Pioneer 1847 Companies
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1847: Tuesday, April 20 - Chase for deer failed,
but fishermen succeeded
Date: April 20, 1847
Some men in the Mormon pioneer company were up very early -- about
4.30 a.m. -- to take their cattle out to graze in the dew-soaked
prairie grass, a two-hour chore.
Howard Egan said he prepared a 'first-rate breakfast" from
wild ducks bagged the day before. Despite the good food, William
Clayton "ate but little' because his aching tooth was keeping
him in misery.
The company began the day's march in two lines, about a quarter
mile apart. A stiff early wind blew considerable sand but finally
died down. The day turned out to be warm and dusty as the iron-rimmed
wagon wheels cut into the prairie turf.
As the party moved along they could see large numbers of waterfowl
near the Platte River. Some of the birds were geese, "but mostly
sandhill cranes which fly in large flocks on every side of us,"
Wilford Woodruff said.
The wagons came to a large prairie dog village covering about
six acres. The pioneers also saw many gopher holes, some with dirt
heaped up two or three feet high and others "resembling a potato
patch, which makes it rough waggoning over them," Woodroff
wrote in his journal.
While stopped near some ponds of water about midday to let the
animals feed, the company saw three deer and 0. Porter Rockwell
and Thomas Brown went after them. "They had a fine chase of
four or five miles, but did not get them,' Norton Jacob reported.
Stephen Markham, John S. Higbee and Luke Johnson took the camp's
leather boat and went ahead to some small lakes to try their hands
at catching fish for dinner that evening.
Johnson, 39, was an early apostle and effective missionary, but
was disfellowshipped from the church for a time. He returned and
was rebaptised in 1846 and later became a bishop at a settlement
in Nevada. He was in charge of the boat for the pioneers.
The rest of the pioneer company pushed on during the afternoon
and camped near a grove of cottonwood trees on the banks of the
river. Blacksmiths got out their forges and repaired some wagon
wheels before darkness fell.
A number of men cut down cottonwood trees to feed the livestock,
but took care to leave plenty for the many companies who would be
following. The cattle gnawed off the bark "as readily as they
would eat corn," Woodruff said.
The fishermen returned to camp that evening after a highly successful
expedition. They had thrown nets into a lake and pulled in more
than 200 fish, mostly carp. The fish were divided among the camp,
one large fish to each person.
Clayton went down to the river and bathed his feet which were
dusty and sore. "I also washed my socks as well as I could
in cold water without soap."
After taking care of his weary feet, he decided to do something
about his aching face. He approached Luke Johnson and asked if he
would pull the offending tooth.
'He willingly agreed," Clayton said and got out his instruments.
Johnson served as doctor for the group. He sat Clayton in a chair
and bent to his work. He lanced the swollen gum and yanked the tooth
out with a pair of nippers, the "the whole operation taking
less than a minute."
Unfortunately, "he only got half the tooth, the balance being
left in the jaw," Clayton said. "After this, my head and
face pained me more than before. I ate but little supper and then
lay down, but could not sleep for pain until near morning."
As they traveled that day, the pioneers veered slightly south
of, but parallel to present-day Highway 30 and the Union Pacific
railroad line.
They passed the place where Schuyler, Neb., would one day be built.
The town was laid out 42 years after this first party of Mormon
pioneers came through. It was named after Schuyler Colfax, vice
president of the U.S. at the time (1869) and it became the first
shipping point on the U.P. railroad for cattle driven north from
Texas after the Civil War.
- Source: 111
Days to Zion
- © Copyright 1997 Big Moon Traders and Hal Knight. All rights
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