
|a Exported from Connexion by CMU and loaded with m2btab.b in 2019. Aldersons tale is a true story of honor, courage. |d New York, Toronto, Farrar & Rinehart |w (OCoLC)612697368. Smith, Helena Huntington May have limited writing in cover pages. A well-bred West Virginia bride begins the adventure of her life when she marries a young. |i Online version: |a Alderson, Nannie T. |a Cosgrave, John O'Hara, |c II, |d 1908-1968, |0 |e illustrator. A Bride Goes West is new and fresh because it is impregnated with a just sense. |a Smith, Helena Huntington, |0 |e author. |a When Nannie Tiffany of West Virginia married Walt Alderson, who'd already been on the cattle trail for years, in 1882, they went to Montana to start a little ranch. |a Two Moons - Young-Man-Afraid-of-His-Horses. |a Story of Mrs Alderson's life as told to Helena Huntington Smith. |a vii, 273 pages : |b illustrations |c 21 cm |a New York |a Toronto : |b Farrar & Rinehart, |c Alderson and Helena Huntington Smith drawings by J. This volume also includes miscellaneous material from the Corps of Discovery's first year.|a TLM |b eng |c TLM |d OCL |d OCLCQ |d KZV |d MTG |d CWU |d VVW |d OCLCQ |d ZAD |d OCLCF |d OCLCA |d HLO |d NLC |d OCLCQ |d OCLCA |d JDP |d OCLCO |d W8A |d OCL |d COM Lewis and Clark collected critical information about traveling westward from Native Americans during this winter. It describes the party's encounters with and observations of area Indian tribes. Alderson and Helena Huntington Smith, A Bride Goes West (Lincoln, University of Nebraska Press, 1969) follows the adventures of a southern. This volume consists of journals, primarily by Clark, that cover the expedition's route up the Missouri River to Fort Mandan in present-day North Dakota and its frigid winter encampment there. Along the way they filled hundreds of notebook pages with observations of the geography, Indian tribes, and natural history of the trans-Mississippi West. Meriwether Lewis and William Clark led this expedition of 1804–6. He conceived the Corps of Discovery to travel up the Missouri River to the Rocky Mountains and westward along possible river routes to the Pacific Ocean. President Thomas Jefferson shared this dream. Since the time of Columbus, explorers dreamed of a water passage across the North American continent.
