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Pioneer 1847 Companies
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The Pioneer Trek of 1847 - Trek Begins
Description:
Pioneer Mural by Lynn Fausett.
Image courtesy of: This
is the Place State Park, This park includes the 'This is the
Place Monument' and 'Pioneer Home and Garden: Old Deseret Living
History Museum.'
Date: April 19, 1847
The real beginning of the trek of 1847 and the whole trans-Missouri
Mormon migration that followed was at 7:30 on the morning of Monday,
April 19th. The company moved out from their staging area and the
grand adventure began.
As previously noted, the Mormons had prepared themselves for this
pioneering venture by studying as much trail literature and as many
travel guides as they could, including works by Irving, Fremont,
Hastings, Parker, and Long, and had acquired maps by Long, Wilkes,
Bonneville, Fremont, and Mitchell. They referred to the maps and
accounts en route, to check their location.
The Platte River, rising in Colorado and one of the largest branches
of the Missouri, is very broad and shallow, a meandering, braided
river that old timers used to say "flowed upside down" -- a reference
to the many visible sandbars. One disgruntled pioneer remarked that
it would make a pretty good stream if it were turned on its side.
Travelers seemed to enjoy thinking up insults for the Platte. The
consensus regarding this river was that it was a mile wide, six
inches deep, too thick to drink, too thin to plow, hard to cross
because of quicksand, impossible to navigate, too yellow to wash
in, and too pale to paint with. For hundreds of miles the pioneers
hauled themselves across its flat, monotonous plain in what is now
Nebraska.
There is some evidence that the pioneers knew in advance that they
were going into the Great Basin somewhere near its eastern rim,
along the western slope of the Wasatch Mountains. As early as 1842,
as previously noted, some claimed Smith said that the Saints would
go there, and church leaders had studied Fremont's account and maps
of the area. But into which of the several unclaimed valleys? En
route, the pioneers consulted with everyone they could about the
region, including some famous mountain men--Moses Harris, Jim Bridger,
and Miles Goodyear. It appears that as they moved toward and into
the Great Basin, they gradually decided to settle in the Valley
of the Great Salt Lake.
The camp moved deliberately, casually, about 2 miles an hour (the
pace of oxen pulling heavy wagons), and under little pressure. Their
best distance for one day was 23 3/4-miles, but they averaged only
10 miles a day. There was no need to get to the mountains before
winter snows had melted.
- 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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