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Historical Pioneer Biographies
Agnes Caldwell (Southworth)
Born: 1847 Died: 1924
Children's
Story: Nine year old Agnes was a member of the 1856 Willie
Handcart Company. She was blessed by the forethought and preparation
of her mother and did not suffer as much as others.
Biography: © 1994 Deseret Book Company.
All rights reserved.
Born: February 22, 1847, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland
Parents: William and Margaret Ann McFall Caldwell
1856: James G. Willie Handcart Company
Age at time of journey: 9
On the twenty-eighth day of June, 1856, under the company leader
of James G. Willie, we landed in the United States of America. Then
began the noted tramp across the desert waste. Mother had one boy
fifteen years of age, upon whom she was depending for the greater
share of the pulling; when only a day or two out he was attempting
to lasso a wild cow to be milked, his foot became tangled in the
rope. He was thrown on his shoulder and dragged quite a distance,
sustaining a broken shoulder. This of course threw the heavy pulling
upon Mother.
Although only tender years of age, I can yet close my eyes and
see everything in panoramic precision before me-the ceaseless walking,
walking, ever to remain in my memory. Many times I would become
so tired and, childlike, would hang on the cart, only to be gently
pushed away. Then I would throw myself by the side of the road and
cry. Then realizing they were all passing me by, I would jump to
my feet and make an extra run to catch up.
Of the long cold journey, the suffering, and hardships, enough
has been told and written, of that terrible night when fifteen were
frozen and buried in one grave. My sister Elizabeth Caldwell had
her foot frozen. Two of her toes were amputated upon our arrival
in the Salt Lake Valley.
I have often marveled of the wonderful integrity of character of
my mother's planning and successfully completing such a journey
where more able-bodied and stronger-yes, even men-failed miserably.
Winter came in October with eighteen inches of snow, but in spite
of this we did not suffer from hunger, due to Mother's careful and
frugal planning. In Iowa City Mother sold a quilt and a bedspread
for the sum of twenty-four cents. With this she bought food. She
had a way with Indians: she traded trinkets for dried meat, which
proved to be of great help to us on the journey. Frequently it would
be stormy so that a fire could not be built; then mother would allow
each of us to have a piece of dried meat on a piece of bread. As
food became more and more scarce and the weather colder, she would
stew a little of this meat and make a delicious gravy over it. I
guess the reason it tasted so good is that we were allowed only
a small portion at each meal.
One very cold night, some young men were on guard. Mother prepared
some meat broth, thickened with flour, and a little salt; she gave
each one of the young men a half pint. They often declared it saved
their lives and never before or since had anything tasted so good.
For baking, Mother dug a hole in the ground. The food was placed
in a heavy iron kettle with a tight lid on, then set in the hole
and covered over with buffalo chips, which were set afire. This
produced a nice, even heat, baking the food evenly.
One day we came to a section inhabited by rattlesnakes. Two of
us, my friend Mary Hurren and I, would hold hands and jump. It seemed
to me we were jumping for more than a mile. Due to the protecting
hand of the Lord, we were not harmed.
The 30th of September we stopped at a station in Laramie, Wyoming.
Mother, in company with her fifteen-year-old boy and a young lady,
Christena McNeil, who was making the trip under Mother's care, visited
one of the generals in command at the fort to obtain permission
to trade some trinkets and silver spoons for flour and meat. The
officer said he himself could not use any of the things but to leave
the young lady in his office while mother went to another station,
where he assured her she would be able to obtain the things she
desired. He seemed very kind, and not wishing to arouse any feeling
of ill will, she left Christena and Thomas. During her absence the
officer used the time in trying to persuade Christena to stay there,
proposing to her and showing her the gold he had, telling her what
a fine lady he would make of her. Then he tried discouraging her,
pointing out to her how the handcart company would never reach Utah,
because of the severe cold, and that they would die of cold and
hunger and exposure. Like all noble girls, and true to the cause
for which she had left her native Scotland, her family, home, and
friends just to be in Utah, she told him in plain language she would
take her chances with the others even though it might mean death.
She was greatly relieved to have Mother return. The officer, however,
seemed to admire her very much for her loyalty to her faith and
gave her a large cured ham and wished her well in her chosen adventure.
Just before we crossed the mountains, relief wagons reached us,
and it certainly was a relief. The infirm and aged were allowed
to ride, all able-bodied continuing to walk. When the wagons started
out, a number of us children decided to see how long we could keep
up with the wagons, in hopes of being asked to ride. At least that
is what my great hope was. One by one they all fell out, until I
was the last one remaining, so determined was I that I should get
a ride. After what seemed the longest run I ever made before or
since, the driver, who was Heber [William Henry] Kimball, called
to me, "Say, sissy, would you like a ride?" I answered in my very
best manner, "Yes sir." At this he reached over, taking my hand,
clucking to his horses to make me run, with legs that seemed to
me could run no farther. On we went, to what to me seemed miles.
What went through my head at that time was that he was the meanest
man that ever lived or that I had ever heard of, and other things
that would not be a credit nor would it look well coming from one
so young. Just at what seemed the breaking point, he stopped. Taking
a blanket, he wrapped me up and lay me in the bottom of the wagon,
warm and comfortable. Here I had time to change my mind, as I surely
did, knowing full well by doing this he saved me from freezing when
taken into the wagon. Agnes Caldwell and her family arrived safely
in the Great Salt Lake Valley November 9, 1856. They settled in
Brigham City, Utah, where Agnes met and married Chester Southworth.
They became the parents of thirteen children. They lived in Dingle,
Idaho, helped settle an LDS colony in Cardston, Alberta, Canada,
and lived a short time in Gridley, California, where her husband
died in 1910. Agnes moved back to Brigham City for her remaining
years, where she was active in Relief Society and enjoyed sewing,
quilting, and living close to some of her children. She was an excellent
cook and made many Scottish recipes. She died September 11, 1924,
in Brigham City at the age of seventy-seven.
Source: "Autobiography of Agnes Caldwell," typescript of interview
conducted by Vera Southworth Fife, her daughter. Original in files
of Daughters of Utah Pioneers Museum in Salt Lake City, Utah.
pp. 56-59 I Walked to Zion: True Stories of Young Pioneers
on the Mormon Trail.
Source: I Walked to
Zion: True Stories of Young Pioneers on the Mormon Trail © Susan
Arrington Madsen. All rights reserved. No part of this book may
be reproduced in any form or by any means without permission in
writing from the publisher. http://deseretbook.com
ISBN 0-87579-848-9
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