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31111Q1SQ54239
3E
V
Arthur King Peters
EN TRAILS WEST
W...ri^
^
E^V E N
S
TRAILS
WEST BV A The
r
t li II
r
King Peters
first book of its kind, Seven Trails West
explores the major routes that linked the eastern
United States to the Far West: the
trail
blazed by
the Lewis and Clark Expedition, the Santa Fe Trail, the Oregon-California Trail, the
the
Mormon
Trail,
Pony Express, the Transcontinental Telegraph,
and the Transcontinental Railroad. Seven Trails West
Ft.
**^_
Hall
5°'^^
Prcymontory
Summit
Independence Rock
River
_i"^Springs
Devil's
Gate
/
»
many stories in one: the men and women (some of
tells
epic tale of determined
them famous
\
trailbreakers,
some
little
lures that attracted these pragmatic
known); the
dreamers to the
West; and the ordeals and disappointments they
overcame along the way. Abundantly
illustrated
with a far-ranging selection of archival photographs, paintings, and documents, this
handsome
volume also features clear maps of each of the
trails
and striking color photographs of the challenging terrain traversed
With
its
by the emigrants.
vivid prose
and illuminating
illustra-
tions. Seven Trails West offers the general reader a
thought-provoking overview of the western
trail
network that bound an immature nation together
and provided an armature for l?v
later
development.
turns a dUfiir!iing and inspiriting account, this
^•v3?'' t^'^.V
;
V^
Taos '
(continued on backflap)
•
Ft. Uilion
SantrfFe
Rabbit Ears,
!
^
^'
/
^ ./"Wagon Mound
i
;lVlccE^frEH
bEVEN -—*--*_^ The
„ I
3 111101605 4239
RAILS
VV ts
Lewis and Clark Expedition
•'"'•• — The Santa Fe Trail **"* .^ The Oregon -California Trail -•"-**—-' The Mormon Trail oODooooo The Pony Express '"*"•"-*-*-»' The Transcontinental Telegraph The Transcontinental Railroad
^
To«Tl
Rendez\-ous Site
Landmark
t'" v^^'
^^-r'^-feCttTTiof Independence
yh>^
Fort
Pass
SEVEN
TRAILS W
E
T
P
Arthur Kin^ Peter
V
E
N
TRAILS W
E
S
Abbeville Press
Publishers
New York
London Paris
1
w To MY WIFE, Sarah, with whom CROSSED THE MISSISSIPPI IN 1946
i
hirst
NORTH FROM BERTHOLD PASS, 18^4. Photograph by W. H. Jackson. Back cover: TH¥. JOSEPH HENRY BYINGTON FAMILY, "a mormon family," near calls FORT, UTAH, l86j. See page 90. Pagesj-j: STAMPEDING BUFFALO, rud. See page 4$. •Pa^a^-j: DONNER LAKE AND RAILROAD SNOW SHEDS, n.d. Photograph by A. J. Ruiiell. See page 212.
fren/i«.'fr.-
Stepagey!.
•
Editor; Nancv Gnibb
First edition
Designer; Molly
10 9 8 7 6 5
Shields
Production Editor: OwenDu^an Production Manager; Richard Thomas Picture Editor: Paula Trono Map Designer: Claudia Carlson
copyright conventions.
3.
—West (U.S.) — History —jgth century. —West (U.S.) —History— 19th century. Telegraph —West (U.S.) — History — rgth century.
Group, 488 .Madison
4.
West
.\dobc Caslon and
F591.P425
system, without permission in writing
publisher. Inquiries should be addressed to Abbe^^lIe Publishing '
•-:iiie,
inn
New York, N.Y. ioo;2. The te.\t of this book was
7.
Printed and bound in
Hong Kong.
I
set in
ISBN r-55859-;S2-4 I.
utilized in any f.^rm
or b^ anv means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by retrie\'al
2
cm.
p.
No part of this book may be reproduced or
any information storage and
3
Includes bibliographical references and index.
—
© 1996 Arthur King Peters. Compilation including selection of text and images — copyright © 1996 Abbe\Tl]e Press. All rights reserved under mtcmational Cop)Tight
4
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION D.\TA Se\en trails West / Arthur King Peters.
&om the
2.
Trails
Transportation
97> .02
(U.S.)
—Description and
travel,
i.
Tide.
1996
— dc20
95-39095
CONTENTS Introducrion
1
2
3
4 5
6 7 8
7
CLARK EXPEDITION MOUNTAIN MEN and the Fl R TRADE The SANTA FE TRAIL 55 The OREGON-CALIFORNIA TRAIL S5 The lewis and
•
ii
^^
•
•
The MORMON TRAIL 117 -^5*^^ The PONY EXPRESS 147 The first TRANSCONTINENTAL The FIRST TRANSCONTINENTAL •
'
•
Coda
Notes
—^-^—
2^1
234
itir
Acknowledgments Chronology ofthe
«
•
Trail Associations
Trails,
•
Selected Bwlicgraphy
237
1800-1890
239
Index
245
241 •
242
TELEGRAPH RAILROAD •
•
173
195
^m
'-^^'^
THAN SlX-ni--Fn-E -itARS. FROM No\-EMBER when Lewis and Clark reached the Pacific
Is LESS 1805,
17,
Ocean, to May lo, 1869, \vhen the Golden Spike was pounded home, Americas western frontier leaped two thousand miles from the Mississippi River to the westernmost edge of the continent. impressively, in that short inter\-al the
nolog\- of the Industrial Revolution
Even more
awesome tech-
was apphed
to
nearly two- thirds of the American continent, which, at the turn
of the nineteenth
the creak of a
nor
felt
wagon wheel
centur>-,
had never heard
or the crack of a
rifle,
the blade of plow or ax. Great and terrible
things were suddenly asked of the \-irgin land riches
1
J\
1
rv
O
13 l_
OT
I
O
]\
seemed
The
trails
leled the north
as inexhaustible as
across the table-flat prairie at first paral-
and south banks of the Platte and North
Platte Rivers. This conglomerate
ridor of western expansion, RivTer
whose
dimensions.
its
formed the major cor-
known as
the Great Platte
Road, before leading to high passes
Rockies
in the
or Sierra Ne\-ada where unwar\' emigrants such as the unluck)Party,
Mormon
and
handcart companies, the Dormer
e\-en the
experienced explorer John C.
