 |
Pioneer 1847 Companies
Previous | Next
The Pioneer Trek of 1847 - Part IV, Fort Bridger
to the Valley of the Great Salt Lake
The pioneers tarried at this rather shabby fort just long enough
to do some trading and repair their wagons, especially the running
gear and wheels. At 8:00 A.M. on Friday, July 9th, the pioneers
quit the Oregon Trail, which there turned north, and began the last
leg of their journey. The Mormons followed Hastings Cutoff, a barely
visible track through the Rockies made by the Reed-Donner party
of 1846, many of whom later perished in the Sierra Nevada snows.
Even with the trailblazing done by the Reed-Donner group, it took
the pioneers sixteen days and ten camps to traverse the 116 miles
between Fort Bridger and the Salt Lake Valley.
Their second day out of Fort Bridger, the pioneers met a third
mountain man, Miles Goodyear, who owned a trading post at the mouth
of the Weber River, near what is now Ogden, Utah, about 38 miles
north of where Young was to locate that summer. They also passed
a pure-water spring, a sulfur spring, and an oil spring. Then they
entered the beginning of a 90-mile-long natural highway, a chain
of defiles, which meandered through the forbidding Wasatch Range
of the Rockies into the valley, as if an ancient Titan had dragged
a stick through the area. The first part of the final stretch came
to be called Echo Canyon.
By noon on July 12th, they had made midday camp along Coyote Creek,
about 1 mile east of a prominent and strange formation of conglomerate
rocks called the Needles, or Pudding Rocks (see Historic Site 60),
and about 1 _ miles east of what is now the Wyoming-Utah border.
Here Young was suddenly stricken with tick fever. He remained ill
for nearly two weeks, during which time Kimball took over the direction
of the camp. In the hope that Young would be well enough to travel
the next day, Kimball and a few others remained at the Coyote Creek
camp and sent Orson Pratt and the main company on. On July 13th,
it was obvious that Young was worse, not better, so Kimball rode
63/4 miles ahead to the main camp near the well-known rendezvous
site called Cache Cave and suggested that Pratt drive on to "hunt
out and improve a road."
For the rest of the journey, the pioneers split into three groups--Pratt's
vanguard, the main portion following, and a rear guard, which stayed
with Young and Kimball. Pratt's company sighted the Valley on July
19th and scouted it on the 21st. On the 22nd at about 5:30 P.M.,
the main company arrived in the valley via what came to be called
Emigration Canyon. Early the next morning the group moved about
2 miles northwest and made camp on the south fork of what became
known as City Creek. There they dammed up the water and began plowing,
planting potatoes, and irrigating.
Meanwhile, back on Coyote Creek, Kimball and a few others went
to the top of the Needles and offered up prayers for the sick, and
on July 15th, Young was well enough to travel in Wilford Woodruff's
carriage. Shortly thereafter they crossed the Hogsback at the summit
of Main Canyon (west of present Henefer) and caught the traveler's
traditional first view of the continent's backbone, the Wasatch
Range of the Rocky Mountain cordillera--disheartening assurance
that the worst of the mountain passes still lay ahead. On the morning
of July 23rd, the Young-Kimball detachment left Mormon Flat on East
Canyon Creek and began the final section of the trail--up Little
Emigration Canyon to Big Mountain Pass.
As the pioneers crossed the 7,400 foot-high Big Mountain pass,
they entered their new homeland, the Great Basin--a vast and forbidding
area of over 200,000 square miles lying generally between the crests
of the Sierra Nevada and the Wasatch Mountains, including parts
of Utah, Nevada, California, Oregon, and Idaho, and inhabited by
various tribes of Great Basin Indians. (It is a natural basin. What
streams and rivers there are, such as the Humboldt, Jordan, Provo,
and Weber, have no access to the sea. They flow into the Great Salt
Lake, into sinks, or disappear by evaporation and percolation. The
area is spotted with unattractive places now named Salt Marsh Lake,
Little Salt Lake, Fossil Lake, and the Humboldt Sink.)
Until the Mormons arrived, this region had only been slightly explored
and settled by Europeans. Imperial Spain, which had claimed it by
right of discovery, had done little with it for centuries except
try to find a trail between Santa Fe, New Mexico and Monterey, California.
To this end, they sent out the eighteenth century expeditions of
the Fathers Escalante and Dominguez and eventually the Old Spanish
Trail was worked out.
England and France had never even fought for it. The Mexicans,
who took it from Spain in 1821, generally considered it a worthless
waste separating more desirable lands. Prior to the advent of the
Mormons some Anglos had visited and explored the area. They included
mountain men, California-bound emigrants, Captain John C. Fremont
of the United States Topographical Corps, and Miles Goodyear, who
in 1846, established a trading post on the Weber River near what
is now Ogden, Utah.
For perhaps four billion years the Great Basin had bent all to
its inexorable will--adjust or perish. In 1847 the Mormons, however,
decided to make the Great Basin their home, and they did it on ancient
principles worked out in Mesopotamia and among some Native Americans
in South America and in the American southwest--centralized organization,
division of labor, and a chain of command, all on an agricultural
basis with controlled irrigation at its heart.
This author [Kimball} believes that Young made his famous statement
"This is the place, drive on." on the Big Mountain summit rather
than over the mountains near what is now Salt Lake City, where the
"This is the Place" monument is located in Pioneer Trail State Park.
This minority view is based on Young's pioneer journal of July 23,
1847, where it is recorded, "I ascended and crossed over the Big
Mountain, when on its summit I directed Elder Woodruff, who had
kindly tendered me the use of his carriage, to turn the same half
way round so that I could have a view of a portion of Salt Lake
Valley. The spirit of light rested upon me and hovered over the
valley, and I felt that there the Saints would find protection and
safety. Then the Young-Kimball party rough-locked their rear wheels
with chains and attached drag shoes (wagon brakes were not then
in general use), slid down Big Mountain, and a few hours later ascended
Little Mountain. At 5:00 that afternoon, suffering much from heat
and dust, they were in Emigration Canyon, at Last Camp.
The next day was July 24th--the day acclaimed as the official entrance
of Young into the valley. July 24, 1847, is the traditional pivot
in Mormon history--everything is related to and from this date.
Brigham Young had finally accomplished what in January 1845, he
had set out to do.
In 1880, during Mormondom's fifty-year jubilee, Woodruff enhanced
the events of July 24, 1847, with the following afterthought, probably
an embellishment of the passage quoted from Young's journal: "President
Young was enwrapped in a vision for several minutes. He had seen
the Valley before in vision, and upon this occasion he saw the future
glory of Zion and of Israel, as they would be, planted in the valleys
of these mountains. When the vision had passed, he said: "It is
enough. This is the right place, drive on." Such was the origin
of the most famous single statement in Mormon history.
The event is commemorated today by the large granite "This is the
Place" monument at the mouth of Emigration Canyon that honors the
pioneers and pre-Mormon explorers and trappers. Atop a huge shaft
thrusting up from the center of the base, stand larger-than-life
figures of Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, and Wilford Woodruff,
serenely and eternally contemplating their work.
- 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.)
|