William Clayton Journals
June 14, 1847
Location: Casper,
Wyoming - Location: 42:52:00N 106:18:45W
Summary: Twenty
three wagons have difficulty in ferrying across river.
Journal entry: MONDAY,
14TH. Morning cloudy and cool. At four o'clock the first division
commenced ferrying their goods over the river in the cater and
some time afterwards commenced taking the wagons across on a
raft which proved to be very slow work. The second division also began to take their goods over on a
raft but the current was so strong they only took two loads over
in it and then quit. The second division then got a rope stretched
across the river from shore to shore and lashing two wagons fast
together to keep them from rolling over, they dragged them over
- by the rope, letting them drift with the current to save breaking
the rope. When the wagons struck on the sand on the other side
the upper one keeled over, and finally rolled over the other one,
breaking the bows considerably and losing iron, etc., in the wagon
to the amount of $30.00 belonging to John Pack.
The other wagon had the reach broken and some of the bows. They
next lashed four wagons together abreast and dragged them over
the same way. All got over well except the upper one which turned
on its side, but it was righted again without damage. They next
tried one wagon alone, but as soon as it got into the current it
rolled over and over, breaking the bows pretty badly.
The plan of taking one wagon at a time on a raft is the safest,
no accident having occurred with it and the wagons got over dry
but it is very slow and would take us three or four days to get
all the wagons across.
The wind blows strong from the southwest which is much to our
disadvantage. At 3:30 we had a very heavy thunder storm. The rain
was heavy indeed, accompanied by hail and as strong a wind as I
ever witnessed.
After the storm was over the ferrying was continued, getting
my trunk, etc., and the loads in Brother Johnson and Harmon's wagons
over, and also Harmon's wagon, Johnson's being got over just before
the storm. It took till nearly ten o'clock to get the loading into
the wagons and get regulated. The river has been rising all day
and has risen very fast since the storm. The men have tried hard,
much of the time being in the water and sometimes up to their armpits
which is very fatiguing indeed. When they quit at night the first
division had got eleven wagons over, the second division twelve,
making twenty - three wagons after a very hard day's labor. There
was no difficulty in getting the freight over for one man can carry
it in the cutter faster than all the rest of the camp can get the
wagons over.
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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