of an unknown person up on a bluff overlooking the Snake River, it is a bit of a reminder of the hazards that people took to make this trek. I guess death was a bit more common in people's experiences back then as well. I can't imagine people now having to bury a family member in the middle of nowhere and then continue on with their journey.
I'm a native Oregonian. ( Living in Cambodian now) Its a beautiful state! I miss the beautiful nature alot. Thank you for pronouncing the name properly! 😊😍
While driving from Michigan to California, I had just entered the mountains and what appeared to be a snow storm when I had a car problem. I pulled over at the next exit/gas station, and my stomach sank when I read the street sign: *DONNER PASS RD*
U poop till u die, especially with something like cholera, the bacteria creates toxins that damage the water retention and absorption cells in the small intestine, so water just pours into the small intestine causing severe diarrhea that can quickly lead to death by dehydration
I am a member of the LDS church (nicknamed Mormons) and I have ancestors that moved west in the 1850s to Utah, for a great length traveling along the Oregon trail. It's awesome to read their journals and see how they dealt with the difficulties and excitements of the travel. Thanks for the great video Simon and company!
I walked a short part of the Oregon Trail. It's so cool seeing the wagon wheel carvings in the rocks and the old graffiti. It was sort of a spiritual experience just being there.
A few more trails to add: Shawnee, Dodge City (Western), California, Goodnight (and Goodnight Loving), Handers, Virginia City, Badlands, Deadwood, Green River, Old Spanish and Cheyenne
The Oregon Trail, and the westward migration overland, created political and ideological divisions which persist to this day. Colin Woodard explained this in his book, American Nations. The wealthy easterners who could afford to do so went by ship around Cape Horn, and established the nation Woodard labeled "The Left Coast". The people who traveled the Oregon Trail overland established the nation Woodard labeled The Far West. These divisions can be seen today in the liberal politics of the west coast, and the conservative politics that dominate inland North America.
Grew up in Walla Walla, near Whitman Mission, where Marcus and Narcissa Whitman lived, and where they were killed during the Whitman Massacre. My family came across on the Oregon Trail and founded Moscow Idaho and Weston Oregon. The family donated their diaries a couple decades ago.
Fantastic video, as always. I thought I knew a lot about the Oregon Trail, but this gave me plenty more to store in my "vault." I'd love to see another trail tackled by this channel. The Appalachian Trail.
I can walk to where the Santa Fe, California, and Oregon trails started. In fact Santacalagon days is celebrated in Independence, Mo every Labor Day weekend(Friday-Monday).
I want to congratulate you for pronouncing both "Oregon" and "Willamette Valley" perfectly correct. This is where I am from and you would not believe how many Americans cannot say those words correctly to save their life!
Of course he says it correctly its a word spoken in english, and he is english we unlike the americans understand how certain placements of certain letters in a word should be said because its our language you guys adopted it 🤦♂️🤣
@@stanleyhipkiss4690 LOL! What a stupid thing to say. Those words are literally not english, they are native American names. Nothing remotely british about it. What a moron!
@@ryanroberts1104 considering its origin is not known and is widley believed to be taken from the french canadian word ouragan meaning storm or hurricane but translated into english id say your the idiot
@@stanleyhipkiss4690 "because its our language you guys adopted it" You're stupid. There is no other way to say it, you are just entirely, 110% incorrect.
There's something great about how the wagon wheel indents can still be seen. It's a semi-permanent mark left by the people who paved the way to what we now have as a country. I just wish everyone could see the beauty of human triumph and look forward to achieve greatness. Some would say I romanticize human progression, but god damn isn't it the most beautiful thing?
Much of the Oregon Trail has been improved into modern roads. I live about a 5 minute walk from a segment of it that's now a street. When I was a kid, you could see it in places where it crossed the main road. Actually, it was very wide in places, as wide as possible, so that the wagons could spread out and not eat one another's dust. I imagine it's still possible to find artifacts along the route in places.
Hi Simon! I’m a big fan of yours and all e channels you do narrations for! Just wanted to say, as someone who was born and raised in the Columbia River Gorge (Hood River, Oregon to be exact), I liked seeing the picture your team posted at the 7:43 mark! The Gorge is beautiful and full of history! Thanks for covering the Oregon Trail! I learned some new things! Keep up the great work guys!
The other reason they walked rather rode in the wagons was that it saved the strength of the Oxen, you know 300 lbs less two humans might mean a few more miles out of the oxen,
What blows my mind is how much the oxen eat. I forget the stats, but I think if you go only a few tens of miles then the oxen eat everything they've carried. It's why so many colonial military expeditions moved so slowly
In 1992, PBS made an excellent American Experience documentary episode on the Donner party. It’s one of the most hauntingly moving pieces I’ve seen. It was on TH-cam for awhile but I can’t find it anywhere anymore.....
