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Pioneer Date Summary
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05/13/1847 - Crockett
Description: Two horses are grazing beside the wagons.
The harnesses are draped over a wagon tongue. Image courtesy of: Heritage Gateway Project Images, These images have been gathered to support the Sesquicentennial
celebration of the immigration to Utah.
On the North Platte River, Nebraska:
Howard Egan was up early on this cold morning. He and many others
went to see the abandoned Indian village. "There appeared to be
two or three hundred wickiups and, from the appearance of things,
I supposed that they had not been gone long from there." They brought
back moccasins, parts of robes, leather, and other items.
A dispute had to be settled in the morning. During the night,
Thomas Tanner took Aaron Farr prisoner and put him under guard
because he was talking loud after the night horn blew for prayers.
At 9 a.m., the pioneers rolled out of camp. They stopped at 11
a.m. to feed the teams. At 12:30, they were on the move again.
After almost eleven miles, they made camp on the west side of a
large stream that was two feet deep, which Brigham Young named
Junction Bluff Fork. [This is present-day Birdwood Creek.] The
sand was soft and they had to cross if very quickly in order not
to sink. Across the North Platte river were bluffs that ran between
the north and south forks of the river. The grass for the animals
was the best that it had been since they left Winter Quarters.
It was very cold. Erastus Snow recorded, "We had a sudden change
in weather, and we are now scarcely comfortable around the fires
with top coats." They huddled around a roaring fire made from buffalo
chips.
Wilford Woodruff wrote: "There is one thing concerning the Platte
River which is worthy of note, which is not characteristic of any
other river that I have knowledge of in the world. It is much of
the way a mile in width & generally covered with water but very
shallow. When a south wind blows hard the water all rushes to the
north shore until one would suppose there was a great rise of water.
Let the wind shift & blow hard from the North & the water immediately
leaves the north shore until one can walk across two thirds of
the river on bare ground & the river onstantly ebs & flows like
the tide just according as the wind blows."
Wilford Woodruff dreamed during the night. "I dreamed last night
we had arrived at our journeys end where we were to build up a
stake of Zion. As we came onto the place there was an open vision
of a temple presented before me. I asked some brethren that stood
by me if they saw it. They said it appeared as though it was built
of white & blue stone. The sight of it filled me with joy and I
awoke & behold it was a dream." [More than forty-five years later,
Wilford Woodruff would dedicate the Salt Lake Temple.]
Mormon Battalion, at Los Angeles, California:
General Stephen F. Kearney left Los Angeles for Fort Leavenworth,
accompanied by about fifteen members of the Battalion. The general
and four of the men went by water and the rest by land to Monterey.
Lt. Samuel Thompson returned from the mountains where his party battled
with Indians. Lt. James Pace was ordered to take twenty-six men to
the Mountains to protect the Mexicans from the Indians.
Sources:
Diary of Howard Egan, Pioneering the West, 37-8
Wilford Woodruff's Journal, 3:175
Erastus Snow Journal Excerpts, Improvement Era 14:1022
Diary of Lorenzo Dow Young, Utah Historical Quarterly, 14:158
William Clayton's Journal, p.145
Journal of Henry Standage in Frank Alfred Golder, The March of the Mormon Battalion,
222
- Source: 150
Years Ago Today
- ©These materials have been created by David R. Crockett.
Copies of these materials may be reproduced for teacher and classroom use.
When distributing these materials, credit must be given to David R. Crockett.
These materials may not be published, in whole or part, or in any other
format, without the written permission of Mr. Crockett, Tucson Az, crockett@goodnet.com.
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