

Into the Wild Frontier
Season 3
As America expands westward, intrepid explorers and rugged mountain men risk their lives to blaze new trails into the wild frontier.
8 Episodes
- William Bartram: America's First Great NaturalistE2
William Bartram: America's First Great NaturalistNaturalist William Bartram risks his life exploring the unmapped regions of the South to document the native fauna and flora. Over thousands of miles of terrain, he faces hostile Native Americans, dangerous wildlife, and deadly disease. - Mason & Dixon: Trailblazing SurveyorsE4
Mason & Dixon: Trailblazing SurveyorsAstronomers Charles Mason and Jeremiah Dixon brave deadly terrain and hostile Native Americans to resolve a border dispute in Colonial America. With science and courage, they survey their famous Mason-Dixon Line with pinpoint accuracy. - James Harrod: Kentucky's Founding FatherE5
James Harrod: Kentucky's Founding FatherWhen frontiersman James Harrod founds Harrod's Town on Native American hunting grounds, he soon finds his new settlement under attack. His leadership is tested as he defends the first European settlement west of the Appalachian Mountains. - Christopher Gist: Unsung Hero of the First FrontierE6
Christopher Gist: Unsung Hero of the First FrontierAfter successfully mapping the rugged Ohio Country, frontiersman and surveyor Christopher Gist is hired to lead a young George Washington on a perilous diplomatic journey to deliver an ultimatum to the French forces in the Ohio wilderness. - George Croghan: Frontier PeacemakerE7
George Croghan: Frontier PeacemakerWhen Chief Pontiac organizes a coalition of Native American tribes to attack British forts, frontier trader George Croghan risks his life on a perilous journey into the wilderness to find Pontiac and attempt to negotiate a peace agreement. - Robert Rogers: Frontier SoldierE8
Robert Rogers: Frontier SoldierRobert Rogers leads an elite fighting force of fearless rangers behind enemy lines to fight French forces in Colonial America, but one mission tests his men as never before when they must trek 200 miles through the wilderness without food.