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"During the winter of 1846-1847, members of the Donner Party found themselves stuck in the snows of the Sierra Nevada on their journey to California, losing many in their group to severe cold and starvation. Those who survived did so by cannibalizing their dead comrades. Today the Donner Party may be the most famous group of American overland emigrants to struggle through life-threatening conditions, but it is not the only one. Ten years after the Donner Party got itself into trouble, two groups sponsored by the Mormon Church ran into similar difficulties. Unlike the Donner Party, these people were following a well-traveled path, but they were doing it in a novel way, pushing and pulling their goods and children in handcarts some 1,300 miles from Iowa to Utah. In the end, over 200 died along the trail. The plights of these travelers have been addressed by different historians in different ways. This book is the first to examine these tragedies in terms of biology. Grayson shows that who lived and who died within these westward-bound groups can largely be explained by age, sex, and family ties. His investigation reveals what happens when our cultural mechanisms for dealing with famine and extreme cold are reduced to only what our very bodies can provide. These were real people in real danger. Understanding what happened to them helps us get at the core of who and what we all are"--Provided by publisher.
Mormon handcart companies. --- Mormon pioneers --- Disaster victims --- Mortality --- Biometry. --- Donner Party. --- Overland journeys to the Pacific. --- Biological statistics --- Biology --- Biometrics (Biology) --- Biostatistics --- Biomathematics --- Statistics --- Burial statistics --- Death --- Death rate --- Mortuary statistics --- Vital statistics --- Transcontinental journeys (United States) --- Travels --- Frontier and pioneer life --- Voyages and travels --- Overland journeys to the Pacific --- Victims of disasters --- Victims --- Pioneers --- Handcart companies, Mormon --- History --- Statistics. --- Sex differences. --- Statistical methods --- James G. Willie Emigrating Company. --- Edward Martin Emigrating Company. --- Martin Emigrating Company --- Martin Handcart Company --- Martin Company (Mormon pioneers) --- Willie Emigrating Company --- Willie Handcart Company --- Willie Company --- Handcart companies, Latter Day Saint --- Mormon handcart companies --- Latter Day Saint handcart companies. --- Latter Day Saint pioneers
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Patience Loader has become an icon for the disastrous winter entrapment of the Martin and Willie handcart companies, who traveled the Mormon Trail in the 1850s. Her autobiography offers an important record of those events, but also of much more. Wife of a Civil War soldier, Patience served as an army laundress in Washington DC and ran a boarding house as well. After the war, her husband died of consumption, and Patience returned to Utah alone, where she became a cook in a mining camp.
Archer, Patience Loader. --- Edward Martin Emigrating Company. --- Mormon women - England. --- Mormon women - United States. --- Mormons - Emigration and immigration. --- Mormon women --- Mormons --- Christianity --- Religion --- Philosophy & Religion --- Emigration and immigration --- Emigration and immigration. --- Archer, Patience Loader, --- Utah Expedition --- Women, Mormon --- Loader, Patience, --- Martin Emigrating Company --- Martin Handcart Company --- Utah War --- Utah Campaign --- Buchanan's Blunder --- Mormon War --- Mormon Rebellion --- Mormon Expedition --- Latter-Day Saints --- Mormon Church --- Christian women --- Martin Company (Mormon pioneers) --- Christians --- Latter Day Saints --- Latter Day Saint women --- Brighamite Mormons --- Church of Christ (Temple Lot) members --- Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints members --- Church of Jesus Christ (Strangites) members --- Hedrikites --- Josephite Mormons --- Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints members --- Reorganized Mormons --- RLDS Mormons --- Strangite Mormons --- Temple Lot Mormons --- Utah Mormons
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