people would wear
Ha Ha i realy have no idea don't ask me that's why i searched it!
The wagon trains tried not to leave too late in the spring to avoid the mountain snows in the fall , so they usually didn't worry about winter clothing. The trip took 6 months so timing had to be right. Some did get caught, but that was unusual.
Girls wore dresses and had their hair in braids. The moms had their hair in buns. Young boys wore pants and shirts.
Trousers and shirts and pants and a hat to block the sun from their eyes
How the h**** am i supposed to know this s***??????? ttmocd10
By some official documentation, mostly surrounding the Lewis and Clark expedition: Hats were large and round (think larger versions of today's cowboy hats) buckskin clothing was used (without fringes) shoes were moccasins. Winter clothing was from different furs and summer clothing was linen frock shirts of differing colors (mostly red and blue).
what did the maidu men wear
Many men did, but obviously not all men did. It was a very popular thing to wear hats during this time period.
Farmed, planted crops, reaped crops, hunted, fished, and protected the family.
Hunted, traded.
How the h**** am i supposed to know this s***??????? ttmocd10
mountain men....
Wayne Studer has written: 'Rock on the wild side' -- subject(s): Discography, Homosexuality, Male, in music, Popular music, Gay men, Songs and music 'Oregon Trail II' -- subject(s): Oregon National Historic Trail, Oregon Trail II (Computer file)
The women usually made the pioneer food on the trail while the men hunted, worked or farmed. The women usually made things like stew, johnny cakes, fritters, etc.
Scurvy and fingers and toes went before other things.
Some came in order to trap otter due to their valuable pelts. Most were farmers but men of many trades (i.e.blacksmithing, carpentry etc.) also settled in Oregon country.
The Oregon Trail. In 1843, a large wagon train of 1,000 people went on the journey on a path called, "The Oregon Trail" to find new land and new lives. These settlers did not know they were about to make either the best choice of their lives or the worst choice they have ever made. The Oregon trail became popular after people started to find out how many people actually made it to their destination so they started to move to. So many people had made it but not all could see what life was like at their dream home in another land. Between 1840 and 1860 The California Trail had attracted over 250,000 thousand people, but the Oregon Trail attracted well over 300,000 farmers, business men, miners and pioneers.
The men wore long sleeved shirts buttoned all the way up to the neck. Full pants rolled up to the knee and high knee stockings to represent their knickers.
In the 1800s Marcus and Narcissa Whitman wanted to spread their religion. They headed east and set up missions in Oregon. On their journey, they were helped by mountain men, people who work in the mountains and trade beaver pellets. The mountain men were from England, as England had a few settlements in Oregon. The Whitmans found there was very good farmland there, and more people slowly migrated to Oregon. The Oregon Trail devolepod and eventually so many people were there the US won Oregon from England. I'm talking about the Oregon territory, which includes parts of Washington and Idaho.
Explorers and fur traders first traced the course of the Oregon Trail. In 1805, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark traveled on a western section of the route in the region of the Snake and Columbia rivers. Trader Robert Stuart also used the trail while returning from Fort Astoria. Benjamin Bonneville is credited with taking the first wagons through South Pass in the 1830's. Nathaniel J. Wyeth also led companies over the trail. John C. Fremont surveyed a portion of the route in 1842 for the United States Army. http://www.worldbookonline.com/advanced/article?id=ar405360&st=oregon+trail---my sourcepeople
what do men,women,and children wear in japan?