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{{Short description|19th-century U.S. religious migrants}}
{{Short description|19th-century U.S. religious migrants}}
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{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2021}}
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[[File:Mormon Pioneer handcart statue.jpg|right|thumb|300px|The ''[[Handcart Pioneers (sculpture)|Handcart Pioneer Monument]]'', by [[Torleif S. Knaphus]], located on [[Temple Square]] in Salt Lake City, Utah]]
[[File:Mormon Pioneer handcart statue.jpg|right|thumb|300px|The ''[[Handcart Pioneers (sculpture)|Handcart Pioneer Monument]]'', by [[Torleif S. Knaphus]], located on [[Temple Square]] in Salt Lake City, Utah]]
The '''Mormon handcart pioneers''' were participants in the [[human migration|migration]] of members of [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] (LDS Church) to [[Salt Lake City, Utah|Salt Lake City]], [[Utah]], who used [[Cart|handcarts]] to transport their belongings.<ref name="Roberts">{{citation |url= https://www.americanheritage.com/awful-march-saints |first= David |last= Roberts |title= The Awful March of the Saints |journal= American Heritage |date= Fall 2008}}</ref> The Mormon handcart movement began in 1856 and continued until 1860.
The '''Mormon handcart pioneers''' were participants in the [[human migration|migration]] of members of [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]] (LDS Church) to [[Salt Lake City, Utah|Salt Lake City]], [[Utah]], who used [[Cart|handcarts]] to transport their belongings.<ref name="Roberts">{{citation |url= https://www.americanheritage.com/awful-march-saints |first= David |last= Roberts |title= The Awful March of the Saints |journal= American Heritage |date=Fall 2008}}</ref> The Mormon handcart movement began in 1856 and continued until 1860.


Motivated to join their fellow church members in Utah, but lacking funds for full teams of [[ox]]en or [[horse]]s, nearly 3,000 [[Mormon pioneers]] from [[England]], [[Wales]], [[Scotland]] and [[Scandinavia]] made the journey from [[Iowa]] or [[Nebraska]] to Utah in ten handcart companies. The trek was disastrous for two of the companies, which started their journey dangerously late and were caught by heavy snow and severe temperatures in central [[Wyoming]]. Despite a dramatic rescue effort, more than 210 of the 980 pioneers in these two companies died along the way. John Chislett, a survivor, wrote, "Many a father pulled his cart, with his little children on it, until the day preceding his death."<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 102.</ref>
Motivated to join their fellow church members in Utah, but lacking funds for full teams of [[ox]]en or [[horse]]s, nearly 3,000 [[Mormon pioneers]] from [[England]], [[Wales]], [[Scotland]] and [[Scandinavia]] made the journey from [[Iowa]] or [[Nebraska]] to Utah in ten handcart companies. The trek was disastrous for two of the companies, which started their journey dangerously late and were caught by heavy snow and severe temperatures in central [[Wyoming]]. Despite a dramatic rescue effort, more than 210 of the 980 pioneers in these two companies died along the way. John Chislett, a survivor, wrote, "Many a father pulled his cart, with his little children on it, until the day preceding his death."<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 102.</ref>


Although fewer than 10 percent of the 1846–68 [[Latter-day Saint]] emigrants made the journey west using handcarts, the handcart pioneers have become an important symbol in LDS culture, representing the faithfulness and sacrifice of the pioneer generation. They continue to be recognized and honored in events such as [[Pioneer Day (Utah)|Pioneer Day]], church pageants, and similar commemorations.
Although fewer than 10 percent of the 1846–1868 [[Latter-day Saint]] emigrants made the journey west using handcarts, the handcart pioneers have become an important symbol in LDS culture, representing the faithfulness and sacrifice of the pioneer generation. They continue to be recognized and honored in events such as [[Pioneer Day (Utah)|Pioneer Day]], church pageants, and similar commemorations.


==Background to the migration==
==Background to the migration==
{{Further|Mormon pioneers}}
{{Further|Mormon pioneers}}
The [[Latter Day Saint movement|Latter Day Saints]] were first organized in 1830. Early members of the church often encountered hostility, primarily due to their practice of withdrawing from secular society and gathering in locales to practice their distinct religious beliefs. Their neighbors felt threatened by the church's rapid growth in numbers, its tendency to vote as a [[voting bloc|bloc]] and acquire political power, its claims of divine favor, and, later, the practice of [[plural marriage|polygamy]].<ref>O'Dea (1957), pp. 41–49, 72–75.</ref> Violence directed against the church and its members caused the body of the church to move from [[Ohio]] to [[Missouri]], then to [[Illinois]]. Despite the frequent moves, church members were unable to escape opposition, which culminated in the [[Missouri Executive Order 44|extermination order]] against all Mormons living in the state by Missouri Governor [[Lilburn Boggs]] in 1838 and the [[Death of Joseph Smith|death]] of their leader [[Joseph Smith]] in 1844. [[Brigham Young]] said that he had received divine direction to organize the church members and head beyond the western frontier of the United States.<ref>O'Dea (1957), pp. 1–85</ref><ref>Allen and Leonard (1976), pp. 103–256.</ref>
The [[Latter Day Saint movement|Latter Day Saints]] were first organized in 1830. Early members of the church often encountered hostility, primarily due to their practice of withdrawing from secular society and gathering in locales to practice their religious beliefs. People who were not Mormon were threatened by the church's rapid growth in numbers, its tendency to vote as a [[voting bloc|bloc]] and acquire political power, its claims of divine favor, and the practice of [[plural marriage|polygamy]].<ref>O'Dea (1957), pp. 41–49, 72–75.</ref> Violence against the church and its members caused the body of the church to move from [[Ohio]] to [[Missouri]], then to [[Illinois]]. Despite the frequent moves, church members were unable to prevent opposition, culminating in the [[Missouri Executive Order 44|extermination order]] against all Mormons living Missouri by the state's governor [[Lilburn Boggs]] in 1838 and the [[Death of Joseph Smith|death]] of their leader [[Joseph Smith]] in 1844. [[Brigham Young]] said that he had received divine direction to organize the church members and head beyond the western frontier of the United States.<ref>O'Dea (1957), pp. 1–85</ref><ref>Allen and Leonard (1976), pp. 103–256.</ref>


