Reply
Honored Contributor
Posts: 21,041
Registered: ‎10-04-2010

Well, that subject has come up in this house (probably due to t.v.) and I want to search some more on that subject.  Busy watching them clean the train tracks of snow there now.  Isn't it funny, how a subject can just seem to pop up numerous times, for no reason at all?

 

I'm going to look on line and then see if the library has any books I can check out or read on this.  Think it's facinating.

 

If anyone lives near that area now, it would be interesting to hear what you can tell about this place.  I only know, some.   

Honored Contributor
Posts: 39,161
Registered: ‎08-19-2010

all I know off top of my head is they misjudged the weather and a group of settlers was looking for a better life and got lost and bitter weather set in, people started dying, no food, etc. They had to resort to whatever they could to survive.

 

Not a real good ending and not for the faint of heart. Sure movies been done on their survival story.

Respected Contributor
Posts: 4,341
Registered: ‎04-19-2010

There is a good documentary on youtube. I knew the basic story but this show taught me a lot more.

 

Also, there is a statue to the Donner party near the original location of their emergency winter camp.   Go figure, it's in the middle of a bunch of expressways now.  I think it's in Nevada. Saw it on a road trip.


-- pro-aging --


Rochester, New York
Honored Contributor
Posts: 39,161
Registered: ‎08-19-2010

I just now put on hold a movie called 'The Donner Pass' from the lib.

Honored Contributor
Posts: 14,866
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

@qualitygal wrote:

Well, that subject has come up in this house (probably due to t.v.) and I want to search some more on that subject.  Busy watching them clean the train tracks of snow there now.  Isn't it funny, how a subject can just seem to pop up numerous times, for no reason at all?

 

I'm going to look on line and then see if the library has any books I can check out or read on this.  Think it's facinating.

 

If anyone lives near that area now, it would be interesting to hear what you can tell about this place.  I only know, some.   


Shoekitty said, what exactly do you want to know?  The history, the trail, about the lake...?  which is so beautiful   Like a mirror.  I used to belong to OCTA, the Oregon-California Trail Association   I have actually followed much of the trail that is accessible.  There are grave markers, hidden.  But they are there.  The original journey was the toughest i know of.   The amazing the grit, determination courage of the early pioneers.  They left everything, for they knew not what.  Many of the first to go had no idea what to expect, or the weather.   And that trail was so dusty, dirty, smelly, the smell of animal excretion so thick masks did not help.   There is alot of folk lore as well.  There are many small publication  that tell individual stories.   I know the museum at Donnor Pass and in Sacramento have many interesting books.

“sometimes you have to bite your upper lip and put sunglasses on”….Bob Dylan
Honored Contributor
Posts: 10,620
Registered: ‎09-22-2010

That used to haunt me when I was a little kid.  I don't know how I heard about it - probably one of my crazy cousins!

Honored Contributor
Posts: 40,917
Registered: ‎05-22-2016

There was a documentary movie about them. The title is:

 

"Dead of Winter: The Donner Party" (2015)

 

I saw it on The Weather Channel when it came out. It's worth watching.

Respected Contributor
Posts: 2,353
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: Donner Pass

[ Edited ]

Unfortunately, the one thing that led to this was them believing in Lansford Hastings and taking his "cutoff". That and their bad luck along the Humboldt River caused them to be trapped by the early snowfall in the Sierras with less cattle and wagons. 

 

I don't know if it's because of where I live but have seen quite a few documentaries on the Donner Party. 

 

P.S. Better than "Dead of Winter" is the 2009 "The Donner Party".

Honored Contributor
Posts: 20,648
Registered: ‎03-09-2010

Re: Donner Pass

[ Edited ]

I've been over Donner Pass a zillion times over the decades but I didn't know there were any stories besides the Donner Party one.

 

We've gotten some pretty good snow up there this week.  I don't know how much they got (I'm just a bit east of the mountains in W Reno), but it had to be measured in feet and not inches.

 

Hoping the ski resorts are doing well because this is the only time of year they make enough to get through the rest of the year.  For a while there, this winter, we had hardly any snow.  At my house I got over a foot this week but then it warms up to around 40 and some of it melts.   I love winter and we just don't get much anymore.

Highlighted
Honored Contributor
Posts: 11,094
Registered: ‎03-21-2010

That was in the 19th century.  Well there have been more recent disasters similar to the Donner party.  Except this happened with a plane.  it crashed in the Andes Mountain. 45 people on board.  Long story short.  Survivors were cut off from any civilization....even the uncivilized kind.  The results were the same as the Donner Pass.  It happened in Oct. 1972.  One survivor made a 10 mile hike for help & got there.  16 people were picked up to safety.