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William Clayton Journals
June 9, 1847
Location: Ayres Natural Bridge State
Park, Wyoming - Location: 42:44:03N 105:36:42W
Summary: Heading
for the Platte River
Journal entry: WEDNESDAY,
9TH. Arose at 4:20 and at 5:15 a.m. we moved onward, keeping near
the La Bonte. At 5:45 halted for breakfast beside the traders'
camp, having come a mile and a quarter. I sent my letter to them
by Aaron Farr, a number of the brethren also sending letters. While
we halted I got the roadometer fixed again and also put up a guide
board marked "To Fort John
60 miles." These traders or mountaineers said they had left a kind of ferry
made of three buffalo skins hung in a tree on the Platte and wanted
Brother Crow's company to have it. It was decided to send a company
ahead to overreach the Missouri companies and get the ferry before
they could arrive, and also build a raft for us to cross on, kill
game, etc. The men say it is about seventy miles to where we cross
the river. Nineteen wagons were sent ahead and about forty men
to attend to this business. All of Brother Crow's company went,
Aaron Farr, J. Redding, the cutter, etc., being five wagons from
the 1st division and fourteen from the 2nd. They started about
half an hour before we started.
We proceeded at 7:45 and immediately after starting had to cross
a very steep gulf, being difficult for teams to get up, though
it was not long. Soon after this, four men passed us with pack
horses and mules. They say they are from Pueblo and going to Green
River; they told others they were from Santa Fe and going to San
Francisco.
We found the road very hilly and uneven and crooked as yesterday.
At three and three quarters miles passed over a branch of the La
Bonte, a stream about ten feet wide but not deep. The descent and
ascent being very steep, most of the teams required assistance
to get up. For half a mile before we crossed this stream and three
and a half miles after, our road lay over a kind of red earth or
sand about the color or red precipitate. Most of the rocks and
bluffs are of the same red color, only a deeper red. It affected
my eyes much from its brightness and strange appearance. About
one and a quarter miles west of the creek President Young and Kimball
saw a large toad which had horns on its head and a tail. It did
not jump like a toad but crawled like a mouse. This was seen near
a pile of rocks or rather a hill.
At 12:40 we halted for noon having come ten miles since breakfast.
There is little water here for the teams. The day fine and nice
west breeze. The road is very crooked, hilly, and mostly rocky,
many large cobble stones covering the bluffs, the land barren and
little grass. The ground here is covered with large crickets which
are so numerous, to walk without stepping on them is almost impossible.
Source: William
Clayton's Journal
- Published by the Clayton Family Association,
and edited by Lawrence Clayton. To the best of our research,
this contents of this book are no longer under copyright.
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