Emigrant Gap | |
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Elevation | ~5,200 ft. / 1,585 m |
Traversed by | I-80, Union Pacific Railroad |
Location | Placer County, California, United States |
Range | Sierra Nevada |
Coordinates | 39°18′11″N 120°39′58″W / 39.303°N 120.666°W |
Reference no. | 403 |
Emigrant Gap is a gap in a ridge on the California Trail as it crosses the Sierra Nevada, to the west of what is now known as Donner Pass. Here the cliffs are so steep that, back in the 1840s, the pioneers on their way to California had to lower their wagons on ropes in order to continue.
The Emigrant Gap was so named because it was a low gap on a ridge where the emigrants' wagons crossed from the American River drainage to the Bear River drainage. It was part of the Truckee Route, a portion of the California Trail by which pioneers, heading west, emigrated from the United States to California, which was part of Mexico until it was captured by the United States in the Mexican–American War (1846–1848).
There is a California historical marker (number 403), dedicated on June 25, 1950, on Interstate 80 commemorating this brave and arduous task.
The small unincorporated community of Emigrant Gap is adjacent to the gap.
The Stephens–Townsend–Murphy Party were the first to cross Emigrant Gap and the Sierra, doing so in 1844–45.