Date: June 9, 1997
On the Oregon Trail, Wyoming:
The feed was not good at the campsite, so the pioneers started
early, at 5 a.m., and went one mile to a better location near
the traders' camp. Some of the men traded with their company
for robes, shirts, pants and other items. At 7 a.m., a company
of 40 men and 15 wagons were chosen to travel ahead of the main
camp to the river crossing at the Platte River. The traders mentioned
that they had left a boat made from buffalo skins hanging in
a tree at the river and the brethren were interested in obtaining
that boat before the Missouri emigration companies did. This
small company would also make preparations for the river crossing
ahead by building a raft. They took "Revenue Cutter" with them.
The company consisted of all of Robert Crow's Mississippi families,
Aaron Farr, Jackson Redden, John Brown and others.
Letters were left with the traders to take back to the Missouri
River. Thomas Bullock wrote a letter to his wife that included: "We
are now about 300 miles from Fort Bridger, but where we go, we
know not." He mentoned that he was "up before the sun every morning
praying for you & long to clasp you feverently in my arms again." William
Clayton put up another guide board that read: "To Fort John 60
miles."
Appleton Harmon described the morning journey. "After one and
a half hours' refreshment, we started on traveling over a rough,
broken country as before, changing our direction every few minutes
to wind around some point or gutter, to pass some creek or confused
mass of rocks which lay in fragments, or to avoid some steep
that is too rugged for our times. . . . We came to a valley some
two miles wide which was somewhat picturesque. Along each side
there were high ranges of hills. The soil in the valley and on
the sides of the hills is, a major part of it, a dark red, while
here upon the sided of these hills and nearer the summit it is
white."
Brigham Young and Heber C. Kimball saw a curious creature to
them. It was a large toad with horns on its head and a tail.
Instead of hoping, it crawled like a mouse.
While the main camp was traveling during the morning, they were
overtaken by a company of French mountaineers with fifteen pack
horses and mules who had traveled from Santa Fe. They were heading
to the Green River, Great Salt Lake, and San Francisco. They
informed the brethren that the Mormon Battalion had arrived in
California in January. They had seen Captain James Brown recently
in Santa Fe obtaining pay for the sick detachments of the battalion.
They believed these detachments would be moving on very soon.
They mentioned that the Mormons at Pueblo were much dissatisfied
and many of them talked about returning to the States to their
families.
At the noon stopping point, the ground was covered with crickets
which were so numerous, that it was impossible to walk without
stepping on some. In the afternoon, the pioneers traveled eight
miles and camped on A'la'parele (Le Prele) Creek. Some brethren
rode ahead on horses and overtook the little lead pioneer group,
who were not far behind the Missouri companies. Sterling Driggs
killed an antelope and a deer. Some of the men viewed a river
flowing under a mountain causing a natural bridge.
Winter Quarters, Nebraska:
A meeting was held to appoint a time for the next company to start
from Winter Quarters to head for the Elkhorn River. Because the
mill dam had broken, further grinding would be delayed. Those who
had already had their grain ground were asked to divide it with
those who would not be able to have it done before they left. Hosea
Stout wrote that this "made a great disappointment to many and
caused a great stir."
Kirtland, Ohio
Elder Lyman O. Littlefield arrived at Kirtland after walking for many day. His
feet were swollen and blistered. He stayed with this father-in-law, John Andrews,
who were very kind.
Company B, Mormon Battalion, at San Diego, California:
Robert S. Bliss started out with others for San Isabel, a fifty to sixty mile
journey in the mountains to go buy horses and mules for the journey home. They
rode over difficult mountains and after about forty miles camped for the night.
During the day they had seen hundreds of horses and mules as they passed a ranch
called Cahoe.
- Sources:
Wilford Woodruff's Journal, 3:199
Erastus Snow Journal Excerpts, Improvement Era 15:56
Autobiography of John Brown, 76
Watson, ed., The Orson Pratt Journals, 422
Appleton Milo Harmon Goes West, 31
William Clayton's Journal, 225-28
Lyman Littlefield Reminiscences (1888), p.192
Brooks, On the Mormon Frontier, The Diary of Hosea Stout, 1:260
Bagley, ed., The Pioneer Camp of the Saints, 186-87
The Journal of Robert S. Bliss, Utah Historical Quarterly, 4:95