Showing posts with label Prairie Roses Collection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prairie Roses Collection. Show all posts

Friday, May 26, 2023

Eagle Valley, Nevada by Zina Abbott


In my recently published book, Clara, at the time my pioneer families that traveled together in 1858 finally stopped, they ended up settling in Eagle Valley, Utah Territory.

Originally inhabited by the indigenous Washoe people, it is believed in 1841 the Bartleson-Bidwell Party passed through the area that became known as Eagle Valley on their way to California.

Augustus Mitchell Map of 1846

At the time, California was still part of Mexico. In the mid-1840s, while the land was still under Mexican rule, John C. Frémont traveled through as part of a mapping expedition. 

Carson River

Because of his great respect for his scout, Kit Carson, he named the river running through that valley the Carson River. In 1848, at the conclusion of the Mexican-American War, Mexico ceded the region to the United States. That was the same year gold was discovered in California. That resulted in a stream of gold-seekers traveling west to search for their fortunes. 


Many of them followed the Mormon-Carson Emigrant Trail cut by the Mormons, who had arrived in California by way of the Mormon Battalion or on the ship Brooklyn, as they traveled east. Their trail took them past what is today Caples Lake, over Carson Pass, and through Eagle Valley until they joined with the established trail that followed the Humboldt River.

1857 map Utah Territory

In September 1850, Eagle Valley became part of the newly established Utah Territory.

Old Mormon Station built 1851


 Many early valley settlers included other Mormons, led by Colonel John Reese who, in 1851, along with eighteen men, established Mormon Station (name later changed to Genoa) near the valley. This was the first trading post in the far western part of Utah Territory. After the Mormons were called back to Salt Lake City, the local ranchers in the valley established another trading post called Eagle Station. It is believed the post was located near present-day Fifth and Thompson streets in Carson City. It provided supplies to those California-bound travelers who chose to take the Mormon-Carson Emigrant branch of the California Trail over Carson Pass to Placerville and the gold fields of the western Sierra Nevada Mountain foothills.

The surrounding area was known as Eagle Ranch. The name reportedly came from an eagle shot by ranch manager Frank Hall, who displayed it on the trading post wall. That gave the name to the valley.

 

Carson City today, most of city is in Eagle Valley

In 1858, pioneer Abraham Curry arrived in Eagle Valley and not long afterward surveyed and plotted a town site.  A group of well-connected attorneys bought the richest part of the valley for $500 and a herd of horses. The farsighted and optimistic Curry set aside 10 acres expressly for the construction of a capitol building. He anticipated the formation of Nevada Territory, which did not take place until 1861. Carson City was soon designated both the territorial capital and county seat of the new Ormsby County.

1912 Eagle Valley looking northeast

 
1912 Eagle Valley north over the western Eagle Valley from C Hill, Mount Slide in background

Carson City in Eagle Valley looking west across Carson Mountains toward Lake Tahoe

The 1859 discovery of the Comstock Lode in the Virginia Mountains to the east and north of Carson City established the economic importance of the area.


In Clara, my characters chose to travel beyond the new city of Carson City and Eagle Station and settle in the town of Genoa. This book is now available for purchase as an ebook and paperback. It is also available at no extra cost with a Kindle Unlimited subscription. To find the book description and purchase options, please CLICK HERE.

 



Also, although each book can be read as a standalone, my first book I wrote for the Prairie Roses Collection, Pearl, has many of the same characters as Clara. To find the book description and purchase options, please CLICK HERE.

 

 

 

Sources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_Valley_(Nevada)

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...

Ken Lund from Reno, Nevada, USA

https://wnhpc.com/details/rw014

https://photos.legendsofamerica.com/nv-southern/h83F9897F#h83f9897f

Friday, April 28, 2023

Forty Mile Desert by Zina Abbott

The Forty Mile Desert was the most dreaded part of the California Trail—and for good reason. Based on reports of those who blazed the first trails to California, it became part of the established routes to northern and central California. Whether travelers intended to take the Truckee river route over Donner Pass, or the Mormon-Carson Emigrant route along the Carson River, they were required to go through this desert wasteland devoid of drinkable water.

 


This desert began as the water of the Humboldt River—brackish at best—dried up in the Humboldt Sink. For the next forty miles there was a lack of drinkable water. It was necessary to keep livestock away from the few sources of available water, like Soda Lake. The water was so alkaline, it killed any who drank from it. Also, the soil of much of that desert was sandy in nature, making it extremely difficult for both people and animals to walk through it.

Here is an excerpt from Mark Twain he write in Chapter XX of Roughing it. He crossed the Forty Mile Desert in the summer of 1861 by stagecoach:

On the nineteenth day we crossed the Great American Desert—forty memorable miles of bottomless sand, into which the coach wheels sunk from six inches to a foot. We worked our passage most of the way across. That is to say, we got out and walked. It was a dreary pull and a long and thirsty one, for we had no water. From one extremity of this desert to the other, the road was white with the bones of oxen and horses. It would hardly be an exaggeration to say that we could have walked the forty miles and set our feet on a bone at every step! The desert was one prodigious graveyard. And the log-chains, wagon tyres, and rotting wrecks of vehicles were almost as thick as the bones. I think we saw log-chains enough rusting there in the desert, to reach across any State in the Union. Do not these relics suggest something of an idea of the fearful suffering and privation the early emigrants to California endured?


Based in today’s Churchill County, Nevada, the Forty Mile Desert is a California Gold Rush name for Nevada's Lahontan Valley and the adjoining area to the northwest. The Lahontan Valley is a landform of the central portion of prehistoric Lake Lahontan’s lake bed from 20,000 to 9,000 years ago. That valley and the adjacent Carson Sink are only a small portion of the lake bed. The Humboldt Lake is to the valley’s northeast. Pyramid Lake is west, and Walker Lake is south. It is all part of the larger Great Basin Desert.

 

Because of the extreme daytime temperatures and lack of water, if possible, this desert was crossed at night.

Many lives were lost while traveling this desert—both human and livestock. Starvation and thirst preyed upon people and animals every mile.  A survey made in 1850 resulted in a listing of 1,061 dead mules, almost 5,000 horses, 3,750 cattle, and 953 graves.  The value of personal property loss was set at the time at $1,000,000.

The heaviest traffic through the Forty Mile Desert occurred between 1849 and 1869, when the Transcontinental Railroad was completed.

I did not find many public domain pictures of the Forty Mile Desert. If you would enjoy seeing some contemporary photographs of the region, for the Carson Trail, please CLICK HERE.

For the Truckee Trail, please CLICK HERE.


I devoted a chapter in my recent novel, Clara, to the experience of the characters crossing the Forty Mile Desert. The chapter that followed included their relief at finally making it through and reaching the Carson River. To find the book description purchase options for Clara, please CLICK HERE.

 

 


Also, although each book can be read as a standalone, my first book I wrote for the Prairie Roses Collection, Pearl, has many of the same characters as Clara. It is on a Kindle Countdown sale for 99¢ (ebook) through April 29, 2023. To find the book description and purchase options, please CLICK HERE.

 

 

 

 

 

Sources:

http://oldageisnotforsissiesblog.com/day-4-on-the-california-trail-a-deadly-desert-to-cross/

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lahontan_Valley

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_Trail

http://overlandtrails.lib.byu.edu/essay_ctrail.php

https://emigranttrailswest.org/virtual-tour/carson-trail/

https://shpo.nv.gov/nevadas-historical-markers/historical-markers/forty-mile-desert