Gila Trail, 1846
The southern overland route to California and the Pacific Ocean through present-day Arizona has been in use for centuries — first by Native Americans then by Europeans throughout the 16th to the 19th centuries. This braided trail became nationally important in mid-19th century when the Mexican War and subsequent gold discoveries in California set off unprecedented westward migration. Thousands made their way over the various routes of the Gila Trail.

▶︎
Santa Fe Trail, 1821: First Trail Into the West

▶︎
The Hohokam: Triumph in the Desert

▶︎
The Mormon Trail, 1846: Journey of Faith

▶︎
Why Comanche Warriors Survived Winters Where Settlers Froze To Death

▶︎
The Bozeman Trail, 1863: The Final Trail West

▶︎
Knives of the Rocky Mountain West

▶︎
How Mountain Men Built Shelters to Survive Deadly Blizzards

▶︎
On the California Trail: Preserving Gravelly Ford

▶︎
“Have You Eaten?” the Widow Asked—And the Quiet Cowboy Never Left Her Table

▶︎
The FORGOTTEN TRUE Story of The Gibson Boys

▶︎
American Traditions - The Oregon Trail | Narrated by Red Steagal

▶︎
The Most Feared Trail in the Old West - Doubtful Canyon

▶︎
Colorado Experience: Women of the Santa Fe Trail

▶︎
The Oregon Trail: Opening of the West

▶︎
The Last Arizona Settler Who Fed a Captured Apache Giant for a Month — What the Giant Said When...

▶︎
The Dark Story of America's Last Great Gold Rush: Cripple Creek Documentary

▶︎
How America Built Wooden Bridges Across Canyons

▶︎
Unveiling the Lost Dutchman Trail: Truths and Myths with Hank Sheffer & Larry Hedrick

▶︎
The Rise and Fall of Dodge Power Wagon - The Truck That Built America

▶︎
