Letters of Encouragement to the Pioneers
Apr 3 - May 23 | May
23 - Jun 30 | Jul 1 - Jul 15 | Jul
15 - Aug 13
May 23 - June 30, 1997
May 23, 1997
Rebecca wrote:
What a great and emotion-provoking writer this Pam Wilkinson
is!! I hope we hear more from her. Can you tell her I thank
her from the bottom of my heart for walking the path my
two English grandmothers walked and telling me what it is like.
Thank you, thank you, thank you for this most wonderful web site
to experience this incredible re-enactment.
[Margaret,] I can feel them through your writings. Indeed, "They
are here." What a beautiful poem.
Also, you must be feeling better or in less pain, because your
writings are getting more descriptive and reflective. They just
get better every day. I do not wonder that it had something to
do with being blessed with the power of the priesthood and the
prayers of so many "followers."
I had to copy your description with your poem for my family and
friends who do not yet know how to find treasures on the internet.
Thank you.
Carol
wrote:
Hi. We are looking for some blueprings/plans for building
a handcart for our students to use in a re-enactment of
the pioneer trek thus summer. Do you know of anywhere that
there are plans we could use to help us in building a handcart?
Kathy replies: As a matter of fact,
do we have a deal for you. Steve Pratt has allowed us to post his book
of handcart blueprints! If you spend some time poking around
our site, you'll find some pretty interesting stuff. June 3, 1997 Jerry wrote:
Thanks for
the tremendous coverage of the re-enactment of the Mormon Pioneer
Trek. It is a tremendous educational opportunity and you have
done an admirable job of conveying that opportunity to a host of
people throughout the world. Your coverage of the event has been
more comprehensive and more timely than any of the other media
or internet efforts. The human interest coverage of your correspondents
has been extremely interesting as well as educational.
I will continue to follow the progress of the trek daily so I
can see what kind of experience is being enjoyed by my teamster
friend, Jack Roberts. Thanks again! Jerry Howell
Kim Grant wrote:
What has happened? I have been following your
Journal. Now you have stopped. I havn't heard again thing since
the 26th of May. I hope that things are alright. We will be
joining the trek today. We will be at the campsite in Henry.
I'm the only member I can see in my history. For I have gone
back in some lines the 1600's. I'm now 35 years old. As one
of my Projects I'm doing this trek and making a book. I have
copied all of your journal for my book. I will be putting my
journal and pictures in this book as well as my husband's and
children's.
We had friends on this trek about a week ago. They were Mike Ward,
Brother Jackson - he is 74 years old and helped pull the handcarts
too. We are so proud of him. Plus Elder Bliss and Brother Jackson's
grandson. They said they would love to give me their journals and
pictures too. I think this will be a once in a life time change.
We are so honored to go. My husband ancestors made this jouney
15 years later. So my children have a heritage. I look at it as
I'm the first in my family and somewhere in the history books I
will be the pioneer. I know this will be hard but not has hard
as the pioneers had it. But in someways it is the same. Well I
guess I better let you go. Can't wait to meet you.
June 4, 1997 the Hills wrote: This message
is for the Rich and Kim Running Family, walking June 2-5. We have
thought of you often the past few days and wonder how you are doing.
We are proud of Amanda(8), Ryan(6) and Christopher(3) for joining
the trek. We love you and pray for you and the others in the Pioneer
Trek. We also send our congradulations to Brent and Amy!! It has
been fun following your engagement over the internet.
June 5, 1997 Jeff wrote:
Hi Dan. I just
read some of your journal (hope you don't mind), and I thought
I'd send you a quick message. It sounds like you're having a
good time. What's the best thing about being on the trek? What's
the hardest thing? Do you ever get tired of just walking and walking
and walking over endless prairie? Did you get to Chimney Rock
yet? What do you think about all day? Do you miss home?
