The Captain Evans/Cherokee wagon company, joined by other wagons, proceeded
from Pueblo north along the front range of the Rocky Mountains on the old
Trappers or Divide Trail. This trail, east of Colorado Springs, ran over
the divide between the Arkansas and South Platte Rivers, and
down Cherry Creek to the South Platte where Denver now stands. Traveling
northeast along the South Platte to the confluence of the Cache la Poudre
River near Greeley, the Evans/Cherokee wagon train left the trading forts
trace, forded the South Platte and proceeded west. With no guide, they
again pioneered the wagon road from the crossing of the South Platte to Fort
Bridger. Their route, west along the Poudre River through present Fort
Collins to Laporte, turned north along the front range passing what would
later become the site of the Virginia Dale Stage Station on the Overland
Stage Route, onto the Laramie Plains of Wyoming. |
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Route to
California
At Salt Lake City the 1849 Evans/Cherokee wagon train left the main emigrant
route that ran north, and instead traveled west around the south end of the
Salt Lake over the Salt Desert. The route was known as the Hastings Cutoff;
and the Evans/Cherokee wagon train may have been the only major one to take
this trail in 1849, and one of few to traverse this route since the
ill-fated Donner Party in 1846. Later separations within the Evans/Cherokee
wagon company on the Humboldt River resulted in members of the train
arriving in California on each of the three major trails--the Carson,
Truckee, and Lassen.
1850 Cherokee Wagon
Trail
In early spring of 1850 four separate wagon trains crossed (in two weeks
time) the Verdigris River, south of present Nowata, (OK) to follow the trail
blazed by Lewis Evans in 1849. The first 1850 wagon train, under Captain
Edmonson, would remain in the forefront of the loosely-organized caravan
all the way to California.
The first three, oxtrains composed of Cherokee and whites, were Captained
by Edmonson (Edmondson, Edmiston) and Holmes from Arkansas, and Alfred Oliver
from Missouri. Clement Vann McNairs Cherokee train was drawn by horses
and mules. Through Oklahoma, Kansas and most of Colorado, the 1850 route
varied little from Evans 1849 route. East of Bents old fort,
the Edmonson company hired Delaware/ French guide Ben Simons. At present
Denver, Simons did not follow down the South Platte River to the confluence
of the Cache la Poudre River as the Evans/Cherokee company had done in 1849;
instead he crossed the South Platte River and struck north toward Laporte
through present Longmont, Loveland and west Fort Collins. Holmes wagon
train followed the route blazed by Edmonson, while Oliver, in possession
of Lewis Evans 1849 Journal, followed the Evans/Cherokee route along
the South Platte River to Greeley before turning west.
The McNair train (following Edmonsons route) stopped, spending two
days panning gold on a small creek. John L. Brown, a Cherokee member who
kept a diary, noted the finding of gold on a creek they named Ralston for
the discoverer. (Note: Remembering this goldfind, some of the same Cherokee
and their white Georgia relatives returned to Colorado in 1858 to pan gold.
A discovery by the Georgians led to the Pikes Peak gold rush of
1859.)
On the north side of the Cache la Poudre all four 1850 companies struck the
Evans/Cherokee Trail of 1849 and followed it north to the Laramie Plains.
On entering the Laramie Plains north of the Colorado border, first Edmonson
and then the other trains left the 1849 Evans/Cherokee Trail and turned west.
Again the Edmonson wagon train pioneered a new wagon road that roughly followed
the Colorado/Wyoming state line to North Park. After crossing the North Platte
River, they traveled northwest to cross the Encampment River at Riverside
(WY). The trains proceeded westerly, crossing the Green River near Buckboard
Crossing (Flaming Gorge), reaching Fort Bridger and joining the main California
Trail. This route became known as the 1850 (Southern) Cherokee Trail.
In 1850 three wagon train companies, Oliver , Holmes, and McNair (now Captained
by Thomas Fox Taylor), left Salt Lake to take the Hastings Cutoff route,
taken by the 1849 Evans/Cherokee wagon train. Separations along the way caused
members of these trains to arrive in California on each of two major routes--the
Carson, and the Truckee.
In California
The areas of goldfinds or strikes were often named after the person, group
or state the miners were from. During the gold rush the Cherokee, with their
previous experience gold mining in Georgia, were associated with many bars,
diggings, creeks, flats, etc. with the result that California had more Cherokee
place names than any other state.
Many of the members of the 1849 and 1850 trains stayed to follow their trade
or profession; some went into business, mainly cattle. Starting in 1852 Arkansas,
Cherokee and east Texas cattle were driven to California over the Cherokee
Trail, in ever increasing numbers. Emigrant trains from SW Missouri, Arkansas
and Texas to Utah, California, and Oregon, surpassed the cattle drives,
continuing through the 1850s, 60s, and 70s. Many of the emigrant trains were
composed of extended or very close families with all of their possessions
and cattle. The most noted was the Baker/Fancher train from Arkansas, most
of whom were massacred at Mountain Meadows, Utah in 1857.
To Other Areas
The finding of gold in 1850 (recorded in the diary mentioned above) led to
the expeditions over the Cherokee Trail to Colorado in 1858. The stampede
to the Colorado or Pikes Peak gold rush in 1859 and subsequently to
the goldfields of Idaho and Montana gave renewed use to the Trail.
The eastward livestock drives of cattle and later sheep, from Oregon and
Washington to the grasslands of Wyoming and Colorado in the 1880s were the
last continental use of the Cherokee Trail. Homesteading in southern Wyoming
and highways in Colorado appear to be the last local uses of the Cherokee
Trail. |