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Okla-homey
2/19/2009, 07:12 AM
February 19, 1847: Rescuers reach Donner Party

162 years ago today, the first rescuers from Sutter's Fort in modern day Sacramento reach the surviving remnants of the Donner emigrant party at their snowbound camp in the high Sierra Nevada Mountains.

The emigrants' frozen hell had begun months earlier. Weeks behind schedule and the massive Sierra Nevada mountains still to be crossed, the members of the ill-fated Donner party had realized they were running short of supplies and sent two men ahead to California to bring back food.

http://img225.imageshack.us/img225/2124/ddddddddddduntitledml9.png (http://imageshack.us)

The group of 89 emigrants had begun their western trek in the summer of 1846in Springfield, Illinois, under the leadership of the brothers Jacob and George Donner. Unfortunately, the Donner brothers had recently read The Emigrant's Guide to Oregon and California, the imaginative creation of an irresponsible author-adventurer named Lansford Hastings, who wanted to encourage more overland emigrants to travel to the Sacramento Valley of California.

http://img223.imageshack.us/img223/6619/dddddddddddddddddonner208zh1.gif (http://imageshack.us)

The Donners innocently accepted Hastings' claim that a shorter route he had blazed to California would cut weeks off the usual trip and agreed to place the fate of the wagon train in his hands once they reached Fort Bridger, Wyoming. From that point forward, the men, women, and children of the Donner Party were doomed.

Though the so-called Hastings Cutoff was indeed shorter than the usual route, Hastings' glowing descriptions of his trail irresponsibly downplayed its many difficulties, as the Donner party soon discovered.

http://img183.imageshack.us/img183/8236/dddddddddddddddddonnercart1pr9.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
The Hasting's Cut-off trailed south of Salt Lake.

After following a boulder-strewn and nearly impassable route over the Wasatch Range in Utah, the party embarked on an arduous six-day trek across the desert-a journey that Hastings had promised would take only two days. Lightening their loads by abandoning chairs, family heirlooms, wagons, and livestock to be swallowed up by the blazing sands, the emigrants struggled onward towards the Sierra Nevada.

A month after the two men had left for California the previous summer, one returned with the desperately needed provisions as well as two Indian guides to help lead the party on the final stage of the trip through the Sierras. But by then it was already late October.

Hastings' "shortcut" had cost the Donner group so much time that they now risked being trapped in the high mountains if an early snowstorm chanced to fall. Unfortunately for the luckless emigrants, just such a snowstorm arrived on the night of October 28. The next day the Donner party was snowbound in the Sierras near modern-day Truckee CA. Then it really got ugly.

http://img183.imageshack.us/img183/9107/dddddddddddddddonnerpassandroutevj6.jpg (http://imageshack.us)

http://img204.imageshack.us/img204/5641/dddddddddddddddonnerpartyzoombi9.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
James F. Reed and his wife, Margret W. Keyes Reed, seen in this photo taken in the 1850s, were survivors of the tragic Donner Party. The Reed family was one of only two families who survived the ordeal intact.

Of the 83 members of the Donner Party who were trapped in the mountains, only 45 survived to reach California. The survivors managed to live by eating the remains of members who perished in the freezing cold of the Sierra winter.

http://img204.imageshack.us/img204/4300/dddddddddddddddddcutbonejq8.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
Archeological evidence of Donner Party cannibalism. Human bone dug at the site bearing "chop" marks.

http://img84.imageshack.us/img84/2633/dddddddddddddddddonnerpartymemorialzs5.jpg (http://imageshack.us)
A memorial to the Donner Party at California's Donner Memorial State Park near Truckee

http://img220.imageshack.us/img220/515/insane7zozw3.jpg

King Crimson
2/19/2009, 07:33 AM
the grill/commissary at the U of Colorado is named after Alfred Packer. like beer at the university's octoberfest celebration, until more PC heads prevailed, the campus featured a student "celebration" of Packer called "Alfred Packer Days" that had a raw meat eating contest. The grill also has very underrated green chile and a two eggs, hashbrowns, and toast breakfast, FWIW.

Al also served as the inspiration for the first creative production from South Park's Trey Parker and Matt Stone. Cannibal, the Musical also features a cameo from the late, world-famous avant-garde filmmaker and former CU faculty member Stan Brakhage.

http://www.metroactive.com/papers/metro/12.18.97/gifs/cannibal1-9751.jpg

The sky is blue, and all the leaves are green.
The suns's as warm as a baked potato.
I think I know precisely what I mean,
When I say it's a shpadoinkle day!

http://wheredaveis.com/wp-content/uploads/2006/08/228344004_6e377bfc86.jpg

King Crimson
2/19/2009, 07:43 AM
OK, so the Donner party and Packer's expedition are separate episodes of supposed cannibalism...looks like.

nothing to see here....