Fremont were trapped by sudden
many lives. The
trails
blizzards that cost
did not foigi\-e mistakes, but
for a Jedediah Smith, a Jim Bridger, a Susan Magoffin,
a James Chtnan, or a Jean Baptiste Charbonneau,
even the danger held a certain fasdnarion.
Some trails
half-mUlion Americans turned west on the
benveen 1800 and
voluntar\-
1870, constituting the greatest
mass migration
gration differed, but
in histor)'.
Motives for emi-
most pioneers, with the exception
ECHO CANYON-, UTAH,
rS6;:
Pimtngrapi iy Ciaris
K
Cartrr.
of the get-rich-quick gold rushers, were ordinar\' folk in search of a better
A profile of the trail com-
life.
plex and the critical role is vital
to be.
for an understanding of
Such an over\'iew
—
quickl\- stretched
present-day
played in this migration
it
how America came
trails
—
reflects the
The
national identity.
tion, the
of frontiers, the
Adantic coast and the others in between,
final
one the
moving ever
first
was,
with
four
trails
blazed by the explorers, fortune
Santa Fe, the Oregon-California, and the
Mormon Trails
many
farther west. In 1800
proved, at a heavy cost, that the con-
Three others
a special place in the trail pantheon: the
the
first
Transcontinental Telegraph, and the
Transcontinental Railroad, which constituted
Une traced on the landscape by the Mississippi and
of a
Missouri Rivers, with the major jumping-off^ place at Saint Louis
— then
the frontier
was more than
a village with just three streets. a
Une on the map
distin-
guishing "civilized" from "primitive" America.
an
unknown
Pacific
—
By
1870,
Golden Spike ceremony completed the
Transcontinental Railroad, that the western frontier
Out of the
frontier's
it
first
can reasonably be said
had ceased
to exist.
seedbed grew the
trails
that
TOPOGRAPHICAL MAP, UNITED STATES AND
TERRITORIES. By
was
a vast region
twice the size of the eastern United States.
Al|;fe-
It
land of unfathomed opportunities lying
between the Mississippi and the
after the
But
Published by MathrmDripps,
i8j6, seven decades after the appearance
New and
i8-j6.
ofArrowsmith and Lewis's
Elegant General Adas 0/1804 (seepage
Mississippi West
development
I
was stiil only on
to come, as the vast
Nl KODl
14), the trans-
the threshold of the
blank areas on
CTION
this
booming
map confirm.
deser\'e
Pony Express,
the frontier's border was the roughly north-to-south
new
SURVIVORS l8j2.
killed more Indians than -white bullets.
The i8jy smallpox epidemic ravaged the leaving only thirty-one
survivorsfrom a tribe ofsixteen hundred.
and pioneers of the Lewis and Clark expedi-
tinent could be crossed overland.
being the
Pacific,
MAti'DA'Si,
Mandan tribe,
seekers,
in fact, a succession
Opposite:
OF SMALLPOX EPIDEMIC,
Diseases introduced by the Europeans
Utah, California, and
national development.
continuing reexami-
die. It
New Mexico,
nation together and fashioned the armature for later
nation of our western roots in America's quest for a
America's western frontier was born to
tendrils
from Missouri and Nebraska to
Oregon, forming a network that bound the growing
presented in this book
through highlights of people, places, and events along seven major
opened the trans-Mississippi West. Their
first
trails
order that enabled speed of communication
and transport. After thev had been opened
—
all
in the
Pictured here are tivo ofthe lucky ones.
but also white by whites, and Indian by Indians.
A
when
devastating clash of cultures was inexitable
the
western European- Americans encountered Paleolithic Native Americans
who had not vet invented
the wheel,
written language, textiles, glass, or metallurg)'. IneWtable, too,
was the culminating white
would come
that
farther
down
the
"\-ictor\-,"
trail, at
but
Wounded
Knee, South Dakota, in 1890. Fortunately for students of the western
trails,
manv
emigrants kept diaries and journals and later «Tote reminiscences describing their treks west. Merrill
Mattes, patriarch of western-trail
and
fied
classified over three
ments, and
many more doubdess
in dusr\' attic trunks
niscences, often
histor\',
has identi-
thousand such docustill
and scattered
wrinen long
await discover^
archives.
after the faa,
The remimust be
read with discrimination, but one can onlv mar\-el at the steadfastness of the diarists, often
voung women,
who faithfiillv permed their accounts in a clattering covered
wagon
or by a campfire at the end of an ex-
hausting day, conscious that thev were making
They have
The
left
trail
histor\-.
us an evewitness heritage bevond price.
experience in itself changed the emi-
To judge from their indi\idual accounts, it impelled many of them to shuck off their out\vom European attitudes and wap, juist as thev abandoned grants.
cherished household possessions crossing the deserts.
