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Beyond Cannibalism: The True Story of the Donner Party
National Geographic ^ | JULY 2, 2017

Posted on 07/01/2017 10:32:12 PM PDT by nickcarraway

If it had worked out differently, the group of settlers that came to be known as the Donner Party would have slipped over the Sierra Nevada into California—and obscurity.

But poor planning, a series of bad decisions, and early snowstorms caused 60 of the original pioneers to become stranded in the mountains during the winter of 1846. And as hypothermia set in and food ran out, many resorted to that greatest of human taboos: cannibalism.

But who were these people? To answer that question, Michael Wallis, author of The Best Land Under Heaven: The Donner Party In The Age Of Manifest Destiny, has gone back to the beginning.

By delving into the biographies of leading party members and placing them into the religious and political context of the time, he has moved the story of the Donner Party beyond mere sensationalism to reveal uncomfortable truths about America, then and now.

National Geographic caught up with Wallis, a historian of the American West, by phone in St. Louis, Missouri.

Let’s cut to the chase. Did members of the Donner Party eat each other to survive? And what evidence do we have?

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE How Baby Poison Frogs Could Escape Cannibalism Cannibalism Study Finds People Are Not That Nutritious Cannibalism—the Ultimate Taboo—Is Surprisingly Common There are different types of cannibalism; ritualistic, sacrificial, and survival cannibalism. There’s been survival cannibalism forever, and there was a lot during this period of time. There was maritime cannibalism, polar exploration cannibalism, and it continued on until the 20th century, in the Warsaw Ghetto and Stalingrad. (Read: "Cannibalism Study Finds People Are Not That Nutritious.")

In order to survive, members of what ended up being called the Donner Party did indeed turn to survival cannibalism. Some of the most substantial proof comes from the survivors themselves.

In correspondence, journals, and later, interviews, they freely admitted that when everything else was gone, they turned to cannibalism. They were suffering hypothermia and starvation; they were delirious. But, they knew that out in the snow banks was this great store of protein: people who had already died. They had carefully placed them in the snow banks and that’s what it came down to.

Their own deep freeze?

[Laughs.] Yup, they went to the deep freeze. Over the years, people would ask me, 'What are you working on now?' The short answer was 'A book about the Donner Party.' The long answer was, 'A book about the folly and arrogance of Manifest Destiny, as told through the eyes of its foot soldiers.' But if I’d just say the Donner Party, they’d invariably say, 'Aren’t those the pioneers who got trapped in the mountains and ate each other?' I’d say, 'Yes.' But then I had to explain that that’s only a slice of the Donner pie, albeit an important one.

VIEW IMAGES PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF LIVERIGHT PUBLISHING CORPORATION In the book, you say, “The Gothic tale of cannibalism draws a real parallel between the individuals consuming flesh and the desire of a country to consume the continent.” That’s a pretty harsh judgment, isn't it?

There are so many metaphors and elements of history that crossroad at this particular point from 1845 to 1847. The term Manifest Destiny was first coined in 1845, by John L. O’Sullivan of the New York Post, in an editorial. Many people, including politicians of course, and others interested in the commercial interests of the U.S., came to the conclusion that God Almighty had mandated the Anglo-Americans as the Chosen People and it was their destiny, their manifest destiny, to take over the entire continent. (Read how a 2,000-mile trail helped define the American mindset.)

Timing couldn’t have been better. We had a bellicose, expansionist president, James Polk, who schemed up a convenient war with Mexico, which owned much of the land we were to take in the West. The story line was, 'There are no people out there, anyway, so let’s take this land!' Of course, there were a lot of people out there, like the Mexicans, and tens, if not hundreds of thousands, of Indians. What we did was gobble up nations.

The most infamous member of the party was a German emigrant named Lewis Keseberg. Give us a bit of background—and describe his heinous deeds.

For me, there are no shining heroes or demons in this story. Keseberg was made into the master villain of this whole tragedy, and he didn’t help his own cause. He and his wife, Philippine, came from Germany. He was a son of a Lutheran clergyman, and they decided to join this vanguard moving west. He was a sharp-tempered fellow, who was sometimes abusive to his young, pregnant wife. He was also accused of plundering Indian burial sites.

