In 1849, at the age of twenty-nine, Manly joined the
California Gold Rush, traveling overland from
Wisconsin.
Floating the Green River Upon reaching the
Green River, just west of
South Pass Manly and a half dozen other men tried to float to California by use of an abandoned ferry they found down the Green to the
Colorado River, then on to California. They put in the river in Wyoming and floated downstream through the canyon of the
Gates of Lodore and possibly behind to present day
Green River, Utah On disembarking they were met by Chief
Walkara, who helped them to travel overland to the
Wasatch Front.
Overland to California South of present-day
Provo, Utah, Manly joined others traveling to southern California. In December they became lost in the
Great Basin Desert and subsequently entered
Death Valley in the northern
Mojave Desert, having followed an inaccurate map for three weeks. Their food supplies were almost exhausted, and the oxen pulling their wagons were dying of starvation. Manly and his associate
John Haney Rogers trekked 250 miles on foot across the Mojave to scout an evacuation route for the families trapped in Death Valley. Arriving at
Rancho San Fernando near
Los Angeles, California, they procured food and horses from Mexican villagers and backtracked to save the wagon train from starvation and to lead them to
Rancho San Francisco. ==Life in California ==