| Pioneer 1847 Companies
Previous | Next
1847: Monday, April 26 - Alert guards prevented
Indian raid on horses
Date: April 26, 1847
Guard duty was dreary work, but unlike some other nights, all
sentries in the Mormon pioneer camp were awake and their alertness
foiled an Indian raid against the horses.
About 3:30 a.m. some of the guards noticed the horses behaving
nervously, so they went to investigate and heard rustling noises
in the grass. Thinking it might be wolves, two of the men raised
their rifles and fired.
Instead of wolves, six Indians leaped upright and ran away at
top speed. The camp bugle was sounded and all the men "arose
up in arms," Wilford Woodruff said. However, no more Indians
were seen that night.
The company moved out about 8 a.m., the horse teams going first
to break up the turf so it wouldn't hurt the feet of the oxen. The
weather was hot and dry "and has a tendency to make sore lips,"
William Clayton said.
Ezra T. Benson discovered during the morning that one of the iron
axles on his wagon had broken. He repacked the wagon load so no
weight rested on the damaged axle and continued the journey.
In the evening, Thomas Tanner and Burr Frost, two of the company
blacksmiths, removed the axle and repaired it on a forge, the whole
operation taking only an hour.
Norton Jacob, one of the captains of 10, followed the advice of
Brigham Young given the day before and chose two men among his group
to serve as cooks. Each 10 was to do the same. The cooks were excused
from all other duty.
Jacob said his choices were Charles A. Harper as chief cook and
Andrew Gibbons as assistant. Harper, 30, and Gibbons, 22, were not
cooks by trade, but in that company they probably were as good as
any others.
As they traveled parallel to the Loup Fork that day, the pioneers
saw the remains of a deserted Indian village. None of the lodges
appeared to be standing. The company passed within a mile of the
place.
Jacob wrote in his journal that Brigham apologized for scolding
some of the men, saying that Henry G. Sherwood was the only one
who had a "legal right to find fault."
Whoever bad a complaint must get permission from Sherwood to grumble,
Brigham said, because Sherwood was formally elected to the off ice
of "chief grumbler."
Sherwood was in charge of food and supplies for the trip and apparently
took his title in good humor.
Jacob said the arrangement had "excellent effect in putting
a check on some fractious persons, especially one by the name of
Chamberlain, who all the time has been grumbling with his team or
somebody or another. But after this he was tolerable decent."
Chamberlain was Solomon Chamberlain, 59, a maker of wooden casks
and tubs. He was the oldest man in the camp and had lost his wife
at Winter Quarters just before the trek. He remained a faithful
Mormon until his death in Washington County in 1862.
Woodruff reported that a "tremendous alarm' was raised in
camp that evening as a report flew around that Porter Rockwell and
his horse had been captured by Indians.
This turned out to be a wild rumor. Rockwell was discovered safe
and sound in camp. But the loss of two horses which touched off
the tale was sadly true.
Joseph Mathews said he saw one of the horses going toward the
river and ran to turn it back. As he did so, the horse broke into
a gallop, "which made him suppose there was an Indian on him,"
although he couldn't see one.
Five or six men mounted up when the alarm was given and rode toward
the river, but could find no trace of the horses. Another 20 armed
men rode out later with Brigham at their head and also came up empty
handed.
"The brethren have been repeatedly warned not to let their
horses go too far from the wagons, But every time we stop they can
be seen around for more than two miles," Clayton wrote in his
journal.
"These are two good horses and the owners feel bad enough,
but it will be a warning to others," he added.
- 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
photocopying, recording or by any information storage and retrieval
system, without permission in writing from the publisher. This
includes educational uses.
|