In the spring of 1843, nearly a thousand settlers gathered in Independence, Missouri, their wagons laden with dreams of Oregon’s promised valleys. They came from all walks of life-farmers, carpenters, merchants, and artisans-each carrying generations of Eastern skills toward an uncertain Western future. This great migration would mark the first major wagon train to traverse the Oregon Trail, blazing a path that countless others would follow. The journey stretched roughly two thousand miles across half a continent. Those who attempted it faced a gauntlet of natural obstacles: the muddy Missouri plains, the harsh Platte River Valley, the towering Rocky Mountains, and the scorching Snake River desert. Disease, accidents, and the unforgiving elements claimed many lives along the way. Yet still they came, drawn by stories of fertile soil and fresh beginnings in Oregon’s Willamette Valley. This is the story of one such family-the Wheelers of Pennsylvania carried five generations of craft and tradition toward Oregon’s distant shore. Their journey would test their physical endurance and understanding of what makes a home. Like many others who attempted the trail that year, they would learn that some treasures can only be found by leaving everything familiar behind.