This is really cool some of my family probably took the Oregon Trail I could probably find out who but I’d have to talk to the Mormon half of my family I don’t wanna
An episode on, basically, my father's family story. T.C. Davis and Samuel T. Walters are 2 of the colorful people I am descended from. Now I live in the part of Canada that was in the map correction that made Point Roberts, USA and where I live in Surrey part of Canada.
If only those people could see their Willamette Valley now. I live here it's not great. Fun Fact: Portland is called Stumptown because, while building the city, they had to cut down so many trees to do it.
Just a detail (it's a pet peeve of mine): the "traces of wagons" in the rock are not wear marks, they are actually carved and they had to be re-carved periodically because they did wear off (they become round and widen with time). They acted as rails in hilly terrain to keep the carts on course, because the lack of inflatable rubber tires and progressive brakes made going downhill a sketchy experience, in particular when the direction is controlled by the horse and not the driver.
I was born & raised in Oregon, a stone's throw of the Willamette River. I'm 71, & have spent a lifetime studying the Oregon Trail. I've visited the Oregob Trail Museum in Baker on the Oregon/Idaho border & The End of the Oregon Trail Museum in Oregon City, among many other museums in Oregon & other museums throughout the West not dedicated specifically to the Trail. I have read & attended lectures & classes about the Trail. I have visited not only the main Trail but also the Mormom Trail, the Applegate Trai, Donner Pass & other lesser known cut-offs from the main Trail. I have a collection of more than 100 first hand accounts from journals kept by men, women & young adults while on their journeys. I have seen the wagon wheel ruts still visible on prairies on the trail. Not once have I ever read, listened to museum curators or in any other way been told the wheel ruts were cut deliberately. I have seen scars on rocks above sharp cliffs where hundreds of wagons were lowered over the edge. Where did you get the idea the ruts were deliberately cut into the Trail? I'm serious. I'd really like to know to expand my knowledge.
@@alicehardy1668 I understood it on my own when seing them in eastern France. 1) the corners are sharp, but erosion produce round things. 2) why would all the carriages have the same width and erode the same path? -> they have the same width to fit in those rails, the rails are here "first". 3) if you look at the Pompeii crosswalk ruts, they are rails centering the wheels away from the stones, whereas erosion would erode the entire width of the space between the stones and the side of the stones themselves. 4) I googled it, because I couldn't guess why they would make such an expensive carving, and found that the answer is that in hilly terrain you can't control the cart.
2:44 Imagine looking upon your newborn baby boy, thinking of all the things he's going to accomplish in life, so you go out of your way to give him the most spectacular name in the history of mankind ZEBULON MONTGOMERY PIKE Sounds like the name of a Starship Captain who's so smug that even James T Kirk wants to punch him in the face
Being from the Northwest, it baffles me how most of them made it here! The arid environment if Eastern Oregon and Washington, to the dense forests of the Western half... a journey that is harsh to replicate.
A lot of people try to understand why us Americans are the way we are. Simon I think you hit the nail on the head, we will not turn back even if it kills us.
I'm Oregonian and while my ancestors did not come here via the Oregon Trail, my husband's ancestors did travel it, but headed to California. Their reason: it was legal in California to get a divorce. Imagine traveling together for months, risking your lives, just to finally divorce each other.
Spending months together cramped up . Facing storms. Horrible conditions and having to rely on each other would either make or break a marriage fully. People that went through that without hating each other were unbreakable for the rest of their lives. But plenty learned the many flaws their partner had on that brutal trail
@@RK-cj4oc Yeah, but imagine hating a person so much, you both agree to pack up, go through months of hardship, PURELY so you can get a divorce. Nowadays, folks divorce because they didn't realize their partner likes orange juice with pulp. Back then, it was taboo, and you had to really work to get that legal separation. Funny thing is, his ancestor got his divorce and then immediately took an equally dangerous journey in a covered wagon BACK to Ohio. He didn't even stick around for the gold rush, he just desperately wanted to get out of that marriage, and California was the only place that would allow it. So it's ironic that my husband's parents (one from Ohio, the other from New York) got married in California and did NOT divorce. They just passed 50 years together. Goals!
I'm 42 and I remember being the first one to play Oregon trail in my elementary school by winning a book reading contest. The only computer in the school was in the library and it was huge and most letters were green. I just remember it looking sooo advanced. U could also play hangman, tic tac toe, and a pong type game. All were on these big floppy disks. For Oregon trail my first try was with the banker cause he started out with the most money to buy goods at the Outpost. It eventually ended with dysentery which I pictured as being explosive diarrhea. Ahh, the good days. Now here I am trying to get on the dark interwebs.
I've lived roughly 80% of my life in Oregon, the east side and I love it... This IS my HOME... I can't imagine how hard it was to omehere on a wagon train..
Another great episode idea is: The Mountain Meadows Massacre; whereby Mormons slaughter about 150 wagon train men, women and children instead of allowing them passage through their area.
