Cherokee Trail

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CHEROKEE TRAIL

CHEROKEE TRAIL, also known as the Trappers' Trail, was laid out and marked in the summer of 1848 by Lieutenant Abraham Buford as a way for both Cherokee and white residents in northeastern Arkansas to access the Santa Fe Trail on their way to the California gold fields. It had previously been followed by trappers en route to the Rocky Mountains. It extended from the vicinity of Fort Gibson up the Arkansas River to a point in the northwestern part of present-day Oklahoma. From there it ran west and joined the Sante Fe Trail.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Agnew, Brad. Fort Gibson: Terminal on the Trail of Tears. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1980.

Bieber, Ralph P., ed. Southern Trails to California in 1849. Glendale, Calif.: Arthur H. Clark, 1937.

Byrd, Cecil K. Searching for Riches: The California Gold Rush. Bloomington: Lilly Library, Indiana University, 1991.

Edward EverettDale/h. s.

See alsoGold Rush, California .

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Cherokee Trail

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