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1847: Sunday, May 9 - Just keeping clean provided
some difficulty
Location: Brady, Nebraska - Location:
41:01:20N 100:22:02W Population (1980): 377
Date: May 9, 1847
Keeping clean on the trip -- the ordinary tasks of washing clothes
and bathing -- presented difficulties for the Mormon pioneers. They
had to make do.
Some of the problems were described by William Clayton who said
he walked three quarters of a mile to the Platte River "and
washed my socks, towel and handkerchief as well as I could in cold
water without any soap."
After taking care of those items, he undressed and rinsed in the
frigid river, "which has made me feel much more comfortable,
for I was covered with dust." Clayton said he then put on clean
clothing and sat on the bank of the river "and gave way to
a long train of solemn reflection respecting many things, especially
in regard to my family and their welfare." He did not write
down his private musings "inasmuch as I expect this journal
will have to pass through other hands besides my own or that of
my family."
The day, which had started very cold, turned warm in the afternoon.
Clayton calculated the company was about 300 miles from Winter Quarters,
their starting point.
He searched out a piece of wood and wrote a message on it: "From
Winter Quarters, 300 miles, May 9, 1&17. Pioneer camp all well.
Distance according to the reckoning of Wm. Clayton." The wood
was nailed to a post and set up near the camp at a bend in the river.
Despite it being a Sunday, the company traveled about four miles
early in the morning and camped on a sandy stretch closer to wood
and water where they remained the rest of the day. The problem of
grass for the animals was still very serious. Buffalo had eaten
everything.
In the afternoon, Brigham Young asked the bugle to be sounded
to call the camp together for worship. Among the speakers at the
meeting was Erastus Snow, who commented, along with others, on the
need for self -government.
He said he was particularly qualified to do so from the recent
"dressing down" he received from Brigham for letting the
camp's cattle wander away. Snow said he felt he deserved the reprimand
and apologized for becoming angry when he was chastized.
Orson Pratt also spoke during the meeting and warned that springtime
was slipping away. He said the planting season might be long past
by time the pioneers reached their destination in the Rocky Mountains.
Pratt said the pioneers should be prepared for difficulties and
thus "be in a condition to cope with whatever circumstances
they are thrown into and make the best of it."
After the meeting, "peace, quiet and contentment seems to
pervade almost every breast," Wilford Woodruff said.
Not everyone was utterly happy, however. Harriet Young, the wife
of Lorenzo Young, noted that a great many dead buffalo littered
the prairie. She said she had been sick all day from the smell of
the dead beasts.
Another woman also had troubles. Ellen Kimball, the wife of Heber
C. Kimball, tried to bake bread, "but could not because the
wind blew so," Howard Egan said.
Brigham and some others rode out later that day to scout the path
ahead. They found a small stream which the wagons would have to
cross and saw many buffalo coming down to water.
Porter Rockwell and Phineas Young managed to get quite close to
the animals in an effort to bag one, but in the whole herd "they
could not find one fit to kill," Clayton said.
"They are very poor because there is no feed for them. They
are so numerous that they eat the grass as fast as it grows,"
he added.
A cold wind began blowing that night. Egan said he had to "sleep
on a chest in the front part of the wagon, crossways, and cannot
stretch myself nor keep the clothes over me." Finally he gave
up and shared a bed with two other men in another wagon.
- Source: 111
Days to Zion
- © Copyright 1997 Big Moon Traders and Hal Knight. All rights
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