From John Smith's start of the religion in New York , and continuing till they finally arrived in Utah, history recorded much bad blood between the Mormons and the rest of society. Both sides have been accused of less than humane treatment of those on the other side. It got so bad in Navoo, Illinois that the Mormons started their pilgrimage to Utah to find a land of their own. Where I live in Nebraska, we have the Oregon Trail just to our southwest where it ran through the prairie from the Blue River up to the Platte River. And the Mormon Trail is north of us where it follows the Loupe River. Further west it drops down to join the Platte River and the Oregon Trail. Just northwest of Kennesaw, Nebraska is a gravestone on the Oregon Trail. A husband lost his wife there, and did not wish to leave her grave marked only with the customary stones or cross. So he sent his belongings along with others, then he started out to Omaha, Nebraska, over a hundred miles away. This was to purchase a real headstone for her grave, which he purchased and returned to set it at her grave. He then set out to catch up with his group. Local history groups have kept the area up, and I believe they even replaced the headstone at one time because the old stone had decomposed so bad. And there was a remark about the buffalo. There is a group of private citizens and groups including nonprofits that have been working together to keep the heritage of the buffalo alive. They have worked to keep the bloodlines as pure as possible, rotate stock amoung themselves to protect genetics and health. And research and trade knowledge on health, nutrition, and anything else to help preserve the species. One herd can be seen at the Platte Valley Crane Trust museum at the I-80 Alda, Nebraska exit on the south side. I do not know if they have returned to regular hours since covid, but the buffalo is often visible in grassland on the south side of the interstate and east of the exit.
I live four blocks from the Trail. Ponderosa pines still have the rope marks from hauling the wagons up hill on the mountain above my home. Tim McCoy on wife's account.
“You have died of dysentery. What do you want on your tombstone?” Pepperoni and sausage 🍕
Delicious...
Mmmm some good pizza
It's still a 💩y situation.
NGL, Tombstone is some of the best cheap pizza of all time.
73 pounds of bison meat
I live on the Canadian prairies in the year 2020. I look at our winters and I can't even begin to imagine how brutal it must have been to not have modern amenities like a warm car or heated home. Those people were hardcore (not that they knew it at the time).
Pretty sure their 11 year olds would kick my ass
their not hard core most people are just useless and whiney and these days
i don't they traveled during the winter
at least not by choice
@@jinglebells3323 Learn to spell, and differentiate the use of basic words before writing in English, please.
Hardcord to them was an ironwood tree axle . . . .
Missed opportunity for alliteration in the title: "The Oregon Trail: Dreams, Disaster and Dysentery"
Only took about 5 seconds to stumble onto the first dysentery comment, you win!! LOL
Stephen Horrocks I thought the same thing!
I support that title with a backup of "The Oregon Trail: Dreams, Disaster, and Death by Dysentery."
Just like that crappy old PC game I loved as a kid.
Also Dashlane for his business daddy.
I grew up in the Willamette Valley of Oregon. My High School friend still had his Great-Great-Grandmother's trunk carried the whole way. They left their piano on the prairie to keep it.
BTW, Oregon is absolutely an Eden-like Paradise.
Egh… I’d debate Eden-like
@@newb431it’s a big state. Every state has crap areas. Most places aren’t.
Had an Oregon Trail game in my 4th grade class when we were learning about it. Basically played like a board game over a period of weeks. When my group got our settlers to the Rocky Mountains, winter was looming and we were told to either try and cross or wait it out on the East side of the pass. I asked the teacher if we could try sending the men across, leaving the women and children behind to cross in spring. Got approved and it worked out great! Come spring the men had supplies and a rest stop built on the far side and the women and children made it to it safely.
You would have been a good pioneer! 👍
Growing up in East Oregon, it was always entertaining bringing out of town guests to see the Oregon Trail because they always have this idea of historical preservation grandeur. It inevitably leads to the disappointment of seeing a slight ditch stretching across an alfalfa field.
Lol! Accurate. I grew up near the “End of the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center”.
So literally is not that big? Do things cross it like roads is anything preserved? I’d like to see one day
@@youngrevival9715 Honestly, the main tracks aren't terribly prominent whatsoever. It was a bunch of wagons rolling across the same patch of land and leaving some dents. In the flatter regions they can farm, there will be some markers denoting its existence. If you go out into the rougher and hillier regions, the wagon ruts are more likely to still exist because it's harder to get a plow through. Since the wagon trains went through the most passable terrain, it ends up being the same terrain used by modern folks; in a way it is living history.
If you happen to find yourself in Eastern Oregon, I'd recommend seeking out Well's Spring and Fourmile Canyon. They aren't terribly prominent, but serve as permanent reminders of the dry wilderness the settlers faced when they within reach of the Willamette Valley.
@@viridiscoyote7038 very cool. Thanks
I'm sitting in Portland, Oregon, watching this and thinking of my great-great-great-grandmother, who walked behind a wagon all the way to Oregon as a child. Without that track, I wouldn't exist. The people whose lives had to crossed in order to create me would not have met without that trail.
Im sure you would have existed without the trail. She would have settled elsewhere.
