Date: June 17, 1847
On the Oregon Trail, Wyoming:
Thomas Bullock observed: "The mosquitoes have been very plaguy
the past night; they are more numerous there than any other place
on our route."
Wilford Woodruff wrote: "Early this morning we swam our horses
over the river. One mule came near drowning by being tangled
in a rope but the curant carried him ashore & he made a live
of it. The men went to work to finish their ferry boat while
the men continued to cross waggons on the raft." The rest of
the pioneer's horses were left over on the other side because
the brethren thought that it was too cold and the wind was blowing
too strong to risk crossing them on this day. The men suffered
greatly working in the cold water.
The last of the pioneer wagons were ferried over by 2 p.m. All
the wagons were once again moved into a circle. Phinehas Young's
wagon was the exception. It did not return from the mountains
until the evening.
They then started to ferry over wagons for two emigration companies
for $1.50 per wagon. William Clayton wrote about the great opportunity
to earn some provisions. "Two companies of the Missourians had
arrived and made application to be set over at a dollar and a
half a load. When the contract was made with the first company
to be sent across [p.241] as soon as our wagons were over, the
other company of ten wagons offered to pay the brethren 50c per
man extra if they would set them over first, making $5.00 over
the stated price for ferryage being ten of the brethren to work
at it. Colonel Rockwood had made a contract to the above effect
with the first company and did not like to break it. However,
he received a hint that this was Colonel Markham's day for the
use of the boat and consequently Colonel Markham had a right
to take the last offer if he chose. He took the hint and they
went to work forthwith at a dollar and a half a wagon in provisions
at Missouri prices and 50c extra per man, in what they preferred
for themselves."
The ferry operation continue all night and by daylight the last
of the Missouri companies had been ferried over.
Elkhorn River, Nebraska:
Charles C. Rich sent a note back to John Scott at Winter Quarters
ordering him to send the cannon "as the whole camp is waiting." He
also wrote to Alpheus Cutler, the presiding member of the High
Council, requesting that he help Brother Scott in sending the
cannon, boat, and Nauvoo temple bell.
Ira Eldredge's fifty, part of the Daniel Spencer Company officially
started their pioneer trek, leaving the Elkhorn River. The Eldredge
fifty consisted of 76 wagons and 177 people. The captains of
tens were Isaac Haight, Hector Haight, Samuel Ensign, Erastus
Bingham, and George Boyes.
[Included in the first ten led by Isaac Haight were were: Joseph
G. Baxter, Eveline Mattin Boggs, Mary Boggs, Esther Jones Brown,
Catherine Adelia Hatwick Curtis, Alanson Eldredge, Alanson Eldredge,
Alma Eldredge, Diana Eldredge, Edmond Eldredge, Esther Ann Eldredge,
Hiram Eldredge, Ira Eldredge, Nancy Black Eldredge, Martin Luther
Ensign, Caleb Haight, Caroline Eliza Haight, Eliza Ann Snyder
Haight, Isaac Chauncey Haight, Sarah A1dridge Haight, Temperance
Keturah Haight, Isaac James, Jane E. James, Silas James, Sylvester
James, Ruth Martin, Hannah Potter, John H. Potter, William Potter,
Ann Elizabeth Roper, George Smith Rust, Amanda Spencer, Anna,
Twin Spencer, Charles Henry Spencer, C1audius Victor Spencer,
Daniel Spencer, Edwin E. Spencer, Emily Spencer, Frances C. Spencer,
Gilbert H. Spencer, Hirum Theron Spencer, Mariah Antoinette Spencer,
Mary Leone Spencer, Elizabeth Howard Standage, Ephraim R. Whitney,
and Harriet Whitney].
[Included in the second ten led by Hector Haight were: Alexander
Boss, Alfred Boss, Calvin Boss, David Boss, David Boss Jr., Martha
Boss, Maria Davidson, Alphonzo Green, Alva Alphonzo Green, Betsy
Murdock Green, Sarah Annadella Green, Hector Caleb Haight, Horton
David Haight, Julia Van Orden Haight, Mary Adelia Haight, William
Van Orden Haight, Chelnecha Smith Hambleton, Jerusha Lucretia
Hambleton, Lucy Ann Hambleton, Madison Daniel Hambleton, James
N. McIntire, Rosannah McIntire, William F. McIntire, Eunice Sweet
Murdock, Joseph Stacy Murdock, Mary Murdock, Nymphus Coridon
Murdock, and Sally Stacy Murdock.]