==Need for handcart companies==
==Need for handcart companies==
Soon after the first Mormon pioneers reached Utah in 1847, the church began encouraging its converts in the [[British Isles]] and elsewhere in Europe to [[Immigration to the United States|emigrate]] to Utah. From 1849 to 1855, about 16,000 European [[Latter-day Saints]] traveled to the United States by ship, through the eastern states by rail, and to Utah by ox and wagon. Although most of these emigrants paid their own expenses, the church established the [[Perpetual Emigration Fund]] to provide financial assistance for poor emigrants to trek west, which they would repay as they were able. Contributions to expand the fund were encouraged.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 22–27.</ref>
When the first Mormon pioneers reached Utah in 1847, the church encouraged its converts in Europe to [[Immigration to the United States|emigrate]] to Utah. From 1849 to 1855, about 16,000 European [[Latter-day Saints]] traveled to the United States by ship, through the eastern states by rail, and to Utah by ox and wagon. Although most of these emigrants paid their own expenses, the church established the [[Perpetual Emigration Fund]] to provide financial assistance for poor emigrants to trek west, which they would repay as they were able. Contributions to expand the fund were encouraged.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 22–27.</ref>


When contributions and loan repayments dropped off in 1855 after a poor harvest in Utah, Young decided to begin using handcarts because the church members who remained in Europe were mostly poor. Young also believed it would speed the journey.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 28–31.</ref>
When contributions and loan repayments decreased in 1855 after a poor harvest in Utah, Young began to use handcarts because the church members who remained in Europe were mostly poor. Young also believed it would speed the immigrate's journey.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 28–31.</ref> Young proposed the plan in a letter to [[Franklin D. Richards (Mormon apostle)|Franklin D. Richards]], [[Mission president|president]] of the European [[Mission (LDS Church)|Mission]], in September 1855. Young's letter and an editorial endorsing Young's plan by Richards was published in the ''[[Millennial Star]]'' the church's England-based periodical, on December 22, 1855. The cost of the migration was expected to be reduced by one-third. The response was overwhelming– in 1856 the Perpetual Emigration Fund supported the travel of 2,012 European emigrants, compared with 1,161 the year before.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 29–34, 46.</ref>

Young proposed the plan in a letter to [[Franklin D. Richards (Mormon apostle)|Franklin D. Richards]], [[Mission president|president]] of the European [[Mission (LDS Church)|Mission]], in September 1855. Young's letter was published in the ''[[Millennial Star]]'', the church's England-based periodical, on December 22, 1855, along with an editorial by Richards endorsing the project. The cost of the migration was expected to be reduced by one-third. The response was overwhelming – in 1856 the Perpetual Emigration Fund supported the travel of 2,012 European emigrants, compared with 1,161 the year before.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 29–34, 46.</ref>


==Outfitting==
==Outfitting==
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[[File:PlattCrossing.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Reenactment: Pioneers crossing the [[Platte River]], from PBS documentary ''Sweetwater Rescue'' ]]
[[File:PlattCrossing.jpg|left|thumb|250px|Reenactment: Pioneers crossing the [[Platte River]], from PBS documentary ''Sweetwater Rescue'' ]]


Built to Young's design, the handcarts resembled a large [[wheelbarrow]], with two wheels {{convert|5|ft|m|abbr=off|spell=in}} in diameter and a single axle {{convert|4+1/2|ft|m|spell=in}} wide, and weighing {{convert|60|lb|kg}}. Running along each side of the bed were seven-foot (2.1 m) pull shafts ending with a three-foot (0.9&nbsp;m) crossbar at the front. The crossbar allowed the carts to be pushed or pulled. Cargo was carried in a box about three feet by four feet (0.9&nbsp;m by 1.2&nbsp;m), with {{convert|8|in|m}} walls. The handcarts generally carried up to {{convert|250|lb|kg}} of supplies and luggage, though they were capable of handling loads as heavy as {{convert|500|lb|kg}}. Carts used in the first year's migration were made entirely of wood ("Iowa hickory or oak"); in later years a stronger design was substituted, which included metal elements.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 53–55.</ref><ref>Dekker (2006), p. 45</ref><ref>{{citation|last=Pratt|first=Steve |title=1856–60, Handcarts: Construction Plans |work=Heritage Gateways |publisher=Utah State Office of Education and [[Utah System of Higher Education]] |orig-year=1989 |year=2006 |url=http://heritage.uen.org/companies/Wcc558845eddb9.htm |access-date=2013-06-04 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522184018/http://heritage.uen.org/companies/Wcc558845eddb9.htm |archive-date=2013-05-22 }}</ref>
Built to Young's design, the handcarts resembled a large [[wheelbarrow]], with two wheels. They were {{convert|5|ft|m|abbr=off|spell=in}} in diameter and a single axle {{convert|4+1/2|ft|m|spell=in}} wide, and weighing {{convert|60|lb|kg}}. Running along each side of the bed were seven-foot (2.1 m) pull shafts ending with a three-foot (0.9&nbsp;m) crossbar at the front. The crossbar allowed the carts to be pushed or pulled. Cargo was carried in a box about three feet by four feet (0.9&nbsp;m by 1.2&nbsp;m), with {{convert|8|in|m}} walls. The handcarts generally carried up to {{convert|250|lb|kg}} of supplies and luggage, though they were capable of handling loads as heavy as {{convert|500|lb|kg}}. Carts used in the first year's migration were made entirely of wood ("Iowa hickory or oak"); in later years a stronger design was substituted, which included metal elements.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 53–55.</ref><ref>Dekker (2006), p. 45</ref><ref>{{citation|last=Pratt|first=Steve |title=1856–60, Handcarts: Construction Plans |work=Heritage Gateways |publisher=Utah State Office of Education and [[Utah System of Higher Education]] |orig-year=1989 |year=2006 |url=http://heritage.uen.org/companies/Wcc558845eddb9.htm |access-date=June 4, 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130522184018/http://heritage.uen.org/companies/Wcc558845eddb9.htm |archive-date=May 22, 2013 }}</ref>