@@peepaw_of_9 Her great-great-great-grandmother wouldn't have met and had children with her great-great-great-grandfather
@@user-ok8yq6nc6x Sure they would have.. It would have just been a possibly different great-great-great-grandfather.
@TisJester PG No. You can't have a different great great great grandfather and still be the same person, that's not how genetics work.
I love the story of the Oregon trail. I live on the eastern Oregon side of the trail. There are markers with stories of people settling where our parks are. We are right before the blue mountains. I couldn't imagine crossing those on foot in a wagon. Amazing what people can do when they set their mind to survive and live free.
I live close to the Applegate Trail that crosses the Warner Mountains (CA) and which is one portion of the overall Oregon trails. It is astonishing the effort the pioneers exercised getting the wagons over the eastern side of Fandango Pass.
A part of the Old Oregon Trail ran through my hometown in Illinois.
The trail at least many parts of it, are not "long gone" you can now drive much of it, it is identified with historical markers and every year people even walk and drive wagons over parts of it. In years with particular historical significance, large groups participate in reenacting the trek, or parts of it. Thanks for covering this piece of geography and history.
The trail goes through my sister and brother-in-laws ranch in eastern Oregon, it's hard not to think of these stories of incredible hardship and death through desert, hellish terrain, and severe weather every time I see it when visiting there. My sister said it took her a couple of years of going by it daily to be able to 'tune it out'. Although it is amazing to still be able to see the wagon ruts after all these years.
I have officially become addicted to this channel. Why do I enjoy learning about so much despair and death??
Being from Oregon, I remember doing a whole class unit on it. We had families/groups and once a week would meet up to make progress on our journey
No one made it all the way
Hobo Ha! Oregonian here. With all of the Oregon Trail games always ending in disaster and death, it’s a wonder our ancestors even made it here. 😂
I beat the PC game...take a break, Simon- I GOT THIS ONE.
That game was unfair
@@kobra6660 it was supposed to be unfair and unbeatable with all your family in tow.
I was only 7 when that game was new and kept dying of m’n’f’n dysentery WTF?!?
You ledgend
I never played the original but got to play Oregon Trail 2, the sequel growing up. Interestingly enough, I was able to beat it once I understood more about needed supplies and managing food from Boy Scouts (and that I stopped using all my ammo at the first buffalo stampede. Nothing like shooting 836 pounds of meat only to be able to carry back 73!)
_The Organ Trail:_ When the westward journey is less about golden fields, and more about chainsaw windows, fighting though zombie hordes, and keeping LaserFrog from ruining all the mufflers.
Joke's on him, I ruined mine already.
I think I walked out of that movie once 😆
Good Video. Some of my Great Grandparents used that trail. One man and his wife come from Aalborg Denmark. He landed not in New York but rather New Orleans. He come up the Mississippi River to the Oregon/California/Utah.trail and ended up in Utah. Others of my ancestors also used the trail.
I have to say this man. I've been absolutely hooked! I have a hunger for more knowledge of history an geography. From your top tenz to today I found out. I absolutely love your content. Ive nearly watched all your videos from all your channels. The way you engage with your audience is nothing to just look over. You do an amazing job, an I look forward to seeing more of your work. Even business blaze, an mega projects are a must watch for me! You an your team do a phenomenal job! An to me this is definitely not a job (however there is much work involved) but an experience if you will! Keep up the great work!
Geography now is a great channel you might want to check out then. They cover every single country.
Hello from Oregon! As a girl, I loved the history of the Oregon Trail. My mom even hand sewed at least two pioneer costumes for me. I still really love 19th century history.
I live in Independence MO. I like road trips. Let's meet at the half way point :p lol
1:35 - Chapter 1 - Heading west
5:35 - Chapter 2 - Oregon fever
8:50 - Chapter 3 - Westward ho !
12:10 - Mid roll ads
13:15 - Chapter 4 - A day in the life
16:55 - Chapter 5 - Death & disaster
20:05 - Chapter 6 - The trail of dreams
I would actually love an RDR2 like remake of Oregon Trail, you could include all the classic features like hunting, river crossings, diseases, etc... all upgraded to modern gameplay and graphics. You could also add a whole bunch of other historical details during the journey like negotiating with/fighting off Native tribes. I’d definitely play that :P
I suggest the show 1883 then.
I Read this as R2D2 lol
@@TheSenorpierre 1883?
Would not the iron horse 🐴🐎 have made journeying West more safe and faster than covered wagon trails by that point in the history of migrating?
Hell to the yeah.
@@jamesfracasse8178 not really, because the railroads didnt go to all portions of the country at the time so they'd still end up having to trek many extremely dangerous miles after departing the train if they could even afford a train ticket. The main saving grace in 1883 would be the fact that the wild west was nearly not so wild having towns popping up to take advantage of people traveling west and around mines, thus having places to stop and resupply/rest.
Hey shout out Eugene Oregon, we appreciate you !
Hi!
The trail of tears would be a great video.
