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<p>[QUOTE="leeg, post: 3565206, member: 17073"]Wish you the best and Thank You!</p><p><br /></p><p><br /></p><p> “The new 1934 Oregon Trail Memorial Half Dollar, just off the Denver mint, commemorates the hundredth anniversary of three significant events in American history.</p><p><br /></p><p> First of these is the founding of old Fort Hall, in what is now Idaho. It was one hundred years ago the Nathaniel J. Wyeth, an intrepid cod-fisherman from Massachusetts rolled across the Rockies along the Oregon Trail with covered wagons. The goods he carried were intended for the Rocky Mountains Fur Company-ordered by of its leaders, Milton Sublette, but by the time Wyeth arrived; Sublette had developed other interests and broke his bargain with the Yankee fisherman.</p><p><br /></p><p> ‘All right,’ returned the doughty New Englander, ‘but I’ll roll a stone in your dooryard you won’t get out.’ And straightaway Wyeth drove on to a strategic spot on the Snake River planted a trading post there and set up a rival business against the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. He named the post Fort Hall after the man who had backed his enterprise. Later the Hudson Bay Company, a British concern who wanted to keep Americans out of the Oregon territory, squeezed Wyeth into selling Fort Hall to them. In after years it played a great part as a way station to Oregon and California.</p><p><br /></p><p> This year thousands of people will commemorate its founding with the Fort Hall Centennial Celebration, Aug. 1-8, held in Pocatello, Idaho and the surrounding places. This 1934 issue of the Oregon Trail coin commemorates the event.</p><p><br /></p><p> The second centennial it commemorates is the founding of old Fort Laramie in what is now Wyoming. Milton Sublette with his brother Captain ‘Billy’ Sublette and Campbell-planted this trading post out there at the junction of the North Platte and the Laramie rivers in 1834.</p><p><br /></p><p>No other post is better known than this pioneer Fort Laramie. Hundred of thousands of American pioneers made it a way station on their trek west.</p><p><br /></p><p> A third event being remembered this year is the pioneer missionary venture into the far west. It was headed by the intrepid Jason Lee, a minister of the Methodist faith. The mission was brought about as a response to the call of the Indians for the ‘White Man’s Book of Heaven.’ Several Indian Chiefs had come more than two thousand miles out of the Northwest to General Clark in Saint Louis with the request for the gospel message. Jason Lee and his brother Daniel with others responded to the call.</p><p><br /></p><p> Not long ago an ‘ox mobile’-a covered wagon built on an automobile chassis left Boston to follow the trail of these pioneer missionaries. The participants in the new trek will participate in a pageant re-enacting ‘The First Sermon’ preached west of the Rockies-which is part of the Fort Hall centennial.</p><p><br /></p><p> The 1934 Oregon Trail Coin commemorates all three of these significant historical events.</p><p><br /></p><p>Howard R. Driggs</p><p><br /></p><p>President, Oregon Trail Association”<b>10</b></p><p><br /></p><p><b>10 <i>The Coin Collectors Journal</i>, A Tri-Centennial Coin, August, 1934, p. 97-98.</b></p><p><br /></p><p><img src="https://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a195/leeg1957/Book%20Project%20Images/Oregon%20Trail%20Memorial%20Association/1938%20Announce%20p.%201.png" class="bbCodeImage wysiwygImage" alt="" unselectable="on" /></p><p><b>1938 Oregon Trail Memorial Association brochure. Most of the brochure recounts the accomplishments of the association up till 1938, some text pertains to the sale of 1938 half dollars. Courtesy of Stacks Bowers Galleries.</b></p><p><br /></p><p><img src="https://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a195/leeg1957/Book%20Project%20Images/Oregon%20Trail%20Memorial%20Association/1938%20Announce%20p.%202.png" class="bbCodeImage wysiwygImage" alt="" unselectable="on" /></p><p><b>1938 Oregon Trail Memorial Association black-and-white brochure. Most of the brochure recounts the accomplishments of the association up till 1938, some text pertains to the sale of 1938 half dollars. Courtesy of Stacks Bowers Galleries.</b></p><p><b><br /></b></p><p><img src="https://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a195/leeg1957/Book%20Project%20Images/Oregon%20Trail%20Memorial%20Association/1938%20Announce%20p.