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Troubadour on the Road to Gold : William B. Lorton's 1849 Journal to California / edited by LeRoy Johnson and Jean Johnson ; with a foreword by Richard Saunders.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Salt Lake City : The University of Utah Press, [2020]Copyright date: ©2020Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 1607817802
  • 9781607817802
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Troubadour on the Road to GoldDDC classification:
  • 979.4/04092 B 23
LOC classification:
  • F593
Online resources:
Contents:
Pt. I Gold Rush Overture -- 1. New York City to Monmouth, Illinois, 1848-1849 -- pt. II On the Trail: Western Illinois to Salt Lake City -- 2. Across Iowa to St. Joseph, Missouri -- 3. St. Joseph to Kanesville, Iowa -- 4. Kanesville to Fort Laramie, Wyoming -- 5. Fort Laramie to Independence Rock, Utah -- 6. Independence Rock to Salt Lake City -- pt. III The Southern Route: Salt Lake City to Pueblo de Los Angeles -- 7. Among the Mormons at Salt Lake City -- 8. Salt Lake City to Beaver River, Utah -- 9. Beaver River to Mount Misery, Utah -- 10. Travails in Terra Incognita -- 11. Old Spanish Trail into Southern California -- 12. California! -- 13. Afterword.
Summary: "Troubadour on the Road to Gold is a true, western adventure story with lots of action and rich detail. William Lorton's spritely, detailed, and insightful journal is a delight, yet moving at the same time. He gives insight rarely found in a young man into daily trail life from the Mississippi River to southern California, by way of Salt Lake City, in the early gold rush of 1849. Additional information is added in his letters from the trail to The New York Sun newspaper. Only a couple other diarists approach Lorton's deep level of detail about the Southern Route from SLC to LA. He is an active observer who exposes the damage done from stampedes, notes variations among the Indians, feels the pleasure of a river swim in the hot sun, appreciates a beautiful sunset or a rampaging hail storm, and he provides entertaining sketches of locations that interested him. He graphically describes his disastrous "walkabout" into uncharted Nevada desert that only four dozen other men experienced before retreating to the Old Spanish Trail. He reveals his scientific curiosity in vivid descriptions of a sidewinder rattle snake, mysteriously moving rocks on a desert playa, or microscopic fairy shrimp in an ephemeral lake. Lorton is a likable fellow with a droll sense of humor who entertains the camp with his rich singing voice and ability to play the violin. At the same time he can cook, clean, or chase oxen while being stoic about getting a foot damaged when trampled in a stampede, having all his bacon stolen by the Indians, or having to shoot his faithful horse. He represents the best traits a man can possess-resilience in adversity, a positive attitude, and an active participant in the society he finds himself in, be it a Mormon home or a wagon mess on the trail"-- Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

"Troubadour on the Road to Gold is a true, western adventure story with lots of action and rich detail. William Lorton's spritely, detailed, and insightful journal is a delight, yet moving at the same time. He gives insight rarely found in a young man into daily trail life from the Mississippi River to southern California, by way of Salt Lake City, in the early gold rush of 1849. Additional information is added in his letters from the trail to The New York Sun newspaper. Only a couple other diarists approach Lorton's deep level of detail about the Southern Route from SLC to LA. He is an active observer who exposes the damage done from stampedes, notes variations among the Indians, feels the pleasure of a river swim in the hot sun, appreciates a beautiful sunset or a rampaging hail storm, and he provides entertaining sketches of locations that interested him. He graphically describes his disastrous "walkabout" into uncharted Nevada desert that only four dozen other men experienced before retreating to the Old Spanish Trail. He reveals his scientific curiosity in vivid descriptions of a sidewinder rattle snake, mysteriously moving rocks on a desert playa, or microscopic fairy shrimp in an ephemeral lake. Lorton is a likable fellow with a droll sense of humor who entertains the camp with his rich singing voice and ability to play the violin. At the same time he can cook, clean, or chase oxen while being stoic about getting a foot damaged when trampled in a stampede, having all his bacon stolen by the Indians, or having to shoot his faithful horse. He represents the best traits a man can possess-resilience in adversity, a positive attitude, and an active participant in the society he finds himself in, be it a Mormon home or a wagon mess on the trail"-- Provided by publisher.

Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.

Pt. I Gold Rush Overture -- 1. New York City to Monmouth, Illinois, 1848-1849 -- pt. II On the Trail: Western Illinois to Salt Lake City -- 2. Across Iowa to St. Joseph, Missouri -- 3. St. Joseph to Kanesville, Iowa -- 4. Kanesville to Fort Laramie, Wyoming -- 5. Fort Laramie to Independence Rock, Utah -- 6. Independence Rock to Salt Lake City -- pt. III The Southern Route: Salt Lake City to Pueblo de Los Angeles -- 7. Among the Mormons at Salt Lake City -- 8. Salt Lake City to Beaver River, Utah -- 9. Beaver River to Mount Misery, Utah -- 10. Travails in Terra Incognita -- 11. Old Spanish Trail into Southern California -- 12. California! -- 13. Afterword.

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