[Included in the third ten led by Samuel Ensign were: Anna Abbott,
Rufus Abbott, Polly Woodsum Bond, Ann Brimhall, Adelia Ann Brown,
Mary Jane Brown, Niamah Brown, Phebe Narcissia Brown, William
Brown, Eliza Clement, Albert Crandall, Mary Crandall, Melissa
Crandall, Alva Cummings, Benjamin Franklin Cummings, Mary Cummings,
John Calvin Ensign, Julia Searles Ensign, Lydia Esther Ensign,
Lyman D. Ensign, Martin Luther Ensign, Mary Bronson Ensign, Mary
Everett Gordon Ensign, Rufus Bronson Ensign, Samuel Ensign, Samuel
Lozene Ensign, Edwin Frost, Emeline Frost, Mary Elizabeth Frost,
Belinda Hickenlooper, John Thomas Hickenlooper, Sarah Hawkins
Hickenlooper, William Haney Hickenlooper, Eliza Holmes, Ellen
Holmes, George Holmes, Hyrum Holmes, Oliver Holmes, Samuel O.
Holmes, Rosetta King, Amanda Nowlin, Bryan Ward Nowlin, Edwin
Randolf, Ann Snedaker, Marris J. Snedaker, Almira Sophia Taft,
and Harriet Taft.]
[Included in the fourth ten led by Erastus Bingham were: Brigham
Heber Bingham, Edwin Bingham, Erastus Bingham, Lucinda Gates
Bingham, Maria Louisa Bingham, Olive Hovey Bingham, Olive L.
Bingham, Perry E. Bingham, Sanford Bingham, Willard Bingham,
Henrietta Deming, Maria Deming, Moses Deming, Wayne Deming, Elijah
Norman Freeman, Mary Bingham Freeman, Thomas Gates, Alvin Greely
Green, Austin Greeley Green, Fanny Greeley Green, Harriet Ann
Green, Robert Green, Beason Lewis, Elizabeth Lewis, John Moss
Lewis, Martha Ann Lewis, Sarah Elizabeth Lewis, William Crawford
Lewis, Caroline J Ostrander, Eliza Morrison Ostrander, Elizabeth
Ostrander, and William C. Staines.]
[Included in the fifth ten led by George Boyes were: Elizabeth
Boyes, George Boyes, Hewy Boyes, Margaret Boyes, Thomas Boyes,
William Boyes, Daniel Drake, Horace Drake, Orson Perkins Drake,
Patience Perkins Drake, Isaac N. Goodell, Jacob Houtz, Lucinda
Houtz, Lydia Mease Houtz, Mary Elizabeth Houtz, Hannah Pearce
Ralston, John Ralston, Josephine Ralston, Asaph Rice, James Rigby,
Ambrose Shaw, Permelia Shaw, and Phoebe Spiers.]
Joseph Horne's fifty, part of the Edward Hunter Company also
officially started their pioneer trek. The Horne fifty (also
known as the John Taylor company) consisted of 72 wagons and
197 people. The captains of tens were Ariah C. Brower, Abraham
Hoagland, Archibald Gardner, William Taylor, and Thomas Orr Sr.
[Included in the first ten led by Ariah C. Brower were: Elizabeth
Boyes, Samuel Bringhurst, Ann Elizabeth Brower, Ariah Coates
Brower, Ariah Hussey Brower, Margaret E. Hussey Brower, Victoria
Adelide Brower, Ann Cannon, George Q. Cannon, William Farrar,
Elizabeth Cole Holmes, Robert Holmes, Elizabeth Ann Horne, Henry
James Horne, Joseph Horne, Joseph Smith Horne, Mary Isabelle
Horne, Richard Stephen Horne, Ann Kelly, John Mackay, James I.
Orr, Elizabeth Pugmire, Hannah Pugmire, John Pugmire, Jonathan
Pugmire, Joseph Hyrum Pugmire, Mary Pugmire, Helenora Symonds,
William Symonds, Annie B. Taylor, Elizabeth K. Taylor, George
J. Taylor, Jane Ballantyne Taylor, John Taylor, Joseph Taylor,
Leonora Cannon Taylor, Mary Ann Taylor, Mary Ann Taylor, Sophia
Whittaker Taylor, Maria L. Woodward, and Alexander Wright.]
