Donner Party FAQ
(Frequently Asked
Questions)
Since this website was
inaugurated in August 1997, several readers have written to me
asking similar questions. Here are some of the most common (in no
particular order) with my answers. For information about the number of members
and deaths, see the Statistics page.
"Missing"
Donner Party Members | Cannibalism | Primary
sources | Why did
they go to California? |
Why did they take the cutoff? | Causes | Effects | Going back down | Fishing
Male/Female
Survival | Donner Party
movies | Religion | Maps and illustrations
Family tradition says my ancestor was in the Donner Party, but I don't see him/her on your Roster. Why not?
- Many people emigrated in 1846 and membership in wagon trains was fluid;
people would travel with one group for a while, then join
another party. The person you're looking for may very well have
met or traveled with the Donners before the Donner Party was
formed. The misunderstanding arises because, over time, oral tradition gets
garbled. "Pa
went west the same year as the Donner Party" can turn into "Great-grandpa was in the Donner Party."
The bottom line is, if they aren't listed in the
Roster, they weren't
members of the Donner Party.
Cannibalism: Did
they really eat each other?
- Yes.
-
- Cannibalism is the best known and least understood aspect of the Donner
Party. Contrary to what a lot of people seem to think, there was no feeding frenzy in the mountains. The emigrants
held out for as long as they could; they slaughtered their animals and ate the
meat, then lived on boiled rawhide, leather scraps, and
bones, whatever they could find, until there was nothing left but the bodies
of the dead. About half the survivors were rescued before any cannibalism
occurred, and almost all of those who ate human flesh did so for only a
few days or weeks at the end of their ordeal. It's ironic that
the Donner Party should be remembered, reviled, or mocked as cannibals, when
their very reluctance to eat human flesh may have cost some of them their lives.
If they had started eating the dead
sooner, more of them might have survived.
- Here's a brief outline of Donner Party cannibalism:
-
- ● In
December 1846 fifteen of the emigrants (later called the "Forlorn Hope") set out on
snowshoes to cross the mountains. Their food ran out, some died, and the
survivors were compelled
to eat human flesh for about two weeks until they reached an Indian village
in the foothills.
- ● At the
lake camp, no
cannibalism was ever reported at the Graves cabin.
- ● There
was no cannibalism at the Breen cabin until after the Breens and
Reeds had left.
- ● The
Murphy cabin was the scene of cannibalism from about February
25, 1847, until sometime in March. Toward the end of the
month,
Louis Keseberg moved
from the Murphy cabin into the deserted Breen cabin, where he subsisted on human flesh for about a month until
after the arrival of the
Fourth Relief on April 17.
- ● At Alder
Creek, at least some of the Donners ate human flesh, probably for as little
as ten days to two weeks. For more about cannibalism there, see
Donner Party Bulletin No. 15.
- ● En route to
California, most of the Second Relief's charges became too weak to continue
and had to be left behind without any
food. When the Third Relief arrived at "Starved Camp" five days later, they
discovered that the famished refugees had consumed three of their number who
had died.
-
- Archaeologists have not yet discovered physical evidence of cannibalism
at Donner Party sites, but this doesn’t mean that it didn’t happen.
Contemporary accounts record that Donner Party members said they intended to
eat human flesh, survivors said they ate human flesh,
and rescuers saw the grisly evidence.
- Incidentally, some readers have suggested that what occurred in
the Donner Party wasnt
really cannibalism because they did it only to survive. I
strongly agree that "Donner" should never
be confused "Dahmer," but
"cannibalism," as commonly understood, means
eating another individual of ones own kind, so until
someone comes up with a new term, "cannibalism"
is the only one that can be used.
Im writing a paper about the Donner
Party and need primary sources.
Where can I find them?
- The major primary sources are available in print and there are also quite
a few on the Internet, several on this website. Lists of print and online primary documents are at the top of the Sources page.
Why did the members of the Donner Party decide to go to California?
- Different people had different reasons.
One of the most common was that California was said to be
so healthy; some were attracted by the promise of cheap
land; others went for the adventure. Usually it was a
combination of factors. The younger men were attracted by the adventure
and the opportunity to make a start in life, while some of the older men
wanted to make a fresh start. Charles Stanton,
for instance, had failed at business; he was also influenced by the
description of California in Hastings book.
James Reed wanted to put his business
failures behind him, too, and in addition he hoped the climate would be
better for his ailing wife Margret.