Yes!!! Simon needs to make that happen!
I don't think anyone had a movie camera back then.
Baha ha ha ha
They've done a couple I believe.
Seconded
Oh jesus
We moved from Maryland to Washington State. That trip gave me a new respect for people that traveled to the Pacific Northwest way back when. I never realized how insanely diverse and suddenly changing a trip like that becomes. Back in the horse and buggy days some of what we encountered would have doomed us. It took us 4 days in the middle of January to make it. That trip used to take months of back breaking work and losing a few along the way.
I never made it, always got dysentery.
Dysentery! Dysentery for everyone! I remember in middle school in 1998, To this day, that game is the hardest I have ever played.
Haha yeah, we had it on the school computers back when I was a kid
Snakebites, dysentery, fording the river
The mega 64 parody video is great, trying to barter bacon to a swap meet guy and dying of smallpox
@@KaladinVegapunk we had it on school computers too. I always remember an impending sense of doom when booting it up.
Never left, still Independence MO.
The oregon trail game or as I called it the inspiration of dark souls.
I'm glad to know that most of the settlers made it through all the way! I never made it when I played Oregon Trail so I wondered how California got to being so populated.
“You have died of dysentery” 💀 💩
@@brawndothethirstmutilator9848 🤣🤣
Simon: Oregon Trail
Me: dysentery flashbacks
"Fart has a snakebite."
"Fart has died."
Guernsey Wyoming, is where those wagon wheel ruts are. The place where all the settlers carved their names is only a couple of miles away. It was cool. Nice little town.
"It was the greatest migration the continent had ever seen"
The not-yet-nearly-extinct American bison: "Excuse me?"
Such a Speciesist...is that the word?
Wasn't there also a trail that involved crying Indians? I think they were crying cause they also got dysentery, but no access to the strong Charmin that the whities had up in Oregon.
@@Evo1313 tail of tears, If I remember right Oklahoma to Az.
@@alexreifschneider6709 no, the Trail of Tears was from the eastern states (NC, GA, etc) to OK consisting of the Cherokee Indians.
The native tribes that relied on those bison and considered the land theirs by right of being there first: "U wot, mate?"
Nice to see great uncle Zeb getting a shout out in the beginning!
Really peaked the interest.
My 3rd Great Grandma came out on the Oregon Trail. I still have the family Bible that made the trip. There was a smaller group of wagons ahead of them and another small group behind them that were both attacked by Natives. When you think about it it really was not that long ago.
“For better and for worse”. The right sentiment and subtle, but very effective, word replacement chosen to describe the historical effects of the topic and to close out the episode.
Serious Simon is like a college professor, Business Blaze Simon is your mate that likes to talk but he isn't annoying :)
I remember when I was learning about the Oregon Trail in elementary school that my teacher had the class play a giant boardgame about it. We were all divided into little caravans and sent through a gameboard of the Oregon Trail. I can't remember much of it now, but my caravan ended up with the most children at the end with fourteen of them. The one I remember the most of these fourteen children was an Andre the Giant of a baby that managed to fall out of the wagon and loose a leg to one of the wagon wheels. Still survived the trip despite that.
One of the main branches of the Oregon Trail is just a few miles north of me. There's a grave of an unknown person up on a bluff overlooking the Snake River, it is a bit of a reminder of the hazards that people took to make this trek. I guess death was a bit more common in people's experiences back then as well. I can't imagine people now having to bury a family member in the middle of nowhere and then continue on with their journey.
:(
I'm a native Oregonian. ( Living in Cambodian now) Its a beautiful state! I miss the beautiful nature alot. Thank you for pronouncing the name properly! 😊😍
So, so many wagon wheels. You will be remembered.
There's a street here in Phoenix named WagonWheel. Yup...each home has an actual wagon wheel near street...usually by the malbox.
I’m hooked on these episodes. I can’t seem to get enough of the random, yet insightful information in addition to your amazing quips. Very well done!
This Geographics is done so well, I got cholera.
While driving from Michigan to California, I had just entered the mountains and what appeared to be a snow storm when I had a car problem. I pulled over at the next exit/gas station, and my stomach sank when I read the street sign: *DONNER PASS RD*
Darn it I died of dysentery. Hate when that happens
A real gut wrenching ordiel.
Why would you ever want to be known as "Montgomery Pike" when you have a first name like Zebulon.
THANK YOU for pronouncing Oregon and Willamette correctly.
I know right. lol
The Trail of Tears would be a good video.
Is it not?
Yes yes yes from East Tennessee,if they tell the truth, thanks 😊
A hell of a story. My dad (step dad as I found out later) told me about the trail of tears when I was a kid. A horrible tragedy
Lol, thank you for not butchering, "Oregon" and "Willamette."
I said the very same thing.
Word
Indeed.
Exactly. 😅
I thought it was pretty good considering he’s British. There are plenty of Americans that mess them up worse
He said Oregon! I live there! Daddy has basically acknowledged my existence!