The handcart companies were organized using the handcarts and sleeping tents as the primary units. Five people were assigned per handcart, with each individual limited to {{convert|17|lb|kg}} of clothing and bedding. Each round tent, supported by a center pole, housed 20 occupants and was supervised by a tent captain. Five tents were supervised by the captain of a hundred (or "sub-captain"). Provisions for each group of one hundred emigrants were carried in an ox wagon, and were distributed by the tent captains.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 58–59, 157</ref><ref>Dekker (2006), p. 41.</ref>
The handcart companies were organized using the handcarts and sleeping tents as the primary units. Five people were assigned per handcart, with each individual limited to {{convert|17|lb|kg}} of clothing and bedding. Each round tent, supported by a center pole, housed 20 occupants and was supervised by a tent captain. Five tents were supervised by the captain of a hundred (or "sub-captain"). Provisions for each group of one hundred emigrants were carried in an ox wagon, and were distributed by the tent captains.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 58–59, 157</ref><ref>Dekker (2006), p. 41.</ref>
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Across Iowa they followed an existing road about {{convert|275|mi|km}} to [[Council Bluffs, Iowa|Council Bluffs]], following a route that is close to current [[U.S. Route 6]]. After crossing the [[Missouri River]], they paused for a few days at a [[Winter Quarters, Nebraska|Mormon outpost]] in [[Florence, Nebraska]] (now part of [[Omaha, Nebraska|Omaha]]), for repairs, before beginning the remaining {{convert|1,030|mi|km|adj=on}} journey along the [[Mormon Trail]] to Salt Lake City.<ref>Kimball (1979).</ref>
Across Iowa they followed an existing road about {{convert|275|mi|km}} to [[Council Bluffs, Iowa|Council Bluffs]], following a route that is close to current [[U.S. Route 6]]. After crossing the [[Missouri River]], they paused for a few days at a [[Winter Quarters, Nebraska|Mormon outpost]] in [[Florence, Nebraska]] (now part of [[Omaha, Nebraska|Omaha]]), for repairs, before beginning the remaining {{convert|1,030|mi|km|adj=on}} journey along the [[Mormon Trail]] to Salt Lake City.<ref>Kimball (1979).</ref>


Initial problems with the carts occurred because the wood used to construct them was said to have been [[green wood|"green timber"]], with many more breakdowns than anticipated. When the first handcart company reached Winter Quarters, Edmund Ellsworth had a member of the company "tin" the wooden axles and also installed "thick hoop iron skeins" which enabled the handcart axles to turn more easily and resist breakage much better.<ref>{{cite web|title=Biography of Edmund Lovell Ellsworth|url=http://www.public.asu.edu/~ellswork/EdmundsBiography.htm|website=Arizona State University|access-date=June 16, 2014}}</ref>
Initial problems with the carts occurred because the wood used to construct them was said to have been [[green wood|"green timber"]], or wood from trees that were recently chopped down and not given sufficient time to dry, causing an increase in breakdowns. When the first handcart company reached Winter Quarters, Ellsworth had a member of the company "tin" the wooden axles and also installed "thick hoop iron skeins" which enabled the handcart axles to turn more easily and resist breakage much better.<ref>{{cite web|title=Biography of Edmund Lovell Ellsworth|url=http://www.public.asu.edu/~ellswork/EdmundsBiography.htm|website=Arizona State University|access-date=June 16, 2014}}</ref>


The companies made good time, and their trips were largely uneventful. The emigrant companies included many children and elderly individuals, and pushing and pulling handcarts was difficult work. Journals and recollections describe periods of illness and hunger. Like other companies traveling on the [[Emigrant Trail]], deaths occurred along the way. Hafen and Hafen's ''Handcarts to Zion'' lists 13 deaths from the first company, seven from the second, and fewer than seven from the third. Journal entries reflect the optimism of the handcart pioneers, even amid their hardships:
The companies made good time, and their trips were largely uneventful. The emigrant companies included many children and elderly individuals, and transporting handcarts was difficult. Journals and recollections describe periods of illness and hunger. Hafen and Hafen's ''Handcarts to Zion'' lists 13 deaths from the first company, seven from the second, and fewer than seven from the third. The first two companies arrived in Salt Lake City on September 26 and the third followed less than a week later. The first three companies were regarded as having demonstrated the feasibility of emigrating using handcarts.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 59–79.</ref>

{{quote|People made fun of us as we walked, pulling our handcarts, but the weather was fine and the roads were excellent and although I was sick and we were very tired at night, still we thought it was a glorious way to go to [[Zion (Mormonism)|Zion]].<ref>Emigrant Priscilla M. Evans of the third company, as quoted by Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 82–83.</ref>}}

The first two companies arrived in Salt Lake City on September 26 and the third followed less than a week later. The first three companies were regarded as having demonstrated the feasibility of emigrating using handcarts.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 59–79.</ref>


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==1856: Willie and Martin handcart companies==
==1856: Willie and Martin handcart companies==
The last two handcart companies of 1856 departed late from England. The ship ''Thornton'', carrying the emigrants who became the Willie Company, did not leave England until May 4. The leader of the Latter-day Saints on the ''Thornton'' was [[James G. Willie]]. Another eleven days passed before the ''Horizon'' departed, carrying the emigrants who later formed the Martin Company. The late departures may have been the result of difficulties in procuring ships in response to the unexpected demand, but the results would be tragic.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 91.</ref>
The last two handcart companies of 1856 departed late from England. The ship ''Thornton'', carrying the emigrants who became the Willie Company, left England on May 4. The leader of the Latter-day Saints on the ship was [[James G. Willie]]. ''Horizon'' departed eleven days later, carrying the emigrants who later formed the Martin Company. The late departures may have been the result of difficulties in procuring ships in response to the unexpected demand.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 91.</ref>


