Redigerer
Donnerfølget
(avsnitt)
Hopp til navigering
Hopp til søk
Advarsel:
Du er ikke innlogget. IP-adressen din vil bli vist offentlig om du redigerer. Hvis du
logger inn
eller
oppretter en konto
vil redigeringene dine tilskrives brukernavnet ditt, og du vil få flere andre fordeler.
Antispamsjekk.
Ikke
fyll inn dette feltet!
=== Overlevende === Of the 87 people who entered the Wasatch Mountains, 48 survived. Only the Reed and Breen families remained intact. The children of Jacob Donner, George Donner, and Franklin Graves were orphaned. William Eddy was alone; most of the Murphy family had died. Only three mules reached California; the remaining animals perished. Most of the Donner Party members' possessions were discarded.<blockquote>I have not wrote to you half the trouble we have had but I have wrote enough to let you know that you don't know what trouble is. But thank God we have all got through and the only family that did not eat human flesh. We have left everything but I don't care for that. We have got through with our lives but Don't let this letter dishearten anybody. Never take no cutoffs and hurry along as fast as you can.</blockquote>A few of the widowed women remarried within months; brides were scarce in California. The Reeds settled in San Jose and two of the Donner children lived with them. Reed fared well in the California Gold Rush and became prosperous. Virginia wrote an extensive letter to her cousin in Illinois about "our troubles getting to California", with editorial oversight from her father. Journalist Edwin Bryant carried it back in June 1847, and it was printed in its entirety in the ''Illinois Journal'' on December 16, 1847, with some editorial alterations. Virginia converted to Catholicism, fulfilling a promise she had made to herself while observing Patrick Breen pray in his cabin. The Murphy survivors lived in Marysville, California. The Breens made their way to San Juan Bautista, California, where they operated an inn. They became the anonymous subjects of J. Ross Browne's story about his severe discomfort upon learning that he was staying with alleged cannibals, printed in ''Harper's Magazine'' in 1862. Many of the survivors encountered similar reactions. George and Tamsen Donner's children were taken in by an older couple near Sutter's Fort. Eliza was three years old during the winter of 1846–1847, the youngest of the Donner children. She published an account of the Donner Party in 1911, based on printed accounts and those of her sisters. The Breens' youngest daughter Isabella was a one-year-old during the winter of 1846–1847 and the last survivor of the Donner Party. She died in 1935.<blockquote>I will now give you some good and friendly advice. Stay at home,—you are in a good place, where, if sick, you are not in danger of starving to death.</blockquote>The Graves children lived varied lives. Mary Graves married early, but her first husband was murdered. She cooked his killer's food while he was in prison to ensure the condemned man did not starve before his hanging. One of Mary's grandchildren noted she was very serious; Graves once said, "I wish I could cry but I cannot. If I could forget the tragedy, perhaps I would know how to cry again." Mary's brother William had several different occupations, a diverse lifestyle, and his nieces thought he was "eccentric and irascible". He died in 1907 and was buried in Calistoga. Nancy Graves was nine years old during the winter of 1846–1847. She refused to acknowledge her involvement even when contacted by historians interested in recording the most accurate versions of the episode. Nancy reportedly was unable to recover from her role in the cannibalism of her brother and mother. Eddy remarried and started a family in California. He attempted to follow through on his promise to murder Lewis Keseberg but was dissuaded by James Reed and Edwin Bryant. A year later, Eddy recalled his experiences to J. Quinn Thornton, who wrote the earliest account of the episode, also using Reed's memories of his involvement. Eddy died in Petaluma, California on December 24, 1859. Keseberg brought a defamation suit against several members of the relief party who accused him of murdering Tamsen Donner. The court awarded him $1 in damages, but also made him pay court costs. An 1847 story printed in the ''California Star'' described Keseberg's actions in ghoulish terms and his near-lynching by the salvage party. It reported that he preferred eating human flesh over the cattle and horses that had become exposed in the spring thaw. Historian Charles McGlashan amassed enough material to indict Keseberg for the murder of Tamsen Donner, but after interviewing him he concluded no murder occurred. Eliza Donner Houghton also believed Keseberg to be innocent. As Keseberg grew older, he did not venture outside, for he had become a pariah and was often threatened. He told McGlashan, "I often think that the Almighty has singled me out, among all the men on the face of the earth, in order to see how much hardship, suffering, and misery a human being can bear!"
Redigeringsforklaring:
Merk at alle bidrag til Wikisida.no anses som frigitt under Creative Commons Navngivelse-DelPåSammeVilkår (se
Wikisida.no:Opphavsrett
for detaljer). Om du ikke vil at ditt materiale skal kunne redigeres og distribueres fritt må du ikke lagre det her.
Du lover oss også at du har skrevet teksten selv, eller kopiert den fra en kilde i offentlig eie eller en annen fri ressurs.
Ikke lagre opphavsrettsbeskyttet materiale uten tillatelse!
Avbryt
Redigeringshjelp
(åpnes i et nytt vindu)
Denne siden er medlem av 2 skjulte kategorier:
Kategori:CS1-vedlikehold: Ekstra tekst
Kategori:Ikke ferdig oversatte artikler
Navigasjonsmeny
Personlige verktøy
Ikke logget inn
Brukerdiskusjon
Bidrag
Opprett konto
Logg inn
Navnerom
Side
Diskusjon
norsk bokmål
Visninger
Les
Rediger
Rediger kilde
Vis historikk
Mer
Navigasjon
Forside
Siste endringer
Tilfeldig side
Hjelp til MediaWiki
Verktøy
Lenker hit
Relaterte endringer
Spesialsider
Sideinformasjon