I have never been so early! Anyway time to learn about dysentery.
Who dose not want to learn about dysentery!
U poop till u die, especially with something like cholera, the bacteria creates toxins that damage the water retention and absorption cells in the small intestine, so water just pours into the small intestine causing severe diarrhea that can quickly lead to death by dehydration
@@ronnyfuentes709 ☆ Go On...
Eager for more Details.
Turn on notifications
As an American I am fairly knowledgeable about the Oregon trail but Simon yet again has taught me things I was not aware of.
GREAT choice for a Geographics.
Thanks Simon for pronouncing Oregon right...
“Or-eh-gun”
And Willamette! That’s a tough one.
I was also happily surprised he got Willamette correct!
Idk I always did the gun a gen I was born in Sandy
Or like orehgn idek what sound I put there between the g and n it's short
@@shaunanelson2587 That shocked me.
Aragorn and the WillyMayes valley.
i want a new version of The Oregon Trail that game was awesome
I vote for an open world sandbox. Red Dead Redemption 2 was close...
They made an Oregon Trail card game.
I am a member of the LDS church (nicknamed Mormons) and I have ancestors that moved west in the 1850s to Utah, for a great length traveling along the Oregon trail. It's awesome to read their journals and see how they dealt with the difficulties and excitements of the travel. Thanks for the great video Simon and company!
I walked a short part of the Oregon Trail. It's so cool seeing the wagon wheel carvings in the rocks and the old graffiti. It was sort of a spiritual experience just being there.
As a land surveyor in western Wyoming, I regularly worked on/beside it.
A few more trails to add: Shawnee, Dodge City (Western), California, Goodnight (and Goodnight Loving), Handers, Virginia City, Badlands, Deadwood, Green River, Old Spanish and Cheyenne
Hardest working man on the Internet! 🔥
The Oregon Trail, and the westward migration overland, created political and ideological divisions which persist to this day. Colin Woodard explained this in his book, American Nations. The wealthy easterners who could afford to do so went by ship around Cape Horn, and established the nation Woodard labeled "The Left Coast". The people who traveled the Oregon Trail overland established the nation Woodard labeled The Far West. These divisions can be seen today in the liberal politics of the west coast, and the conservative politics that dominate inland North America.
That explains a whole lot!
And I'm one of those micro-brew drinking, soccer loving, legal weed smoking, coffee fiend liberals! Biden 2020 (thank god).
@@upperleftcoastchelseafan7718 Sounds fairly European. :)
@@upperleftcoastchelseafan7718 GO AWAY
@@upperleftcoastchelseafan7718 Good luck having a micro-brewery surviving the taxes imposed by the Green New Deal!
Grew up in Walla Walla, near Whitman Mission, where Marcus and Narcissa Whitman lived, and where they were killed during the Whitman Massacre. My family came across on the Oregon Trail and founded Moscow Idaho and Weston Oregon. The family donated their diaries a couple decades ago.
Fantastic video, as always. I thought I knew a lot about the Oregon Trail, but this gave me plenty more to store in my "vault."
I'd love to see another trail tackled by this channel. The Appalachian Trail.
I can walk to where the Santa Fe, California, and Oregon trails started. In fact Santacalagon days is celebrated in Independence, Mo every Labor Day weekend(Friday-Monday).
From an Oregonian, thank you for pronouncing Oregon and Willamette correctly.
I want to congratulate you for pronouncing both "Oregon" and "Willamette Valley" perfectly correct. This is where I am from and you would not believe how many Americans cannot say those words correctly to save their life!
Who cares 🤷🏽♂️
Of course he says it correctly its a word spoken in english, and he is english we unlike the americans understand how certain placements of certain letters in a word should be said because its our language you guys adopted it 🤦♂️🤣
@@stanleyhipkiss4690 LOL! What a stupid thing to say. Those words are literally not english, they are native American names. Nothing remotely british about it. What a moron!
@@ryanroberts1104 considering its origin is not known and is widley believed to be taken from the french canadian word ouragan meaning storm or hurricane but translated into english id say your the idiot
@@stanleyhipkiss4690 "because its our language you guys adopted it"
You're stupid. There is no other way to say it, you are just entirely, 110% incorrect.
I had to like and share this one as I'm from Independence, Missouri. The Oregon Trail is a big important part of our history.
Last summer I took my 87 year old uncle from California to see the wagon wheel ruts at Minor Park KCMO. He liked seeing it.
I am from Central Nebraska so I feel you on being a big part of our history
Now there's some childhood computer lab memories, lol!
There's something great about how the wagon wheel indents can still be seen. It's a semi-permanent mark left by the people who paved the way to what we now have as a country. I just wish everyone could see the beauty of human triumph and look forward to achieve greatness. Some would say I romanticize human progression, but god damn isn't it the most beautiful thing?
Much of the Oregon Trail has been improved into modern roads. I live about a 5 minute walk from a segment of it that's now a street. When I was a kid, you could see it in places where it crossed the main road. Actually, it was very wide in places, as wide as possible, so that the wagons could spread out and not eat one another's dust. I imagine it's still possible to find artifacts along the route in places.
