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Pioneer 1847 Companies
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Mormon Emigrants: 1848-1868 - Y.X. Company
There is one more dimension to the Mormon Trail which, while it
pertains little to immigration, deserves mention in this study.
This is the short-lived Brigham Young Express and Carrying Company
(popularly known as the Y.X. Company) of 1856-1857. It has a place
in this study because the route of the company generally was the
Mormon Trail of 1847.
In 1856 the Mormon Church bid for and received a four-year contract
for monthly mail service between Independence, Missouri, and Salt
Lake City. Wagons, animals, feed, stations, and men were quickly
lined up, and mail service commenced February 8, 1857. Soon the
church was preparing to carry freight as well. The first permanent
stations or settlements were set up at Genoa, about 100 miles west
of Omaha, and on Deer Creek (just west of Deer Creek in what is
now Glenrock, Wyoming). Other stations were begun at the Horseshoe
Creek stage station (2 miles due south of what is now Glendo, Wyoming,at
La Bonte Creek (10 miles south of Douglas, Wyoming), Devil's Gate
(near the Gate, just south of the Sweetwater River and abandoned
Wyoming Highway 220), and at Rocky Ridge (a very remote and difficult
place to visit today). The Mormons also made use of other existing
stations at Fort Laramie, Sweet Water (known today as Burnt Ranch,
just south of the Sweetwater River, and Fort Bridger. The proposed
sites at Horseshoe Creek, La Bonte Creek, Deer Creek, Devil's Gate,
and Sweetwater River were surveyed into 640-acre or one square-mile
rectangles--160 rods by 640 rods, or 2 miles by 1/2-mile sections.
The main objective was eventually to have stations every 50 miles--the
daily distance attainable by mule teams. Such stations would also
be aids to Mormon emigrants by stocking and providing grain and
other basic supplies, where hay and other crops could be raised.
Then suddenly the contract was canceled because of the political
influence of rival mail contractors and all the Mormon mail and
freight stations were closed for good.
- 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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