ALL NEWS

Athletes to retrace Sierra escape of Donner Party survivors

Dec 16, 2020, 7:01 AM | Updated: 7:02 am

Donner Party...

This photo provided by Keith Sutter shows the 4 Forlorn Hope Expedition members from left to right, Tim Twietmeyer, Jennifer Hemmen, Bob Crowley, and Elke Reimer near the Donner Pass on Nov. 22, 2020. The four veteran ultrarunners from Northern California are setting out on snowshoes to retrace the footsteps of the pioneers who braved the worst blizzard in a century to escape over the top of what's now called Donner Pass through the Emigrant Gap northwest of Lake Tahoe. (Keith Sutter via AP)

(Keith Sutter via AP)

RENO, Nev. (AP) — A pair of backcountry endurance athletes who became obsessed with the Donner Party spent the last seven years researching and exploring the Sierra on foot to try to pinpoint the final 90-mile (145-kilometer) route survivors of the infamous tale of cannibalism finally cut through mountain snowdrifts to safety in the winter of 1846-47.

Now, four veteran ultrarunners from Northern California are setting out on snowshoes to retrace the footsteps of the pioneers who braved the worst blizzard in a century to escape over the top of what’s now called Donner Pass through the Emigrant Gap northwest of Lake Tahoe.

Fifteen members of the original 81-member Donner Party left camp west of Truckee, California, along the current Interstate 80 on Dec. 16, 1846, but only seven — two men and five women — arrived at a settlement east of Sacramento 33 days later to fetch help for dozens of others.

Historians dubbed the escape party the Forlorn Hope, a term originally used to describe military missions with no realistic chance of success.

Unlike those who left Donner Lake that day on crude snowshoes with only wool blankets, an axe and scraps of dried meat, the four extreme athletes will have modern equipment and wilderness gear on the planned five-day hike. They’ll be tracked by live GPS signals at www.forlornhope.org when they begin Wednesday — 174 years to the day after their predecessors.

Tim Twietmeyer, five-time winner of the Western States 100-mile (160-kilometer) endurance run, and Bob Crowley, president of the International Trail Running Association, have been running backcountry trails more than four decades.

They’ll be joined by ultra-runners Jennifer Walker Hemmen and Elke Reimer.

“As I’ve read the account of the Forlorn Hope and then traveled in their footsteps, it has only galvanized my belief this might be the greatest endurance trek in history,” Twietmeyer said.

Crowley, who lives near Sacramento, became intrigued by the journey when he read a novel about the pioneers best known for eating the flesh of their dead companions to stay alive. Cowley “realized it happened right in my own backyard.”

The more he learned, the more convinced he became that cannibalism was but a footnote of a bigger story about “perseverance, passion and grit.”

Crowley said the four modern explorers hope it snows because they’re trying to recreate the experience as much as possible.

“Which we know is impossible to really do because we’ll have the latest technology, and we know where we’re going and we’ll have plenty of food,” he said in a telephone interview Monday. “But I think our mantra is, ‘Let it snow.’ The worse it gets, the happier the four of us would be.”

The Donner Party families traveled 2,000 miles (3,218 kilometers) west in a wagon train in 1846, mostly from Missouri and Illinois, to claim free land in California before the discovery of gold in what was then the Mexican Territory.

Trouble began when they took an unproven “shortcut” and were delayed in Utah and Nevada. Eighty-one men, women and children reached the Sierra in late October and were trapped in the snow before some built cabins at what’s now Donner Lake.

Since the 1980s, archaeologists and others have investigated various stretches of the Forlorn trail that begins with a 1,000 foot (304 meter) elevation climb near what’s now the I-80 corridor, but the complete route topping 7,000 feet (2,133 meters) has remained a matter of speculation.

Seven years ago, Crowley and Twietmeyer started gathering accounts from diaries and historic journals to compare and contrast various descriptions of the escape party’s daily movements during the 33-day journey that ultimately saved the lives of about 40 others.

They eventually identified at least six different theories about the route. Scouring satellite imagery and topographic maps, they set out on the ground to gather first-hand observations on each trail segment before settling on the two most likely.

Judy DePuy, a longtime member of the Truckee Donner Railroad and Donner Summit historical societies, said previous efforts to identify the route relied on aerial photos and diaries that were never fact-checked on the ground.

“Doing the real recon work is worth its weight in gold,” she said.

