The Oregon Trail
Francis Parkman, Jr.
Read by R. S. Steinberg
The book is a breezy, first-person account of a 2 month summer tour of the U.S. states of Nebraska, Wyoming, Colorado, and Kansas when Parkman was 23. (Summary by Wikipedia) (0 hr 57 min)
Chapters
Chapter I. The Frontier | 16:55 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter II. Breaking the Ice | 22:21 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter III. Fort Leavenworth | 7:01 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter IV. “Jumping Off” | 22:46 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter V. The “Big Blue” | 36:48 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter VI. The Platte and the Desert | 28:41 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter VII. The Buffalo | 34:10 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter VIII. Taking French Leave | 33:42 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter IX. Scenes at Fort Laramie | 31:39 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter X. The War Parties | 48:37 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XI. Scenes at the Camp | 43:21 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XII. Ill-Luck | 15:15 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XIII. Hunting Indians | 51:16 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XIV. The Ogillallah Village | 42:29 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XV. The Hunting Camp | 48:33 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XVI. The Trappers | 20:27 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XVII. The Black Hills | 8:59 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XVIII. A Mountain Hunt | 25:50 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XIX. Passage of the Mountains | 35:21 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XX. The Lonely Journey | 43:31 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XXI. The Pueblo and Bent's Fort | 15:10 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XXII. Tete Rouge, the Volunteer | 9:17 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XXIII. Indian Alarms | 23:25 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XXIV. The Chase | 19:44 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XXV. The Buffalo Camp | 32:47 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XXVI. Down the Arkansas | 37:37 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Chapter XXVII. The Settlements | 22:15 | Read by R. S. Steinberg |
Reviews
EXCELLENT EXPLORATION PRESENTATION
AVID READER
Parkman Jr's reputation as a fine presenter of historical fare is well deserved. His lucid descriptions of scenery and of actions makes one feel as though he were present. A most surprising thing to me was the constant interface with people; one always considers that the trek west was lonely, the traveling companions being the only company to be had. This narrative seems to show the westward trek to be one long series of meetings and even re-meetings with many diverse groups. It was very interesting and the reader is to be commended for his clear and even narration
Great story and very well read
brian
Additional info
TheGreenLama
Here's a link to the 1892 edition illustrated by Frederic Remington https://archive.org/details/oregontrailsketc07park/mode/2up Wanton slaughter and Indian savages my not be for everyone. Note: Black Hills mentioned are not the ones in SD, but rather they refer to the Laramie Mtns west of Fort Laramie. Missing Chapter Titles: Chapter IV - "Jumping Off" Chapter V - The "Big Blue" Chapter VI - The Platte and the Desert Chapter XI - Scenes at the Camp Chapter XII - Ill-Luck Chapter XII - Hunting Indians Chapter XIV - The Ogillallah Village Chapter XV - The Hunting Camp Chapter XXI - The Pueblo and Bent's Fort Chapter XXII - Tete Rouge, the Volunteer
How the Buffalo disappeared
Linda in PNW
This was not what I expected. I should have read the description carefully. I found the descriptions of places and lands very interesting. The author is good at descriptions. There were a lot of gruesome occurances, especially when hunting Buffalo. These people had no idea of taking only what you need. I'd like to hear more about the settlers without the obvious prejudices towards Mormans. I think this book makes potential settlers seem crazy for even trying. I listened to the end. Not a book I'd read or listen to again.
I enjoyed this.
Wintergreen
I had to read this for school, but I am very happy I did. This book has been fun in a history sort of way. I likely would not have listened to or read it outside of school, so I'm glad I had to. It was very interesting. I probably would only be able to tell you of a few things that happened to it, though. :)
interesting
Elsie Reads
the narrative wasn't bad but I had objections to the authors attitude to "inferior races" and even his own peoples' "stupidity". He seemed to think himself above most people he met which is irritating to listen to. Otherwise it is well written. Also thanks to the reader, who did a great job!
The best description of a buffalo hunt
Mesi
The way American Indians haunted the buffalo was spectacular and unique sometimes that it lost forever and it very well describe here by a very widnes man. Very good book.
lb46fbg
Parkman' book is a classic all interested in American history will enjoy. The reader is fabulous with wonderful phrasing, a pleasing calm voice, and obvious love of the writing.