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Pioneer 1847 Companies
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Emmett Company, 1844-1847 (Disobedient Group,
sort of)
James Holt, 1844-1846, 1852
(Emmett Company)
[NOTE: The Emmett Company left Nauvoo after the death of Joseph
Smith and against the wishes of Church leaders. Brigham Young, in
1846, sent two men to find this company and persuade them to join
with the rest of the Saints at Council Bluffs. This is the account
of one of the members of that company.]
I, James Holt, was born February 10, 1804, in Halifax County,
North Carolina. When I was five or six months old, my father started
with a colony of his kindred, and others, and traveled to Tennessee
and settled in Wilson County, near Lebanon. My grandfather, Icom
Davis, was also of the colony.
James Emmett came after me to go with him.
He said he had been appointed before Joseph's death to choose
a few families and travel among the Indians; to go on to the Rocky
Mountains; to preach to the Indians along the way and prepare them
to receive the Saints in the valley of the mountains. Bishop Miller
testified to me that Emmett had been appointed by Joseph, and said
that he had the privilege of choosing whom he pleased to accompany
him. So I decided to go with him. He also chose John Butler to go.
He wished us not to reveal it to anyone, not even to our wives,
where we were going, for everything was in such an uproar that he
was afraid a great many would follow and it would cause suffering.
John Butler had a friend by the name of (Billy) Edwards, whom
he told, and this Edwards told others. Emmett was to go by boat
and I was to travel by land and meet him at a certain place up the
Iowa River, but before we met, it got rumored around to such an
extent that a white settlement on Bare Creek joined us. We traveled
on up the Iowa River and all met five miles above Kitchen's Settlement,
which was the largest settlement at that time on the Iowa River.
There my wife died, in October, and was buried. The doctors gave
her a dose of lobelia when her stomach was too weak to take it,
and it caused her death; and I must say I have ever since been opposed
to anyone administering drugs. My wife left a child about two months
old, which William Kartchner's wife took to nurse. She died on the
10th of February 1845. I lost another child at this camp, above
Kitchen's Settlement. It was my oldest son Leander. He died about
a month after my wife, in the month of November. I must here state
that I cannot give dates and particulars as I would wish, for in
my moves I lost my journal and I have to tax my memory to a great
extent, to remember even one hundredth part of all which I would
like to relate.
We here organized the company which had increased to upward of
25 or 30 families. Emmett was appointed trustee in trust for the
company, and I was appointed bishop with Henry Hinman and Jackson
Steward as my two counselors, and we all came under a covenant to
divide up everything equal. We sold everything which we did not
need, and bought corn and teams, and everything was divided out
equal. The provisions were rationed out daily, and each person received
only haft a pint of corn a day. On the first of January 1846 we
started again, and still traveling up the Iowa River, we went somewhere
between fifty and one hundred miles where we stopped to rest awhile.
Here we made a good deal of sorghum. It was a good place for our
cattle to browse and rest. Here we also had a visit from Brother
Lyman, who was sent by Brigham Young to stop us from going any farther
at present and to have us come back, as he thought there were too
many following us which would bring great suffering. Emmett agreed
to go back and consult with the Twelve when he got his company in
a place where he was certain they would be safe, as he didn't feel
they were safe here traveling in an Indian country.
I married Parthenia Overton on the 11th of February 1845. Great
was the suffering of all the camp. The men hunted as much as possible
and when they killed anything, it was divided among them, even a
squirrel. When an ox died from fatigue or starvation, it was divided
out to the people. They were greedy for it as if it was the best
of beef. No one can have any idea of the suffering of this company,
except those who experienced the same. Women and children suffered
great starvation and fear, not knowing when they would be massacred
by savages or unprincipled whites. Our Pioneer Heritage, Vol. 13,
p.474 In the month of March we again started on our journey and
went to the Vermillion, which was a French trading post, but before
we arrived at this place, we were spied by the French and the Indians,
who came out to meet us and find out our intentions. After they
found out, they escorted us to the fort, where we arrived the 7th
day of June. The next day Emmett went about 15 miles to see the
Indian chiefs, who were drying buffalo meat for their winter provisions.
They were of the Sioux nation. When he told them his business, being
able to converse with them in their own tongue, he returned accompanied
by seven of their chiefs. Now there was one of their chiefs by the
name of Henry, who had been to Petersburg to college and had quite
a good education and had settled down in this place. Emmett and
those seven chiefs went to Henry's house to hold council. I must
here state that the chiefs brought us several bales of dried buffalo
meat for a present, which was very acceptable.
We made a feast for them, giving them the best we had. Emmett
handed Chief Henry the Book of Mormon to read and after he had read
the preface and explained it to his comrades, they all gave a great
shout for joy. They danced, sang, shouted and had a joyful time.
Emmett asked them why they were so happy. They told him that their
great chief who had died twenty years ago had told them that the
whites would bring them in this year the record of their forefathers.
