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Pioneer 1847 Companies
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The Pioneer Trek of 1847 - Trail/Divisions and
Topography
Description:
Line drawing by Matt, a ninth grader from Central Davis Junior High.
Image courtesy of: Heritage Gateway Project Images,
These images have been gathered to support the Sesquicentennial
celebration of the immigration to Utah.
West of Winter Quarters the Mormons followed generally what is
sometimes called the Great Platte River Road or the north branch
of the Oregon Trail, which had always been regarded as the most
advantageous approach to the easiest crossing of the Rocky Mountains.
The original Oregon Trail, from 1812, was north of the Platte and
after Independence Missouri became the eastern terminus around 1827,
it shifted to the south side. The Mormons of 1847 simply followed
the older Oregon Trail to Fort Laramie, where they crossed the North
Platte River and picked up the then main route of the Oregon Trail.
(In trail days whatever side of the Platte a party started out on
is the side it remained on; no emigrants crossed that river unless
absolutely necessary. Had the Mormons started out south of the Platte,
they probably would have remained on that side.) Among those who
preceded the Mormons west along the north bank of the Platte were
Indians, trappers, traders, Robert Stuart, James Clyman, Major Stephen
H. Long, Samuel Parker, the Marcus-Whitman party of 1836, and the
Townsend-Murphey group of 1844. And many non-Mormons followed the
pioneers of 1847, for the Council Bluffs area was a very important
and popular jumping off place throughout the westering period in
American history.
The simplest way of following the pioneers (and most subsequent
Mormon emigrants) from "civilization to sundown" is to divide the
trail into four sections and relate them to the Oregon Trail, the
"main street to the west."
- The Oregon Trail proper of the 1840s started at Independence,
Missouri, and crossed Kansas, Nebraska, Wyoming, and Idaho. The
first section of the Mormon Trail from Winter Quarters was generally
along the north bank of the Platte River, some 185 miles to near
what is now Kearney, Nebraska. Up to this point the Mormon Trail
and the Oregon Trail of the late 1840s were entirely separate.
- The second portion of the Mormon Trail was from Kearney to Fort
Laramie, Wyoming. Along this approximately 320-mile-long section,
the two trails followed the Platte, the Mormons on the north bank
and the Oregonians on the south. Since in the 1840s, the favored
route to Oregon and California was along the south bank of the
Platte, it might appear that the Mormons pioneered the north bank
trail, but actually during the 1820s and 1830s the north bank
had been the preferred way, used by fur trappers and missionaries.
As late as 1846, the famous historian Francis Parkman took the
northern route to South Pass.
- 3. The third section of the trail was from Fort Laramie to Fort
Bridger. Here the Mormons followed the Oregon Trail proper for
some 397 miles.
- 4. The fourth and final section of about 116 miles started at
Fort Bridger, where the Oregon Trail turned north and where the
Mormons left the Oregon Trail and picked up the year-old Reed-Donner
track through the Rockies into the Salt Lake Valley.
West of Winter Quarters the Mormons passed along river valleys,
across grasslands, plains, steppes, deserts, and mountains, and
through western forests, experiencing dramatic changes in flora
and fauna. Topographically the trail led across the Central Lowlands
of eastern Nebraska, covered with the tall prairie grass of bluestem
and needle; across the High Plains of central Nebraska and the Upland
Trough of western Nebraska and eastern Wyoming, blanketed with short,
stubby plains grasses such a grama and buffalo; through the Wyoming
Basin with its desert shrub of sagebrush, creosote bush, and greasewood;
through the forests of Douglas fir and scrub oak of the middle Rocky
Mountains, and into the sagebrush desert of the Great Basin.
From Winter Quarters they followed the broad, flat valley of the
Platte for some 600 miles and the beneficent little Sweetwater for
about 93 more, all the while enjoying an increasingly rugged and
beautiful land, and finally zigzagging through a series of defiles
and canyons.
They traversed the empire of the bison, wolf, antelope, bear, coyote,
goat, elk, fox, raccoon, rabbit, hare, gray swan, great blue heron,
and quail; the bee, grasshopper, and firefly; the rattlesnake, copperhead,
lizard, and turtle; the grayling, catfish, and trout. Seasonally
the area was a piebald garden of sunflowers, daisies, gayfeather,
and butterfly milkweed. The modern traveler can still find some
parts of the old trail. Much of the plains, deserts, mountains,
steppes, and forests remain, but the tall grass prairie is almost
all gone, a victim of the white man's plow. (See previous section
on Mormons and the Environment.)
- Source: Historic
Resource Study - Mormon Pioneer National
- By Stanley B. Kimball, Ph.D., May 1991. (The study focuses
on the history of the trail from its official beginning in Nauvoo,
Illinois, to its terminus in Salt Lake City, Utah, during the
period 1846-1869. During that time, thousands of Mormon emigrants
used many trails and trail variants to reach Utah. This study
emphasizes the 'Pioneer Route' or 'Brigham Young Route' of 1846-1847.
The sections on Mormon beliefs and motivations for going west
have been omitted. Interested persons can find ample sources for
that information. The footnotes, bibliography, maps, pictures,
pioneer companies by name and dates for the 22-year period, and
historic sites - about 2/3 of the book - have also been left out
for space considerations. Thanks to Dr. Kimball and the National
Park Service for the availability of this information.)
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