0:00 | 12:56 WHY FOUR COWBOYS RODE WILD HORSES 3,000 MILES ACROSS AMERICA (PART 3) When the fourth rescue party reached him in April 1847, he was the only survivor. He was reportedly found with a cauldron of cooked flesh and discarded bones. There were even rumors from some of the surviving children that he had taken one lad to bed with him to comfort him and the next morning the boy was dead, hung up on the wall of the cabin, like a slab of meat, and later eaten.

The journalists of the day feasted on all this. Sensationalized stories, often filled with outright lies, [nicknamed] Keseberg "The Human Cannibal." It was said he actually relished the taste of human flesh, and that when rescuers offered him alternative protein, he refused it, saying, 'Oh no, I like this better.' Many of those stories are suspect. So, though I don’t think Keseberg is someone to champion, I do believe he got a fairly raw deal.

You say there were no heroes and heroines in this grisly tale. But one person who stands out is Tamsen Donner. Tell us about her—and how women became, as you put it, “she-wolves” to save their kin.

Throughout the many years that separate us from the Donner Party and its tragedy, people have singled out Tamsen as the true heroine. There were many things that she did that are admirable. [A natural educator, she] dreamed of starting a girls’ school in California. She liked to botanize, collecting specimens of plants along the route. For her, the whole trip was a learning adventure.

The reason people flocked to Tamsen is because she totally refused, to her detriment and eventual death, to abandon her husband, George, the elder of the Donner brothers. He had injured his hand near the time they were marooned in the snow. It became gangrenous, and that ultimately claimed his life. She sent her children off to various rescue parties, but she stayed with George until the very end.

One of the surprises in the book is that, if history had turned out differently, Abraham Lincoln might have died with the Donner Party. How did he connect to this story?

That’s one of my favorite stories. For me, James Reed is the most interesting character. He was this entrepreneurial Irish immigrant who built a business in Sangamon County, Illinois. In Springfield, the state capital, there was this astute young prairie lawyer who helped Reed in various business matters. They had been messmates in the Black Hawk War, were good friends, and when Reed declared bankruptcy and set out on the trail to rebuild his life, it seems this young lawyer, Mr. Lincoln, was very interested in going as well.

Lincoln was interested in California for the entirety of his life. He was even offered civic office out in the Pacific Northwest. He might have signed up for the Donner Party, but he had a driven, and often obstinate wife, Mary Todd Lincoln. She already had kinsmen in California, who had gone out in earlier wagon trains. But at the time of the Donner Party, she had a young toddler son and was pregnant with another. Lincoln was also just beginning his political career, after being elected to his one term of Congress. So he didn’t go. But Mary Todd was there waving goodbye at the Donners’ departure point, which is today well marked in the heart of Springfield.

How did the survivors of the Donner Party, particularly children, come to terms with what they had done and seen? Did they go on to live normal lives—or were they too scarred by their experiences?

Eating human flesh was a total, last resort. People say, 'Oh, those cannibals, how could they do that?' I turn it around and say, 'What would you do if you are a mother watching your children starve and freeze to death? You’ve already eaten the horses and oxen, and boiled their hides into a horrible gelatinous concoction; you’ve eaten field mice and finally cut the throats of your beloved family dogs and eaten them, paws and all. But you know that there’s protein that will keep you alive in those snow banks.'

It didn’t really scar the children because they were told to eat it and they knew it kept them alive. Some of them never ever spoke of it again. Some denied it, but not that many. A lot of them went on to live perfectly normal and successful lives, like James Reed, who became a prosperous citizen and business leader in San Jose, California.

The reason I was able to capture a lot of information that’s never really been discussed before is because I struck up a relation with the descendants of the Donner Party. Not many people have talked to the descendants. But they have a great deal to say!

They’re wonderful people, from every walk of life, and I found who were willing to talk and share some of their archival material. There was no guilt or embarrassment. They know they’re part of history, they’re bright people with a great sense of humor, which is very important.

What did you learn about human nature—and America—when writing this book?

It proved several things to me. This grand expansionist movement came at a critical time, when America was fixated on extending its borders. It was, as the great historian, Bernard Devoto, called it, The Year of Decision. Yet I found many of the decisions were not good decisions. I also found solid proof that the old, somewhat clichéd statement about repeating history—that those who don’t learn from history are doomed to repeat it—is true.

