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  1. The Oregon Trail

    The Oregon Trail

    1959 · Western · 1h 26m

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  1. The Oregon Trail is a 1959 American CinemaScope and DeLuxe Color Western film directed by Gene Fowler Jr. and starring Fred MacMurray, William Bishop and Nina Shipman. [2] [3] [4] The film's sets were designed by the art directors John B. Mansbridge and Lyle R. Wheeler .

  2. The Oregon Trail: Directed by Gene Fowler Jr.. With Fred MacMurray, William Bishop, Nina Shipman, Gloria Talbott. In 1846, a newspaperman joins an Oregon Trail wagon train to verify rumors about the U.S. government sending troops disguised as settlers there in order to claim Oregon.

  3. The Oregon Trail: Directed by Gene Fowler Jr.. With Fred MacMurray, William Bishop, Nina Shipman, Gloria Talbott. In 1846, a newspaperman joins an Oregon Trail wagon train to verify rumors about the U.S. government sending troops disguised as settlers there in order to claim Oregon.

    • (493)
    • Drama, Western
    • Gene Fowler Jr.
    • 1959-09
  4. In September 2018 the first Historic Oregon Film Trail sign was installed in collaboration with Oregon State Parks in Gleneden Beach SP. The sign celebrates the 1971 production of the Paul Newman film based on Ken Kesey's novel "Sometimes a Great Notion" which filmed on nearby beaches and at a house on the Siletz River only a few miles away.

  5. Dec 6, 2017 · The Oregon Trail was a roughly 2,000-mile route from Independence, Missouri, to Oregon City, Oregon, that was used by hundreds of thousands of American pioneers in the mid-1800s to emigrate west.

    • 3 min
  6. Organ Trail (film) Organ Trail. (film) Organ Trail is a 2023 American horror- Western film directed by Michael Patrick Jann and starring Zoé De Grand Maison, Mather Zickel, and Lisa LoCicero. Set in the 1870s on the Oregon Trail, the story follows Abigale Archer as she attempts to retrieve her family's horse while fighting against the outlaws ...

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  8. Synopsis. In 1846, the United States, under President James K. Polk, plans to extend the country's borders to the edge of the Oregon territory, despite conflicting claims by the British. Facing possible war, Polk orders soldiers disguised as civilians into the territory. Newspaper publisher James G. Bennett hears rumors of this and dispatches ...

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