It uses the Millennial Star to show why the handcarts were used. The most famous quote from the book is in the introduction. "But at only one period, 1856-1860, was the handcart employed for mass migration--the most remarkable travel experiment in the history of Western America."
The Hafens had an ancestor who as a small girl was part of the last handcart company. The bias of favoring the church and the handcart plan is part of the book, and is to be expected.
The appendices are great. They include poetry and hymns important to the pioneers, diaries, story of the rescue, and rosters of each of the companies (although not complete as Isaac Wardle is missing from the Martin Handcart Company roster.)
If one is studying the handcarts, this is the place to start that study. It includes an interesting graph of all the companies, the number of immigrants, the number of handcarts, the number of deaths. 250 or eight and a half percent of the handcart pioneers died along the trail. The majority, 150 were part of the Martin Company.
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