For some, the course of a single decade coiintT}'
had changed
irrevocablv:
America was now one Blood was
spilled
— people recognized from sea to
that the sea,
nation.
on
ever}'
tion.
one of the seven
trails,
hardships amounted to a purifica-
to enrich a \-ision of the ing,
and not simplv Indian blood bv \vhites and \\ce versa
trail
Even today the simple
trail
testimonies continue
West that, sometimes
inspir-
sometimes disturbing, remains deeplv imbedded
in the nation's conscience
and
in the world's percep-
tion of us as Americans.
I
NTRODL CT ON I
,^55Si^
The American
trails west began in Paris.
After two frustrating years of negotiation limited primarily to the acquisition of American rights in the
New
Orleans area,
Thomas Jefferson's
agents in Paris
were astounded bv Napoleon's sudden decision all
to sell
the French landholdings west of the Mississippi
River to the United States, a strategic
move aimed
at
thwarting the English. Accordingly, at Paris, on "Deux
an onze de
Prairial
May
22, 1803), the flourish
AND
as
of Napoleon's unexpected
lock to America's western frontier.
At
^
Republique Fran9aise" (which
signature on the treaty of sale turned the kev in the
THE LEWI
la
from the postrevolutionary calendar
translates
C"^
T
ARK
EXPEDITION
states
the stroke of a pen, the size of the United
more than doubled, yielding what
central third of the country
miles
—
at a cost
is
now the
— some 909,000 square
of about four cents an
the acquisition of this vast territory,
acre.
With
whose exact
boundaries were not even clear at the time, the ican frontier
made
Amer-
a giant leap over the Mississippi
River and across the Great Plains to the Rockies.
From
that
the Pacific
moment became
on, a grand sweep of migration to inevitable, bridging the rest
continent, although
it
of the
would take three more genera-
tions to accomplish.
Jefferson had not yet concluded the Louisiana
Purchase Treaty when, in January 1803, he convinced
Congress
to secretly give
Captains Meriwether Lewis
and William Clark $2,500 the circumstances
for their historic (and
somewhat
illegal)
under
mihtary mission
great falls of the MISSOURI RIVER, MONTANA. igyy.
Photograph by
David Muench.
to the Pacific
Ocean. Never mind that the purchase
from France was a
still
up
in the
air,
that Spain claimed
huge landmass west of the Louisiana Territorv, and
that British
and Russian
Pacific
ocean
ble water
When
interests in the Pacific
several
to the Pacific: the fabled
Northwest Passage that
prompted him
some of the diplomatic
most
direct
& practica-
this continent for
niceties.
in
finally
June 1803, Lewis had
months making
reached
alread\-
spent
& such principal stream of
as,
it,
by
course and communication with the waters of the
The Corps of Disco \erv —
WEsTBo
•
bv
1S03-6 Fort
^
Lewis
Part)',
return trip
Town
•
Clark
Part)',
return trip
Landmark
A
Pass
X
Louisiana Purchase, 1803
The Lewis
.\nd Cl.\rk
I
ND
(62
X
x
.?/* in.
^ cm). Muse'e Conde,
Cbantilly, France.
(rjjS-lSdoj.
Expedition
his
and
own
it
was through
this connection,
backed
outstanding mihtar\' record, that in 1801
Rembrandt Peak
PORTRAIT OF
THOMAS JEFFERSON, Oil on canvas,
Meriwether Lewis's family were old friends of Thomas Jefferson,
Ocean
""*•-•
PORTRAIT OF BONAPARTE, 1ST CONSUL,
48. 8 cm).
Tacifu
The Lewis and Clark Expedition, ^"*—-.^ Lewis and Clark Part)-
Franfois-Pascai-Simon
logistical preparations for
his
newlv formed Corps of Discoverv "to explore the Alissouri River
left:
Gerard (ijyo-lSjy).
Opposite, right:
In a personal order
and
Opposite,
his expedition.
to circumvent
to Lewis, the president directed the captain
12
offer the
lead to rich trade with the Orient. This geo-
poUtical temptation
it's
may
iSoj. Oil on canvas. 24V4
dreamed of finding
would
.
news of the purchase
Washington
water route from the Mississippi
.
the purposes of commerce."'
Northwest had vet to be resolved. Jefferson had long a
.
communication across
23% x /pK
rfoo.
in.
(fS/ x
White House Historical
Association, Washington, D. C.
iitMiM,.^kt^ltJmlri'tUsW~44*^1
/^f: 'ti
T
i>i.^Tf/>0!l/iV
Photograph by Randall A. Wagner.
band
do
earlier estimates.
to
for
This improvement was due mainly
William Clayton
— company and
clerk, musician,
author of
shuck corn,
director of the Saints' band,
in return
The Latter-day Saints' Ernigrants' Guide
later
(1848).
After
Near present-day Casper, Wyoming,
advance party camped on the swollen close to
two companies of Oregon-
bound Missourians who needed
a
way
to cross over
before the river rose any farther. Rejoicing that man's
extremity
God's opportunity, the Saints used their
is
large leather boat, whimsically called the
"Revenue
Cutter," to transport the travelers' loads to the far side.
For
this service they received
commodity,
usefiil
out to $7.50
less
payment
in flour, a
especially at a price that
per
pound than
Laramie, where they could
To
built a
ORSON PRATT,
trans-
Mor-
Orson Pratt, scientific
Salt
the
wagons
coming up
across
—
all
night in the chill water to get
for a
good
fee.
rapidly from the rear.
Mindfiil of others
Young
left a
crew
charge of the ferry operation and continued on his
in
way
with a heavier pocketbook and a heart no doubt made Ughter because his profit had been paid by Missourians,
whose
state
On
had
earlier cost
pain.
the north side of the Platte River, near Fort
Laramie, the Saints
126
him such
TiiK
left a
mileage sign penciled on
Mormon Tkail
1880.
