| Pioneer 1847 Companies
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1847: Wednesday, April 14 - Four yelling Indians
were cause for delay
Date: April 14, 1847
A small party of men with Thomas Bullock had camped on the prairie
after leaving Winter Quarters the previous day and arose at dawn
to continue the journey.
But the Indians were up even earlier.
"While I was in the act of hitching my cattle," Bullock
wrote, "four Omaha Indians came rushing down upon us, waving
their standards covered with turkey feathers and hallooing and yelling
like savages."
The noise frightened his cattle and they broke away from the wagon
tongue "as if they were mad," and ran back in the direction
of Winter Quarters "and I after them at full tilt,'
Bullock recorded.
He finally caught up with the animals two or three miles away,
but one of the Indians also had given chase and drew his bow and
arrow, "threatening to shoot one of my oxen."
The pioneers tried to calm the Indians by giving them bread. "They
were not satisfied with that and demanded more to take with them,"
Bullock said. "One had the boldness to come to my wagon and
attempt to take the front of my wagon cover for a headress, but
I repelled him and he went away in anger."
Norton Jacob, who was with the party of wagons, said he heard
a gun fired and some whooping. "Soon four of them came to us
and were very saucy because we would not give them our provisions.'
The confusion caused by the Indian raid created considerable delay
and the wagons were late getting on the trail that day.
Brigham Young and the rest of the apostles left Winter Quarters
around noon the same day. Wilford Woodruff wrote in his journal
that he called his family together, "blessed them and left
them in the hands of the Lord." The group took the Indian shortcut
they had followed earlier to Winter Quarters.
With Brigham was William Clayton, who would serve as scribe and
historian for the trip. He hadn't expected to be with the group.
He was sick in bed with "rheumatism of the face" (which
turned out to be an infected tooth) when Brigham and Willard Richards
walked in and told him to be ready to leave in half an hour.
With the help of his family, he quickly gathered his clothing
and a few supplies, said his farewells and became a passenger in
Heber C. Kimball' s carriage.
Taking Clayton was a fortunate move. Without his excellent journal
and his "Emigrant's Guide," published in 1818, knowledge
of the Mormon trail experience wouldn't be as complete as it is
today.
Brigham's party traveled 19 miles, according to Clayton, and then
pitched camp. Those with the group had what Woodruff called "a
splendid supper." It consisted of fried catfish, pork beans,
shortcake and honeycomb. "I ate hearty," Woodruff noted.
Because darkness had fallen and the slowermoving, ox-drawn Bullock
wagons hadn't appeared, Brigham ordered signal fires to be kept
burning. Bullock saw the lights and finally joined the group for
the rest of the night.
Meanwhile, the main body of pioneers at the Platte continued to
rest in camp. A rain soaked them during that morning, but the weather
cleared as a sharp wind began blowing.
Howard Egan said two of his horses had strayed the night before.
He borrowed a horse from R. Jackson Redden and rode back toward
the Elkhorn River. He found the animals, but could only catch one
of them and finally left the other.
John S. Higbee, 43, Redden, and four or five other men went up
the Platte River looking for a good place to fish and returned that
evening with a catch of about a dozen. Which were eaten for supper.
Higbee actually should have been in California. He had volunteered
the year before to join the Mormon Battalion in the war with Mexico,
but by the time he reached Council Bluffs to march with the troops,
they had already left.
He was called to be a captain in the advance pioneer company,
even though he had no wagon of his own. His supplies were carried
in a friend's wagon.
Higbee didn't reach the Salt Lake Valley that summer. He was assigned
to stay behind at a crossing of the Platte River and help operate
a ferry. His family eventually joined him there and they entered
the valley in September, 1847.
- Source: 111
Days to Zion
- © Copyright 1997 Big Moon Traders and Hal Knight. All rights
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