Franklin
Ward Graves was attracted to California's healthy climate but he
also was said to have an itchy foot. The same is probably
true of George and Jacob Donner. In addition to any other
motivation, the Breens and Murphys
may have gone
for religious reasons, the Breens wanting to live in a
Roman Catholic area and the Murphys wanting to rejoin the
Mormons, who were reportedly going to California.
-
- Another important reason could be called
"family" or "affection."
Sarah Keyes
went because she didnt want to be parted from her daughter,
Margret
Reed, and also because she hoped to meet her son Robert
on the trail. (Hed gone out the previous year and was thought to
be returning East.) Sarah Graves was torn between her
family and her sweetheart; she had intended to stay in
Illinois, but changed her mind at almost the last minute.
Jay Fosdick wanted to be with Sarah, so they got married
just before the Graves family left home and went with
them.
-
- In fact, "family" is the reason
the majority of Donner Party members went. Im
talking, of course, about the women and children. Many of
them might not have wanted to go at all, but if a man
made up his mind to head West his family had very little
choice but to accompany him. For a woman to refuse to go
with her husband was desertion and grounds for divorce,
which was a social disgrace, and children had to go with their parents. Women and children might have
expressed their feelings, but the ultimate decision was
the husbands. Levinah Murphy was probably the instigator of
her familys move; Tamzene Donner wrote favorably (though
with no great enthusiasm) of the idea of going to California:
"I am willing to go & have no doubt that it will
be an advantage to our children & to us";
Margret Reed was "overcome with grief" when she
left Springfield; but we dont know
how the other women of the Donner Party felt.
-
- Why did they decide
to take Hastings Cutoff?
-
- The decision to take the cutoff was not as
foolish as some critics would have it. The Donner Party did
what reasonable people do: they gathered information,
discussed their options, and made a decision. The
information they based their decision on was
questionable, but they didnt know
that. And remember, about 300 other people -- the
so-called "Harlan-Young Party" -- made the same decision based on the same
information; no one has called them foolish.
That they made it safely to California and the Donner
Party did not was the result of circumstances that
developed after the decision was made.
-
- There was good reason for emigrants to
think that the new route was practicable. First, there
was Lansford W. Hastings. He had led a group to Oregon in
1842, another group to California in 1845, and had
written a book. His Emigrants Guide, with its glowing accounts of
Californias charms, had induced many emigrants to leave
home for the Pacific. Hastings promised to meet the
travelers at Fort Bridger and personally conduct them on
the cutoff. Then there were the reports of John C.
Fremont, a national hero, whose description of the new
route to California mentioned grass, water, and game but
not the 80-mile dry stretch across the Great Salt Lake
Desert. And third, the famous mountain man Jim Bridger
assured the Donner Party that the new route was good.
These positive accounts, plus the promise that the cutoff would save hundreds of miles, convinced the Donner
Party to take it.
What caused the Donner
Party disaster?
- The simplest answer is "the weather." If the
Donner Party had made exactly the same decisions, done
exactly the same things, and the first big snow had held
off for as little as two or three days, we probably would
never have heard of them. But they werent in control of the
weather, they could only have changed their behavior, so
a lot of accusations have been made. Some writers have
criticized the Donner Party for being stupid, lazy, and
quarrelsome, while others have singled out Hastings or
Reed to blame for the decision to take the cutoff. I dont think its that easy; I think
that it was a combination of all these factors --
behavior, personalities, weather -- that caused the
disaster.
What effect did the Donner
Party disaster have?
- The Donner Party was a relatively minor event, but although it didn't
change the course of history, it did have some effects:
-
- ● A common
misconception is that people were so horrified at the news of the Donner
disaster they were afraid to go to California, but this belief cannot be
justified. News of the disaster didn't reach the east until late in the summer
of 1847, months after emigrants had set out across the plains, so the Donner
Party could not have affected people's decision to go to California that year.
It may have had something to do with the lower number of emigrants who went in
1848, although the fact that the United States was still at war with Mexico
was probably a factor, too. But any worries people may
have had about the journey to California were blown away by news of the gold
discovery, and in 1849 thousands flocked to the territory.
● Another
myth is that Donner Pass was abandoned by overland pioneers. True, new routes over the Sierra Nevada
were developed after the disaster, but what had happened
to the Donner Party was by no means the only reason why. The Truckee Route, which had cost them so dearly,
was extremely difficult under the best of circumstances and in addition, new entrances to California were necessary to accommodate the heavy
traffic to the gold fields in 1849-50. Some of these new routes were
successful, others less so, but overland emigrants continued to the Truckee Route via Donner Lake,
where many recorded seeing human remains at the ruined cabins.