With slow communications in the era before the transatlantic telegraph, the church's agents in Iowa City were not expecting the additional emigrants and had to make frantic preparations for their arrival. Critical weeks were spent hastily assembling the carts and outfitting the companies. When the companies reached Florence, additional time was lost making repairs to the poorly built carts.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 92–94.</ref> Emigrant John Chislett describes the problems with the carts:<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 99–100.</ref>
With slow communications in the era before the transatlantic telegraph, the church's agents in Iowa City were not expecting the additional emigrants and made frantic preparations for their arrival. Weeks were spent hastily assembling the carts and outfitting the companies. When the companies reached Florence, additional time was lost making repairs to the poorly built carts.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 92–94.</ref> Emigrant John Chislett describes the problems with the carts:<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 99–100.</ref>


{{quote|The axles and boxes being of wood, and being ground out by the dust that found its way there in spite of our efforts to keep it out, together with the extra weight put on the carts, had the effect of breaking the axles at the shoulder. All kinds of expedients were resorted to as remedies for the growing evil, but with variable success. Some wrapped their axles with leather obtained from bootlegs; others with tin, obtained by sacrificing tin-plates, kettles, or buckets from their mess outfit. Besides these inconveniences, there was felt a great lack of a proper lubricator. Of anything suitable for this purpose we had none at all.}}
{{quote|The axles and boxes being of wood, and being ground out by the dust that found its way there in spite of our efforts to keep it out, together with the extra weight put on the carts, had the effect of breaking the axles at the shoulder. All kinds of expedients were resorted to as remedies for the growing evil, but with variable success. Some wrapped their axles with leather obtained from bootlegs; others with tin, obtained by sacrificing tin-plates, kettles, or buckets from their mess outfit. Besides these inconveniences, there was felt a great lack of a proper lubricator. Of anything suitable for this purpose we had none at all.}}


Prior to the Willie Company departing Florence, the company met to debate the wisdom of such a late departure. Because the emigrants were unfamiliar with the trail and the climate, they deferred to the returning missionaries and church agents. One of the returning missionaries, [[Levi Savage Jr.|Levi Savage]], urged them to spend the winter in Nebraska. He argued that such a late departure with a company consisting of the elderly, women, and young children would lead to suffering, sickness, and even death. All of the other church [[Elder (Mormonism)|elders]] argued that the trip should go forward, expressing optimism that the company would be protected by [[miracle|divine intervention]]. Some members of the company, perhaps as many as 100, decided to spend the winter in Florence or in Iowa, but the majority, about 404 in number (including Savage) continued the journey west. The Willie Company left Florence on August 17 and the Martin Company on August 27. Two ox-wagon trains, led by captains W.B. Hodgett and John A. Hunt, followed the Martin Company.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 96–97.</ref>
Prior to the Willie Company departing Florence, the company met to debate if they should continue the journey immediately or wait for the spring. Because the emigrants were unfamiliar with the trail and the climate, they deferred to the returning missionaries and church agents. One of the returning missionaries, [[Levi Savage Jr.|Levi Savage]], urged them to spend the winter in Nebraska. He argued that such a late departure with a company consisting of the elderly, women, and young children would lead to suffering, sickness, and death. All of the other church [[Elder (Mormonism)|elders]] argued that the trip should go forward, expressing optimism that the company would be protected by [[miracle|divine intervention]]. Some members of the company, perhaps as many as 100, decided to spend the winter in Florence or in Iowa, but the majority, about 404 in number (including Savage) continued the journey west. The Willie Company left Florence on August 17 and the Martin Company on August 27. Two ox-wagon trains, led by captains W.B. Hodgett and John A. Hunt, followed the Martin Company.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 96–97.</ref>


Near [[Wood River, Nebraska|Wood River]], [[Nebraska]], a herd of [[American bison|bison]] caused the Willie Company's cattle to [[stampede]], and nearly 30 cattle were lost. Left without enough cattle to pull all of the wagons, each handcart was required to take on an additional {{convert|100|lb|kg}} of flour.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 100.</ref>
Near [[Wood River, Nebraska|Wood River]], [[Nebraska]], a herd of [[American bison|bison]] caused the Willie Company's cattle to [[stampede]], and nearly 30 cattle were lost. Left without enough cattle to pull all of the wagons, each handcart was required to take on an additional {{convert|100|lb|kg}} of flour.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 100.</ref> In early September, Richards, returning from Europe where he had served as the church's [[mission president]], passed the emigrant companies. Richards and the 12 returning missionaries who accompanied him, traveling in carriages and light wagons pulled by horses and mules, pressed on to Utah to obtain assistance for the emigrants.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 97–98, 119.</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), p. 5.</ref>

In early September, Franklin D. Richards, returning from Europe where he had served as the church's [[mission president]], passed the emigrant companies. Richards and the 12 returning missionaries who accompanied him, traveling in carriages and light wagons pulled by horses and mules, pressed on to Utah to obtain assistance for the emigrants.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 97–98, 119.</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), p. 5.</ref> The Loader family and Harrison family were with the Martin Company. Patience Loader Rozsa Archer (at the time of their journey the twenty-nine-year-old Patience Loader) later wrote in her autobiography (c.1887) of the struggle:<blockquote>[T]his was in the month of '''september [1856]''' and our dear father was beginning to get very weak and food was geting Short day by day his strength began to fail him Some days he was not able to pull the cart but had to walk[.]<ref>{{Cite book|last=Petree|first=Sandra Ailey|title=Recollections of Past Days the Autobiography of Patience Loader Rozsa Archer|url=https://archive.org/details/recollectionspas00petr|url-access=limited|publisher=Utah State University Press|year=2006|location=Logan, Utah|pages=[https://archive.org/details/recollectionspas00petr/page/n82 70]}}</ref></blockquote>


