enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of mountain men - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mountain_Men

    This is a list of explorers, trappers, guides, and other frontiersmen known as "Mountain Men". Mountain men are most associated with trapping for beaver from 1807 to the 1840s in the Rocky Mountains of the United States. Most moved on to other endeavors, but a few of them followed or adopted the mountain man life style into the 20th century.

  3. Mountain man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mountain_man

    A mountain man is an explorer who lives in the wilderness and makes his living from hunting and trapping. Mountain men were most common in the North American Rocky Mountains from about 1810 through to the 1880s (with a peak population in the early 1840s). They were instrumental in opening up the various emigrant trails (widened into wagon roads ...

  4. Dashrath Manjhi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dashrath_Manjhi

    Dashrath Manjhi (14 January 1934 [1] – 17 August 2007 [2]), also known as Mountain Man, [3] was an Indian laborer from Gehlaur village, near Gaya in the eastern state of Bihar. When his wife died in 1959 after being injured from falling from a mountain and due to the same mountain blocking easy access to a nearby hospital in time, he decided ...

  5. John Colter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Colter

    John Colter (c.1770–1775 – May 7, 1812 or November 22, 1813) was a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804–1806). Though party to one of the more famous expeditions in history, Colter is best remembered for explorations he made during the winter of 1807–1808, when he became the first known person of European descent to enter the region which later became Yellowstone National ...

  6. Jedediah Smith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jedediah_Smith

    Jedediah Strong Smith (January 6, 1799 – May 27, 1831) was an American clerk, transcontinental pioneer, frontiersman, hunter, trapper, author, cartographer, mountain man and explorer of the Rocky Mountains, the Western United States, and the Southwest during the early 19th century. After 75 years of obscurity following his death, Smith was ...

  7. Eustace Conway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eustace_Conway

    Occupation (s) Naturalist, educator. Eustace Robinson Conway IV (born September 15, 1961) is an American naturalist and the subject of the book The Last American Man by Elizabeth Gilbert. He has also been the subject of Adventures in the Simple Life by Sarah Vowell on the weekly radio show This American Life with Ira Glass.

  8. Jeremiah Johnson (film) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremiah_Johnson_(film)

    Jeremiah Johnson is a 1972 American Western film directed by Sydney Pollack and starring Robert Redford as the title character and Will Geer as "Bear Claw" Chris Lapp. It is based partly on the life of the legendary mountain man John Jeremiah Johnson, recounted in Raymond Thorp and Robert Bunker's book Crow Killer: The Saga of Liver-Eating Johnson and Vardis Fisher's 1965 novel Mountain Man.

  9. Andrew Henry (fur trader) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Henry_(fur_trader)

    Andrew Henry (fur trader) Major Andrew Henry (c. 1775 – January 10, 1832) was an American miner, army officer, frontiersman, trapper and entrepreneur. Alongside William H. Ashley, Henry was the co-owner of the successful Rocky Mountain Fur Company, otherwise known as "Ashley's Hundred", for the famous mountain men working for their firm from ...