Hi Simon! I’m a big fan of yours and all e channels you do narrations for! Just wanted to say, as someone who was born and raised in the Columbia River Gorge (Hood River, Oregon to be exact), I liked seeing the picture your team posted at the 7:43 mark! The Gorge is beautiful and full of history! Thanks for covering the Oregon Trail! I learned some new things! Keep up the great work guys!
I actually grew up in those misty blue mountains. Its nice to hear a shout out to my homeland.
Blazing Saddles we weren't allowed in the circle so we formed out own circle😂
They darker than us!
Mathew, Mark, Luke and Duck!
@108johnny Yea! No one is finishing that line!
“They said you were hung!”
Where the white woman at?
Thanks Simon and all the others involved in these videos. I look forward to every upload for this and all the channels simon host.....which is a lot.
The other reason they walked rather rode in the wagons was that it saved the strength of the Oxen, you know 300 lbs less two humans might mean a few more miles out of the oxen,
What blows my mind is how much the oxen eat. I forget the stats, but I think if you go only a few tens of miles then the oxen eat everything they've carried. It's why so many colonial military expeditions moved so slowly
@@tamlandipper29 that's why its crazy to me that people were still taking the trail after trains were mainstream... How is that economical at all
I wish I could smash that thumbs-up button more than once. Thank you. Great piece!
Great video! Well done as always. Thank you for mentioning the slaughter of the buffalo. Such a tragedy.
In 1992, PBS made an excellent American Experience documentary episode on the Donner party. It’s one of the most hauntingly moving pieces I’ve seen. It was on TH-cam for awhile but I can’t find it anywhere anymore.....
I'd love to see a video on Wounded knee, Simon. Thank you for your content, it is entertaining across all channels.
This is really cool some of my family probably took the Oregon Trail I could probably find out who but I’d have to talk to the Mormon half of my family I don’t wanna
An episode on, basically, my father's family story. T.C. Davis and Samuel T. Walters are 2 of the colorful people I am descended from. Now I live in the part of Canada that was in the map correction that made Point Roberts, USA and where I live in Surrey part of Canada.
If only those people could see their Willamette Valley now. I live here it's not great. Fun Fact: Portland is called Stumptown because, while building the city, they had to cut down so many trees to do it.
Ah The old Oregon trail game one of the most universally know things to come out of Minnesota. Good ol’ MECC games
Imagine going out west then and being some of the first to see tornados.
*screams in settler*
Just a detail (it's a pet peeve of mine): the "traces of wagons" in the rock are not wear marks, they are actually carved and they had to be re-carved periodically because they did wear off (they become round and widen with time). They acted as rails in hilly terrain to keep the carts on course, because the lack of inflatable rubber tires and progressive brakes made going downhill a sketchy experience, in particular when the direction is controlled by the horse and not the driver.
I was born & raised in Oregon, a stone's throw of the Willamette River. I'm 71, & have spent a lifetime studying the Oregon Trail. I've visited the Oregob Trail Museum in Baker on the Oregon/Idaho border & The End of the Oregon Trail Museum in Oregon City, among many other museums in Oregon & other museums throughout the West not dedicated specifically to the Trail. I have read & attended lectures & classes about the Trail. I have visited not only the main Trail but also the Mormom Trail, the Applegate Trai, Donner Pass & other lesser known cut-offs from the main Trail. I have a collection of more than 100 first hand accounts from journals kept by men, women & young adults while on their journeys. I have seen the wagon wheel ruts still visible on prairies on the trail. Not once have I ever read, listened to museum curators or in any other way been told the wheel ruts were cut deliberately. I have seen scars on rocks above sharp cliffs where hundreds of wagons were lowered over the edge.
Where did you get the idea the ruts were deliberately cut into the Trail? I'm serious. I'd really like to know to expand my knowledge.
@@alicehardy1668 I understood it on my own when seing them in eastern France. 1) the corners are sharp, but erosion produce round things. 2) why would all the carriages have the same width and erode the same path? -> they have the same width to fit in those rails, the rails are here "first". 3) if you look at the Pompeii crosswalk ruts, they are rails centering the wheels away from the stones, whereas erosion would erode the entire width of the space between the stones and the side of the stones themselves. 4) I googled it, because I couldn't guess why they would make such an expensive carving, and found that the answer is that in hilly terrain you can't control the cart.
nraynaud1 SMH!
measles, dysentery and those ox and that gear lost fording the river. i love that game
I live next to the Oregon trail in Wyoming. I love traveling it to see if I can find hits of the past.
Life long resident of Vancouver Island here. Glad to see we finally got a mention in Geographics :D
He said Oregon and Willamette correctly!
You can tell Simon really loves the history of the Oregon trail.