===Disaster and rescue===
===Disaster and rescue===
In early October the two companies reached [[Fort Laramie National Historic Site|Fort Laramie]], Wyoming, where they expected to be restocked with provisions, but no provisions were pre-stocked for them. The companies cut back food rations down to {{cvt|12|oz|g}} per person, hoping that their supplies would last until help could be sent from Utah. To lighten their loads, the Martin Company cut the luggage allowance to {{convert|10|lb|kg}} per person, discarding clothing and blankets that soon would be desperately needed.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 101, 108.</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 3–4.</ref>
In early October the two companies reached [[Fort Laramie National Historic Site|Fort Laramie]], Wyoming. They expected to be restocked with provisions, but they were unavailable. The companies cut back food rations down to {{cvt|12|oz|g}} per person, hoping that their supplies would last until help arrived from Utah. To lighten their loads, the Martin Company cut the luggage allowance to {{convert|10|lb|kg}} per person, discarding clothing and blankets.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 101, 108.</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 3–4.</ref>


[[File:Man3.jpg|left|thumb|upright|Dramatization of man pulling [[handcart]] through snow]]
[[File:Man3.jpg|left|thumb|upright|Dramatization of man pulling [[handcart]] through snow]]
On October 4, the Richards party reached Salt Lake City and conferred with Brigham Young and other church leaders. The next morning the church held a [[General Conference (LDS Church)|general conference]], where Young and the other speakers called on church members to provide wagons, [[mule]]s, supplies, and [[teamster]]s for a rescue mission. On the morning of October 7, the first rescue party left Salt Lake City with 16 wagon-loads of food and supplies, pulled by four-mule teams with 27 young men serving as teamsters and rescuers. The party elected George D. Grant as their captain. Throughout October more wagon trains were assembled, and by the end of the month 250 relief wagons were on the road.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 119–125.</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 5–11.</ref>
On October 4, the Richards party reached Salt Lake City and conferred with Brigham Young and other church leaders. The next morning the church held a [[General Conference (LDS Church)|general conference]], where Young and the other speakers called on church members to provide wagons, [[mule]]s, supplies, and [[teamster]]s for a rescue mission. On the morning of October 7, the first rescue party left Salt Lake City with 16 wagon-loads of food and supplies, pulled by four-mule teams with 27 young men serving as teamsters and rescuers. Throughout October more wagon trains were assembled, and by the end of the month 250 relief wagons were sent.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 119–125.</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 5–11.</ref>


Meanwhile, the Willie and Martin companies were running out of food and encountering bitterly cold temperatures. On October 19, a blizzard struck the region,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Long |first1=Gary Duane |title=The Journey of the James G. Willie Handcart Company October, 1856 |date=2009}}</ref> halting the two companies and the relief party. The Willie Company was along the [[Sweetwater River (Wyoming)|Sweetwater River]] approaching the [[Continental Divide]]. A scouting party sent ahead by the main rescue party found and greeted the emigrants, gave them a small amount of flour, encouraged them that rescue was near, and then rushed onward to try to locate the Martin Company.<ref>The various sources disagree regarding the identities of the members of first "express team" that found the Willie Company. Hafen and Hafen [1960] (1981), quoting emigrant John Chislett, name [[Joseph Angell Young|Joseph Young]] and Stephen Taylor. Jones (1890), a member of the rescue party, names Cyrus Wheelock and Stephen Taylor. Bartholomew and Arrington (1992) name Joseph Young, Abel Garr, and Cyrus Wheelock.</ref> The members of the Willie Company had just reached the end of their flour supplies. They began slaughtering the handful of broken-down cattle that still remained while their death toll mounted. On October 20, Captain Willie and Joseph Elder went ahead by mule through the snow to locate the supply train and inform them of the company's desperate situation. They arrived at the rescue party's campsite near [[South Pass (Wyoming)|South Pass]] that evening, and by the next evening the rescue party reached the Willie Company and provided them with food and assistance. Half of the rescue party remained to assist the Willie Company while the other half pressed forward to assist the Martin Company. The difficulties of the Willie Company were not yet over. On October 23, the second day after the main rescue party had arrived, the Willie Company faced the most difficult section of the trail—the ascent up Rocky Ridge. The climb took place during a howling snowstorm through knee-deep snow. That night 13 emigrants died.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 101–107, 126</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 11–18</ref><ref>Christy (1997), pp 37–39.</ref>
The Willie and Martin companies were running out of food and encountering extremely cold temperatures. On October 19, a blizzard struck the region,<ref>{{cite book |last1=Long |first1=Gary Duane |title=The Journey of the James G. Willie Handcart Company October, 1856 |date=2009}}</ref> halting the two companies and the relief party. The Willie Company was along the [[Sweetwater River (Wyoming)|Sweetwater River]] approaching the [[Continental Divide]]. A scouting party sent ahead by the main rescue party found and greeted the emigrants, gave them a small amount of flour, encouraged them that rescue was near, and then rushed onward to try to locate the Martin Company.<ref>The various sources disagree regarding the identities of the members of first "express team" that found the Willie Company. Hafen and Hafen [1960] (1981), quoting emigrant John Chislett, name [[Joseph Angell Young|Joseph Young]] and Stephen Taylor. Jones (1890), a member of the rescue party, names Cyrus Wheelock and Stephen Taylor. Bartholomew and Arrington (1992) name Joseph Young, Abel Garr, and Cyrus Wheelock.</ref> The members of the Willie Company had reached the end of their flour supplies and slaughtered the handful of broken-down cattle that still remained. On October 20, Captain Willie and Joseph Elder went ahead by mule through the snow to locate the supply train and inform them of the company's desperate situation. They arrived at the rescue party's campsite near [[South Pass (Wyoming)|South Pass]] that evening, and by the next evening, the rescue party reached the Willie Company and provided them with food and assistance. Half of the rescue party remained to assist the Willie Company while the other half pressed forward to assist the Martin Company. On October 23, the second day after the main rescue party had arrived, the Willie Company faced the most difficult section of the trail—the ascent up Rocky Ridge. The climb took place during a howling snowstorm through knee-deep snow. That night 13 emigrants died.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 101–107, 126</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 11–18</ref><ref>Christy (1997), pp 37–39.</ref>