Mormon Apostle and
advisor to Brigham Young,
took celestial observations for the
Pioneer
huge ferry from cottonwoods planked
together and worked
c.
Photograph by Charles W. Carter.
the going rate at Fort
sell it for a profit.
port the 108 wagons themselves, the resourceful
mons
most
worked
Company
Lake
Valley.
en route to Great
would perish
in the worst disaster in the histor)- of
Left:
There was ample time on the long
trail for
the
Mormon leader's
thoughts to turn to his several wives.
Clan', a relatively
new
when neer
bride
he had married
him
Winter Quarters. He had
Jr.),
Lake
Thefamous
Mormon
him
sent her a long, and for his first
wheel,
it gave
had
to
rotations per mile, Cla}ton decided there
from
\ear he led the
Lake
be an easier wav and invented the odometer, a
lade abed and thought a grate deal
one of the best famelyes that eney
me with
count the revolutions and measure the mileage cov-
ever had on earth.
ered each day. According to his calculations. Fort
good and mind
Laramie was
543'/^
mUes from Winter Quarters. By
the time thev reached South Pass, the Pioneer
Com-
.
due hope the children
I
mother when
there
I
am
man will
son Joseph vou must not go away from home and
Brigham
also
must
would
stay at
when
How due you
home.
come home and
sapose
On
one of mv children destroyed by the Indens?
way
to
land's natural
South Pass the Saints marveled
wonders;
Chimnev Rock,
at the
the slender
last
heaven hke the finger of God; Independence Rock;
on
had
De\al's Gate,
where even the sober Saints
briefly turned excursionists,
climbing the Gate's
steep walls, roUing rocks off the top, and firing guns to laugh at the echoes.
The
place
was more apdy
named than thev could have imagined
at the time.
A few years later at that ver\' spot scores of Saints The Mormon Trail
I
pray this
rock spire that soared up from the plains, pointing to
and then
be
My
gon.
pany had traveled 818% miles from Winter Quarters. the
.
.
should hke
I
due think the Lord has blest
to sav to you. ... I
system of wooden cogs attached to a wagon wheel, to
feele
may not be
we saw
I
the case.
buffalow for the
a chase after
.
.
first
.
On
time.
find I
Saturday
They went
them, the got 4 old ones and
5
We
calfs
which has made us plenty of meat.
shall
have to cross the Piatt River here on acount
of feed.
The
prairie
side of the River
is all
.
.
.
burnt over on the north
— the Pawneas have gone ahead
of us and burned.
.
.
ivagor.
A rare early photograph of
Brigham Young, taken
My dear Companion Partner in Tribulation. I
a
trail west.
week out:
Winter Quarters
its
to
thefirst accurate mileage
reading on the
Opposite:
pm April 20, 1847 Pioneer Camp of Israel 95 miles
counting
roadometer,
by William A. King. Although only a
9 o'clock
walking behind a wagon wheel for days, laboriously
City.
simple system of cogs attached
waited for him back in
hv express courier
Saints, Salt
aid of Orson Pratt and probably built
in the Pio-
his third wife. Mar}' (mother of his
sons Joseph and Brigham,
tender, letter
184-;.
designed by William Clayton -with the
whom
she was sixteen, traveled with
Companv;
ROADOMETER,
Church ofjeius Christ of Latter-day
western migration.
.
— Brigham Young^
Valley.
in 184J, the
Mormons
to
Great Salt
A month later Young revealed a different side of his nature, bUstering his company with
a
tongue-
lashing penitently noted in their journals by Bullock,
WUford Woodruff. Even
Clarton, and
brief extracts
from Woodruff's account give a sense of the fire-andbrimstone it
st^'le
that
Young adopted when he
felt
necessair:
I
am
about to revolt from travelling with this
camp any I
further with the spirit they
had rather
now
possess.
myself among the savages
risk
\vith
men that are men of faith, men of mighri' prayer men of God, than to be with this whole Camp when thev forget God & turn there hearts ten
to follev
For
& wickedness.
.
.
.
A week past nearly the whole camp has
been card placing, chequres
& dominoes have
& & hoeing down. ... If these things are
occupied the Attention of the brethren dancing
Xigering
suffered to
go on
it
wUl be but
a short time befor
vou wiU be fighting knocking each other down
& taking
life
&
it is
high time
it
was stoped.
.
.
.
What
did you do
Zion,
& find A resting place for the Saints whare
when aou went
the Standard of the
reared
to seek out
Kingdom of God would be
& her banners unfiirled for the nations to
gather unto? [Did] vou spend
A good deal of
vour time in dancing pitching quate. Jumping
wrasdeing Sec? Yes. Yes. Did you play Cards, dice, checkers
you do with
& dominoes? O! Yes. What Could
^'ourself?
Why you would
shrink
& men
from the glance of the eyes of God Angels even wicked men.
