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1847: Saturday, April 17 - Pioneers awoke to
ice oil water buckets, traveled only 7 miles
Date: April 17, 1847
The night was bitter cold and when the Mormon pioneers awoke at
5 a.m. they found ice an inch thick in the camp's water buckets.
Men who had been on guard duty "complained much of the severity
of the weather."
Keeping as usual between the river on their left and the sand
bluffs on the right, the company moved slowly along a sandy track,
bothered by a "disagreeable" wind.
The group stopped about noon after moving only seven miles and
established camp where they would spend the time until Monday morning.
A grove of small cottonwood trees was nearby and the men chopped
down 'hundreds" of them to feed their teams and save their
precious corn for treeless parts of the prairie still to come. A
small lake was nearby, but scouts said the water was no good. The
pioneers filled their buckets in the Platte River, about a half
-mile from the campsite.
At 5 p.m. Brigham Young called the camp together and warned once
again that this was Indian country. He reminded them of camp rules
about keeping loaded guns at hand at all times and staying close
to the wagons.
A military organization was formed with Brigham as lieutenant
general and commander-in-chief; Stephen Markham as a colonel and
John Pack and Shadrach Roundy as majors.
Pack, 37, had been an officer in the Nauvoo Legion. He was to
later help settle Carson Valley, Nev., and in his Salt Lake home
were held the first classes of what was to eventually become the
University of Utah.
Roundy. 58, was one of the oldest in the pioneer company. He was
to cross the plains another five times helping later emigrant parties.
He was involved in forming the cooperative which later became ZCMI.
Concern of the pioneers about Indians became more intense because
they knew a large Pawnee village was nearby. An estimated 4,000
warriors were rumored to be there. The Pawnee generally were considered
friendly to whites, but the Mormons were taking no chances.
Shortly before dark, a wagon driven by traders entered the Mormon
camp and pitched their tents about a quarter mile away. They had
been trading at the Indian village and the wagon was loaded with
furs and pelts.
The traders "had plenty of buffalo meat and gave us what
we wished," Wilford Woodruff reported.
That night after dinner, two of the men, Ellis Eames and Hans
C. Hansen, got out their violins and entertained the camp until
the bugle sounded at 9 p.m.
Eames was to give up the trek and leave the camp in less than
24 hours, but made it later to the Rocky Mountains and served as
mayor of Prove.
Hansen, 40, a native of Denmark, was the only Scandinavian in
the group. A former seaman, he was on shore leave in Boston when
he learned of the new religion and joined the church. An accomplished
violinist, he settled in Salina where he lived out his life as a
bachelor, performing at local dances and social events.
After the music the pioneers retired to their tents and wagons
under the watchful eyes of the night guard, but 'all was peace and
quietness," wrote William Clayton.
The campsite was near what is now the Ames Post Off ice. The tiny
community was founded by the Union Pacific Railroad Co. and was
named after one of the company officials.
During the day the pioneers had traveled through the area now
occupied by Fremont, Neb. A historical marker in a small park west
of town notes the community is on what was the Oregon-Mormon trail.
Because the Mormon pioneers used the best route they could find,
with the fewest hills and obstacles, their path was later chosen
for the Omaha Fort Kearny Road and finally became the right-of -way
for the Union Pacific railroad.
Eventually, Highway 50, the famous Lincoln Highway, was built
along the same corridor. Motorists on Highway 30 between Fremont
and Columbus, Neb., are right on the trail.
- Source: 111
Days to Zion
- © Copyright 1997 Big Moon Traders and Hal Knight. All rights
reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in
any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including
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includes educational uses.
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