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Pioneer Date Summary
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04/23/1847 - Crockett
Description: Crayon
picture by Jamie, a 4th grader at Valley View Elementary.
Image courtesy of: Heritage
Gateway Project Images, These images have been gathered
to support the Sesquicentennial celebration of the immigration
to Utah.
Date: April 23, 1847
On the Loup Fork, Nebraska:
The morning was cold, thirty four degrees. The pioneers stayed
in camp during the morning while Brigham Young, and others went
to Loup Fork to try to find a place where the wagons could cross.
They understood there was a good place about four miles up the
river that had been used by George Miller the previous summer,
but it was near another band of Pawnees, so they hoped to use a
different crossing point. In the mean time, the rest of the men
spent time fixing wagons and washing. Others filled their bed ticks
with fresh hay.
The scouting team consisted of Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball,
Wilford Woodruff, Ezra T. Benson, Amasa M. Lyman, Luke S. Johnson,
Albert P. Rockwood, James Case, Jackson Redden, Orrin Porter Rockwell,
and Joseph Matthews. Wilford Woodruff reported that the scouts "went
down the stream some distance & several men waded across the stream & found
the water so deep & so much quick sand we concluded to drive higher
up to the old Pawnee Village."
Brigham Young and his company of scouts returned at 11 a.m. and
informed the camp about the new plans. He felt that James Case
was justified in taking much of the plows and iron at the missionary
settlement as compensation for the pay that the government owed
him. A large quantify of iron was loaded into various wagons. All
spare hands went to work with shovels to grade the hill down to
the creek.
Thomas Bullock went to see the deserted Pawnee Mission. "It consists
of two double log houses and six single smaller houses with pig
pens & ashes cribs to each set, also two ricks of good hay, & a
yard to enclose corn fodder, several yards to enclose horses & cattle,
two fields fenced in with posts & rails where corn had grown last
year. Also fruit trees & a beautiful little creek of Soft Water
running behind the same, the whole making a very pleasand retired
spot for a farm."
The pioneer company crossed Plumb Creek at 12:10 p.m. and after
passing by beautiful plowed fields, they soon came to Cedar creek
which was difficult to ford because of the sand. Soon they came
to the proposed crossing at Loup Fork. It looked like it would
be difficult because of the sandbars and the rapid current. There
were two channels of water with a sand bar in the middle. The water
was only three to four feet deep in the deepest spots, but there
were many places full of quicksand.
Luke Johnson was the first to try crossing. He unloaded "Revenue
Cutter" (the boat) and tried to pull across only the running gear
of the wagon. He made it with great difficulty. Orson Pratt tried
to cross with a small load. He had only gone a few yards when his
horses began to sink in the sand. William Clayton wrote: "A number
of brethren jumped in and lifted at the wheels, etc., till they
go him to the bar in the middle. He then started for the other
bar and about half way across his horses sank in the quicksand
so badly that one of them fell down." The horses were taken off
the wagon and led across to the sand bar. Heber C. Kimball recorded: "When
I jumped into the river I was astonished at the strength of the
current." Wilford Woodruff also struggled to get across, as his
cattle and wagon sank into the sand. "The horses were taken from
the waggons the load taken out & carried to shore by hand & the
waggon drawn out by the help of me."
Brigham Young tried to get his carriage across by having men pull
in with a long rope. After awhile, Brigham Young realized that
this crossing point would not work and ordered that no more wagons
should be taken over. Instead, they would move up the river about
a quarter mile and camp for the night. This plan left six men,
including Wilford Woodruff and Orson Pratt, stranded over on the
other side of the river, without men to guard them from the Pawnee.
They organized themselves into two groups of three to stand guard
during the night. Wilford Woodruff wrote, "I stood guard in my
wet clothing one half the night and slept in them the other half."