I guess the pioneers probably had some of the same problems that
you are all facing. They missed their homes a lot, I'm sure, and
I'll bet they got tired of the same thing every day. It's pretty
amazing that you and your family are doing this. I drove across
Nebraska and Wyoming a couple of years ago--it's a long ways. Thanks
for having the courage and strength to walk all that way--it helps
people like me to remember what other people did for us a long
time ago, and remembering what they did helps us to try hard today.
I've thought a lot lately about all that my ancestors went through
to cross the plains. As I've thought about all of their sacrifice,
I've wondered if I am sacrificing enough and doing enough today.
I've been given a lot more than the pioneers had, but am I doing
as much with what I have as they did with what they had?
I hope all is going well. Have fun. Tell Courtney hi. Is she still
walking with your family? She was my neighbor until she left to
go on the trek. She's pretty cool--has she told you any stories?
She's got some good ones--make her tell you them sometime. See
ya later. Keep it up.
Chuck wrote:
Dear ones on the Mormon trail---
I have just started reading your journal entries. Our prayers
and encouragement go with you. I noted that on May 2-3 you
passed through Chapman, Nebraska. It was the town my mother was
born and grew up in. There are many happy memories of that town.
My grandfather took me to the Platte River to fish. We knew nothing
of the Church or the Mormon trail then. One by one our family
joined the church. My mother attended the Baptist Church where
you visited. Our cousins wrote of their experience with you.
Perhaps you remember them: Loren, Barbara, Rich, and Pam Ogden.
I it did as much for them as for you. God bless you in your
journey. You are doing much good. Your journey is sending a wave
of goodness and peace to all in your path. Your courage and sacrifice
are qualities these hard-working, rugged people can relate to.
Thank you.
Dorothy of San Jacinto Academy wrote:
Couldn't
find the Encouragement link so may I use this to send
Love to the dear new friends on the trail. Also special thanks
to those who set up the WWW so we could all participate. You on
the trail are an inspiration to so many of us who are following
your progression. The picts we get to see are of blue skyes
and straight roads with music and naration, no heat no rain sore
feet and aching bodies. We will never be able to feel the spirit
of the pioneers like you who are there, reading the old journals
by the markers and landmarks where they origionated. By the
way marshmellows are a good thing.
I know many of you have made great personal sacrifices to make
the trek. I can tell you are being rewarded for your sacrafice.
I would like to thank my son in law David Herterich of Hemet CA.
whose hard work has made it possible for my Daughter Kimberly and
their four children to participate. Happy trails to them and happy
15th birthday to Arianna and 41st to Kimberly the 6th and 7th of
June. We will be there to greet you with bells on when you arrive
in SLC. Love from San Diego Grandma and Mom
June 6, 1997 Dixie wrote:
We just arrived
home from spending the weekend from Scottsbluff to Mitchell with
you wonderful modern-day pioneers. The three days we spent were
a highlight in our lives. My name is Dixie Conger and I came
with my two daughters, Julia and Jennifer and my sister-in-law
and her daughter, Dayna Conger and son Joel Conger. I talked to
B.C.--also I know Virginia (tell her I'm Grant Carter from St.
George--his cousin) Maybe she'll remember. Joseph helped me walk
into camp last Saturday that we walked from 19-23 miles and I thought
I wouldn't make it. We helped pull the number one handcart with--was
it Joe--that is helping a sister with the handcart?
I can see why we should not only be in awe regarding our ancestors,
but our prayers should be directed towards you modern-day pioneers,
too--you are amazing to go day after day. My daughters want to
come back and plan to before Independence Rock. I can see why
the Wagon Train is magical...as hard as it is. The Spirit is
present--that's why it's such a splendid feeling there.
On the way home we drove home over the trail and visited all
the sights. You have some great places yet to visit. Thanks!!!
