CharmSnake
Super-Earth
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2013
- Location
- In the Grass
Kanesville, Iowa
April 22nd, 1850
Slowly the wagons rolled down Main Street, stirring up clouds of dust. The hooves of the oxen and horses that pulled them clumped in the dirt. They passed in groups of four and five, then a late straggler, each flanked by the occasional outrider and trailed by all those on foot. Their canvas bonnets gleamed in the late morning sun as they stretched over their iron hoops. Entire extended families, some with hired help, were uprooting to emigrate and start anew. For some the journey would end in prosperity and independence, perhaps even great fortune, while others would find only grim sickness and death. Nearly daily these trains rolled west, across the plains to the mountains, most destined for Oregon, some California. They came from the east and the south and gathered in the pasture on the highland overlooking town. Kanesville was a collecting point of sorts, where people congregated in hope.
Samuel wiped the sweat from his brow upon his sleeve before reaching up to the porch timber of the post office. With a hammer in the other he carefully tapped in a nail. From it hung a paper poster written in his own hand.
An old man covered in dirt with no teeth and rot with drink fanned the dust with his hat as the last wagon turned right at the end of the block and followed the ruts of the ones before along the road to the river bank. He looked up at Samuel and spoke.
"And there goes another one," he remarked, shaking his head with the sage wisdom that had got the old drunk to where he was in life. "If you ask me, you're all crazy." He spat in the dirt and took another swig from his jug.
April 22nd, 1850
Slowly the wagons rolled down Main Street, stirring up clouds of dust. The hooves of the oxen and horses that pulled them clumped in the dirt. They passed in groups of four and five, then a late straggler, each flanked by the occasional outrider and trailed by all those on foot. Their canvas bonnets gleamed in the late morning sun as they stretched over their iron hoops. Entire extended families, some with hired help, were uprooting to emigrate and start anew. For some the journey would end in prosperity and independence, perhaps even great fortune, while others would find only grim sickness and death. Nearly daily these trains rolled west, across the plains to the mountains, most destined for Oregon, some California. They came from the east and the south and gathered in the pasture on the highland overlooking town. Kanesville was a collecting point of sorts, where people congregated in hope.
Samuel wiped the sweat from his brow upon his sleeve before reaching up to the porch timber of the post office. With a hammer in the other he carefully tapped in a nail. From it hung a paper poster written in his own hand.
~ Oregon ~
a group shall convene upon Samuel H Hogan's farm
this Saturday evening, the 27th of May
for the purpose of interest in forming a party
to emigrate for western opportunity
a group shall convene upon Samuel H Hogan's farm
this Saturday evening, the 27th of May
for the purpose of interest in forming a party
to emigrate for western opportunity
An old man covered in dirt with no teeth and rot with drink fanned the dust with his hat as the last wagon turned right at the end of the block and followed the ruts of the ones before along the road to the river bank. He looked up at Samuel and spoke.
"And there goes another one," he remarked, shaking his head with the sage wisdom that had got the old drunk to where he was in life. "If you ask me, you're all crazy." He spat in the dirt and took another swig from his jug.
Illusion & CharmSnake
Wagons West
Wagons West