[Included in the second ten led by Abraham Hoagland were: Dorcas
Millikin Andrews, Simeon Andrews, Elizabeth Cain, Joseph Cain,
Job Harker, Joseph Henry Harker, Susannah Sneath Harker, Abraham
Elias Lucas Hoagland, Elizabeth Hoagland, Emily Hoagland, John
Hoagland, Margaret Quick Hoagland, Peter Hoagland, Isabella Leach,
James Leach, Elizabeth DeGroat Oakley, Ezra Hemstead Nassau Oakley,
John DeGroat Oakley, Margaret S. Oakley, Mary Elizabeth Oakley,
Mary M. Oakley, Abigail Parsons Robinson, Isaac P. Robinson John,
Jr. Robinson, John Sr. Robinson, Lawrence Robinson, Sarah Abigail
Robinson, Adelia West, Chauncey West, Mary West, Emeline Whittaker,
George Whittaker, and Harriet Whittaker.]
[Included in the third ten led by Archibald Gardner were: Abigail
Sprague Bradford, Ithamer Bradford, Mariana Bradford, Pleasant
Sprague Bradford, Rawsel Bradford, Sylvester Bradford, Triphenia
Bradford, Andrew Correy, George Correy, Janet Correy, Margaret
Clemmie Correy, Archibald Gardner, Jane McKeown Gardner, Janet
Gardner, Janet Gardner, John Gardner, Margaret Gardner, Margaret
Gardner, Margaret Callander Gardner, Margaret Livingston Gardner,
Mary Jane Gardner, Neil Gardner, Niel Livingston Gardner, Robert
Gardner, Robert Gardner, Robert Gardner, Robert Pierson Gardner,
William Gardner, William Gardner, Mary Luckham, Mary Gardner
Luckham, Roger Luckham, Agnes Duncan Park, Andrew Duncan Park,
Hugh Duncan Park, James Duncan Park, Jane Duncan Park, Jane Duncan
Park, John Duncan Park, Marian Ellen Park, Mary Ann Park, William
Duncan Park, William Park Sr., Dolly Sprague, Hezekiah Sprague,
Margaret and Sweeten, Robert Sweeten.]
[Included in the fourth ten led by William Taylor were: Elizabeth
Arrowsmith, John Taylor Arrowsmith, Angeline B.W. Bennion, Ann
Bennion, Esther W. Bennion, Hyrum Bennion, John Bennion, John
R. Bennion, Mary Bushell Bennion, Mary Panter Bennion, Samuel
Bennion, Samuel Roberts Bennion, Jane Cole, John Cole, Mary Ann
Cole, William Cole, William Fields, Mary Jones, Ann Mackay, Ann
Mackay, John Mackay, Thomas Mackay, Catherine Quail, Catherine
Quail, Henry Quail, John Quail Jr., John Quail Sr., Thomas Quail,
William Quail, Anges Rich, Elizabeth Rich, John Taylor Rich,
Samuel Taylor Rich, Agnes Taylor, James Taylor, Lovina Taylor,
William Taylor, John Topham, Catherine Turbet, Eleanor Turbet,
John Turbet, Nephi Turbet, Thomas Turbet Jr., and Thomas Turbet
Sr.]
[Included in the fifth ten led by Thomas Orr Sr. were: Elizabeth
Albern Babcock, Dolphus Babcock, George Babcock, Jerusha Jane
Babcock, John Babcock, Lucy Babcock, Permelia Babcock, David
Blackhurst, Ellen Blackhurst, Joseph B. Blackhurst, William Blackhurst,
Catherine Orr, Isabella Orr, May Ann Orr, Thomas Orr Jr., Thomas
Orr Sr., Jane Park, John Park, Louisa Park, Louisa Park, Marian
Park, Mary Ann Park, Ann Pitchforth, Mary Mitchell Pitchforth,
Mercy Pitchforth, Samuel Pitchforth, Sarah Barbara Pitchforth,
Francis Pullin, Hannah Pullin, and Edward Tattersall.]
Samuel Russell's fifty, part of the Abraham O. Smoot's Company
also officially started their pioneer trek. The Russell fifty
consisted of 95 people. The captains of tens were Lauren H. Roundy,
Amasa Russell, and Farnum Kinyon.