Dixie Conger
Karen
wrote:
Hi, I am enjoying following the trek through the eyes
of Margaret, Brent, Osamu, Wendy and Dan. I have missed hearing
from them lately and was worried that something might have
happened to Margaret, who usually had an entry every day. From
the June 2nd entry I am assuming that they are just having computer
and phone problems? Hopefully they are all O.K. I feel that
I have come to know the journalists through their entries and wish
that I could be there with them. Thank you for sharing your
experiences with us!
Kathy responds: We're working to solve the cell
service problem. For now, we're getting the entries through
the US Postal Service. Hoepfully soon this will be resolved.
John and Lauri wrote:
We'd like to pass our
love and encouragement to our Uncle Grant Packard, who is
with the re-enactment company. If we didn't have to make a living,
we'd be there with you. We're spending July on the trail
from Palmyra to Salt Lake, including stops in Kirtland, Jackson
County, Nauvoo, Winter Quarters, and the trail...but, unfortuantely,
in our van. God bless you...from the John and Lauri Barger
family, Great Falls, Montana.
Lynda Durfee wrote:
I supposed many people have already
told you that courtship on the trail 130-150 years
ago was quite common. I guess when you're with someone
the better part of your waking hours, you get to
know him/her pretty well--including all the strengths and
shortcomings. My great-great-grandfather, Daniel
Robison, was captain of the 9th Handcart Co., which left Florence
June 6, 1860 and arrived in the valley on August
27. One couple was married on the trail, and five other
couples who met in the handcart company were married
after they reached the valley--some within days of
their arrival. Having suffered through such hardships
together, they must have been well-prepared for whatever
lay ahead. Congratulations on your engagement and
best wishes for the future. Lynda Durfee
P.S. By the time they had been on the trail about two months,
some people were starting to get pretty tired and cranky. I guess
there is such a thing as TOO much togetherness. Think of some
of those family vacations you probably took by car, with the
kids asking "where are we going?", "when are we going to get there?", "are
we there yet?" etc. Also, lots of "I'm tired, I'm hungry, I'm thirsty".
I suppose pioneer parents went through the same thing. Anyway,
keep up your spirits and good luck!
Julie Ann Larson wrote:
My best to you all. I think about you
daily. I live in the past and the present through your efforts.
I have great grandfathers and grandmothers who came in the original
wagon train, and later ones. I wish so much that I could be there
with you. Thanks for all your journal entries. We read them every
night. Today I picked berries at a farm nearby our home. My thoughts
went to all of you. I would love to share them with you. Keep
up the faith. I look forward to meeting you at the Salt Lake Valley
on July 22nd. The Lord bless and keep you.
June 7, 1997 Lowell asks:
What day did
Margaret write about the experience with the Porta Pottie episode
in volving "Granny"? I
wanted to refer to it again and have been unable to locate it.
Kathy responds: It was May 10th,
a day that will live in hilarity...You can see all of the entry
here.
June 9, 1997 Kathy and Robert wrote:
Dear Margaret,
I have been reading your journal and following the wagon train
ever since we got home. We were lucky enough to be there in
Omaha Sat and Sun and to travel with you on the first day Monday
April 19. That was all our life would allow but my heart is
with you and I'm traveling with the train via you and the other
journal writers. It is probably easy for me to say this from my comfortable
home in Dayton Ohio but please don't be to discouraged. You are doing a
wonderful thing. I laugh and cry with you. All of my family
lines came across the plains! I owe everything to them. I feel
of their spirit through your writing. I hope some day we all
have a wondeful reunion on the other side. What they walked
for and endured for is true and if we follow their examples with faith
in our every footstep no matter how painful we will be together
some day.
If I had been in a different family situtation I would have wanted
to do the same as you. My children are 5, 3, 1 and one due in 3
months. I wasn't in a place to leave them or even take them along
on the entire trip. I regale my family with the stories I'm reading
and my 5 year old often asks how the pioneers are doing.
