About Expedition by Bill Oudegeest

In the winter of 1846, eighty or so members of the Donner Party, a group of men, women and children, became snowbound and trapped in the Sierra Nevada mountains. They were among the first pioneers seeking a better life in California, their Manifest Destiny

Hoping to find help, on December 16th seventeen of the emigrants – 10 men (4 were fathers), 5 women (3 were mothers) and 2 children – set out on snowshoes in a desperate attempt to cross the mountains and reach a settlement near Sacramento 100 miles away. After enduring punishing physical, mental and emotional hardship, only seven survived. The rest met a horrible fate. Together, this brave group became known as the Forlorn Hope.

This is their story.

The Forlorn Hope Expedition which will begin December 16th, 2020 on the 174th anniversary of the Forlorn Hope journey, culminates 7 years of research – both from written word (diaries, journals, interviews with survivors, articles, novels, academic research, etc..) and in-the-field surveying.

Expedition Introduction

By Bill Oudegeest, Donner Summit Historical Society

When you match an affinity for endorphins with an affinity for history you might get an interesting activity and a compelling story. That’s what we’ll get as spectators as four extreme athletes follow the 1846 route of the Donner Party’s Forlorn Hope. Over five or six days and one hundred miles, they will go from Donner Lake, over Donner Pass and down to Johnson’s Ranch, near Wheatland in the Central Valley.

The general public knows the outlines of the Donner Party, particularly because of the stories of cannibalism.  Fewer know the story of the Forlorn Hope, seventeen people who left Donner Lake on December 16, 1846 in a bid to get help and rescue their friends and families.  Only seven arrived in the Central Valley, emaciated, exhausted and near death, leaving bloody footprints behind them.  That story is fascinating and compelling and is maybe “the greatest endurance trek in history.”   (You can read about that….)

Now 174 years later we have another compelling story, the story of four people who love challenges, love to push themselves to their limits, and are aficionados of history. This new story comes in a couple of parts.  There is the seven years of research from primary and secondary sources and field trips to learn as much as possible about the Forlorn Hope and their route.  There is the logistical planning that follows, so the modern journey ends better than the original.  Then there is the story of the actual reprise itself.

Extreme athletes, Bob Crowley, Tim Twietmeyer, Jennifer Hemmen and Elke Reimer will take on the challenge of crossing the Sierra in winter.  The original trek was incredible but so is this 2020 trek for those of us who can’t conceive of doing anything like it.  There is the driving curiosity to get some idea of what the original Forlorn Hope went through as they overcame obstacles. There is the appreciation of history and human nature in the struggle to survive.  There is also the opportunity to, as Bob Crowley says, “honor and reflect upon the seventeen souls who dared this selfless and desperate act.”

There is another motivating factor too.  Whereas many people know about the Donner Party and fewer know about the Forlorn Hope, the memorable part of the stories is the cannibalism.  For most, there the story ends, leaving out the heroism and human nature fighting the elements.  There is so much more and these four athletes want to change the narrative. Their recreation of the Forlorn Hope journey will bring the story back to the public’s attention and with it the real story “about these amazing people who risked their lives for their families.” Now, Bob Crowley says, the focus can be on the “perseverance, endurance, toughness, passion and grit… focusing on the motivation, ruggedness and resilience of these ‘normal’ people who accomplished extraordinary feats and who embodied the core characteristics and tenets that became the backbone of America.”