| Pioneer 1847 Companies
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1847: Wednesday, May 5 - Platte island provided
safety from fires that devastated area
Location: Lexington, Nebraska - Location:
40:46:51N 99:44:28W Elevation: 2389 feet
Date: May 5, 1847
Some of the Mormon pioneers became sick, a condition they blamed
on all that buffalo meat.
"The change from salted meat to fresh meat is affecting a
number of the company," reported Wilford Woodruff, who was
one of those stricken.
After breaking camp about 7:30 a.m., the wagon train made a detour
to the north to avoid a bad slough. "The horses' feet cut through
the sod and the ground under appears wet, although there has been
no rain for some time," William Clayton wrote in his journal.
No Indians had been sighted since the alarm two days before and
Woodruff surmised the "war party" of 400 Indians was a
case of mistaken identity. "The man who saw them was frightened
by a herd of antelope and supposed them to be Indians," he
guessed. But the company had seen plenty of Indian signs, including
freshly abandoned camps, in the past few days.
Buffalo were sighted again. However, Brigham Young directed the
pioneers not to kill anything they couldn't bring into camp on a
horse, which ruled out adult buff ale.
Hunters returned to the camp in the afternoon, bringing a live
buffalo calf and the carcass of another calf they had killed. They
said four additional calves had been shot. Other men were dispatched
to bring in the meat.
The live calf had been chased after its mother was killed and
a dog finally cornered it. The calf was tied in camp that night.
Dogs and some of the men teased it and were butted for their efforts.
The calf learned to drink from a bucket.
Prairie fires still stretched as far as the eye could see and
the flames were getting close. Brigham ordered the wagons to retreat
half a mile to an island in the Platte River where "we can
be secure from the fire," Clayton said.
"The prairie is all burned bare and the black ashes fly bad,
making the brethren look more like Indians than white folks."
he noted.
The river was easily forded and the island refuge provided some
grass for the animals. The horses and cattle were beginning to suffer
from the lack of feed.
Where the pioneers passed in 1847 there now stands a multi-storied
farm house, painted yellow with white trim and decorated with gables
and bay windows -- a remarkable sight miles from any other building.
Modern-day scenery along the pioneer route is mostly empty corn
fields and once in a while an advertising sign amid the stubble.
The land appears flat to the horizon.
Not far from where the pioneers camped was the future sight of
the town of Lexington, Neb., which got its start as a trading post
named Plum Creek. It was an infamous rendezvous for gamblers, thieves
and holdup men who preyed on passing miners and other travelers.
In 1867 a band of Cheyenne Indians wrecked a train near here,
ransacked the freight cars and scalped the crew.
Another train carrying Mormon emigrants to a departure point for
wagon travel, had an engineer at the helm who swore he would "drive
the Mormons to hell." He opened the throttle and went tearing
across the prairie.
But shortly after the wild ride began the baggage car caught fire.
The engineer quickly stopped and backed up to the nearest watering
station seven miles away. By the time the train arrived, the baggage
car was in ruins.
- 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
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includes educational uses.
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