%203.png" class="bbCodeImage wysiwygImage" alt="" unselectable="on" /></p><p><b><b><b>1938 Oregon Trail Memorial Association black-and-white brochure. Most of the brochure recounts the accomplishments of the association up till 1938, some text pertains to the sale of 1938 half dollars. Courtesy of Stacks Bowers Galleries.</b></b></b></p><p><b></b>[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="leeg, post: 3565206, member: 17073"]Wish you the best and Thank You! “The new 1934 Oregon Trail Memorial Half Dollar, just off the Denver mint, commemorates the hundredth anniversary of three significant events in American history. First of these is the founding of old Fort Hall, in what is now Idaho. It was one hundred years ago the Nathaniel J. Wyeth, an intrepid cod-fisherman from Massachusetts rolled across the Rockies along the Oregon Trail with covered wagons. The goods he carried were intended for the Rocky Mountains Fur Company-ordered by of its leaders, Milton Sublette, but by the time Wyeth arrived; Sublette had developed other interests and broke his bargain with the Yankee fisherman. ‘All right,’ returned the doughty New Englander, ‘but I’ll roll a stone in your dooryard you won’t get out.’ And straightaway Wyeth drove on to a strategic spot on the Snake River planted a trading post there and set up a rival business against the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. He named the post Fort Hall after the man who had backed his enterprise. Later the Hudson Bay Company, a British concern who wanted to keep Americans out of the Oregon territory, squeezed Wyeth into selling Fort Hall to them. In after years it played a great part as a way station to Oregon and California. This year thousands of people will commemorate its founding with the Fort Hall Centennial Celebration, Aug. 1-8, held in Pocatello, Idaho and the surrounding places. This 1934 issue of the Oregon Trail coin commemorates the event. The second centennial it commemorates is the founding of old Fort Laramie in what is now Wyoming. Milton Sublette with his brother Captain ‘Billy’ Sublette and Campbell-planted this trading post out there at the junction of the North Platte and the Laramie rivers in 1834. No other post is better known than this pioneer Fort Laramie. Hundred of thousands of American pioneers made it a way station on their trek west. A third event being remembered this year is the pioneer missionary venture into the far west. It was headed by the intrepid Jason Lee, a minister of the Methodist faith. The mission was brought about as a response to the call of the Indians for the ‘White Man’s Book of Heaven.’ Several Indian Chiefs had come more than two thousand miles out of the Northwest to General Clark in Saint Louis with the request for the gospel message. Jason Lee and his brother Daniel with others responded to the call. Not long ago an ‘ox mobile’-a covered wagon built on an automobile chassis left Boston to follow the trail of these pioneer missionaries. The participants in the new trek will participate in a pageant re-enacting ‘The First Sermon’ preached west of the Rockies-which is part of the Fort Hall centennial. The 1934 Oregon Trail Coin commemorates all three of these significant historical events. Howard R. Driggs President, Oregon Trail Association”[B]10[/B] [B]10 [I]The Coin Collectors Journal[/I], A Tri-Centennial Coin, August, 1934, p. 97-98.[/B] [IMG]https://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a195/leeg1957/Book%20Project%20Images/Oregon%20Trail%20Memorial%20Association/1938%20Announce%20p.%201.png[/IMG] [B]1938 Oregon Trail Memorial Association brochure. Most of the brochure recounts the accomplishments of the association up till 1938, some text pertains to the sale of 1938 half dollars. Courtesy of Stacks Bowers Galleries.[/B] [IMG]https://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a195/leeg1957/Book%20Project%20Images/Oregon%20Trail%20Memorial%20Association/1938%20Announce%20p.%202.png[/IMG] [B]1938 Oregon Trail Memorial Association black-and-white brochure. Most of the brochure recounts the accomplishments of the association up till 1938, some text pertains to the sale of 1938 half dollars. Courtesy of Stacks Bowers Galleries. [/B] [IMG]https://i11.photobucket.com/albums/a195/leeg1957/Book%20Project%20Images/Oregon%20Trail%20Memorial%20Association/1938%20Announce%20p.%203.png[/IMG] [B][B][B]1938 Oregon Trail Memorial Association black-and-white brochure. Most of the brochure recounts the accomplishments of the association up till 1938, some text pertains to the sale of 1938 half dollars. Courtesy of Stacks Bowers Galleries.[/B][/B] [/B][/QUOTE]
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