The story of the Donner Party, which looms so large in America’s folklore, is not only a metaphor for Manifest Destiny, but also a microcosm of the U.S. Recently, that deadly combination from the past has reared its head again. The two words that come to mind to describe the present are ignorance and arrogance. So my hope is that this story has relevancy for today.


TOPICS: Food; History; Travel
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1 posted on 07/01/2017 10:32:12 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway
Liberals are always reaching to rewrite the past and come up with some way of making it a crime to be Caucasian. Aside from coming up with yet another condemnation of Manifest Destiny, there's really very little in this publication which wasn't already really well covered in the histories published in the 1890’s, including the Lincoln connections.

I am rather surprised that the aftermath histories were given such short shrift in this latest tome; especially in context of the mega flood of 1861-62 in the California central valley. But I guess when you're writing an agenda piece, actual interesting history is secondary to pushing the agenda.

2 posted on 07/01/2017 10:47:47 PM PDT by kingu (Everything starts with slashing the size and scope of the federal government.)
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To: nickcarraway
The “true story” After 150 years? How about “the true story” on carbon dioxide, “global warming,” and your leftist agenda. Does that qualify as a “true story?”
3 posted on 07/01/2017 10:48:31 PM PDT by Fungi (Mucor roxii is not a rock band.)
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To: kingu

Liberals believe in natural selection. I like to tweak them and say nature selected whites to be on top. It’s not privilege, it’s nature.


4 posted on 07/01/2017 10:50:01 PM PDT by ez ("Abashed the devil stood and felt how awful goodness is." - Milton)
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To: nickcarraway

Not an easy read at all. Gratuitously morbid , all the moreso with the author’s tendency to crack puns and ghoulish little jokes throughout his article. I can see Vincent Price smiling
creepily. I can hear his manic, cackling laugh as it echoes in the dark.

This is like something Steven King would have written early in his career, minus the trademark excesses of Steven King violence.
If I had been holding this book in a bookstore flipping pages, I would have the urge to wash my hands with bleach and pumice soap afterward.


5 posted on 07/01/2017 10:50:34 PM PDT by lee martell
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To: nickcarraway
Typical of what was formerly "National Geographic" had devolved into National Sociographic. Dropped them over a decade ago in disgust.

Focus on nature and the exploration of distant regions has given way to social engineering and angst...........

6 posted on 07/01/2017 10:56:26 PM PDT by doorgunner69
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To: nickcarraway

No mention that the local Indians tormented them by killing their cattle as they chased them into the mountains? The Indians knew survival would be very difficult that winter without the cattle. And no, I am not blaming the Indians for their demise, the Donnor Party made many mistake on their own.


7 posted on 07/01/2017 11:02:06 PM PDT by Michael.SF. (Women who are 25 pounds overweight tend to live longer than the men who mention it.)
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To: doorgunner69
Donner Party revisionism is passé. Historians know very well that the group was offered a series of sumptuous meals by Morgan Freeman but their backward, racist thinking led them to forsake him - and to eventual ruin. Poor Morgan: so just, so righteous. Food for the soul.
8 posted on 07/01/2017 11:37:12 PM PDT by golux
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To: kingu

Why do libs hate Manifest Destiny so? According to this article, it figuratively went up a frozen mountain pass to die.

Why hate something so grand a failure? Manifest Destiny didn’t work, right? The massive number of American liberals living on the west coast is just a delusion. The U.S. is still a cluster of states east of the Mississippi.

Or are liberals waiting for their fever dreams of Reconquista to balance the books, and label MD a failure future tense?


9 posted on 07/01/2017 11:48:23 PM PDT by Rinnwald
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To: nickcarraway
"...so much to grok, so little to grok from."
10 posted on 07/02/2017 12:19:42 AM PDT by shibumi (Cover it with gas and set it on fire.)
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To: nickcarraway

Was the Donner Party the first American “frozen dinner”? Historians really don’t want to know.


11 posted on 07/02/2017 12:59:05 AM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: shibumi
"...so much to grok, so little to grok from."