On October 19, the Martin Company was about {{convert|110|mi|km}} further east, making its last crossing of the [[North Platte River]] near present-day [[Casper, Wyoming]].<ref>Christy (1997).</ref> Shortly after completing the crossing, the blizzard struck. Many members of the company suffered from [[hypothermia]] or [[frostbite]] after wading through the frigid river. They set up camp at Red Bluffs, unable to continue forward through the snow. Meanwhile, the original scouting party continued eastward until it reached a small vacant fort at [[Devil's Gate (Wyoming)|Devil's Gate]], where they had been instructed to wait for the rest of the rescue party if they had not found the Martin Company. When the main rescue party rejoined them, another scouting party consisting of [[Joseph Angell Young|Joseph Young]], Abel Garr, and [[Daniel Webster Jones (Mormon)|Daniel Webster Jones]] was sent forward. The Martin company remained in their camp at Red Bluffs for nine days until the three scouts finally arrived on October 28. By the time the scouts arrived, 56 members of the company had died. The scouts urged the emigrants to begin moving again. During this interval, the party was met by [[Ephraim Hanks]], bringing meat from a recently slaughtered buffalo, likely saving many lives as the nutritive value of the protein and fat in the meat was much higher than that of the exhausted flour supplies, etc. He also performed many blessings and helped in some amputations, etc. to stop the progression of the frostbite and gangrene that would have otherwise killed more members of the company. Three days later the main rescue party met the Martin Company and the Hodgett and Hunt wagon companies and helped them on to [[Devil's Gate (Wyoming)|Devil's Gate]].<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 108–116, 126</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 21–25</ref><ref>Christy (1997), pp. 39–47.</ref>
On October 19, the Martin Company was about {{convert|110|mi|km}} further east, making its last crossing of the [[North Platte River]] near present-day [[Casper, Wyoming]].<ref>Christy (1997).</ref> Shortly after completing the crossing, the blizzard struck. Many members of the company suffered from [[hypothermia]] or [[frostbite]] after wading through the frigid river. They set up camp at Red Bluffs, unable to continue forward through the snow. Meanwhile, the original scouting party continued eastward until it reached a small vacant fort at [[Devil's Gate (Wyoming)|Devil's Gate]], where they had been instructed to wait for the rest of the rescue party if they had not found the Martin Company. When the main rescue party rejoined them, another scouting party consisting of [[Joseph Angell Young|Joseph Young]], Abel Garr, and [[Daniel Webster Jones (Mormon)|Daniel Webster Jones]] was sent forward. The Martin company remained in their camp at Red Bluffs for nine days until the three scouts arrived on October 28; 56 members of the company had died while they waited. The scouts urged the emigrants to begin moving again. During this interval, the party was met by [[Ephraim Hanks]], bringing meat from a recently slaughtered buffalo. The meat likely saved many lives as the nutritive value was much higher than that of the other supplies. He also performed many blessings and helped in some amputations to stop the progression of the frostbite and gangrene that would have otherwise killed more members of the company. Three days later the main rescue party met the Martin Company and the Hodgett and Hunt wagon companies, and they helped them on to [[Devil's Gate (Wyoming)|Devil's Gate]].<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 108–116, 126</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 21–25</ref><ref>Christy (1997), pp. 39–47.</ref>


George D. Grant, who headed the rescue party, reported to Young:<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 228</ref>
George D. Grant, who headed the rescue party, reported to Young:<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 228</ref>
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[[File:MartinsCove.JPG|thumb|upright=1.2|[[Martin's Cove]], [[Wyoming]]]]
[[File:MartinsCove.JPG|thumb|upright=1.2|[[Martin's Cove]], [[Wyoming]]]]
At Devil's Gate the rescue party unloaded the baggage carried in the wagons of the Hodgett and Hunt wagon companies that had been following the Martin Company so the wagons could be used to transport the weakest emigrants. A small group, led by Daniel Webster Jones, remained at Devil's Gate over the winter to protect the property. The severe weather forced the Martin Company to halt for another five days; the company moved into [[Martin's Cove]], a few miles west of Devil's Gate, as it was much more protected than the open plains just to the east. This is where the famous crossing of the Sweetwater River on November 4 occurred (see more information below). During this season, the River, though shallow &ndash; about {{convert|2|ft|m|abbr=off}} &ndash; was also {{convert|90|to|120|ft|m|abbr=off}} wide. The stream temperature was frigid and clogged with floating ice. Some of the men of the rescue party spent hours pulling the carts and carrying many of the emigrants across the river.<ref name="Orton 2006, pp. 10–14">Orton (2006), pp. 10–14.</ref> However, many members of the company crossed the river themselves, some even pulling their own handcarts across.<ref name="Orton 2006, pp. 21–24">Orton (2006), pp. 21–24.</ref><ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 132–134</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 25–28.</ref>
At Devil's Gate, the rescue party unloaded the baggage carried in the wagons of the Hodgett and Hunt wagon companies that had been following the Martin Company so the wagons could be used to transport the weakest emigrants. A small group, led by Jones, remained at Devil's Gate over the winter to protect the property. The severe weather forced the Martin Company to halt for five days; the company moved into [[Martin's Cove]], a few miles west of Devil's Gate, as it was much more protected than the open plains to the east. During this season, the river, though shallow at about {{convert|2|ft|m|abbr=off}}, was also {{convert|90|to|120|ft|m|abbr=off}} wide. The stream temperature was frigid and clogged with floating ice. Some of the men of the rescue party spent hours pulling the carts and carrying many of the emigrants across the river,<ref name="Orton 2006, pp. 10–14">Orton (2006), pp. 10–14.</ref> while many members of the company crossed the river themselves, with some pulling their own handcarts.<ref name="Orton 2006, pp. 21–24">Orton (2006), pp. 21–24.</ref><ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 132–134</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 25–28.</ref> The rescue parties escorted the emigrants from both companies to Utah through snow and severe weather. When the Willie Company arrived in Salt Lake City on November 9, 68 members of the company had died from disease and exposure.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 127–131</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 17–19.</ref>


