
The wagon encampment
Posted by:
Volcanoguy
N 44° 48.802 W 117° 43.744
11T E 442352 N 4962476
Large history signs at the Wagon Circle outside the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center.
Waymark Code: WM3520
Location: Oregon, United States
Date Posted: 02/10/2008
Views: 12
Large history signs at the Wagon Circle at the Oregon Trail Interpretive Center.
Marker Name: The wagon encampment
Marker Text: A moveable community for four to six months along the trail . . . the wagon encampment typically grouped into a circle, forming a temporary corral. Around the circle, tents and bedrolls provided the shelter for exhausted pioneers. A few guards kept an eye on the grazing livestock and watched for signs of trouble from wild animals or potential thieves. At sunrise, four o’clock or so, the guards called out or fired their rifles to wake the camp and start another day on the long and dusty trail.
Morning fires were kindled, coffee and breakfast prepared. The men and boys spread out to gather the grazing cattle and horses. Tents were struck, breakfast eaten, dishes cleaned, and wagons repacked. The oxen were yoked and the wagons pulled out of the circle into a caravan. Another day began on the trail west.
After five or six hours of travel, the wagon master looked for a noonday resting place. Wagons pulled to a stop and the oxen were unhitched to rest and graze. Families and ftriends gathered to eat a cold lunch, often leftovers from yesterday’s supper. It was a brief time for the weary travelers to nap, visit, or write a few notes in their diaries, or to just sit and fest after hours of walking.
Depending on the weather, the wagon train might stay at the nooning spot several hours and choose to travel again in cooler evening temperatures. Most rested only an hour or so before plodding on. Women and children looked for wood to gather along the way. Hunters made forays searching for fresh game for supper. The wagon master kept his eye out for a suitable evening campsite . . . a place with water, fuel wood, and forage for the livestock.
As the sun became low, the lead wagon started a circle, followed by the others, about a wagon’s length apart. As the wagons rolled into position and the animals were unhitched, the wagon tongue and chains were used to connect the wagons into a corral. Outside the circle, tents were pitched, fuel wood gathered, and campfires started. Guards were selected, and the livestock set loose to graze. Again, it was time for the evening meal, mending clothes, repairing wagons, washing dishes, resting. Friends gathered in small groups to visit and play cards. Some pulled out musical instruments to accompany singing and dancing. Weary after a day of traveling 15 or 20 miles, the activity soon quieted down. The music stopped, the campfires dwindled, and the encampment slept.
The sign also has sections on the wagons used by pioneers and questions about wagon trains.
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