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Great Osage Trail: Difference between revisions

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To commemorate the trail and its important role in the lives of Native Americans, and the migration of  pioneers and settlers, the Iroquois Chieftain, Jake Swamp, attended a ceremonial planting of a tree along the route in Independence Missouri in 1999.  The tree is an Iroquois "Tree of Peace" and is planted on property owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and designated as a "Temple Site"   An article published in 1979 in the Church magazine tells about early Mormon pioneer along the trail called "Boone's Lick" and then along the Santa Fe/Great Osage Trail leading from Franklin, Missouri to the western border of Missouri.  
To commemorate the trail and its important role in the lives of Native Americans, and the migration of  pioneers and settlers, the Iroquois Chieftain, Jake Swamp, attended a ceremonial planting of a tree along the route in Independence Missouri in 1999.  The tree is an Iroquois "Tree of Peace" and is planted on property owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and designated as a "Temple Site"   An article published in 1979 in the Church magazine tells about early Mormon pioneer along the trail called "Boone's Lick" and then along the Santa Fe/Great Osage Trail leading from Franklin, Missouri to the western border of Missouri.  


[[Category:Missouri Migration Routes]] [[Category:Indians_of_the_United_States]] [[Category:Migration_Routes]]
[[Category:Missouri Migration Routes]] [[Category:Indigenous Tribes of the United States]] [[Category:Migration_Routes]]
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