Women's Voices from the Oregon Trail

Women's Voices from the Oregon Trail

Author: Susan G Butruille

Publisher: Northwest Corner Books

Published: 2018-11-13

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781941890264

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The lives and struggles of the women who followed the 2,000-mile trail to Oregon 175 years ago narrated in their own words from diaries, songs, and recipes. This 25th anniversary edition includes an updated Guide to Women's History Along the Oregon Trail.


Women's Voices from the Oregon Trail

Women's Voices from the Oregon Trail

Author: Susan G. Butruille

Publisher:

Published: 1993

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13:

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Tracing the trail and tracking down and writing about places of interest about women: landmarks, statues, signposts, markers, gravestones.


Triumph and Tragedy: Women's Voices from the Oregon Trail

Triumph and Tragedy: Women's Voices from the Oregon Trail

Author:

Publisher:

Published:

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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Oregon Public Broadcasting (OPB) and Off the Wall Productions present the online supplement to "Triumph and Tragedy: Women's Voices from the Oregon Trail." The documentary program focuses on the lives of the women who followed the Oregon Trail to the western United States. The trail was a route taken by pioneers to get to the western United States, including what is now the states of Washington, Oregon, California, Nevada, Idaho, and Utah.


Voices from the Oregon Trail

Voices from the Oregon Trail

Author: Kay Winters

Publisher: Penguin

Published: 2014

Total Pages: 49

ISBN-13: 0803737750

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"An account of several families and individuals making the long and often dangerous trek across the United States from Missouri to the West Coast in the 1800s"--


Women's Voices from the Western Frontier

Women's Voices from the Western Frontier

Author: Susan G. Butruille

Publisher:

Published: 1995

Total Pages: 340

ISBN-13:

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Women's Voices from the Western Frontier continues the evocative tone of the author's previous book, Women's Voices from the Oregon Trail. Sweeping yet intimate, Susan G. Butruille's book gives voice to the women of the many western frontiers through their journals, stories, songs & recipes. Here are strung-together moments of everydayness, punctuated by a Pueblo woman's corn grinding song, a Hispanic wedding feast & horseback rides across the prairie, hair flying free.


Gender and Generation on the Far Western Frontier

Gender and Generation on the Far Western Frontier

Author: Cynthia Culver Prescott

Publisher: University of Arizona Press

Published: 2016-06

Total Pages: 232

ISBN-13: 0816534136

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As her family traveled the Oregon Trail in 1852, Mary Ellen Todd taught herself to crack the ox whip. Though gender roles often blurred on the trail, families quickly tried to re-establish separate roles for men and women once they had staked their claims. For Mary Ellen Todd, who found a “secret joy in having the power to set things moving,” this meant trading in the ox whip for the more feminine butter churn. In Gender and Generation on the Far Western Frontier, Cynthia Culver Prescott expertly explores the shifting gender roles and ideologies that countless Anglo-American settlers struggled with in Oregon’s Willamette Valley between 1845 and 1900. Drawing on traditional social history sources as well as divorce records, married women’s property records, period photographs, and material culture, Prescott reveals that Oregon settlers pursued a moving target of middle-class identity in the second half of the nineteenth century. Prescott traces long-term ideological changes, arguing that favorable farming conditions enabled Oregon families to progress from accepting flexible frontier roles to participating in a national consumer culture in only one generation. As settlers’ children came of age, participation in this new culture of consumption and refined leisure became the marker of the middle class. Middle-class culture shifted from the first generation’s emphasis on genteel behavior to a newer genteel consumption. This absorbing volume reveals the shifting boundaries of traditional women’s spheres, the complicated relationships between fathers and sons, and the second generation’s struggle to balance their parents’ ideology with a changing national sense of class consciousness.


Community Building and Early Public Relations

Community Building and Early Public Relations

Author: Donnalyn Pompper

Publisher:

Published: 2021

Total Pages: 38

ISBN-13: 9780429274718

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"From the start, women were central to a century of westward migration in the U.S. Community Building and Early Public Relations: Pioneer Women's Role on and after the Oregon Trail offers a path forward in broadening PR's Caucasian/White male-gendered history in the U.S. Undergirded by humanist, communitarian, critical race theory, social constructionist perspectives, and a feminist communicology lens, this book analyzes U.S. pioneer women's lived experiences, drawing parallels with PR's most basic functions--relationship building, networking, community building, boundary spanning, and advocacy. Using narrative analysis of diaries and reminiscences of women who travelled 2,000+ miles on the Oregon Trail in the mid-to-late 1800s, Pompper uncovers how these women filled roles of Caretaker/Advocate, Community Builder of Meeting Houses and Schools, served a Civilizing Function, offered Agency and Leadership, and provided Emotional Connection for Social Cohesion. Revealed also is an inevitable paradox as Caucasian/White pioneer women's interactional qualities made them complicit as colonizers forever altering indigenous peoples' way of life. This book will be of interest to undergraduate and graduate PR students, PR practitioners, and researchers of PR history and social identity intersectionalities. It encourages us to expand the definition of PR to include community building and to revise linear timeline and evolutionary models to accommodate voices of women and people of color prior to the 20th century"--


Pioneer Women

Pioneer Women

Author: Joanna L. Stratton

Publisher: Simon and Schuster

Published: 2013-05-28

Total Pages: 320

ISBN-13: 1476753598

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From a rediscovered collection of autobiographical accounts written by hundreds of Kansas pioneer women in the early twentieth century, Joanna Stratton has created a collection hailed by Newsweek as “uncommonly interesting” and “a remarkable distillation of primary sources.” Never before has there been such a detailed record of women’s courage, such a living portrait of the women who civilized the American frontier. Here are their stories: wilderness mothers, schoolmarms, Indian squaws, immigrants, homesteaders, and circuit riders. Their personal recollections of prairie fires, locust plagues, cowboy shootouts, Indian raids, and blizzards on the plains vividly reveal the drama, danger and excitement of the pioneer experience. These were women of relentless determination, whose tenacity helped them to conquer loneliness and privation. Their work was the work of survival, it demanded as much from them as from their men—and at last that partnership has been recognized. “These voices are haunting” (The New York Times Book Review), and they reveal the special heroism and industriousness of pioneer women as never before.


Seeing the Elephant

Seeing the Elephant

Author: Joyce Badgley Hunsaker

Publisher: Texas Tech University Press

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 292

ISBN-13: 9780896725041

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A workbook to provide exercises to teach students about the life of those who traveled on the Oregon Trail.