A sister, Marilyn Wells and her family (husband Christian, sons
Jordan, Jared and Jeremy) will join you for a couple of days in
July. They have been following also. I will add your child that
needs both parents to my prayer list. I feel for you. I also feel
greatly for Kimberly (from Calif.) who found she could not walk,
move her car, set up camp, cook for her four children, shop, clean
and everything else and who finally gave up the walking.
If you personally get this message please pass on to her my love
and support. She made a good and wise decision to give up something
she wanted for herself in order to help her children. I doubt she
will remember me but we are the family that camped next to her
and Douglas Laws (from Chicago) those first two nights. I also
think of Doug and hope he is doing well. I hope he still wants
to go the distance and that everything will work out for him.
I thank all those support people that help get your journal on
the air. I was lonely those days that they were having trouble
sending things out. Thank-you all for what you are doing and for
allowing the world to share in your joys and pains. I would give
anything to be there in Salt Lake when you get in. What a party
you will have. Please continue to write it up so that we here in
Ohio can live it through you.
with love and encouragment, Kathy and Robert Graham
Lowell wrote:
Pass our gratitude along to Margaret
Clark for her inspirational and wonderful accounts of her journey.
We surely petition the Lord for blessings in her behalf for such
a wonderful person to undertake such ajourney and furnish us
with the reports she does. We are truly feeling th spirit that
she radiates about the pioneers and the experiences that both
they and she have experienced.
June 10, 1997 Craig wrote:
Konnichi
wa! This is Craig McBeth. What a surprise to find you are on
the trek. How are you enjoying the trek? Have you had much rain?
I work with the son of Jury and Marjean Toone who are along the
trek selling souveniers. Please tell them hello as well. Ganbatte
Kuddasai!
Art wrote:
Dear Brother Osamu, I just finished
reading your journal entries today and felt I should write.
You must be very adventurous to take your family on a trek
like this, in a foreign country, not unlike many of the original
pioneers. I felt during the lunch hour it took to read your journal
that I was there with you and your wonderful family. Cows or no
cows, I can tell you are a man of great dignity. Thank you
so much for sharing your thoughts with us. Best Regards, Art
June 11, 1997 Annette wrote:
Margaret,
Thank you for the great write up on my folks, Gene and Opal Layman.
I have been watching for their picture and article for some
time now on your web site. I wish Dad would have told me sooner
that I could have E mail them "Howdies" once
in a while especially on Dad's birthday and on Mother's Day. I haven't heard
from them since they left the train, but that is to be expected since they
are probably real busy getting caught up on their domestic chores now. I
will continue to peek in on the TREK with my kids, plus now
that I know where you are, I may have my students, who are
still in school until June 20th, search your web site. I am
a teaching assistant in Federal Way school dist. and my 5th
grade class did American History this year. If the internet
gets back up at our school, we may have opportunities to peek
in.
Keep up the good work.
Annette Hinckley
Steve wrote:
Where did all the diaries go? I was reading Margaret
Clark daily. Those accounts meant a lot to me. Sincerely hope
they return soon. God bless you for the wonderful work you are
doing to enable us armchair adventurers to participate vicariously
in the reenactment.
Christine wrote:
Thank you so much for your strenght
and endurance while you pound out the miles towards
the valley and the hugh throng of people who will be anxiously
awaiting the trek's arrival on july 22.
I seldom read from the journals that I do not weep. I suppose
if I was with you, I would be crying constantly and the wagon master
would just stick a barrel under my face for drinking water!!
Carry on Carry on !!!!! Christine in Jerome , Idaho
June 12, 1997 Terry wrote:
Howdy...
you're getting closer. I was out on the Green River today. It
is very high and very fast. The bugs are something else... bring
lots of repellent. It's been raining every day with no relief in
sight. We even had a twister near Rock Springs. Be careful.
Welcome to Wyoming.
Terry
Carol Lee wrote:
Wow--what
a great new site!!! Thanks for all your hard work.
