 |
Pioneer 1847 Companies
Previous | Next
The Pioneer Trek of 1847 - Part III, Fort Laramie
to Fort Bridger
Date: June 10, 1847
On Saturday, June 5th, the pioneers were ready to leave for the
Continental Divide at South Pass and Fort Bridger, 397 miles west.
For a little over one month the pioneers would be on the Oregon
Trail with several other Gentile (non-Mormon) companies, with whom
they would vie for the best campgrounds, feed, and priority in fording
rivers.
On their first day out from Fort Laramie they came to what is now
called Mexican Hill. They may have been familiar with the frontier
hyperbole regarding this steep cut down the bluffs to the river.
While descending, so the story went, if a tin cup fell out of a
wagon it would land in front of the oxen. Two miles west of Mexican
Hill is Register Cliff and 1 1/2 miles beyond that are some of the
most dramatic trail ruts in the world--four feet deep in solid rock--near
what is now Guernsey, Wyoming, in Guernsey State Park. Near here
is Warm Springs Canyon, the Emigrants' Wash Tub, where the water
is always a warm 70 degrees.
Two days later, near Horseshoe Creek, Heber C. Kimball discovered
a large spring, which was named after him. On Sunday, June 13th,
while at their fording site on the Platte, frequently referred to
as "Last Crossing," the pioneers established a ferry for the Saints
who would follow. It was also established to be a money-making venture.
Ten men were left behind to operate and maintain what soon became
known as Mormon Ferry.
When the pioneers left Last Crossing on June 19th, they quit the
Platte for good. From the Elk Horn River to Last Crossing they had
followed its generally gentle valley for more than 600 miles. The
easy part of the trek was over, as the next 50 miles would prove.
The stretch from Last Crossing through Emigrant Gap, by Avenue of
Rocks, Willow Springs and up Prospect Hill to the Sweetwater River
near Independence Rock was the worst section of the whole trail
between Nauvoo and the Salt Lake Valley. It was a "Hell's Reach"
of few and bad campsites, bad water, little grass, one steep hill,
swamps, and stretches of alkali flats.
But the pioneers endured and lived to enjoy refreshing draughts
of the Sweetwater River, which probably acquired its name either
from American trappers because of its contrast with the other brackish
streams in the vicinity, or from French voyagers, who called it
the Eau Sucree because a pack mule loaded with sugar was lost in
its water. This small, gentle, beneficent river, which all Oregonians
and Mormons followed for 93 miles to South Pass, made it possible
for travelers to reach their destination in one season, avoiding
a winter in such desolate country.
Like all travelers before and after them, the pioneers stopped
to climb the huge turtle-shaped Independence Rock and some carved
or painted their initials or names into or on it. Four and a half
miles west was the equally famous Devil's Gate, another popular
resting place on the trail.
Its name derives from the notion that the formation bears the profiles
of twin petrified genies. It is a 1,500-foot-long, 370-foot-deep
gap in a rocky spur, through which flows the Sweetwater. Signatures
can still be found in this gap.
West of Devil's Gate came Martin's Cove, the Split Rock ruts, Three
Crossings, the Ice Springs, the Willie's Handcart grave, and South
Pass.
On June 27th they crossed the flat, almost imperceptible 7,750-foot-high
continental divide at South Pass, the "Cumberland Gap" of the Far
West. Oregonians and Californians tried to reach this pass by July
4th in order to get to their destinations before winter. (The Mormons,
with a shorter distance to go, did not have to be so careful.) At
Pacific Springs, immediately west of South Pass, the pioneers refreshed
themselves and their animals. These famous springs, so named because
their waters flowed to the Pacific Ocean, were the recognized beginning
of the sprawling and ill-defined Oregon Territory.
A few miles farther, on the aptly named Dry Sandy, they met Moses
Harris, the first of the mountain men with whom they consulted about
their destination. Harris, who had roamed the west for twenty-five
years, did not think much of the country around the Great Salt Lake;
he said it was barren, sandy, and destitute of timber and vegetation
except wild sage. On the next day, still on the Dry Sandy, the pioneers
met the famous Jim Bridger, who was on his way to Fort Laramie,
and spent some time with him discussing the Valley of the Great
Salt Uke. This camp was the setting of Bridger's well-known challenge
that he would give a thousand dollars for a bushel of corn raised
in the Great Basin. For his help, Young gave Bridger a pass for
the Mormon Ferry on the Platte.
At this time, Bridger, who was quite "likkered up," entertained
them with some of his tall tales, like the one about the glass mountain
strewn about with the corpses of animals and birds that had killed
themselves running and flying into it; or the one about petrified
birds singing in a petrified forest; perhaps the one about a stream
that ran so fast it cooked the trout in it; or about the rock he
threw across the Sweetwater River, which just kept on growing until
it became Independence Rock; and maybe the story of the time some
Indians chased him up a narrow canyon closed at the head by a 200-foot
waterfall. "And how did you escape, Jim?" the Mormons may have asked.
"I didn't," he'd have answered, "they scalped me."
June 29th was a banner day: the Mormons, passing the famous Parting
of the Ways made the best distance of the whole crossing--23 3/4-miles,
against an overall average of 10 miles per day. Such a distance
was covered only because there was no water between the Dry Sandy
and the Sandy. By July 3rd they were at the Green River where they
established another ferry. From there they passed Church Butte and,
finally, on the afternoon of July 7th, they arrived at Fort Bridger,
a poorly built ramshackle adobe establishment on Black's Fork of
the Green River, put up in 1842 to service emigrants on the Oregon
Trail.
- 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.)
|