Great Osage Trail
The Great Osage Trail, also known as the Osage Trace or the Kaw Trace, was one of the more well-known Native American trails through the countryside of the Midwest and Plains States of the U.S., pathways blazed by herds of buffalo or other migrating wildlife (Medicine Trails).
The Osage Indians and other tribes traveled among a variety of routes later named "Osage Trails" by European settlers; the famous Route 66 through southern Missouri Ozarks follows the route of one such "Osage Trail" and U.S. Route 24 through central Missouri follows the route (from Franklin, Missouri westward) of the "Great Osage Trail", which in 1825 became known as the first phase of the Santa Fe Trail, extending from central Missouri (near Franklin and Boonville, Missouri) westward shadowing the route of the Missouri River, then turning southwestward through Independence, Missouri, into Kansas, Colorado, Santa Fe, New Mexico, and "Old" Mexico. From an 1881 History of Jackson County, Missouri,
"The Santa Fe trade first began at Old Franklin, a little town on the Missouri River... and continued from this point till the year 1831, when it sprung up at Independence. The town of Independence being a hundred miles further west, and near the great bend of the Missouri River, it was thought to be a more favorable place for fitting out caravans for Mexico, since also the route could be made from Franklin to Independence much better by water than land. At Independence the bulk of the trade continued till about the years 1838-40, when it began at Westport, and subsequently at Westport Landing (now Kansas City)...." [2]
Iroquois Tree of Peace and the Trail
[edit]On October 24, 1999, Iroquois chieftain Jake Swamp oversaw a ceremonial planting of an Iroquois "Tree of Peace" alongside the route of the Great Osage Trail, a few yards south of Lexington Street in Independence, Missouri, on the property of the Community of Christ's Independence Temple and on the site of the Latter-day Saint "Temple Site" property claimed and then purchased by Mormon leadership in 1831.[3] A 1979 article in an LDS Church magazine[4] discusses early Latter-day Saint travels along the Boone's Lick Road from St. Louis to Franklin in the central part of the state, then along the Great Osage Trail/Santa Fe Trail from Franklin to Missouri's western border.
References
[edit]- ^ "Santa Fe National Historic Trail Map" (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved 2008-07-20.
- ^ p. 170, The History of Jackson county, Missouri: containing a history of the county, its cities, towns, etc.,... Union Historical Society, 1881.
- ^ They "Shall Blossom as the Rose": Native Americans and the Dream of Zion" Keynote address at a February 17, 2001 Community of Christ-sponsored "Call to the (First) Nations Conference"
- ^ "Two More Mormon Trails: The Boonslick Trail; The Mississippi Saints’ Trail", Ensign, August 1979, p. 49.
External links
[edit]- Native American trails in the United States
- Santa Fe Trail
- Historic trails and roads in Missouri
- Pre-statehood history of Missouri
- Trails and roads in the American Old West
- Historic trails and roads in New Mexico
- Historic trails and roads in Kansas
- Historic trails and roads in Colorado
- History of Indigenous peoples of North America
- Pre-Columbian cultures
- Native American history of Missouri
- Native American history of New Mexico
- Native American history of Kansas
- Native American history of Colorado