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Pioneer Date Summary
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06/10/1847 - Crockett
Date: June 10, 1847
On the Oregon Trail, Wyoming:
Thomas Bullock recorded in his journal: "Opened with a lovely
morning. The place I had to stand guard was on a hill where I
had a beautiful view & delightful company, the Birds were singing
merrily. The country looked Green. I could see a great distance
in some directions. A solemnity prevailed near me & altogether
to praise their Creator. Two Deer galloped by in their happy
manner & 'the Brook murmured by' in its course to the Father
of Waters." He observed a grave near the camp with a name written
on a stone: "J. Umbree 1843." [This was the grave of six-year-old
Joel Hembree who had been run over by a wagon.]
At 7:30 a.m., the pioneers moved out of camp. The morning was
warm, fifty-seven degrees. They were fascinated seeing a stream
flow through a natural tunnel in a mountain. Howard Egan recorded: "It
runs through a tunnel from ten to twenty rods under the high
bluffs. The tunnel is high enough for a man to stand upright
in it, and the light can be seen through from the other side.
After traveling almost nine miles and crossing three streams,
they halted for the noon rest on the east side of a stream about
thirty feet wide. [Box Elder Creek.] They had crossed over several
steep bluffs and the streams had been difficult to ford. One
of the Missouri companies could be seen a few miles ahead of
them. William Clayton said: "We have learned today from one of
the travelers that there is one man living and making a farm
in the Bear River valley."
At 1:45 p.m., the wagons rolled out. During the afternoon, they
came within sight of the North Platte River for the first time
in several days. They came upon a sick horse that had been left
to die by the Missouri companies ahead. The men tried to treat
it, but also had to leave it behind.
William Clayton recorded: "At a quarter to six we passed another
stream about thirty feet wide and two feet deep, swift current
and clear water. Name is Deer Creek. There is plenty of timber
on its banks and abundance of good, rich grass for our teams.
We formed our encampment on the west bank in a grove of large
timber." [They camped on Deer Creek south of the future site
of Glenrock, Wyoming which was established several years later
as a way-station for the Mormon pioneers. On the return trip
in August, Brigham Young would be chased by a grizzly bear on
Deer Creek.]
In the creek there were plenty of fish. William Clayton caught
twenty-four herring with a hook and line. A few catfish were
caught by others. A bed of stone coal was found a quarter mile
upstream. The coal vein was about ten feet thick and about 300
feet long. George A. Smith and Albert Carrington brought samples
back into camp. The hunters killed several antelope.
The Twelve walked down to the North Platte to examine the river
and have prayers.
Erastus Snow wrote: "I have been agreeably surprised in the
country of the Black Hills, over which we have travelled a distance
of ninety miles from Fort Laramie. Instead of sand and continual
barrenness, without water, as I had expected, we have found hard
roads through the hills, and at convenient distances beautiful
creeks skirted with timber, and bottoms covered with grass, though
the country otherwise presents generally a rough and barren appearance."
Wilford Woodruff recorded this experience: "At the blowing of
the horn I did not feel much like retiring to bed so I walked
1/2 mile from the camp on the bank of Deer Creek & found Br Clayton
fishing with a hook. He had caught about two dozen good fish.
Another Br Harmon had caught some. They resembled the eastern
Herrin. They were about to leave & they left their lines for
me to fish with so I sat down for half an hour musing alone as
unconcerned as though I had been sitting upon the banks of Farmington
river. Very suddenly I heard a rustling in the bushes near me & for
the first time the thought flashed across my mine that I was
in a country abounding with grizzly bear, wolves, & Indians and
was liable to be attacked by either of them at any moment & was
half a mile from any company & had no weapon not even enough
to have defend myself against a badger & I thought wisdom dictated
for me to return to camp so I took up my polls & fish & walked
leasurely home & retired to rest which closed the business of
the day."
Winter Quarters, Nebraska:
Mary Richards visited Sister Taylor to bid her good-bye. Sister
Taylor was about to leave with the second pioneer company. Hosea
Stout delivered the public arms to Alpheus Cutler, as ordered,
and the wagon to Charles C. Rich to be used for his journey west.
Brother Stout was getting frustrated in his efforts to figure
out what was going to be done with the guard in the second pioneer
company, and whether or not he would be going with them. He wrote: "[I]
could not learn anything about it nor as much as get any of them
[the leaders] to talk on the subject to any satisfaction but
to refer me to the other. [Isaac] Morley refered me to [Charles
C.] Rich & he to [John] Taylor, who requested me not to trouble
him about it for he said he had never considered it before, and
refered me to [Alpheus] Cutler & he said he had not time to talk & [Newel
K.] Whitney knew nothing about it. Thus I was sent around all
day and learning nothing so seeing that there was no arrangement
for either me or a guard on the journey, I now give up the idea
of going & bought a house of Br A[braham] O. Smoot which was
more spacious & comfortable than the one I now occupied."
Summer Quarters, Nebraska:
Those at Summer Quarters were busy plowing and harrowing corn.
At 2 p.m., Isaac Morley came for a short business. [John D. Lee
listed those men in his family who were working this day at Summer
Quarters: A.D. Young, Allen Weeks, George W. Hickerson, James Woolsey,
Levi North, William Swap, Jacob Woolsey, Hyrum Rheu, Allanson Allen,
Marshal Allen, William Woolsey, David Young, and Eli Bennett.]
Mormon Battalion, at Los Angeles, California:
Several men were detailed to go to San Pedro to guard a military
store.
Sources:
Diary of Howard Egan, Pioneering the West, 69-71
Appleton Milo Harmon Goes West, 32
Erastus Snow Journal Excerpts, Improvement Era 15:164
Wilford Woodruff's Journal, 3:199-200
William Clayton's Journal, 228-30
Bagley, ed., The Pioneer Camp of the Saints, 188-89
Ward, ed., Winter Quarters, The 1846-1848 Life Writings of Mary Haskin Parker
Richards, 147
Brooks, On the Mormon Frontier, The Diary of Hosea Stout, 1:260
Kelly, ed., Journals of John D. Lee, 1846-1847 and 1859, 175
Journal of Henry Standage in Frank Alfred Golder, The March of the Mormon Battalion,
225
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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