They had almost forgotten it until he had presented him with this
book. They felt to rejoice because the words of their Prophet had
come to pass. Emmett told them he was traveling through their country
to preach the Gospel that was found in that book, and that his intentions
were to travel on to the Rocky Mountains where his people wished
to go and settle. They told him that it was a long way to the mountains;
that he would have great waters to cross and great plains where
there were no waters and when he got to the Rocky Mountains, he
would find no buffalo; and his women and children would starve.
They wished him and his people to stop with them and teach them
to farm; anyway, he must not go any farther this season, for it
was late and he was perfectly welcome to take his men and hunt and
kill all of the buffalo they wished. They could help him and they
should not be molested in any manner. We went out in a few days
and killed two or three loads of buffalo which greatly helped us
in our provisions. After Emmett had been promised protection by
the Indians, he took John Buffer and went back to Nauvoo to have
a council with the Twelve as he had promised.
We had peace while he was gone; the Indians treated us very kindly.
When he returned, he told me that he had made everything right with
the Twelve, that he had been baptized again and Brigham had blessed
him with all the blessings that had before been conferred upon him
and also conferred upon him greater blessings than he had hitherto
held. There were a couple of brethren who came back with him; Brother
Sherwood and another brother. They both confirmed his words and
we were all re-baptized by them. John Butler did not come back at
this time, but came the following spring. The brethren that came
back with Emmett concluded to go back by water if we would fit them
up a boat and they could sell their horses, which belonged to the
Church. There was no one to buy their horses, but a Frenchman who
kept a station nearby for a fur company offered them $30 for one
and $35 for the other, but Emmett thought the sum too small and
he concluded to buy them for the company, giving $50 for one and
$60 for the other, taking the means to pay for them out of the company
treasury. He told the brethren, when he met the Church that it could
have the horses back if it so wished, by returning the same amount
to him. After these two brethren had gone, the Frenchman who wished
to get the horses, got very much offended because we had bought
the horses and he couldn't get them. So he got the Indians together
and got them drunk, and hired them to come kill us all off. The
station where they gathered was about one-half mile from our camp.
The Indians started toward us to put in execution the bloody orders
of the Frenchman, but the head chief came on ahead to have a council
with Chief Henry at his cabin. They asked him if it was right to
kill us. "Yes," said Henry, "Go and kill them who brought us the
record of our forefathers; kill all the women and little children
who have never done us any harm, and get a big name." Said they,
"Are you making fun of us?" "Yes," he said, "Go and stop your warriors
and don't let them hurt a hair of the whites, at your peril." This
sobered the chiefs and they in the company with Henry, came on a
run to intercept the Indians and met them at our camp in the act
of raising their guns to shoot us down. The chiefs ran in among
them, knocking their guns right and left, and shouting at them to
stop. They nearly had a war between themselves, before the chiefs
were able to stop them, as the Indians were so drunk that they were
hard to control by their own leaders; however, they were brought
under subjection before they shed any of our blood, but our people
were greatly frightened, especially our women and children who cried
and screamed thinking wewere all going to be massacred. But the
hand of God seemed to be over us, and we escaped by almost a miracle,
for during the skirmish between the chiefs and Indians, there were
a great many guns discharged and the bullets whistled among ourwagons,
some over and some under, and several in close contact to the inmates
of our camp.
The Indians now all swore vengeance of the Frenchman, whom they
now called a murderer, and they went to kill him, but he kept forted
up and dared not go out of the walls for some time. But they got
a chance by fall to shoot him. They only wounded him and he was
taken by his friends to a doctor where he recovered. He then started
to return and when he got to the little Zion, he was again shot
by them and this time killed. So he fell into the trap that he had
set for us.
When spring opened up we put in garden seeds and were preparing
to put in corn to raise a crop, but John Butler now returned from
Nauvoo with James Cummings bringing word from the Twelve for us
to meet the Church at the Bluffs, so we broke up camp and met the
Church at that place. We went about twenty-five or thirty miles
beyond and camped on Keg Creek and the brethren who were able went
down the Missouri and worked around to obtain corn for our families
to eat. We obtained a load or two and were about ready to start
with it to our families when word came for us to hurry up and join
George Miller's company which was waiting for us ready to proceed
to the Rocky Mountains.
We came back and got our families and crossed the Missouri River
in July joining in with Miller's company and we were making for
the Pavanee, which was a trading station. But the men of the station
had been driven out by the Indians previously and had started to
return when they fell in with our company; Brother Miller promised
to haul their effects. The day before we were to arrive there, those
men went on ahead to arrange things at the fort for our reception.
About noon, Emmett came to me and said he was impressed that something
would happen to those men and he wished to get my horse to go and
overtake them. I let him have the horse and he went on to the fort.