[Included in the first ten led by Lauren H. Roundy were: Celestia
Ann Farr, Enoch Farr, Lorin Farr, Nancy Bailey Chase Farr, Persis
Atherton Farr, Alvin Harding, Joseph L. Harding, Violette Otis
Harding, Emma B. Harrington, Leonard Ellsworth Harrington, Loise
Russell Harrington, Theodore Spencer Harrington, William Peacock,
Byron Donalvin Roundy, Jared Curtis Roundy, Lauren H. Roundy,
Lorenzo Wesley Roundy, Myron Shadrach Roundy, Betsey Roundy,
Nancy J. Roundy, Susannah Roundy, Wm. Heber Roundy, Abigail Thorne
Russell, Esther Russell, Francis Maria Russell, Helen Russell,
Henry Russell, Maria Russell, Samuel Russell, Valasco Russell,
Olive Hovey Walker, and Peter Winward.]
[Included in the second ten led by Amasa Russell were: Samuel
Brown, Amanda Chipman, Beulah Chipman, William Henry Chipman,
James Chipman, Martha Elizabeth Chipman, Sinah Ceneth Chipman,
Stephen Chipman, Washburn Chipman, Adam McDonald, Seth Rigby,
Amasa Russell, Andrew Jackson Russell, Ann Russell, David Dudley
Russell, Hannah Knight Russell, Henry Madison Russell, Elijah
Shockley, Elijah H. Shockley, Elijah S. Shockley, James D. Shockley,
Lidy F. Shockley, Mary Shockley, Mary E. Shockley, Matilda Ann
Shockley, Richard Shockley, Helen S. Thorn, Joseph Thorn, Joseph
C. Thorn, and Lorena Thorn.]
[Included in the third ten led Farnum Kinyon were: John Adams,
John Harris Henderson, Farnum Kinyon, George B. Kinyon, Hyrum
Kinyon, Lucinda Kinyon, William H. Kinyon, Ann McMinds, Emily
Ann McMinds, James McMinds, William McMinds, Elizabeth Meaks,
Peggy J. Meaks, Pridy Meaks, Sarah Meaks, Louisa Norris, Betsy
Persons, Carlos Shephard, Charity Shephard, Lydia Shephard, Samuel
Shepherd, Charles Swarthout, George W. Swarthout, Horley Swarthout,
and Tramand Swarthout.]
Winter Quarters, Nebraska:
Walter and Maria Wilcox visited Mary Richards to say good-bye.
They were leaving for Missouri where they would be spending the
summer and maybe the winter.
Kearny detachment of the battalion, in California:
The soldiers camped at Bear Creek at Johnson's Ranch, the last
house that they expected to see. They were forty miles north of
Sutter's Fort.
San Francisco, California:
Addison Pratt decided to travel to the New Hope settlement on the
Stanislaus River to help harvest nearly three hundred acres of
wheat. He traveled by boat in the bay with some of the Brooklyn
Saints, George K. Winner, Richard Knowles, Isaac Goodwin, and Samuel
Ladd. The spent the night at Samples Ferry, in the straits of Carquinez.
The ferry was run by one of the Brooklyn brethren, Abram Combs.
Mormon Battalion, at Los Angeles, California:
John Allen, the disgraced soldier who was drummed out of town,
was recaptured near the city and put back in jail. He later escaped
by digging a hole through the adobe wall. In the evening, Colonel
Stevenson started efforts to convince the battalion to reenlist.
He read an order calling for volunteers to reenlist for six more
months. No one stepped forward to sign. The army was worried the
Los Angeles would not have enough men to properly guard the post.
The building of the fort was progressing slowly. Henry Standage
commented: "They cannot in reason expect us to enlist again and
especially when they know the treatment we have received, receiving
no pay to go home and no ammunition to be given to us with our
guns &c. and no pay for our back rations, although we have paid
out much money on the road when our rations were kept back or in
other woords when the Col might have procured full rations at Govt.
expense. But hard was been our fare as soldiers."
Kirtland, Ohio:
Elder Lyman O. Littlefield, still in Kirtland, was visited by former apostle,
William McLellin. Elder Littlefield wrote: "He commenced upon me in relation
to the Church, its authority, its transgressions, etc. I argued in defense until
12 o'clock at night."