Then
are
vou not ashamed of
The Mormon Tr\ii
'
129
yourselves for practicing these things? Yes vou are
cut through the rough canyon forests the year before
& you must quit
by the westbound Donner
it.^
Pratt's party
Young then renew
their covenants
humble themselves and
to
by
moral and
phere, a
new
advance party cleared the
as a
slashing their
sermon had admin-
spiritual catharsis,
"we had emerged into a new element,
some of their
branches to make a makeshift corduroy road for the
wagons. Canyon Creek was crossed eleven times in
where
his
men
firearms for buckskin clothes
before continuing on the final one hundred miles to the valley of the Great Salt Lake.
of Bridger, however
Bear River
— about
—Young and
at
days out
with
ill
wagon
real torture. Chills
and
to leave
Woodruff noted
Kimball called an emergency meeting
Orson
On July 17 is
at
searching out the
last section
Till;
trail.
had been
On July 24,
carriage,
Canyon "This
is
trail
down
into
Mo KM ON Tk.ml
and
for a
home
a
of the Pio-
on
cleared at once,
dam and
irrigation
planted in pota-
still
in
Woodruff's
mouth of Emigration
to the first
first
into the valley,
five acres
Brigham Young,
to gaze for the
time on the
tradition, the ailing leader
the right place. Drive on!"
declared the next day, Sunday, July
New
Zion.
announced,
Heber Kimball 25,
"We
have
reached the promised land." Eight days after entering the vallev the
Reed's Cutoff, had been
built
was brought
According to
which he
the
Ground was broken and
vary
crops, while the
of the
and Erastus Snow were Company to make their way
Heber
advance party took the lead in
the vallev; part of the
toes.
"one of the
which could be found."*
Pratt
21, 1847.
as
and pleasant places
ditches
with their aihng leader. Pratt's
for the Saints
valleys
and within forty-eight hours
urged sending an advance party to the valley in search
rest stayed
most beautiful
July
truly a wild
he saw Salt Lake sparlding in the distance
and was moved to describe the view
swept
Young
in his journal: "Br.
hill,
is
having climbed to the top
22,
travel in
poorly this morning," and on the eighteenth
first
of the
On July
made
Woodruff's carriage.
of a suitable place to plant the
looking place!"
fevers
Young, interspersed with waves of dehrium, and he
was unable
ment, confided to his journal, "This
neer
was marked by bhnding headaches and by
a
and wagon covers were shredded by the
heavy brush. Clayton, in something of an understate-
Colorado tick
to be
Fort Bridger, the
sharp pains in the spine and joints that a jolting
five
several others fell
Probably picked up
affliction
Only
the time they crossed
mountain fever (now thought fever).
feet tall
new atmos-
After leaving South Pass, Young headed the
traded
of boulders and stumps,
and fiUing the swampy canyon bottom with willow
single day,
to Fort Bridger,
trail
way through willows twenty
through which a
society."
company southwest
traversed in sixteen. For several days the
to
hands
raising their right
pledge. Clayton recorded that the istered a
Donners had
upon the Twelve, the High
called
and the Elders
Priests,
Party. In only sLx days
covered the thirty-six miles that the
Mormons had
consecrated the land,
blessed the seeds, broken fift\'-three acres of ground,
and planted
forty- two
of those acres with potatoes,
corn, buckwheat, oats, and beans. In addition to the
dam and
irrigation ditches, they
acre temple plot
of Salt Lake.
— not
a
had
laid
in a
1,032 miles
hundred days and
man, woman,
or chicken had perished
out a forty-
a survey for the fiiture
The company had come
Winter Quarters ably
and begun
cit)'
from
— remark-
had promised. Under the circumstances,
tor
Latter-day Saints.
Bv
the beginning of August 1847
inhabited the
new
some 450 people
settlement in Great Salt Lake Val-
Later that same
Young's horse, which had been shot by accident).
ley.
Young had indeed
Twelve, and others
led his people to their land, as he
seemed
"sustained" as Prophet, Seer, and Revelator of the
child, horse, mule, ox, cow,
on the journey (except
it
only fitting that during the winter of 1847-48 he was
month Young,
left
the Council of
the valley to return to
Winter
SALT LAKE TEMPLE SQUARE, /%.
Photograph by Charles W. Carter
Afterforty years of construction, the grc.
Mormon Temple towers
over Temple
Square in Salt Lake City, as
it
nears
completion at the turn of the century.
k
'A
Tuf Mf)RMoN Tram
By
Quarters, leaving behind only three hundred Saints to
continue the intensive farming and building before the early
mountain winter
from
a
camp twenty
young wife Clary,
set in.
Writing on September
8
he had
left in Salt
Lake
Young commented with
Valley, the generally formal
unusual warmth: "You have been a grate comfort to
me
this
summer.
with
in carriages to greet the
a lone child I
of it. ...
I
would often
of bread, melons, and cakes. Captain
some of
ride out
new
arrivals
who had walked
Brass
Pitt's
play for dancing and singing by
the weatherbeaten, trail-weary newcomers.
though
even
all,
One woman
barefoot every step of the way,
left it
seemed
to
so she could enter
who
Zion with
dignity. Frederick
in a pleasant land
The Mormon W
saw reminded me of you and your
goodness to one
citizens
then put on the shppers she had carried the entire trek
very lonesome after vou
everything
Mormon
Emigration Canyon, bringing with them generous
Saint,
I felt
capital over the
on horseback and
Band would
My Dear Brigham me I was
Mormon
thousand having died on the way. Emi-
many
gifts
brimming with
tenderness, housewifely soUcitude, and local news:
...
six
the Apostles, and
at
miss your society." His nineteen-
I
year-old wife replied in a long letter
Trail,
grants were given a joyous welcome. Brigham,
miles east of South Pass to his
whom
1870 a total of eighty thousand Saints had
trekked to the
feels herself quite
r
From
unworthy
put your clothes away and every thing
Piercy's
to Great Salt
Back
east. President-elect
James Buchanan,
me
you wished
aire
your clothes
sits
on
you
to as soon as
when
they need
it
left. I
your
a shelf beside the looking glass
be dismrbed.
.