June 14, 1997 Steve wrote:
I sent an e-mail to you last week asking where the Margaret Clark
(and others) postings had gone. You kindly responded telling
me where and giving me some idea of the difficulty they were having
in making the posting. I can believe it. I didn't even know
that cell phones worked in western Nebraska or Wyoming outside
of big cities. I appreciate your response.
I would really like to communicate with [Margaret]. Is there
any where that she can tap into e-mail? What I would like to
tell her is how much I am enjoying her diaries. I read them faithfully.
They are well done and an inspiration. Recently I gave a talk
in a ... meeting about "Faith in Every Footstep," but focused
less on the 1847 migration than I did on the reenactment and
what it should mean to us today. Here I relied almost entirely
on [Margaret's] postings. The most touching part of the meeting
is when I read the poem she wrote on 1
May and the one on 20
May. There was not a dry eye in the building. I'll bet that
when [she] penned those lines she never thought they would be affecting
people ... all across the land. I know this journey has been hard
for her, but in my opinion the blessing she is bring to all the
rest of us is immeasurble in its worth. I hope she feels her sacrifice
is worth it. And I hope she is able to continue the journey. If
you know of a place to post this message where she will find it,
please do. Thanks.
Kathy G wrote:
If someone wanted to meet the train in
SLC what is the best time to do that? On July 22 at This Is
The Place or in SLC at the parade on the 24th? I'm assuming the
wagon train will participate in the big parade. I have been following
their progress daily and they have become such a part of my
life that I would really like to join in welcoming them into The
Valley. Any advice on good travel arrangements?
Thank you for all your hard work in getting their journals onto
the net so I could follow them.
Kathy responds: See
Margaret's invitation. She recommends walking from the 'This
is the Place Monument' to the City/County building with the train
on the 23rd of July.
June
16, 1997 Jessi wrote:
Hey-
I'm Jessi and love the Oregon Trail. I have both the CD rom games,
about 7 dresses from back then,all the Laura Ingalls Wilder
books, the map of the Oregon Trail, and I have the American
Girl, Kirsten Larson. Even though she really didn't ride the
Oregon Trail I still pretend. I just LOVE the Oregon Trail
and everthing about it. My best friend Kelsey took me with
her and her family on part of the Oregon Trail. And when she
sleeps over here or I sleep over there I bring the dresses
and we play th Oregon Trail. I wanted to go on the Oregon Trail
trip but I couldn't Please E-mail me back and tell how it feels
to be on the Oregon Trail and to relive the past.
Thank You, Jessica, Age 12
Roland and Carol wrote:
We want to express our gratitude again
to Margaret. Would you please send this on to her? She will probably
never know how much we appreciate what she is doing. There must
be thousands of others who feel the same way.
Margaret, IT IS SUCH A FEAST TO READ YOUR JOURNALS! After we came
home to Arizona from Lisco, Nebraska, (last of May) we had a week
or so when no journals came through the internet. That's when you
had all that rain to deal with. 3 to 6 inches in one day! YIKES!
We were glad to again hear from you on June 9th to know that you
are basically alright and to catch up on your activities.
Pam, I've thought of you so many times and the special experience
it was for us to have you out to the Lisco farm for the evening
of May 27th. (In a recent letter to us, my Uncle said the 4 robin
eggs have hatched now and his yard is full of bunny rabbits. :-)
I would very much liked to have had you, Margaret, come to the
farm also. We were touched by your journal wherein you told about
Pam's sore feet and the shoes the man gave her and "he walked away
without shoes." We are touched over and over--again & again-
by the stories you write of your many experiences. We are grateful
for your awareness, and grateful for your ability (and tenacity)
to put those experiences down on paper so we can read and share
vicariously! thanks. thanks.
I am still xeroxing each journal and sending many of them to our
7 md children---from Connecticut to California---and I'm also sharing
with 7 of our close neighbors and also a few lucky friends. I guess
you can tell that I--WE feel real lucky to read your journals.
Your June 5th Torrington-Ft. Laramie description of "30 miles
for the walkers" had both of us in tears.