He found that the Indians had all collected to kill them. He told
the men to make a feast for the Indians and treat them well and
they would not be harmed until he could go back to camp and return
with help. He got back to our camp about 1 o'clock at night and
called for a few men to go back to the fort with him immediately.
About twenty-five or thirty men responded to the call, including
myself. It was about fifteen miles to the fort and we were in wild
Indian country, and nearly all of our able-bodied men were now called
to leave their wives and children, the aged and infirm, to the mercies
of the savages. It was quite a perilous night. Women were clinging
to their husbands and trying to prevail upon them not to go and
leave them in their present dangerous position, but we commended
them to the Lord and departed on foot in the dead of night.
We arrived at the fort just at the first glimmer of dawn. We found
the Indians all asleep in a circle around the dying embers of their
campfire. We carefully approached, surrounding them, pointed our
guns and were ready to fire at them at a given signal. Emmett spoke
to the chief in their own tongue. The chief arose to his feet with
the well-known "ugh" at which the Indians all arose, found themselves
in such a trap, shook hands with us all around, led by the chief
and silently took their departure, and thus we saved the fort without
the shedding of blood.
We went back and met our teams, which had been hitched up by the
men and women of the company, and started on the way to the fort.
We took charge of our teams and arrived during the day. The station
men were afraid to stop at the fort any longer, for they knew when
we were not there, the Indians would come upon them again and massacre
them. So they gave Brother Miller all the corn and grain they had
here to take them and their effects back to the Bluffs. We stopped
here about two weeks and harvested their grain, loaded up, and were
ready to start again on our journey, when a dispute arose as to
the leadership.
We had been increased, by this time, to two companies. One was
led by Kimball and one company called Brigham's Company. Although
they were all under the direction of Brigham Young, Miller wished
to have the honor of being chief captain because he started out
first. Some of the brethren wrote to Brigham Young at the Bluffs
to settle the dispute and know what to do. He wrote for us not to
go any farther this season as it was too late, but to find a suitable
place and winter and he would advise us further in the spring. We
turned off on the Missouri bottoms and camped at the mouth of Puncaw
River and went to work building shanties to winter in. The grain
we brought with us from Pawnee Fort was, now all divided by Brother
Miller among the company; six bushels of corn, forty pounds of flour,
and a few oats fell to my share. We made the oats into meal and
tried to eat it, but it was very poor indeed. The most of the time,
we pounded it in a mortar and made it into soup, seasoning it with
squirrel's legs or a small piece of any other meat we might happen
to obtain. We tried many experiments with different things to see
if they were eatable. We searched out everything we could to sustain
life. We even tried and experimented to make biscuits with elm bark,
but it was a poor substitute. At one time we were poisoned by eating
some "Gar Eggs" and we concluded it was not for the food of man.
A great many roots that we obtained were good for food such as the
lions root, artichoke, and hog potato. The rations which I received
at Puncaw were very small for my family. I had at times five in
the family, including myself, but going down the river to work and
getting a few jobs around home and straining all my energy, we made
out to live through the winter. Many things turned up for our sustenance
which would look almost like a miracle to some. There was one time
during the winter that the Lord opened a way for me to get a few
pounds of flour without much exertion on my part. It was as thankfully
received at that time as fifty times the amount would be at different
times since.
There was a man by the name of Dalton who had a cow and had been
hunting for it for two or three days. He came to me one evening
and offered me sixteen pounds of flour if I would get her for him,
so I arose early the next morning preparatory to getting ready to
start out on the hunt for a cow. I looked out and it seemed a dismal
day to take a tramp in the snow. While I was looking out I heard
a cow bellow close to my shanty and I saw Dalton's cow close by.
She seemed to be waiting for me to drive her home which I soon did
and obtained 12 lbs. of flour. He thought I shouldn't have the full
amount as I had not been to any trouble to hunt for her. However.
I was very thankful for the small amount.
The next spring [1847], Brigham sent for us to all come to the
Bluffs. We were now all without provisions and Emmett took a horse
and started on ahead to obtain means for us to get provisions. He
agreed to meet us at a certain place but by the dint of much labor
and fatigue in hunting wild animals and fowls we made out to keep
from starving. When we got to the Bluffs, our company was broken
up. Emmett and a few of us went down on the Waupause Creek in Fremont
County, Iowa, and took up farms. We sowed some buckwheat and planted
some potatoes and raised a crop. There was a settlement close by
where we obtained employment enough to get provisions to keep us
from starving until our crops matured. My first child by wife Parthenia
died here on the 15th of August 1847.
- Source: Our
Pioneer Heritage
- © Carter, Kate B., ed. 20 vols. Salt Lake City: International
Society, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 1958-1977. All rights reserved.
No part of this material may be reproduced in any form or by any
means without permission in writing from the publisher. Documents
and images are exerpted by permission from the LDS
Family History Suite CDROM from Ancestry.
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