.
ever attend you
May heaven's
.
is
it
wLU
little
shall
some two thousand
not
and reUgious authority in the hands of Brigham
choicest blessings
torians as the Big
Taylor,
a
filled Salt
company back
TH
V.
to
City.
to the valley that
\l
ORMON
treated
behavior as tantamount to rebellion, Buchanan
dispatched twenty-five hundred troops to stamp
Mormon
his-
TRA
five
year,
was
would
regret.
Several thousand Saints were at Big
I
L
Canyon, Utah, on July
anniversary of their entry into Zion, well galloped in with
this
response.
Cottonwood
24, 1857, celebrating the tenth
John
and
when
Porter Rock-
news of the advancing army. In
Young quickly mobilized
the
Nauvoo Legion,
or militia, and assigned harassing missions to
and
it
a politically motivated decision that he
out. It
thou-
Young himself led
same
time he stayed, never to leave Utah again.
132
Mormons
this
led by Parley Pratt,
Lake
high-handed way
Clara C. Young'
known
Company,
at the
Washington's emissaries to Utah. Choosing to view
Yours affectionately
and John Young. By the end of 1848
sand residents
Young, and
with a westbound group of
Saints,
of civil
at the concentration
at
the prayer of your friend
trails
polygamy,
desk
Returning to Winter Quarters, Young and his party unexpectedly crossed
the political winds in 1856-57, detected public outrage
Mormon
his guerrillas,
Piercy.
1853.
Route from Liverpool
Lake
Valley,
/.Sjy.
sniffing Piercy's
else
Hawkins
SALT LAKE CITY IN ,\
Lot Smith
who promptly burned down
Fort
view of Salt Lake City only
six years after
people
Brigham Young and his
had entered the valley.
The Mormon T k
\
1
1,
i
v
Supph' and Fort Bridger, stampeded thousands ot armv cattle,
and
set fire to the prairie grass
armv supply wagons. (This enormous
depredation caused
last
financial losses to Russell,
Waddell, the Tabernacle,
later organizers
and sevent>'-two
Majors and
of the Pony Express). In
Young announced
nor a fence, nor a
grass or hay, that
nor
tree,
wLU burn,
be
commanded
Mormon
ten vears before
tion
Although not
a shot
was
back east
criticized
on
his
cap in
Battalion he had
their epic
had been as a
followers, however,
left
march
to
fired,
the expedi-
clumsy poUtical
it
proved
a
his
godsend.
The Mormon community prospered from
not have to carry out this threat
immediatelv because, caught by
selling provisions to the
that
pulled out to go
his
troops one hundred miles short
army
had come to suppress them,
and when the troops
bad weather. Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston wintered
through town, one
George Cooke, doffed
San Diego.
of our enemies."^ Young did
in reach
the\' filed quieth'
maneuver bv Buchanan. For Young and
a particle ot
[will]
As
Philip Saint
a respectfiil salute to the
a scorched-earth poUcy,
thundering: "Not one building, nor one foot of lumber,
the other side. officer,
finally
home
in i860,
a four-million-dollar auction
The next when Johnston planned enter the city. Young with-
armv
and equip-
of Salt Lake City.
of
spring,
ment enabled manv Mormons
to
drew
thirtv
to live for
thousand
the foundation for several
two months along the
and dugouts, while
deserted Salt Lake City,
family fortunes.
Mormon
Once
again,
ingenuity had turned
adversity' into opportunir\'.
in a
Nauvoo
legionnaires were posted in house:
m.\ss.\cre at
stuffed with straw, poised to send
Mountain Me.adows
Zion up
in flames at a
word from All that anniversan,-
their Prophet.
But the
political
Buchanan backed
Mormons in
June
1858,
off and extended a pardon to the
good behavior. Consequendy,
when Colonel Johnston marched
his
troops into Salt Lake City (guided by Peg-leg Smith
and Jim Bridger), he kept on marching
134
Till-:
Mormon
Tk,\il
—
summer
of 1857,
Brigham
Young's Saints lived under the threat of extermina-
winds had shifted again.
in return for
f.
7*701.
Though peace-loving people by precept,
when persecuted the Mormons could fightfire with fire- The Sons of Dan.
an enforcement group within the to profit considerably, laying
Mormons
Prove River bottoms in lean-tos, tents,
supplies
ORRIN PORTER ROCKWELL,
right
on out
tion by the U.S.
Army. As Colonel Johnston's troops
advanced on Salt Lake City, reviving ugly memories of earlier militia kiUings of Saints in souri, tensions
had mounted
Memories of slaughter
rose
in the
Illinois
and Mis-
Mormon
redoubt.
up from the ashes of the
were sometimes called on
church,
to retaliate
against hostile Gentiles. Orrin Porter
Rockwell, frontiersman once shot
and Danite,
and wounded Lilbum
ex-governor of Missouri.
Boggs,
past, inflaming
Mormon
hearts and
moning dark thoughts of atonement
At restive,
minds and sum-
their fortified
for such atrocities.
dren walked in front, a detachment of the Iron Count)'
the same time, local Indians were
becoming
Militia brought
covetously eyeing the livestock and arms of
nal, "Halt!"
emigrant trains passing through Salt Lake Cirv before turning south to pick up the California Trail. trains
—
Two
and
— grew
Mormon
up the
Mormon
utes, followed
settlers aUke.
exact figures remain
When
Lee
Smith; and the Mormons, desperatelv conserving food
Indians,
Young burst
and two
trials to
he would rather feed than
said
the emigrants but were driven
guidance by the
them
Mormon
When
off.
trains;
whom Young
fight, finallv
to let the Missouri Wildcats
and the Fancher
train "go in peace"
and sent
his friend
John Lee
to
calm the Indians. Although more Indian attacks lowed, the
Mormons
appeared.
asked for
Young counseled
fol-
refused to help the emigrants,
fell
on the
few min-
a
monument marking that of one
unknown.
