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1847: Monday, April 5 - Six Wagons Slowly Began
Epic Journey

Description: Colored marker picture by
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.
Location: Winter Quarters - 1014 miles
left, Nebraska - Location: 41:21:41N 95:56:45W Currently the site
of Florence, Nebraska, Winter Quarters was settled in September,
1846 as a temporary resting place for the pioneers. It is located
just west of the Missouri river in Nebraska.
Date: April 5, 1847
Despite rainy weather, Heber C. Kimball led six loaded wagons
from the Mormon refugee town of Winter Quarters on the west bank
of the Missouri River and moved toward the open prairie to the west.
With the river at their backs, the teams slowly made their way
just three miles before halting and setting up camp on the plains
of what is now Nebraska. In 1847 it was strictly Indian country.
This brief march by a handful of wagons hardly was an impressive
event, but it was the beginning of an exodus destined to become
an epic in American history -- the trek of the Mormon pioneers across
a thousand-mile wilderness to what is now Utah.
In the next 22 years, before the transcontinental railroad was
linked in 1869, more than 68,000 pioneers, 9,600 wagons and 650
handcarts would make the long trip in search of religious freedom
Unlike the Hollywood version, the first Mormon wagon train to
embark on the journey did not neatly line up, say goodbye, and set
forth with a "westward ho" cry.
Instead, Kimball's wagons were slowly followed by a half dozen
similar small groups in subsequent days, leaving at different times,
taking slightly different routes and camping at scattered places
on the prairie.
Even after departing Winter Quarters, many men in these groups
rode back repeatedly to take care of last-minute business, hold
conferences and meet with missionaries returning from abroad.
Not until about 10 days later did all the wagons assemble on the
banks of the Platte River some 35 miles northwest of Winter Quarters
and get fully organized under the leadership of Brigham Young. That
the 46-year-old Kimball was the first on the trail was not surprising.
Since encountering Mormon missionaries in Mendon, N.Y., he had been
a dedicated and driving force in the fledgling Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.
A 6 foot, 200-pound barrel-chested blacksmith, he said of his
meeting with the missionaries in late 1831: "As soon as I heard
them, I was convinced they taught the truth.' He never looked back.
He joined the church in April, 1832, and within four years was
a member of its original quorum of 12 apostles. He served eight
proselyting missions, including the founding of the enormously successful
British mission.
By the time of the Mormon exodus he was second to Brigham Young
in seniority among the apostles and was Brigham's trusted friend
and right-hand man.
As his tiny group camped in the darkness on the prairie that first
night, they were once more without a roof over their heads -- a
situation they had shared often with other members of the church
since its founding.
The church was organized in Fayette, N.Y., in April, 1830, with
six members. It grew rapidly, but persecution drove the followers
to Ohio, to Missouri and finally to Illinois where they built Nauvoo,
at the time the largest city in the state.
The Mormons prospered in Nauvoo for a few years, but their growing
numbers and influence brought more persecution. Finally, their leader
Joseph Smith and his brother, Hyrum, were killed by mob action in
1844.
A year and a half later the Mormons began to abandon their thriving
city under the threat of massive mob violence. They struggled across
Iowa in the winter and spring. They froze and starved and the living
left behind hundreds of loved ones in unmarked graves. The physical
and emotional suffering was intense.
Their history of one exodus after another, the persecutions, beatings
and even murders, had convinced the Mormons that their only safety
lay in leaving settled portions of the United States and moving
to the distant Rocky Mountains, at that time in the hands of Mexico.
Now, on April 5, that journey had begun. Ahead lay the unknown.
But Kimball and his associates were in high spirits. They worried
about family and friends left behind, but ahead was not just a trail
of tears. There was also freedom -- freedom from persecution, freedom
to be themselves, to hunt, fish and explore new lands.
Typically, Kimball never complained about any of the trek' s hardships.
Instead, his journals indicate he seems to have had a great time.
Most of those early pioneers probably did.
The site of Kimball's first camp is near a little-used section
of old State Highway 36 in Nebraska. Where his oxen hauled the wagons
at a slow two miles an hour, aircraft now hurtle overhead to and
from the nearby North Omaha Airport.
The surrounding area is one of small farms and pleasant homes
just outside the metropolis of Omaha, which was laid out in 1854,
shortly after the Nebraska Territory was organized by Congress.
- 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.
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