You broaden our vision and appreciation of those handcarters of
yesteryear. [...]
We salute you...Margaret and Pam, and others we know by name only.
We love you for the sacrifices you are making....in our behalf.
We identify with you. You are in our prayers. We are with you,
in our thoughts, as you travel. We cannot ease your painful feet,
but YOU ARE IN OUR PRAYERS. And when you come into the valley,
though we are in Gilbert, Arizona, WE WILL BE WITH YOU.
God Bless!
Anne wrote:
I read this morning that the trek is difficult and
at times feels lonely and you (this refers to Kathy
Stickel's comment "It helps for us to be reminded that people know that
we're out here and they care about us."). Know that there are people
who know and DO care and literally live from one day to the next, waiting
to see how and what you all are doing. I can't believe how emotional
I feel, reading what is shared. You are doing a great thing and I thank
you. Sincerely, Anne Ch., Provo, UT
June 17, 1997 Kathy Graham wrote:
I'm
so glad your family is there with you. What a great day you and
your girls, especially had that first day. What a challenge for
everyone. I'm cheering all of your family on as hard as I was
you. Thank you for letting me be a part of all of this. Thanks
for helping the family of four from Arizona, my home state. I love
you and pray for you nightly. Happy walk trekking!!!
We are the young family that tented next to Doug Laws those first
two days in Miller Park in Omaha. We enjoyed our one and only day
of riding and ever since we have had to return to our Dayton Ohio
home I have been following the trek through the e-mail journals....
Your days sound really tough. I walked an easy, flat three miles
yesterday on pavement pushing our 19 month old Lexy in a stroller
and while I didn't get blisters I was plenty sweaty and tired.
I thought of all of you walking 20-30 miles in one day and on one
hand was grateful I wasn't doing that but on the other hand I was
walking with you in spirit.
I laugh and cry and I read the journal entries and I have been
surprised at how much they have affected me. I talk to everyone
constantly about all of you. ... I will try to send word if I fly
out to Utah and maybe we can meet on June 23 as you walk the last
distance from This Is The Place park to the city council building.
I've been told by the people running this e-mail link that that
may be the best place to welcome you in. Lots of luck and God speed,
each and every day. Kathy Graham
Don wrote:
When are you going to post updated
maps? We are still looking at May 23 to June 7. Other than
that, this is the best Website on the Web. It is so beautiful
and useful. We are docents at the Deseret Village State Park,
and will be joining the trek at Bear River Crossing, and pulling
a handcart into the valley, July 12-22. We are really looking
forward to it, and have benefited greatly from the information
on this site.
June 19, 1997 Merry from the Lakewood
Library wrote:
Nancy, saw your pictures...Go Girl! We miss you!
Everyone at Y.Y.N. & H. and Merry of the library, too!. Is
the handcart as heavy as it looks?
Ron Andersen (our resident history expert)
wrote:
Drove to Independence Rock with my brother, Welden. Got
there at 1:30 A.M., slept in the car until 4:45 A.M. Took pictures
and visited with wagon train participants until 6:45 P.M.
It's brutal out there. I have utmost respect for the participants,
especially the walkers, and those without RV and other support
vehicles. Got back at 12:30 A.M. this morning and will leave Friday
for the trail and will be back late the 28th.
I talked very shortly with Wendy and B.C. I couldn't find Danny
or Margaret. It's not easy to do. There are bodies, animals,
support vehicles, and people EVERYWHERE. These people are beginning
to hit the wall (marathon) talk, or "See the Elephant" (in trail
history talk). They are at 6,000 feet elevation and will soon
be over 7,000 at South Pass. It's still too far from Salt Lake
City to begin the sprint for home. I'll be in touch when I return.
Ron
June 20, 1997 Ilene wrote:
Dear wagon
trail folks,
I so enjoy following the trials of the trail on the internet.
Thank you for hanging in there and continuing to keep us updated.
