07/29/2024
175 years ago today, on July 25, 1849, at Parting of the Ways, west of South Pass, Forty-niner Elisha Perkins finds, stuck on forked sticks, 40 or 50 notes with news for emigrants behind him on the road.
"Parting of the Ways" written by WyoHistory.org shares the story of this important junction along the Oregon Trail.
"About 18 miles after travelers on the Oregon Trail crossed the Continental Divide at South Pass, they reached a junction known now as the Parting of the Ways. The right fork went west toward Fort Hall in present-day southern Idaho, while the left continued southwest toward Fort Bridger and Salt Lake City. The Fort Hall route was a cutoff, opened in 1844. It saved about 46 miles and two and a half days’ travel, but only by crossing a waterless, sagebrush desert.
Diarists sometimes referred to the roads at this junction as the California and Oregon trails. The northerly, straight-west route—the “Oregon” road across what’s now known as the Little Colorado Desert—was most often called Sublette’s Cutoff, although some called it Greenwood’s Cutoff. The decision to take one branch or the other was not irrevocable. The trails diverged again farther on, offering more than one way to Oregon or California." CONTINUE READING 👉 https://www.wyohistory.org/encyclopedia/parting-ways
📷 At True Parting of the Ways, the eye can follow the divergent trails for miles towards the horizon. Randy Brown photo.