Date: June 4, 1847
On the North Platte River, Wyoming:
It was a clear, pleasant morning. The snow-capped Laramie Peak
could be seen clearly in the distance. The ferrying of wagons
started early, at 4:30 a.m. The last of the wagons were brought
over by 8:00 a.m. Brigham Young, Heber C. Kimball, and others,
went up to Fort Laramie for one more visit. They brought back
good reports from traders about Bear River Valley. It was described
as being well-timbered, plenty of grass, and mild winters. There
were many fish in the streams. Wilford Woodruff recorded: "I
conversed with a mountaineer who had wintered at the great Basin
of the Salt and Utah Lakes & he recommends the country very highly
for a healthy, fertile Country, the lakes and streams abounding
with trout and other fish, a good supply of sugar maple & other
timber &c."
Levi Jackman described the fort: "The walls are made of adobes
with door attached to the walls on the inside and one two stories
high. A row of houses also runs through the center of the fort."
Porter Rockwell traded a horse with James Bordeaux for two cows
and calves, one heifer, two pair of moccasin shoes, and two lariats.
John Pack traded a lame horse for three robes. Luke S. Johnson
provided his dental services to several people in the fort in
exchange for some moccasins and skins. Many letters were left
behind for love-ones back at Winter Quarters. They would be sent
back to Peter Sarpy at Trader's Point and then delivered to Winter
Quarters. [These letters did arrive safely]
Appleton Harmon and Albert P. Rockwood used a yoke of oxen to
tow the ferry boat back up to the fort. Brother Rockwood paid
the fifteen dollars fee, seven in cash, one dollar's worth of
potatoes, and Robert Crow of the Mississippi Saints paid the
other seven dollars. Mr Bordeaux was very pleased to see that
the Saints settled up with him. He remarked that he had never
had a group of people pass Fort Laramie who first made sure they
had settled up with him.
At 11:30, the three families from the Mississippi Saints came
from the fort and took their place in the pioneer company. The
seventeen new members of the camp were, Robert Crow, Elizabeth
Crow, Benjamin B. Crow, Harriet Crow, Elizabeth Jane Crow, John
McHenry Crow, Walter H. Crow, George W. Therlkill, Matills Jane
Therlkill, Milton Howard Therlkill, James William Therlkill,
William Parker Crow, Isa Vinda Exene Crow, Ira Minda Almarene
Crow, Archibald Little, James Chesney and Lewis B. Myers. This
brought the current number of the camp to 161 (148 men, eight
women, and five children). [The total would be 165, if we include
the four men who left the day before for Pueblo]. Certainly the
three sisters traveling in the pioneer company were delighted
to welcome five new sisters and three children. Lewis B. Myers
was a valuable addition to the pioneer company because he had
in years past traveled in the rocky mountains. The Mississippi
Saints brought with them five wagons, one cart, eleven horses,
twenty-four oxen, twenty-two cows, three bulls, and seven calves.
This brought the camp totals to ninety-six horses, fifty-one
mules, ninety oxen, forty-three cows, nine calves, three bulls,
sixteen chickens, sixteen dogs, seventy-nine wagons, and one
cart.
William Clayton put up a sign board at the ferry crossing that
read: "Winter Quarters, 561 1/4 miles. 227 1/2 miles from the
Junction of the Platte. 142 1/4 miles from Ash Hollow. 70 1/4
miles from Chimney Rock. 50 1/2 miles from Scotts Bluff"
At noon, the pioneers again started their journey, now on the
south side of the North Platte River. After three miles, at 1:20,
they halted to feed the cattle. Horace K. Whitney wrote: "At
this place the grass was the most luxuriant that we have seen
for a long time -- here to our right, a short distance, the river
winding in a serpentine direction, glides gracefully by, while
immediately to our left are large crags & masses of rock, as
it were, suspended over our heads."
As they traveled, they noticed Archibald Little, a new-comer
with the Mississippi group, whipping his oxen very bad. Brigham
Young and others went to help him but he treated them with contempt
and continued to whip his animals. President Young commented
that there had been more abuse of cattle in those few minutes
than by all the brethren since they left Winter Quarters.
The journey continued at 2:30. About eight miles from Fort Laramie,
they descended a very steep hill [Mexican Hill] and had to lock
the wheels on the wagons for the first time. At 5:30 the night's
camp was established. Soon a heavy thunder shower rolled through.
Thomas Bullock wrote: "We saw two perfect rainbows in the heavens
and an Eagle flying in the Air."
Winter Quarters, Nebraska:
The weather was very warm. Mary Richards traveled around the city
with the Burtons. "We went into store & traded, afterwards we went
to the Mill and the Miller took & shewed us through every department
of the same, it was then in Motion. We were well pleased with our
visit there."
Mormon Battalion, at Los Angeles, California:
The Pueblo was having trouble with mad wild dogs. A man had recently died because
of a bite. Colonel Stevenson asked a some men from the battalion to go and kill
all of the stray dogs that they could find.
Company B, Mormon Battalion, at San Diego, California:
A large drove of horses were brought into town to sell to the battalion.
Sources:
Diary of Howard Egan, Pioneering the West, 64-65
Appleton Milo Harmon Goes West, 28
Excerpts from the Hitherto Unpublished Journal of Horace K. Whitney, Improvement
Era, June, 1947, 407
Elden Watson ed., Manuscript History of Brigham Young, 557
Wilford Woodruff's Journal, 3:196
Bagley, ed., The Pioneer Camp of the Saints, 179-81
Levi Jackman Autobiography, typescript, BYU-S, p.34
Ward, ed., Winter Quarters, The 1846-1848 Life Writings of Mary Haskin Parker
Richards, 146
Brooks, On the Mormon Frontier, The Diary of Hosea Stout, 1:258-59
The Journal of Robert S. Bliss, Utah Historical Quarterly, 4:94
Tyler, A Concise History of the Mormon Battalion, 290
Source: 150 Years Ago Today
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