| Pioneer 1847 Companies
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1847: Thursday, May 6 - A timely light shower
dampened prairie fires
Date: May 6, 1847
Prairie fires, which had threatened the Mormon pioneers for a
number of days, finally were extinguished by the weather.
"During the night the Lord sent a light shower which put
the fire out, except in one or two places," William Clayton
reported in his journal.
The company was awakened at 5 a.m. with the usual problem of finding
early-morning grazing for the cattle before doing anything else.
Brigham Young gave orders to leave the island camp ground to get
the animals to a place where they could have adequate feed.
A buffalo calf the hunters had brought into camp the day before
was found dead, still tied to a stake in the center of the wagon
circle.
Despite a desire to get started early, some of the men delayed
to give their cattle some of the carefully-hoarded corn feed. Others
took time to milk cows. These chores cost an hour. but once the
wagons were moving, the pioneers reported the ground was hard and
good for traveling.
Grass was hard to find. Where it had escaped the fire, it was
eaten down to the soil by the huge herds of buffalo now surrounding
the company. Horsemen had to drive them out of the wagon train path.
A young buffalo calf followed one of the hunters into camp, but
Brigham ordered it placed out in the open in view of its mother
because the calf was only a few days old.
But as the buffalo cow approached, two men walked nearby and the
frightened animal ran away, leaving the calf alone on the prairie.
Wolves soon attacked the small animal and killed it.
While stopped at noon, the pioneers discovered that some of their
cows had wandered near the buffalo herd. If they once got mixed
with the buffalo, that would be the last the camp would see of them
because they would run with the herd.
Brigham, Heber C. Kimball and Thomas Woolsey gave frantic chase
on horseback and barely turned the cows back before they were into
the herd. In the excitement, Brigham lost his spyglass. Although
the men hunted around the prairie for a long time, they couldn't
find it.
The wagon train traveled slowly and some of the horses and oxen
gave out because of the lack of feed. Wilford Woodruff said buffalo
had eaten the grass to such a degree "that our cattle and horses
get very little."
Green grass was available on the other side of the Platte River,
but the Mormons persisted in keeping to the north bank where they
would avoid other travelers. Bitter memories of persecution made
them suspicious of strangers.
The company camped for the evening near some islands in the Platte.
Brigham announced that no more game should be killed until further
notice because "we have got as much meat in camp as can be
taken care of."
This order pleased Norton Jacob who had grumbled in his journal
earlier about the needless shooting of buffalo by those overcome
with the zeal of hunting.
Wagon trains of emigrants going west for the gold rush often shot
buffalo for sport. An eyewitness in those later years said the meat
was left to rot while the Indians starved. He called it a "flagrant
injustice." Clayton said the pioneers hadn't been out of sight
of buffalo all day and the largest herds still were ahead. "The
prairie looks black with them,' he wrote. Some said the company
passed 50,000 buffalo during the day. Others thought it was more
like 100,000.
This disparity in estimates also extended to the number of miles
traveled each day. "Some think we have traveled 18, some 20,
and some even 25 miles today," Clayton said, but put his own
guess at a conservative 15. As it turned out, he was the most accurate.
The scribe was pondering possible ways to keep a precise record
of the miles traveled.
The Mormon campsite this night was near the place where the town
of Cozad would one day be founded. Sioux Indians would attack a
wagon train here in 1867, killing several men and taking a number
prisoner.
A historical marker on the edge of town notes that the community
lies on the 100th meridian, often termed the "line of aridity."
West of this line the yearly rainfall usually is insufficient to
support non-irrigated agriculture.
- Source: 111
Days to Zion
- © Copyright 1997 Big Moon Traders and Hal Knight. All rights
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