I so hope to be able to see all of you soon. Tell Doug, Ted,
Gordon and Pam hello from Ilene. Thank you for the card Kinberly,
you are my heroine. Margaret you are a women I want to always
stay in touch with! I think of you all everyday and pray for you. My friends
the Garffs are joining you soon. I love you all.
Love Ilene
Welden wrote:
Here are a couple of GIF images of you and Amy and a shot of the
group at the Mormon Cemetary Visitors Center.
Welden Andersen - LDS Photo Services
 
Two families wrote:
We just
got back from Wyoming where we were riders on the pioneer trek.
My parents are from ILL & I am from ID and we met on the trail.
We just wanted to write to let you know how much we have enjoyed
reading the information on your site. It was a great experience
and we thought the modern wagon train pioneers were doing a
great job. Thanks for the good work you are doing. Sincerely,
Rob Oakes Family
Larry Oakes Family.
Vince asked:
I heard that not all the trekkers
will be able to participate in the Day's of 47 parade.
What a shame but I know there are many who travelled just part
of the way.
Is it certain that everyone who travelled the entire route will
be included in the parade?
[The latest information we have is that 5 wagons will be included
in the parade. About 30 have gone the distance. None of the full-distance
walkers will be included.]
The letter below from Mike in Fort Collins,
Colorado, addressed to the editor of the Deseret News, was forwarded
to the Heritage Gateways web site.
My family was extremely disappointed
to hear that only 5 wagons would represent the Mormon Trail
Wagon Train in the Days of 47 Parade. I think [the] president
of the parade, is unaware of the broad enthusiasm the wagon
has nation wide.
Hundreds from our community of Fort Collins, Colorado walked a
day with the wagon train as a part of a handcart company. Front
page articles have appeared in most of the newspapers in Colorado,
including our local paper.
Our family walked with a handcart company for a day and experienced
in a small way what the pioneers had to endure. We had so many
life enriching experiences in that one day, I count this as one
of the single most rewarding days of my life.
Full time members of the wagon train have sacrificed much and
have unselfishly allowed families like ours to be a part of their
adventure and memorial. We have made plans to attend the Days of
47 Parade to yell our brains out for the heros who have walked
and traveled the entire trail. We owe them a debt of gratitude.
The wagon train is the reason we would come to Salt Lake over
the 24th. Others from Fort Collins have similar plans. We do not
want to cancel our trip. We hope the parade committee will change
their minds.
[The president of the parade]'s concerns, I believe, are unfounded.
The entertainment value is extremely high, we are cheering heros.
The day we walked with the wagon train, people lined the streets
of the town as we entered. They cheered for us, clapped, and shouted
encouraging words. That was just a taste of what those great modern
day pioneer travelers can expect as they parade in Salt Lake.
The wagons and handcarts will not slow the parade down. These
people know how to walk. We traveled at close to three miles per
hour the day we were with the train. We tenderfeet day trippers
slowed up the full time walkers. [He] was worried about breakdowns.
He has to be kidding. After a thousand miles on trails, the flat
smooth streets of Salt Lake will be no obsticle.
Get with the spirit. Every full time walker, handcart puller,
horseman, and wagon driver should be in that parade. The wagon
train will be the highlight.
Mike Gebhardt
Robert Salazar wrote:
dan this is colton. i will be at the parade
when you get back.
well audioce amigos
Brad wrote:
HI, This is Brad Hamblin, from last week
at Denny's.
I did find where I can read your past entries. They are great
you are doing a good job. I enjoy hearing about the people in the
authentic camp. I like being informed on how they are doing. Tell
Wendy Sorenson to take it easy. She doesn't have to sacrifice her
knee for this. I am glad to hear that you are going to waterproof
the tents. We slept in our car twice last week because the tents
did not keep the water off of our stuff.
