"Whatever view we take of the great Mormon movement, we cannot fail to recognize every important part it had in the settlement of the great West. It was essentially a 'westward movement.' It employed the strongest elements of our nature- the religious, the family, the patriotic and the home loving- and bound them together in a long continued, unwearied, supreme effort to find a place to establish themselves.
The Mormon movement from Kirtland to Salt Lake Valley, core area of the Mormon culture, shows a typi...
In 1842 John C. Frémont led a party of twenty-five men on a five-month journey from Saint Louis to t...
Candy Moulton’s The Mormon Handcart Migration: “Tounge nor Pen Can never tell the Sorrow” tells the ...
In their march to California, the Mormon Battalion played a vital role in laying the groundwork, lit...
Between 1846 and 1869 thousands of Mormon immigrants traversed the Great Plains enroute to sanctuary...
Between 1841 and 1866, the years of heaviest traffic on the overland trails, approximately 500,000 p...
Review of: The Great Medicine Road, Part 2, Narratives of the Oregon, California, and Mormon Trails,...
This volume presents a study of overland travel across the Great Plains of the United States prior t...
This preliminary study examined the cultural and logistical factors underlying the settlement of the...
Nineteenth-century Mormonism was a frontier religion with roots so entangled with the American exper...
Ten years before the pioneer party of the Mormon Church first sighted the Valley of the Great Salt L...
"The Road to Oregon is by far the most comprehensive and authentic work yet published on the subject...
Purpose: In 1847, the Mormon colony at Great Salt Lake was founded. In many respects this was the mo...
Over the Rim is the first book about an important but little-known expedition sent by Brigham Young ...
Mormon Trail -- Hand Cart Train. Mormon emigration, 1856-60, From an old print. The Hand Cart migrat...
The Mormon movement from Kirtland to Salt Lake Valley, core area of the Mormon culture, shows a typi...
In 1842 John C. Frémont led a party of twenty-five men on a five-month journey from Saint Louis to t...
Candy Moulton’s The Mormon Handcart Migration: “Tounge nor Pen Can never tell the Sorrow” tells the ...
In their march to California, the Mormon Battalion played a vital role in laying the groundwork, lit...
Between 1846 and 1869 thousands of Mormon immigrants traversed the Great Plains enroute to sanctuary...
Between 1841 and 1866, the years of heaviest traffic on the overland trails, approximately 500,000 p...
Review of: The Great Medicine Road, Part 2, Narratives of the Oregon, California, and Mormon Trails,...
This volume presents a study of overland travel across the Great Plains of the United States prior t...
This preliminary study examined the cultural and logistical factors underlying the settlement of the...
Nineteenth-century Mormonism was a frontier religion with roots so entangled with the American exper...
Ten years before the pioneer party of the Mormon Church first sighted the Valley of the Great Salt L...
"The Road to Oregon is by far the most comprehensive and authentic work yet published on the subject...
Purpose: In 1847, the Mormon colony at Great Salt Lake was founded. In many respects this was the mo...
Over the Rim is the first book about an important but little-known expedition sent by Brigham Young ...
Mormon Trail -- Hand Cart Train. Mormon emigration, 1856-60, From an old print. The Hand Cart migrat...
The Mormon movement from Kirtland to Salt Lake Valley, core area of the Mormon culture, shows a typi...
In 1842 John C. Frémont led a party of twenty-five men on a five-month journey from Saint Louis to t...
Candy Moulton’s The Mormon Handcart Migration: “Tounge nor Pen Can never tell the Sorrow” tells the ...