Meanwhile, a backup relief party of 77 teams and wagons was making its way east to provide additional assistance to the Martin Company. After passing Fort Bridger, the leaders of the backup party concluded that the Martin Company must have wintered east of the Rockies, so they turned back. When word of the returning backup relief party was communicated to Young, he ordered the courier to return and tell them to turn back east and continue until they found the handcart company. On November 18, the backup party met the Martin Company with the supplies so they could continue the journey. The 104 wagons carrying the Martin Company arrived in Salt Lake City on November 30; at least 145 members of the company had died during the journey. Many of the survivors had to have fingers, toes, or limbs amputated due to severe frostbite.<ref>Hafen & Hafen (1981), pp. 134–138; Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 28–37.</ref> Residents of Utah allowed the compnaies to stay in their homes during the winter. The emigrants would eventually go to Latter-day Saint settlements throughout Utah and the West.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 138–140</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 39–42.</ref>
The rescue parties escorted the emigrants from both companies to Utah through more snow and severe weather while their members continued to suffer death from disease and exposure. The Willie Company arrived in Salt Lake City on November 9; 68 members of the company had lost their lives.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 127–131</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 17–19.</ref>

Meanwhile, a backup relief party of 77 teams and wagons was making its way east to provide additional assistance to the Martin Company. After passing Fort Bridger the leaders of the backup party concluded that the Martin Company must have wintered east of the Rockies, so they turned back. When word of the returning backup relief party was communicated to Young, he ordered the courier to return and tell them to turn back east and continue until they found the handcart company, but several days had been lost. On November 18, the backup party met the Martin Company with the greatly needed supplies. At last all the members of the handcart party were now able to ride in wagons. The 104 wagons carrying the Martin Company arrived in Salt Lake City on November 30; at least 145 members of the company had lost their lives. Many of the survivors had to have fingers, toes, or limbs amputated due to severe frostbite.<ref>Hafen & Hafen (1981), pp. 134–138; Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 28–37.</ref>

After the companies arrived in Utah, the residents generously opened their homes to the arriving emigrants, feeding and caring for them over the winter. The emigrants would eventually go on to Latter-day Saint settlements throughout Utah and the West.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 138–140</ref><ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 39–42.</ref>

===Sweetwater River crossing ===
One of the most persistent and popular stories regarding the Mormon pioneers was about three of the rescuers who helped the pioneers cross Sweetwater River.<ref name=Roberts2008>{{cite book
| last=Roberts
| first=David
| title=Devil's Gate: Brigham Young and the Great Mormon Handcart Tragedy
| year=2008
| publisher=[[Simon & Schuster]]
| location=New York
| isbn=978-1-4165-3988-9
| url=https://archive.org/details/devilsgatebrigha00robe
}}</ref>{{rp|242}} The most popular telling, by Solomon Kimball, states:

{{quote|Three eighteen-year-old boys belonging to the relief party came to the rescue; and to the astonishment of all who saw, carried nearly every member of that ill-fated handcart company across the snow-bound stream. The strain was so terrible, and the exposure so great, that in later years all the boys died from the effects of it. When President Brigham Young heard of this heroic act, he wept like a child, and later declared publicly, "That act alone will ensure C. Allen Huntington, George W. Grant, and David P. Kimball an everlasting salvation in the Celestial Kingdom of God, worlds without end.<ref>Solomon F. Kimball, "Belated Emigrants of 1856," Improvement Era, Feb. 1914, p. 288</ref>}}

This version was quoted by [[Gordon B. Hinckley]],<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/1981/10/four-bs-for-boys?lang=eng|title=Four Bs for Boys|author=Gordon B. Hinckley|year=1981}}</ref> [[James E. Faust]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/1992/10/a-priceless-heritage?lang=eng|title=A Priceless Heritage|author=James E. Faust|year=1992}}</ref> and was previously taught in [[Sunday School (LDS Church)|Sunday School]] in the LDS Church for both adults<ref>{{cite book|title=Doctrine and Covenants and Church History: Gospel Doctrine Teacher's Manual|year=1999|url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/manual/doctrine-and-covenants-and-church-history-gospel-doctrine-teachers-manual/lesson-35-a-mission-of-saving}}</ref> and children.<ref name="lds.org">{{cite book|title=Primary 5: Doctrine and Covenants and Church History|year=1997|url=https://www.lds.org/manual/primary-5-doctrine-and-covenants-and-church-history/lesson-43-handcart-companies-come-to-the-salt-lake-valley?lang=eng|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170929000925/https://www.lds.org/manual/primary-5-doctrine-and-covenants-and-church-history/lesson-43-handcart-companies-come-to-the-salt-lake-valley?lang=eng|archive-date=2017-09-29}}</ref>