● One effect the Donner disaster did have was to
inspire Californians to take steps to prevent another such tragedy. In 1849,
1850, and 1852, when large numbers of emigrants were streaming into the
territory, Californians allocated money to send relief teams eastward into
the mountains and desert to assist struggling overlanders with food and water. (See John D. Unruh,
The Plains Across, p. 368-378, for details.)
● Back in Utah, the road the Donner Party blazed
from Fort Bridger into
the Salt Lake Valley in 1846 was a godsend to the Mormon pioneer companies of
1847. It became part of the Mormon Trail, and for twenty years was the main
route to Salt Lake City.
Why didnt they go
back down to Truckee Meadows or
someplace to spend the winter?
- Going back down the Sierra seems like such a simple
solution to us, knowing what was going to happen to the Donner Party, but
they didnt have
the advantage of our knowledge. Lets ask
instead, Why should they go back down?, bearing
their situation in mind. They had spent grueling months
heading west; food, friends, and journeys end
lay ahead of them, not behind. The eastern side of the
Sierra is steep, and it had been hard enough to get up to
the lake, so going back down, away from help, would have
seemed a terrible waste of effort. Besides, could
they have gotten back down? Wouldnt the
snow that had kept them from going over the pass also
have prevented them from returning east? Perhaps not, if
they abandoned their wagons, but the wagons contained the
tools and equipment they needed to live. There was no
guarantee that theyd find food on the eastern side; they hoped
that, early as it was in the season, the snow would melt
and they could cross; and they expected Reed and
McCutchen to come back with supplies any day now. They
didnt know that the snow wasnt
going to melt soon, that it would take four months for
relief to arrive, that half of them were going to die of
starvation. If theyd known these things, then yes, they might have
decided to go back down.
Couldnt they have eaten fish from
the lake?
- Theoretically they could have, and they
did try. Lovina Graves told a granddaughter she
"distinctly remembered going with one older brother
and sister to the lake to fish. The ice was so thick they
had to cut a hole in it about a foot and a half square,
through which they dropped their lines, but they could
not catch a thing. They could see the fish plainly, but
caught nothing. It was very hard for them to go away
without any fish for they were very hungry." --Edna Maybelle
Sherwood, "Tragic Story of the Donner Party."
-
- "There was an abundance of beautiful
trout in the lake, but no one could catch them.
W. C.
Graves tells how he went fishing two or three different
times, but without success. The lake was not frozen over
at first, and fish were frequently seen; but then were
too coy and wary to approach such bait as was offered.
Soon thick ice covered the water, and after that no one
attempted to fish. In fact, the entire party seemed dazed
by the terrible calamity which had overtaken them."
--C.F. McGlashan, History of the Donner Party.
-
- "The failure of the emigrants attempts to catch
fish has long formed a subject for debate. Any experienced native of the
district can testify that lake fish may be taken easily (if not legally)
during the winter months. The facts seem to indicate that members of the
party failed to catch fish chiefly because they lacked experience and
equipment and because they were too bewildered and dispirited to acquire
them." --Ibid.
-
- Theres a certain amount of criticism implied in some
of these comments. I think that whatever the problems
might have been at first, the emigrants simply became too
weak to make the effort.
-
- Why did more women than men
survive?
-
- This is a complicated question with no
simple answer, but here are some major factors:
-
- 1) Men led more dangerous lives. Some,
like John Snyder,
Mr. Wolfinger,
William Pike,
Luis, and
Salvador died violently. Also, more men went out on
snowshoes to get help; most of these men died.
-
- 2) The men had done heavy labor along the
way -- clearing the road through the Wasatch Mountains,
for instance -- and when they reached Donner Lake they
set to work felling trees and building cabins. During the
winter they were expected to continue doing "mens
work," like shoveling snow and chopping firewood.
Basically, the men started the winter in worse physical
shape, and their customary activities further weakened
them.
-
- 3) Women have less muscle and more body
fat than men. They need less food, have more stored
energy, and may have an advantage in some cold
situations, although this last is by no means certain.
-
- 4) All the women traveled with at least
one family member, which gave them not only a support
system but also something to live for. Having a family
was also a factor in mens
survival; all the adult males who survived the entrapment
were fathers, and all the bachelors (single men 21 and
over) died.