Subtle. I still remember laughing, the first time I read where Jubal Harshaw asked, standing at the stove, "Michael?"

12 posted on 07/02/2017 3:21:06 AM PDT by jonascord (First rule of the Dunning-Kruger Club is that you do not know you are in the Dunning-Kruger club.)
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To: nickcarraway

At least they didn’t have to deal with some stupid highway patrol guy making them put tire chains on (or wagon chains, or whatever they called them in those days).


13 posted on 07/02/2017 3:35:57 AM PDT by BobL (In Honor of the NeverTrumpers, I declare myself as FR's first 'Imitation NeverTrumper')
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To: nickcarraway

I am sitting about 35 miles from where the Donner Party wintered. Yes the results of their ordeal is the “big” story. However, if one looks back to the origins of how they wound up in that situation there was a series of poor decisions that almost guaranteed that they were headed for disaster. Modern day preppers should study what lead to them being stranded. Even down to the people chosen to be part of the group.


14 posted on 07/02/2017 3:38:21 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Not my circus. Not my monkeys.)
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To: nickcarraway

Ok read until the last paragraph - “The story of the Donner Party, which looms so large in America’s folklore, is not only a metaphor for Manifest Destiny, but also a microcosm of the U.S. Recently, that deadly combination from the past has reared its head again. The two words that come to mind to describe the present are ignorance and arrogance. So my hope is that this story has relevancy for today”.

Yeah, we’re ignorant and arrogant with Trump as president. F@ck you leftist historian. Why do you have to let your leftism and bias creep into everything.? It’s like the main stream news!


15 posted on 07/02/2017 3:45:51 AM PDT by Nicojones
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To: nickcarraway

bit of unrelated sentences got posted


16 posted on 07/02/2017 3:48:55 AM PDT by SMGFan (Sarah Michelle Gellar is on twitter @SarahMGellar)
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To: nickcarraway

It seems there is no segment of mainstream media communication outlets today that aren’t polluted through and through with “cultural Marxism”. I’ve developed my own methods of filtering out all of the dreck to try and get at any fact that may be revealed amidst the crap, but it’s getting harder to do. I have no idea how young people can be expected to do the same, since they have no reference point that predates the liberal leftist s**tstorm that has plagued this country for so many years.


17 posted on 07/02/2017 3:50:21 AM PDT by DrPretorius
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To: nickcarraway
"We had a bellicose, expansionist president, James Polk, who schemed up a convenient war with Mexico, which owned much of the land we were to take in the West. The story line was, 'There are no people out there, anyway, so let’s take this land!' Of course, there were a lot of people out there, like the Mexicans, and tens, if not hundreds of thousands, of Indians. What we did was gobble up nations."

I grow weary of uneducated tripe such as this. The author has obviously never worked the land. Property rights and land ownership is premised upon the idea of man's labor being expended on the land for a prevailing property right.

The settlers were not "gobbling up nations".

18 posted on 07/02/2017 3:53:37 AM PDT by Cvengr ( Adversity in life & death is inevitable; Stress is optional through faith in Christ.)
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To: nickcarraway
"to describe the present are ignorance and arrogance. So my hope is that this story has relevancy for today."

So Trump and his ilk are the cause of misery.

Fairly interesting article until it ended w/that.

Even if I had been interested in reading that book, knowing that it's just another communist cause in disguise eliminates all interest.

Incidentally, a lot of younger folks don't know about Donner. If you make a reservation at a restaurant for Donner, when they call out your table, the laughs are fewer and fewer.

19 posted on 07/02/2017 3:54:34 AM PDT by fruser1
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To: nickcarraway

“’What are you working on now?’ ... The long answer was, ‘A book about the folly and arrogance of Manifest Destiny, as told through the eyes of its foot soldiers.’”

The self hatred of America is strong in this one. How was Manifest Destiny “folly” or “arrogant”? It was bold, successful and created the most powerful, free and prosperous nation in history (until liberals got hold of it). Was it folly because some pioneers didn’t successfully make the trip? The left HATES AMERICA and everything that happened here starting from the voyage of Columbus to the present.


20 posted on 07/02/2017 3:58:22 AM PDT by Brooklyn Attitude (The first step in ending the War on White People, is to recognize it exists.)
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