Crowley told the Reno News & Review they are 85% sure they’ll be following in the original footsteps.

He said they embraced two major principles in their quest to establish the most authentic route — “always presume you’re wrong” and “accept nothing as the whole truth or fact.”

And they often relied on the most basic premise: hikers follow the path of least resistance and exertion while maintaining a proper bearing toward the destination.

Bill Oudegeest, a founding member of the Donner Summit Historical Society, partnered with Crowley and Twietmeyer to help verify the trail. He said cannibalism is the only thing most know about the Donner Party.

“For most people, there the story ends, leaving out the heroism and human nature fighting the elements,” he said. “There is so much more, and these four athletes want to change the narrative.”

We want to hear from you.

Have a story idea or tip? Send it to the KSL NewsRadio team here.

All News

Donald Trump at podium...

Lauren del Valle and Kara Scannell, CNN

Trump fraud trial begins in New York on Monday: What to know

Trump inflated his net worth by as much as $3.6 billion in three separate years between 2011 and 2021, according to the attorney general’s office.

1 hour ago

Frontline healthcare workers hold a demonstration on Labor Day outside Kaiser Permanente Los Angele...

Chris Isidore, CNN

Health care is in crisis. The looming strike by 75,000 health workers is just another sign of that

75,000 health care workers are participating in the nation’s largest health care strike in history.

2 hours ago

Ambulance and first responders...

Ashley Fredde, KSL.com

Murray police searching for driver who police say hit and killed a pedestrian in Murray

MURRAY — Murray police are looking for a driver who police say hit and killed a pedestrian in a hit-and-run crash Friday night. About 9:45 p.m., a pedestrian was about 30 feet south of a crosswalk in the northbound lanes of 900 East and approximately 6300 South in Murray, police said. The fatal crash may […]

2 hours ago

Democratic Rep. Dean Phillips of Minnesota is leaving his position in House Democratic leadership o...

Kristin Wilson, CNN

House Democrat steps down from leadership role over party’s support of Biden’s reelection

Rep. Phillips of Minnesota is leaving his position in House Democratic leadership over his party’s support of President Biden’s reelection

3 hours ago

Police truck...

JOSH ELLIS KSLTV.com

Four killed after small plane crashes north of Moab airport

A Classic Air Medical helicopter located the downed aircraft Sunday evening. Four people died in the accident.

3 hours ago

A pedestrian views diamond jewelry in the window of a store in the Diamond District neighborhood of...

Eva Rothenberg, CNN

Diamond prices are down as people spend more on travel and food

Prices for rough diamonds — the unpolished and uncut stones — have dipped in 2023 as many post-pandemic consumers shy away from luxury goods.

4 hours ago

Sponsored Articles

silhouette of a family looking over a lake with a bird in the top corner flying...

Bear Lake Convention and Visitors Bureau

8 Fun Activities To Do in Bear Lake Without Getting in the Water

Bear Lake offers plenty of activities for the whole family to enjoy without having to get in the water. Catch 8 of our favorite activities.

Wellsville Mountains in the spring with a pond in the foreground...

Wasatch Property Management

Advantages of Renting Over Owning a Home

Renting allows you to enjoy luxury amenities and low maintenance without the long-term commitment and responsibilities of owning a home.

Clouds over a red rock vista in Hurricane, Utah...

Wasatch Property Management

Why Southern Utah is a Retirement Paradise

Retirement in southern Utah offers plenty of cultural and recreational opportunities. Find out all that this region has to offer.

Human hand holding a protest banner stop vaping message over a crowded street background....

Prosperous Utah Communities

Utah’s Battle to Protect Youth from Vaping Epidemic Faces New Threat as Proposed Rule Threatens Progress

Utah's strict standards of nicotine levels in vaping products are at risk, increasing health hazards associated with use. Read more about how you can advocate for a better future for Utah's youth.

Aerial photo of Bear Lake shoreline with canopies and people camped out on the beach...

Visit Bear Lake

Last-Minute Summer Vacation Planning? Check Out Bear Lake!

Bear Lake is the perfect getaway if you are last-minute summer vacation planning. Enjoy activities with your whole family at this iconic lake.

close up of rose marvel saliva blooms in purple...

Shannon Cavalero

Drought Tolerant Perennials for Utah

The best drought tolerant plants for Utah can handle high elevations, alkaline soils, excessive exposure to wind, and use of secondary water.

Athletes to retrace Sierra escape of Donner Party survivors