| Pioneer 1847 Companies
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1847: Tuesday, April 27 - It was slow traveling
over dry sand ridges
Date: April 27, 1847
Shots were fired in the night as nervous guards heard noises in
the surrounding grass. No Indians were seen and the sentries concluded
the sounds were caused by wolves.
In the morning, the Mormon pioneer company turned away from the
Loup River and headed across dry and sandy country toward the Platte
River about 25 miles distant. The Platte was their guide and lifeline.
.
"There are a great many lizards on these sand ridges, but
they are of a small size," said William Clayton. Also seen
were prairie dogs, rattlesnakes and owls, all living in holes in
the ground.
At 2:15 p.m. the party stopped for a break. The animals were having
a hard time because of pulling wagons through uneven and sandy soil
and also because of the lack of water. Some teams fell behind and
needed help.
While stopped, several of the men got out shovels and dug holes
in a search for water, "as there is none above the surface."
They obtained a little moisture this way, but not enough to give
the cattle and horses to drink.
As the journey resumed, Wilford Woodruff, Roswell Stevens and
John Brown came upon an antelope. All three fired and hit the animal.
They skinned it and put it in one of the wagons.
Stevens, 37, had enlisted in the Mormon Battalion in 1846 and
marched as far as Santa Fe (New Mexico) where he was chosen as one
of several messengers to take back some of the battalion's army
pay to families in Winter Quarters. He, John D. Lee and Howard Egan
made the long trip, arriving at Winter Quarters in late November,
1846, with $4,000.
Brown, 26, had led 18 families from Mississippi and Missouri all
the way to Fort Laramie Wyoming) in 1846 in an effort to join the
Mormon pioneers believed to be already on the way west. When he
discovered the error, he turned south and settled the people in
Fort Pueblo (Colorado) and made his way with seven other men back
to Winter Quarters.
As the pioneer company traveled toward the Platte this day, Porter
Rockwell, John Eldredge, Joseph Mathews and Thomas Brown rode back
in search of two horses believed stolen by Indians earlier.
Near Sunday's campsite they saw movement in the grass and went
to investigate. As they approached within 200 feet, 15 Indians jumped
up, each with a rifle slung over his back and a bow and arrow in
the hands.
The Pawnee began to advance, but the four men stood fast and raised
their rifles. Seeing this, the Indians made overtures of friendship,
crying out "bacco, bacco." But the men replied that they
had no tobacco.
The Indians tried to lure the small band down a nearby wash, but
the men turned away instead. As they did so, the Pawnee fired six
shots at them. The bullets "whistled about the brethren, but
no one was injured."
As they were fired upon, the men faced about and raised their
rifles and the Indians fled. Rockwell and his companions did not
return the shots.
"They saw the tracks of the missing horses and are satisfied
the Pawnee had got them," Clayton said.
He said the Indians were some of the same ones who visited the
pioneer camp when the company stopped near a Pawnee village several
days ago "and proves they have followed us close ever since."
About the time the men returned to camp, the pioneers lost another
horse in an accident. A loaded gun was placed inside John Brown's
wagon. When Brown pulled a coat out of the wagon, it caught on the
rifle and caused it to discharge.
The bullet went through a bag of clothing, starting a fire, and
hit a horse in the leg, breaking the bone. The horse was one of
a team pulling Stephen Markham's wagon.
"This makes four of the best horses lost in the last four
days," Clayton sorrowed.
Many unnecessary deaths occurred on the frontier in those days
from keeping loaded firearms about. Accidental shootings were a
common occurrence.
- Source: 111
Days to Zion
- © Copyright 1997 Big Moon Traders and Hal Knight. All rights
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