There rest of the pioneer company camped very close to the old
destroyed Pawnee village, forming a semi-circle on a bluff by a
stream. In the evening the captains of tens were called together
to vote on building two light rafts, sixteen feet long. Tarlton
Lewis would superintend the building of one, and Thomas Woolsey
the other. The leather boat would be used to carry over as many
loads as possible and teams would pull over empty wagons. It was
believed that after several wagons were taken across that the sand
would become firm.
Some of the men went to explore the ruins of the Pawnee Village.
Charles Harper wrote, "I went to the ruins together with many of
the brethren to get wood to cook our suppers. We surveyed the ground
where the city once stood. The houses or wigwams were nearly all
burnt. They had the appearance of having been large and commodious." Brigham
Young wrote: "Dr. Richards reported that he had rode through the
Pawnee town about half a mile west of us and had seen the ruins
of 175 houses or lodges averaging from twenty to sixty feet in
diameter, all of which had been burnt to the ground. . . . The
town had been partially fortified by an embankment of earth and
sod about four feet high, having a ditch on the outside."
The only lodge that wasn't burned belonged to the Pawnee Chief.
Levi Jackman described: "The one remaining was about 45 feet on
the inside and about 15 feet high in the center. They were built
round with a row of posts about seven feet high, standing nearly
straight up and down. On the top of these posts were plates to
support the upper part. The timbers were put on those plates running
quite steep to the top, leaving a hole in the center for the smoke
to go out. The fire being in the center of the lodge, from the
east side an entry was made running out about 20 feet and of good
width."
Brigham Young sent five men across the river in the boat to help
protect Wilford Woodruff's small group. The river was about a quarter
mile across at this point.
Winter Quarters, Nebraska:
A meeting was held at Brother Leonard's home, presided over by
Brother Sessions. Many sisters including Eliza R. Snow attended.
Hosea Stout weighed his baby. She was 19 pounds. One year ago
he had weighed all of his children, included his two little boys
who later died on the trek across Iowa. On this day he wrote, "I
weighed all my children this day one year ago, she weighed then
8 pounds and the others O! where are they now!! hush."
Summer Quarters, Nebraska:
The men were busy clearing land, hauling logs, and building cabins.
Brothers Potter and Dalton came from Winter Quarters and reported
that a treaty had been made with the Omahas. The terms called for
the Saints to pay them five hundred bushes of corn as soon as it
could be hauled from Missouri. If this was done, the Saints could
use their land and the Omahas would stop killing their cattle.
Mormon Battalion, at Los Angeles, California:
The detachment led by James Pace started out for Cajon Pass, to
relieve Company C. Nathaniel V. Jones recorded: "They had bought themselves
some horses and Col. Cooke came out just at the time they were starting,
and ordered them all back, took all their horses from them, sent
them off on foot and ordered their horses sold to the highest bidder,
which was done accordingly." After they left, Colonel Cooke sent
word to the rest of the battalion that they would be moving to
another camping location for their safety. The Missouri Volunteers
had threatened to harm the Mormon Battalion. The men moved to a
green about one half mile below the Pueblo.
Sources:
Watson, ed., Manuscript History of Brigham Young, 551
William Clayton's Journal, 91-94.
Wilford Woodruff's Journal 3:156-58
"Excerpts from the hitherto unpublished Journal of Horace K. Whitney," Improvement
Era, 50:204
Charles Harper Diary, 17
Erastus Snow Journal Excerpts, Improvement Era 14:819
Heber C. Kimball Diary, Utah Genealogical and Historical Magazine, 30:78-9
Bagley, ed., The Pioneer Camp of the Saints, 128-30
Levi Jackman Autobiography, typescript, BYU-S, p.28
Leonard J. Arrington, BYU Studies, Vol. 20, No. 1, p.45
Beecher, The Personal Writings of Eliza R. Snow, 166
Brooks, On the Mormon Frontier, The Diary of Hosea Stout, 1:251
Kelly, ed., Journals of John D. Lee, 1846-1847 and 1859, 155
The Journal of Nathaniel V. Jones, The Utah Historical Quarterly, 4:15
Journal of Henry Standage in Frank Alfred Golder, The March of the Mormon Battalion,
218
- 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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