Date: May 26, 1847
On the North Platte River, Nebraska:
The morning weather was clear and calm -- fifty-eight degrees.
Thomas Bullock wrote: "While I was engaged filling up the Doctor's
[Willard Richards] Water Bottle, my Ink Bottle fell out of my
pocket into the Well, there being about four feet of Water in
it. I went to work, emptied the Well, descended, and after groping
some time in the mud bottom, I again found it safe & sound."
The pioneers broke camp at 8 a.m. and after traveling four and
three quarters miles, the pioneers arrived directly across the
river from from Chimney Rock. Orson Pratt calculated the height
to be 260 feet. After about two more miles, they stopped for
the mid-day rest.
Wilford Woodruff recorded: "Just before camping at noon while
travling on a smooth prairie, an accurance took place which like
to have proven of serious consequence to our camp. An Indian
Horse that was bought of the Sioux ran away with a singletree
to his heels & gave a tremendious fright to the cows, oxen & horses
that were attached to the waggons. And in an instant, a dozen
or more waggons were darting by each other like lightning & the
horses & mules flying as it were over the ground. Some turned
to the right & some to the left. Some run into other waggons.
The horse & mule that Br Fowler was driving leaped with all speed.
With Br Little hold of the lines & Br Fowler hold of the bits
they darted by my carriage like electricity & came within one
inch of a collision with my wheels. . . . Br Fowlers waggon continued
to roll regardless of rough or smooth ground for about fifty
rods. . . but all was soon stoped & returned to their lines without
any accident to any team of waggon which appeared to me truly
a miricle. . . . It give us something of an idea what an Indian
yell would do in such an encampment with teams hitched to waggons.
A person can hardly conceive of the power that is manifest in
animals especially mules when in such a fright. But I felt thankful
that no accident happened."
William Clayton gave this account: "Yesterday morning Stephen
Markham traded a mule which was foundered and unable to work
to one of the Indians for a pony. They put him in the harness
a little towards evening and again this morning. When crossing
a very soft place the whipple tree unhitched and struck against
his heels. He ran full gallop towards the head teams and twice
through the line of wagons causing several teams, horses and
oxen both, to spring from the road and run some distance before
the men could stop them. After running nearly a mile some of
the brethren caught the pony brought him back and put him to
the wagon again without any accident, except a little injury
to the harness."
In the afternoon, the company traveled five more miles and then
camped in a circle by the river at 5 p.m. Orson Pratt wrote: "The
prairie still wet; grass a little better than usual. Grasshoppers
seem to be an inhabitant of their country; I noticed that there
were plenty in dry places. Prickly pears are becoming more numerous." Four
antelope were killed by the hunters during the day and distributed
throughout the camp.
Right after the camp was established, a heavy black cloud arose
from the west. The wind blew hard, but only a few drops of rain
fell. A sad accident occurred. Some of the brethren were moving
George Billings' wagon and ran over the young eagle and killed
it. [This eagle had been taken out of its nest on May 22.] William
Clayton explained: "Carlos Murray has been trying to rear the
young eagle caught on Saturday. After stopping tonight, he put
it under a wagon and a while afterwards the men ran the wagon
back, one of the wheels ran over its head and killed it."
Summer Quarters, Nebraska:
Brothers Busby and Johnson returned from Winter Quarters and reported
that two steamboats had arrived at Winter Quarters on the 24th
and the this day. Goods and passengers had been unloaded. At dusk,
John D. Lee called the the settlement together for a meeting. They
adopted some resolutions. No cattle were to be turned loose in
the settlement. Calves were to be kept from doing any mischief.
A fence should be made on the west line of the settlement. Charles
Kennedy's land was to be fenced in on Saturday. John D. Lee's company
would fence the lower line of the farm.
Company B, Mormon Battalion, at San Diego, California:
Robert S. Bliss wrote: "To day is my guard tour. I have sent to
the Rancheros for 1 mule & 1 mare for my journey home; I look forward
to my discharge with much anxiety."
- Sources:
Watson, ed., The Orson Pratt Journals, 408
Diary of Howard Egan, Pioneering the West, 50
Appleton Milo Harmon Goes West, 23
Wilford Woodruff's Journal, 3:184-85
William Clayton's Journal, 184-86
Bagley, ed., The Pioneer Camp of the Saints, 168
Kelly, ed., Journals of John D. Lee, 1846-1847 and 1859, 172
The Journal of Robert S. Bliss, Utah Historical Quarterly, 4:94