Wyoming - Western Travel Magazine | News | Rodeos | History | Towns | Old West | New West Old West New West Magazine – Your Travel & History Guide for Western Adventures. Enjoy Travel Tips, Discounts, Specials, Restaurant Reviews, National Park Information and Much More… http://www.oldwestnewwest.com/national-state-parks/wyoming/ Thu, 09 Feb 2012 20:23:53 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-us A Home in the West, If We Can Just Follow the Oregon Trail to Get There http://www.oldwestnewwest.com/2008083089/national-state-parks/wyoming/a-home-in-the-west-if-we-can-just-follow-the-oregon-trail-to-get-there.html http://www.oldwestnewwest.com/2008083089/national-state-parks/wyoming/a-home-in-the-west-if-we-can-just-follow-the-oregon-trail-to-get-there.html Between 1840 and 1870 thousands-some experts say maybe as many as half a million-emigrants went West, following the Oregon, California, Mormon and Pony Express Trails that took them across the Grain Plains and to settlements in Oregon, Utah and California.

Often progress was measured in just a few miles a day. Natural landmarks such as Chimney Rock and Scotts Bluff in today's Nebraska would be comforting signs that they were on the right track to their eventual destinations.
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Mikeharris@oldwestnewwest.com (Mike Harris) Wyoming Sat, 30 Aug 2008 22:42:56 +0000
Wandering Along a Trail of Western History http://www.oldwestnewwest.com/2008082854/national-state-parks/wyoming/wandering-along-a-trail-of-western-history.html http://www.oldwestnewwest.com/2008082854/national-state-parks/wyoming/wandering-along-a-trail-of-western-history.html Visit the grounds at Wyoming’s Fort Bridger State Historic Site and it’s like wandering along a trail of history, a tributary of the great American West where explorers, fur trappers, Oregon Trail emigrants and Pony Express riders coursed by on their way to settling and taming the frontier.

Fort Bridger’s beginnings go back to 1843 when mountain man Jim Bridger set up a trading post on the Black Fork of  the Green River, close to the Oregon Trail. Bridger, and fellow trapper and adventurer Louis Vasquez, built a small pine-log stockade which included two log and mud buildings and a coral for horses. The buildings housed Bridger’s trading post, blacksmith shop and living quarters.

]]> fazri.zubair@gmail.com (Administrator) Wyoming Thu, 28 Aug 2008 05:22:46 +0000