We stopped at Martin's cove on our way home Sunday. That is an
amazing place. The thing that makes it so special is not the things
that are there, but what happened there. It has a special spirit
because of the sacrifice that was made. To think of what happened
there 141 years ago is overwhelming. We were able to go into the
visitors center and see the names of my Great-Great Grandfather
and his family.
Well enough for know. Give our love to the Sorenson's, Proud's,
Cornell's, well the whole group. Keep up the good work.
June 21, 1997
Terry wrote:
The warm winds of spring have arrived and have done wonders
in terms of drying out the trail. It looks like (barring some
hefty changes) that the trail will be near-perfect west of South
Pass.
When y'all pass through this area remember all those before
us who made the trails. But let's not forget those of the intervening
generations who saved the trails for us to use. It is no accident
that the last, best, longest remaining segments of intact trail
are here in Wyoming. But we need all of you to stay focused and
stay involved. Each year there's a little less trail for us to
see. Save the Trails... Terry
June
22, 1997 Lisa wrote in part:
(I have wanted to write you all for some
time, and just figured out how!!)
When I first heard about the reenactment, (quite some time,
actually, after it had started--such news does not travel fast
to my corner of the world) I wanted to join you so badly I could
hardly bear it....My answer seems to be that right now my "pioneering" effort
must consist of going over to the home of another ward member who
gets cable (TV), so that the children and I can watch the 1/2 hr
special every Sunday on the Odessy channel about the wagon train,
then spending just a few minutes reading the latest journal entries
you are posting on your web site after the children go to bed on
Sunday nights. The rest of my weeks are (almost =)) too hectic
to give time to breath right now. [...] We hope to walk next year
some of the places "you-all" are walking now, and we will remember
you all (as well as the original walkers along that trail) and
what ya'll are doing.
In the mean time, I think of all of you often, and pray for you,
both the ones going the whole way and the daily visitors and walkers.
There must be others out here like me, who wish with all our hear
and soul that we were with you. Thanks so very much to those who
are letting me share a little of the trek through your journal
entries!!! !!!!! !!!!!!!!!
My heart travels with you. Lisa
June 23, 1997 Thomas Milner wrote:
We joined the trek for one day while coming along the mormon
trail from winter quarters I shot this picture of one of the handcarts
near NorthPlatte Nebraska.
Thomas Milner
June 26, 1997 James wrote:
Is there
anyone else besides walkers? It sounds as if the only people
on the wagon train are people who walk. What happened to the wagons?
Are there any? It would be nice to hear about other people besides
just the walkers.
David and Kathie Johnson wrote:
Dear
Heritage Gateway,
My family and I joined with the wagon
train during the first part of June for a few days and also have
a modern as well as a legacy
pioneer story to tell.
Thanks very much.
David and Kathie Johnson Forks, WA
   
June 27, 1997
Kathryn Kelly wrote:
Dear Margaret: I was delighted
to find your web site and to read about the wagon train in Torrington
and in our area. I have a good picture of you by camera and on
video camera--at the fairgrounds and on the road closeto Guernsey,
Wyoming. I was so thrilled to have the events in Torrington
go as planned. The only problem was getting our meals and numbers
to coordinate. The windows are still painted with wagon
train scenes around town. They plan to leave them up all summer.
I hope the 4th of July at the Simpson Hollow site will
be exciting. Please put something on the web site so we
can watch from home. The tv coverage from Casper is getting
less and less. Hopefully the Utah tv channels will be picking
it up much better.
Best wishes to you. Sincerely, Kathryn Kelly
June 28, 1997 Tracey from Grove Park wrote:
We are so proud of what you all are doing, we are the
pioneers for our families and feel blessed to be a part of
this heritage. We are in Knoxville, Tn. and can only imagine
how strong the feeling of the Holy Spirit must be when you
sit and reflect on your day and imagine the hardship that the
original pioneers went through. How blessed you all must be.
Do you feel the Spirit in your aching, weary bodies? What a
blessing it must be for all of you. I wish I was there to share
the experience.What an honor it would be.
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