MANIFEST DESTINY 1806 1855
THE OREGON TRAIL WESTWARD MIGRATION TO THE PACIFIC OCEAN
Question
[CLICK ON ANY CHOICE TO KNOW THE RIGHT ANSWER]
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to move more easily from one wagon to the next
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to fit more people into each wagon for sleeping
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to ensure a safe place to eat, and sleep
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to block the wind so they could start a fire
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Detailed explanation-1: -drew their wagons into a circle at night to create a makeshift stockade. If they feared Native Americans might raid their livestock-the Plains tribes valued the horses, though generally ignored the oxen-they would drive the animals into the enclosure.
Detailed explanation-2: -Each evening, the wagon encampment typically grouped into a circle, forming a temporary corral. Around the circle, tents and bedrolls provided the shelter for exhausted pioneers. A few guards kept an eye on the grazing livestock and watched for signs of trouble from wild animals or potential thieves.
Detailed explanation-3: -During the 1800s, many settlers traveled west from the East Coast in covered, horse-drawn wagons. At night, or when threatened during the day, the wagons would stop moving. The drivers then would line up all the carriages in a circle. This was a way of protecting the settlers from attack.
Detailed explanation-4: -Covered Wagons The covered wagon consisted of a wooden bed covered by canvas stretched over wooden hoops riding on top of iron-covered wooden wheels and iron axels. Covered wagons had two main purposes: transporting people with their belongings and supplies on long journeys and hauling cargo across difficult terrain.
Detailed explanation-5: -What exactly was a wagon train? It was a group of covered wagons, usually around 100 of them. These carried people and their supplies to the West before there was a transcontinental railroad.