Brigham Young, reporting
had been perpetrated
solely
by the
into tears. It took twenty years
bring Lee to justice, by which time
most of the other witnesses and
attacked
setders.
official
later lied to
that the slaughter
Indians,
Lee's prearranged sig-
and Indians
by the hollow silence of death, deepened
brandished a gun that he claimed had killed Joseph
The
chil-
nvent\~three died and seventeen children sur\-ived.
The
emigrants had poisoned a well; one Missouri Wildcat
surly fistfights erupted.
and
hundred forn- emigrants attacked, one hundred
particu-
two
Women
Mountain Meadows tragedy records
the
Provocations proUferated: the Indians claimed that the
in case of war, refijsed to sell supplies to the
file.
At
rear.
settlers
by shame and horror. The
numbering some i6o men, women, and children (reports vary as to the actual figures)
in a single
emigrant column. The carnage lasted onlv
the Missouri Wildcats and the Fancher Train,
larly abrasive to natives
camp
He was
participants
finally convicted
by
a
had
dis-
Mormon jur\',
taken back to the scene of the massacre, and executed
by
a
Mormon
firing squad.
Today, a centurj' and a half later, what remains
important about the massacre is
not so
villains
much
at
Mountain Meadows
the identity of either the victims or the
but rather the recognition that
it
was
a tragic
leaving the two trains to huddle fearfully in an en-
instance of religious zeal and discipline run amok.
campment
horrifj'ing episode
at
from Cedar fiirious
Mountain Meadows,
Cin.',
thirty-five miles
holding the Indians
at bay.
The
conscience of the
of September
The
haunts the
Mormon community to
this day.
emigrants threatened to return from California
someday and
assassinate
Brigham Young
— an
act that I
The H
.\ .n
dc
could have led to a devastating holy war.
At
ii, 1857,
this point John
Lee was induced
to enter into a
treacherous conspiracy- between the Indians and
of the other
Mormon
safe passage, the
setders.
some
Lured by an assurance of
unarmed emigrants ventured out of
Mormon Trail traffic the church expanded
.a
rt
Comp
.a
.m e
s
increased greatly after 1849, its
missionar}' activities
lished the Perpetual Emigrating
when
and estab-
Fund (PEF). This
transportation organization assisted poorer converts
Thi-
Mdrmon Tr
\ii
136
I
Thi-;
Mormon Tkail
who wished
New Zion bv providNew
to emigrate to the
ing low-cost ocean passage from Liverpool to
New York.
Orleans, Boston, or
newcomers
usually continued
bv
and
to
1887, a critical infusion
The Mormon C.C-J. Christensm.
PIONEERS, 11
X
trom Liverpool to
HANDCART
longest of any
/poj. Oil on canvas,
75 in. (2-/.^ xjS.i cm).
Museum of
Church History and Art, Salt Lake
City.
Chrtstensen painted a cheery picture of the
Mormon handcart pioneers on
way to
their
—
often barefoot
—
hauling a three-hundred-pound cart -was so
trail
tives chartered ship after ship
Cirv,
grueling an ordeal that one in ten
emigrants perished along the -way.
Lake
Valley.
of those years stretched
Salt
trail
New Zion between 1849 and into the Mormon melting pot. Lake
Citv,
making
it
all
the
bv
way
far the
west.
tionably the
most desperate, the most committed,
and the most impressive. Predominantlv church converts
from Scandinavia and England, thev were often
destitute victims of the Industrial Revolution a
who saw
golden opportunity- in the church's offer to pav their
passage to America at nine pounds sterling a head,
provided they signed a contract to pay
it
back through
labor once thev reached Great Salt Lake Valley.
many no doubt Rio Griffiths
felt
—
a forty-one-year-old
4, 1851. "I this
acquaintance
I
(with
my
widow of some
sailed out
of Liverpool
day took leave of every
could collect together; in
probability never to see
now
Still,
the same pangs recorded by Jane
means and experience, who on January
selves at the
them again on
children) about to leave
all
human
am for-ever my earth. I
a
America." Eighteen years and
many
North
tribulations later.
tally
and stationed them-
and load the emigrants.
captain designated for each company.
routine at sea Saints
was
awakened
The new
also rigorously controlled: the
and
to a bugle at 6:00 a.m.,
bells
clanged at various times, calling them to morning and
evening prayer and to the tasks shared by
men and women were
Unmarmen often
all.
segregated; the
sleeping on deck while cabins were occupied by women
and children. Meals were prepared b^ the passengers in relays, each shift leaving the galley spodess for the
next.
The
discipline
and cleanliness of Mormon ships
during the crossing gready reduced the incidence of
compared with that among other
disease and death
Mormon
travelers,
and
emigrant
vessels.
ships
became models
for other
Crossings were often erdivened bv
marriages and births, but sometimes darkened by death
and burials
at sea.
Jane Griffiths, on February
noted sadly in her journal that her
had "breathed
his last"
and that
22,
litde son, Josiah,
his
body was "com-
mitted to the deep, nearly a thousand miles from land, there to remain give
up
its
till
the
word goes
dead, then shall
I
have
forth for the sea to
mv child
again.
.
.
.
Elder Booth conducted the service in Long. 44 '/14 west, Lat. 25713 north."*
At Liverpool
Native Land, in order to gather with the Church of Christ, in the Valley of the Great Salt Lake, in
docks to
Passengers were divided into groups of one hundred,
with
ried
Of all the emigrants who traveled west on anv the Mormon handcart companies were unques-
Zion. But in reality the thousand-
mile trek onfoot
Trail
long pipeline from Liverpool to Salt Lake
Iowa
some rwenrv-six thousand English and
European Mormons
Utah
was highly organized. In England church representa-
rail to
or the cheaper handcart, to Great Salt sent
The
in
life
my grasp."''
