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🌕The Lost Recordings: 14 Exclusive Voices from the 1800s 🔥 Get it here → https://pay.hotmart.com/X104215612Y?c... 14 handpicked, never-before-released recordings from people born in the 1800s. 12+ hours of exclusive, uncensored history. 📖 IF I COULD LIVE AGAIN: Advice From Those Who Lived in the 1800s ⏳🔵 Get it here → https://pay.hotmart.com/K104149345A?c... Stories and reflections from people born in the 1800s — compiled into one book you can return to for the rest of your life. We present the deathbed confession of a woman born in 1848 who, in August 1869 at age 21, abandoned her dying sister in the desert to save herself. Mary Miller and her husband Joseph were traveling with the narrator and her husband William through dry California territory when Mary's fever returned. On the seventh day, with water running low and oxen failing, William decided to abandon Mary and Joseph and push ahead to the spring. The narrator chose her husband over her sister. They left at dawn without goodbye. Joseph later abandoned the dying Mary to walk for help—he survived, Mary died. For 55 years (1869-1924) the narrator prospered on California farmland while Joseph lived broken in Missouri believing he had killed Mary. Only now, dying at 75 in 1924, does she confess she abandoned Mary first. This story represents the brutal reality of frontier travel through desert and dry country. Water was life. Delayed pace could kill everyone. Sick travelers slowed the group. The choice between abandoning the weak and dying with them was a real dilemma faced by countless wagon trains. Family loyalty often lost to survival necessity. Historical Context: Desert crossings required precise water planning Fever/illness on trail was often fatal Sick travelers created impossible dilemmas for groups Abandoning dying members was not uncommon Slow pace to care for sick could kill healthy members No medical help available in desert Oxen failure meant death for everyone Survival often required abandoning loyalty Many died on California desert routes in 1860s-70s Bodies often never recovered from desert This testimony captures the psychology of choosing survival over dying family—not just the initial choice but living 55 years prospering while abandoned sister died and brother-in-law lived broken believing he had killed his wife. Subscribe for more authentic Wild West testimonies featuring the real voices of frontier history. Note: This audio has been enhanced and the voice recreated using AI technology to preserve these historical narratives. While the specific individual is fictional, the experiences described are based on extensive historical research into documented cases of abandonment and impossible survival choices during frontier desert crossings. #DesertCrossing #California #1860s #FrontierTravel #WildWest #PioneerWomen #HistoricalNarrative #MojaveDesert #SurvivalChoice #AmericanFrontier #WagonTrain #HistoricalTestimony #AuthenticHistory #DesertAbandonment #FrontierBetrayal