If you had been in Laughlin Park in Waynesville, Missouri the afternoon of December 9, 1837, you would have seen more than 350 Cherokee setting up camp in the fields along Roubidoux Creek. Read the Trail of Tears stories about removal along the northern route.
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This morning word came that a Cherokee woman was dying. I hastened to her tent…She was put in the wagon which carried her family when the detachment started, but soon expired.
Rev. Daniel S. Butrick diary, March 11, 1839
…halted at Waynesville, MO 4 o'c P.M. encamped and issued corn and fodder, beef and cornmeal. Weather extremely cold. B. B. Cannon's diary, December 9, 1837
We travelled about 12 miles to a settlement… on the banks of a beautiful stream, named Rubedoo. Here we had a delightful place, on the bank of the river convenient to wood and water.
Rev Daniel S. Butrick's diary, March 12, 1839
A Frigid Crossing A Road Through History |
Last updated: February 21, 2019