-
- 5) When things get tough, men tend to want
to go out and do something to fix the situation.
The strongest men went with the Forlorn Hope snowshoers.
The ones left behind couldnt do
much but wait; they certainly couldnt fix the weather,
and as they weakened from hunger they were less able to perform their
expected tasks, like hunting, cutting firewood, or shoveling snow. I believe
that the men were more likely to fall prey to feelings of hopelessness and
despair. Milt Elliott returned from the Donners at Alder Creek reporting
that "it was very sad down their & it made a man feel awful bad when he
could not do any thing to fix them any better." Some of the men, like
Jacob
Donner and James Smith, seem to have just given up.
James F. Reed wrote,
"James Smith was about the first who died of the boys. He gave up, pined
away, and died. He did not starve."
-
- 6) The women, on the other hand, still had their usual
roles of keeping house and tending children. Women seem to be better at
putting up with things, at accepting the fact that a situation isnt
fixable and trying to make the best of it. This gives
them a psychological advantage in scenarios like the
Donner Party, when people are at the mercy of factors
beyond their control. In addition, its not
as damaging to a womans self-esteem to have to be rescued.
-
- In the 1990s Donald K. Grayson, an
anthropologist, and Stephen A. McCurdy, a physician,
independently performed statistical studies of Donner
Party mortality rates. The full length reports of their
studies appear in professional journals but synopses are
available on the Internet; see Jared Diamonds "Living Through the Donner Party" in Discover 3:13 (March 1992), p.
100-107, which describes Graysons
work, or the summary of McCurdy's study.
-
- For Donner Party mortality/survival figures by gender, see the
Statistics page.
Are there any Donner Party movies?
- No feature films, but there have been two
made-for-television movies. The first one, Donner
Pass: The Road to Survival, aired in 1978 and has
also been released on video. It's not very good as either
history or entertainment, but if you'd like a copy, you
can often find one being auctioned at eBay.
-
- The second movie, One More Mountain, aired in
March 1994 on the Hallmark Hall of Fame, with Meredith
Baxter starring as Margret Reed.
It's a cut above the previous one, but leaves a lot to be desired. Formerly
you could find it only in the possession of people who taped it off the air
and kept a copy, but Disney finally released it on VHS in the spring of
2000. The video was marketed to educators at a whopping $99, but is now
available (with additional educational material) on DVD for $59.95 (VHS is
$49.00). See the
Disney website for details.
What was the religion
of Donner Party members? Were they Mormons?
- No, they werent a Mormon group, but yes, one family
was or had been Mormon. Levinah Jackson Murphy converted to the
LDS faith in 1836; she and her children lived in the
Mormon seat of Nauvoo, Illinois, in 1841-1842, then
returned to their home in Tennessee. They may have been
attempting to rejoin the church when they went West, but
its not certain that they still considered
themselves Mormons in 1846. As for the other members of
the Donner Party, the Breens and
Patrick Dolan were Roman
Catholics; Margret Reed and
her mother Sarah Keyes were Methodists; James Reed had been raised Presbyterian but
joined the Methodist church after his marriage to Margaret;
Augustus Spitzer may
have been Jewish; Louis Keseberg was a Lutheran, but his
wife Philippine
had been raised Catholic. Tamzene Donner
may have been brought up Episcopalian, but the German Prairie Christian
Church which she and
George attended in Illinois was evidently a Disciples of Christ congregation.
-
- After their rescue Virginia Reed Murphy,
Mary Murphy
Covillaud, and the Fosters converted to Roman
Catholicism; William G. Murphy
joined the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and was active in founding
a congregation in Marysville; Naomi Pike Schenk
and
Eliza Donner
Houghton joined the Episcopal Church;
Nancy Graves
Williamson became a Methodist (and married a minister); and her sister
Lovina
Graves Cyrus attended Baptist services.
Where can I find maps of the Donner Party route
and other illustrations?
- Please see Maps and Illustrations on the Student Page. The OCTA bookstore has
trail maps for sale, as did the Emigrant Museum at
Donner Memorial State Park
the last time I was there.
"Missing"
Donner Party Members | Cannibalism | Primary
sources | Why did
they go to California? |
Why did they take the cutoff? | Causes | Effects | Going back down | Fishing
Male/Female
Survival |
Donner Party
movies | Religion | Maps and illustrations
-
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|
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Revised:
31 Jan 2006
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©1997-2006 by Kristin Johnson. All rights reserved.