2:44 Imagine looking upon your newborn baby boy, thinking of all the things he's going to accomplish in life, so you go out of your way to give him the most spectacular name in the history of mankind ZEBULON MONTGOMERY PIKE
Sounds like the name of a Starship Captain who's so smug that even James T Kirk wants to punch him in the face
Being from the Northwest, it baffles me how most of them made it here! The arid environment if Eastern Oregon and Washington, to the dense forests of the Western half... a journey that is harsh to replicate.
A lot of people try to understand why us Americans are the way we are. Simon I think you hit the nail on the head, we will not turn back even if it kills us.
Colorado probably owes its existence to pioneers who got to the Rockies and said “far enough”.
I'm Oregonian and while my ancestors did not come here via the Oregon Trail, my husband's ancestors did travel it, but headed to California. Their reason: it was legal in California to get a divorce. Imagine traveling together for months, risking your lives, just to finally divorce each other.
Spending months together cramped up . Facing storms. Horrible conditions and having to rely on each other would either make or break a marriage fully. People that went through that without hating each other were unbreakable for the rest of their lives. But plenty learned the many flaws their partner had on that brutal trail
@@RK-cj4oc Yeah, but imagine hating a person so much, you both agree to pack up, go through months of hardship, PURELY so you can get a divorce. Nowadays, folks divorce because they didn't realize their partner likes orange juice with pulp. Back then, it was taboo, and you had to really work to get that legal separation. Funny thing is, his ancestor got his divorce and then immediately took an equally dangerous journey in a covered wagon BACK to Ohio. He didn't even stick around for the gold rush, he just desperately wanted to get out of that marriage, and California was the only place that would allow it. So it's ironic that my husband's parents (one from Ohio, the other from New York) got married in California and did NOT divorce. They just passed 50 years together. Goals!
I'm 42 and I remember being the first one to play Oregon trail in my elementary school by winning a book reading contest. The only computer in the school was in the library and it was huge and most letters were green. I just remember it looking sooo advanced. U could also play hangman, tic tac toe, and a pong type game. All were on these big floppy disks. For Oregon trail my first try was with the banker cause he started out with the most money to buy goods at the Outpost. It eventually ended with dysentery which I pictured as being explosive diarrhea. Ahh, the good days. Now here I am trying to get on the dark interwebs.
You missed an opportunity by having the title as “Oregon Trail: Dreams, Disaster and Dysentery”.
At 15:39 When Simon reminds you of how much fun his choice of dialogue can get.
The Oregon Trail still exists. People are driving on it outside my window right now.
Do any of them have dysentery? 🤣
I've lived roughly 80% of my life in Oregon, the east side and I love it... This IS my HOME... I can't imagine how hard it was to omehere on a wagon train..
Also I was born in Walla Walla, Tthe maarcuss Whitman story is still well known here.
The last time I was this late, the good ol' US of A was a colony! 😉😏😆😂
In the game Oregon Trail II, I was the sole reason for the disappearance of wild buffalo from the great plains. Straight up extermination
Another great episode idea is: The Mountain Meadows Massacre; whereby Mormons slaughter about 150 wagon train men, women and children instead of allowing them passage through their area.
Sounds like Mormons to me!
From John Smith's start of the religion in New York , and continuing till they finally arrived in Utah, history recorded much bad blood between the Mormons and the rest of society. Both sides have been accused of less than humane treatment of those on the other side. It got so bad in Navoo, Illinois that the Mormons started their pilgrimage to Utah to find a land of their own. Where I live in Nebraska, we have the Oregon Trail just to our southwest where it ran through the prairie from the Blue River up to the Platte River. And the Mormon Trail is north of us where it follows the Loupe River. Further west it drops down to join the Platte River and the Oregon Trail.
Just northwest of Kennesaw, Nebraska is a gravestone on the Oregon Trail. A husband lost his wife there, and did not wish to leave her grave marked only with the customary stones or cross. So he sent his belongings along with others, then he started out to Omaha, Nebraska, over a hundred miles away. This was to purchase a real headstone for her grave, which he purchased and returned to set it at her grave. He then set out to catch up with his group. Local history groups have kept the area up, and I believe they even replaced the headstone at one time because the old stone had decomposed so bad.
And there was a remark about the buffalo. There is a group of private citizens and groups including nonprofits that have been working together to keep the heritage of the buffalo alive. They have worked to keep the bloodlines as pure as possible, rotate stock amoung themselves to protect genetics and health. And research and trade knowledge on health, nutrition, and anything else to help preserve the species. One herd can be seen at the Platte Valley Crane Trust museum at the I-80 Alda, Nebraska exit on the south side. I do not know if they have returned to regular hours since covid, but the buffalo is often visible in grassland on the south side of the interstate and east of the exit.
You just said the episode right there, no need to make an episode now.
I live four blocks from the Trail. Ponderosa pines still have the rope marks from hauling the wagons up hill on the mountain above my home. Tim McCoy on wife's account.
I would love more information on the Santa Fe Trail also, it's older and information on who went, how and why is pretty difficult.