Pioneer 1847 Companies
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1847: Thursday, April 22 - Sleeping guards were
taught lesson by a joke
Description:
Crayon picture by Jamie, a 4th grader at Valley View Elementary.
Image courtesy of: Heritage Gateway Project Images, These images
have been gathered to support the Sesquicentennial celebration of
the immigration to Utah.
Date: April 22, 1847
Many extra guards were on duty during the night -- 50 per shift
-- because of the nearness of the large Pawnee Indian village which
the Mormon pioneers passed the previous day.
Several of the guards fell asleep and when they awoke in the morning,
two of them discovered their rifles were missing and a hat was gone
from a third man.
The embarrassed guards were the objects of considerable jokes
about having fallen victim to prowling Indians during the night.
But other sentries finally confessed they took the hat and guns
from the sleeping men "as a warning."
However, William Clayton sympathized with the guards, noting that
it was "difficult for men to keep awake night after night,
while traveling 20 miles in a day, taking care of teams, cooking,
etc." The few sentries who fell asleep did not cause security
problems. Plenty of other men were alert, but there was no sign
of any Indian activity around the camp during the night.
The pioneers resumed their march at 7.30 a.m. and soon crossed
Looking Glass Creek, which was named by Heber C. Kimball. The name
was appropriate, according to Norton Jacob, because the water was
"clear as crystal."
Later the company forded Beaver Creek. Here the crossing was less
pleasant. The stream was 20 feet wide and two feet deep, but the
west bank was very steep. A rope was hooked to the tongue of each
wagon and 12 men hauled the wagons one at a time up the nearly vertical
creek bank.
In the afternoon the pioneers reached a deserted Pawnee missionary
station near Plum Creek, a stream the pioneers found especially
attractive.
The missionary outpost and some nearby government buildings were
established eight years earlier, but were abandoned in the fall
of 1&16 when Sioux raiders drove off the Pawnee. The attackers
burned the government buildings but left the missionary structures
intact.
The Mormons took possession of the farmyard at the station, observing
that there were a number of good log houses and considerable improved
land enclosed by rail fences, plus plenty of hay and fodder lying
about.
This feed for cattle was especially welcome because of the limited
supplies carried by the pioneers and the frequent lack of good grass
on the prairie. Brigham Young said the company could use all the
hay desired but gave strict orders not to touch anything else at
the abandoned station.
Scattered around the buildings were "large lots of iron,
several plows, a drag and two stoves, all apparently left to rot,"
Clayton said. Such iron products were scarce and extremely valuable
to the pioneers.
The burned-out government buildings were about a quarter mile
from the missionary station. The area was familiar to James Case,
one of the members of the pioneer company. He had been employed
at the station as a government farmer the year before.
Jacob said the area around the abandoned station was "excellent
country with rich land." He said the surrounding slopes were
covered with the "richest kind of grass which serves to feed
those immense herds of buffalo. Although, by the by, we haven't
seen any yet,' he added.
One of the pioneer company had a close call that day. George A.
Smith, destined one day to become a counselor to Brigham Young,
was watering his horse when it became mired in the mud and lunged
forward, knocking him flat.
The horse then stepped on his legs and chest "and held him
fast in the mud" until Wilford Woodruff could spring to the
rescue and hack the animal away. 'I was fearful he was badly injured
but found he was little hurt," Woodruff said.
Smith, 29, would later lead a large group of pioneers across the
plains, a lengthy journey of 155 days filled with a number of disasters.
He was a tireless colonizer and became known as the father of
the Mormon settlements in southern Utah. The town of St. George
was named after him. In 1868, after the death of Heber C. Kimball,
he became a counselor in the church First Presidency.
In the pioneer camp this night, Brigham ordered the cannon unlimbered
and loaded. Thomas Tanner drilled the gun crew until dark, showing
them how to use the cannon. The president was concerned about the
possibility of Indian raiders trying to steal the horses.
- Source: 111
Days to Zion
- © Copyright 1997 Big Moon Traders and Hal Knight. All rights
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