New York
Iowa, or Florence, Nebraska, and then on bv wagon,
The PEF
bubble that has burst in
as "a
Transport from these
coastal cities varied, but out of Boston
the
an embittered Jane Griffiths described her
lin
in the spring ot 1856
Aposde Frank-
D. Richards busded around the docks overseeing
the departure of one ship after another,
Tn K
M(iR
M(i \
T
all
K
\
loaded with
I
1
— church converts. Passengers destined to become the three handcart companies to cross into
first
already shipped out, and
now he was
fourth and fifth companies, but sending
was
a lapse that
to
them
off late
provoke the gravest consequences
other end of the sLx-thousand-mile journey. In
at the
New York, Apostle John Taylor awaited ers,
Zion had
dispatching the
eager to hurry
them by
train to
the
Iowa
newcom-
Citv',
where
a
the carts to spell their flagging husbands, and one sevent\'-three-year-old
woman
in
Handcart Company
Number Three walked all the way. The first three companies left Iowa 1856
and arrived
at Salt
Lake
in late
City in June
September
—
speedy journey of just under four months. But such an easy crossing was not to be the fate of the fourth and fifth
handcart companies, captained by James Willie
they would be outfitted with supphes and the humble
and Edward Martin,
handcarts that they had so far heard so httle about.
pany was
late getting to
Iowa
outfitted,
and
reaching Florence, where
The handcart being simply was actuaUv
there
a glorified wheelbarrow,
httle to say
about four feet bv four
feet,
about
a
it:
wooden box
with eight-inch
rode an axle between two large wheels.
Two
ot the fourth nately,
and
were
fifth
all
of seasoned
fitted
wood
(those
with bows
ered milch fijlly
in the rear.
man between
loaded, the
that he all
cow ambUng
cart
When
had
was
— over —
was hauling about four hundred pounds
for
good
conditions on dry, level ground, free of stumps and
the mileage
fell
make
ten to twenU' miles a day, but
off quickly with deep sand or spring
muck underfoot,
or with frequent river crossings.
most handcart companies made
Lake
relatively smoothly.
it
Women
men, women, and children, organized into
The companies' equipment
the shafts could find
nearly fourteen hundred mUes. Traveling under
spirits, and the fifth company left a week The two companies were followed by two oxdrawn wagon trains captained by W. B. Hodgett and John A. Hunt. WiUie's company was made up of 500 later.
units of one
hundred, while Martin's had 576, similarly organized.
a teth-
a cart
kinds of terrain and in every' sort of weather
rocks, a cart could
it
The same held true for company. The fourth company finally
for cart repairs.
and good
Children rode inside on the bundled clothes,
and blankets, and an occasional
com-
was
pulled out of Florence on August 18 with high hopes
and cotton covers, Hke miniature covered wagons.
tents,
it
Martin's fifth
handcart companies, unfortu-
were green), and some were
where
shafts
projecting forward from the box enabled a person
early handcarts
late again
City',
sides, that
walking between them to puU the cart along behind.
The
was held up
respectively. WiUie's fourth
Still,
approximately every
included one handcart for
five people,
for every twenty' people.
and one round tent
Bulk supphes, such
as
the
ninety-eight-pound sacks of flour, were carried in the
ox-drawn wagons and sparingly issued
to handcarts as
needed. Each person was restricted to seventeen pounds
of clothing and bedding; individual food rations were limited to a half-pound of beef (on occasion), one
pound
of flour per day, and some molasses, sugar, bacon, and other items.
The PEF members of the company, for make do with these
the most part paupers, had to
through to Salt
minimal provisions, but other members with greater
often helped pull
means supplemented them with
Thk Mount on Tkail
private supplies.
H.\NDCART STORM,
TB-H. Shnhouse-THE
EMIGRANTS n.d.
IN A
Denver Public Library, Western
History Department. Stenhouse, a
a
Mormon apostate, presented
realistically grim
image ofhandcart
emigrants crossing the plains in winter.
Trouble on the
trail
was not long
in
coming
tor
The extreme dr\'ness wheels of green wood
the fourth and fifth companies.
of the plains made the cart
boot
leatlicr, .soap, jiid finally
ineffectual) lubricants.
the companies near
More
Grand
bacon
as makeshift (and
serious problems awaited
Island, Nebraska,
where
A three-day
shrink and separate, and the dust ground away the axle
a buffalo
shoulders; in desperation, the travelers used greased
search recovered only part of the ox teams, forcing
herd stampeded their
TH
1-;
M
(I
K
cattle.
\i II
N
T
i
-,
Collection, Har-
vard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts:
Young, Ewing, 68 132
Map
Harvard
left;
154 left;
.American Heritage Center, University of
tesy
124-25, 128, 729, 135, 162, 180, 190,
and Art, Tulsa, Oklahoma:
203;
Utah State Historical
Lake
Cit)': 100,
95,
n6,
left, 129, 134,
228 bottom; Randall A.
153, 186,
Wagner
Perspective,
127;
Cit}':
Society, Salt
104 top, 121
Wagner,
Cheyenne, Wyoming;
photographed by Tony Walsh,
Cincinnati; 188.
BiTTESROOT
Or^on
^^^*^^
x^
\ \ Green.
\
Independe;
River
Pacific
sGate Promontoo' montor>' Summit
Ocean
/
l
\ ,
B ent's New Fort
%,' Bent's
Old Fort \
c