Chad Orton notes it would be physically impossible for three boys to carry five hundred people across the river in two hours.<ref>Orton (2006), pp. 16–18.</ref> In actuality, the number of rescuers was considerably larger than three, eighteen of whom have been positively identified as being at the Sweetwater crossing.<ref name="Orton 2006, pp. 10–14"/> The rescuers brought ten rescue wagons in addition to the wagons the Martin Company had with them. Many survivors wrote about riding the wagons across.<ref>Orton (2006), pp. 18–21.</ref> However, because of time constraints, not everyone could ride the wagons. Some were carried, but other survivors wrote that they crossed the river themselves or with the help of people other than the three boys.<ref name="Orton 2006, pp. 21–24"/> The boys mentioned in the story did help some people across, but not "nearly every member" as reported in the mythologized version of the story. While the three boys were among those that helped several across, the ages were wrong. C. Allen Huntington was 24, David P. Kimball was 17, and George W. Grant was 16.<ref>Orton (2006), pp. 14.</ref> There is no medical evidence that they died from effects of the crossing, and most lived active and relatively long lives.<ref>Orton (2006), pp. 24-29.</ref> Outside of Kimball's account, there is no other account of Brigham Young promising everlasting salvation to the rescuers based on a single act. Orton notes that such a promise is inconsistent with church doctrine.<ref>Orton (2006), pp. 29-32.</ref><ref name=Roberts2008 />{{rp|242}} John Thomas notes that Solomon Kimball did not witness the crossing, but relied heavily on other sources, particularly [[Orson F. Whitney]]'s 1888 account, who also claimed that all of the boys died from the event, even though Huntington was still alive in 1888.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Sweetwater Revisited, Sour Notes, and the Ways of Learning|author=John C. Thomas|year=2009|journal=Religious Educator|volume=10|issue=2|url=https://rsc.byu.edu/archived/volume-10-number-2-2009/sweetwater-revisited-sour-notes-and-ways-learning}}</ref>

===Faithfulness of the survivors===
Another common myth is that none of the survivors of the Willie or Martin handcart companies ever complained and they never apostatized from the church.<ref>{{cite news | title=Some myths accompany stories of pioneers' arrival | author = Lynn Arave | date= July 24, 2008 | url = https://www.deseretnews.com/article/705381370/Some-myths-accompany-stories-of-pioneers-arrival.html | publisher = Deseret News }}</ref> A comment Francis Webster had made in a Sunday School class in Cedar City was later quoted by [[David O. McKay]] in 1948, and later by Gordon B. Hinckley,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/1991/10/our-mission-of-saving?lang=eng|author=Gordon B. Hinckley|year=1991|title=Our Mission of Saving}}</ref> James E. Faust<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/1979/04/the-refiners-fire?lang=eng|title=The Refiners Fire|year=1979|author=James E. Faust}}</ref> and was taught to children:<ref name="lds.org"/>
{{quote|... did you ever hear a survivor of that company utter a word of criticism? Not one of that company ever apostatized or left the church because everyone of us came through with the absolute knowledge that God lives for we became acquainted with him in our extremities.}}

However, several people in the Willie or Martin handcart companies did leave the church, including John Chislett, John Ahmanson, Elizabeth Sermon, Henry Augustus Squires, Henry Kemp and Deborah Jane Chapman. Many of the survivors complained.<ref name=Roberts2008 />{{rp|287}}<ref name=Orton2006>{{cite journal|url=https://byustudies.byu.edu/file/5104/download?token=q7IGKLc9|journal=BYU Studies Quarterly|volume=45|issue=2|year=2006|title=Francis Webster: The Unique Story of One Handcart Pioneer's Faith and Sacrifice|author=Chad M. Orton}}</ref>{{rp|125}}

Palmer gave the quote during a radio series of ''Men You Should Know'' describing the life of Webster about forty years after Webster died. Palmer said that he was paraphrasing Webster, and given the lapse of time and the casual nature of a Sunday School class, Orton believes it unlikely to be an exact quote. Orton believes Palmer was trying to emphasize Webster's character, rather than give a definitive statement on the faithfulness of all the members of the Willie Martin handcart company, and finds it unlikely that it was an exact quote. Orton also finds it unlikely that Webster knew all of the survivors, given that they spread throughout Utah after they arrived and didn't have a reunion until after Webster's death. Orton believes Webster was only referring to the pioneers in Cedar City, where the quote was given.<ref name=Orton2006 />


===Responsibility for the tragedy===
===Responsibility for the tragedy===
American West historian, [[Wallace Stegner]], described the inadequate planning and improvident decisions leading to the tragedy when he wrote,<ref>Stegner (1992), p. 222.</ref>

{{quote|In urging the method upon Europe's poor, Brigham and the priesthood would over-reach themselves; in shepherding them from Liverpool to the valley, the ordinarily reliable missionary and emigration organization would break down at several critical points; in accepting the assurances of their leaders and the wishful importunities of their own hope, the emigrants would commit themselves to greater sacrifices than even the Nauvoo refugees; and in rallying from compound fatal error to bring the survivors in, the priesthood and the people of Mormondom would show themselves at their compassionate and efficient best.}}

As early as November 2, 1856, while the Willie and Martin companies were still making their way to safety, Brigham Young responded to criticism of his own leadership by rebuking Franklin Richards and Daniel Spencer for allowing the companies to leave so late.<ref>Christy (1997), pp. 22–23</ref><ref>Stegner (1992), pp. 256–258.</ref><ref>Richards was the highest ranking church official in the area at the time the companies left Florence, and Spencer was the church's agent in Iowa City.</ref> However, many authors argued that Young, as author of the plan, was responsible. [[Ann Eliza Young]], daughter of one of the men in charge of building the carts and a former plural wife of Brigham Young, described her ex-husband's plan as a "cold-blooded, scheming, blasphemous policy".<ref>{{citation |last= Young |first= Ann Eliza |author-link= Ann Eliza Young |title= Wife No. 19, or the story of a life in bondage. Being a complete exposé of Mormonism, and revealing the sorrows, sacrifices and sufferings of women in polygamy |location= Hartford, Conn. |publisher= Dustin, Gilman & Co. |year= 1876 |pages= [https://archive.org/stream/wifenoorstoryofl00youniala#page/204/mode/2up 204–205] }}.</ref> Stegner described Richards as a [[scapegoat]] for Young's fundamental errors in planning, though Howard Christy, professor emeritus and former senior editor of scholarly publications at [[Brigham Young University]] (BYU), noted that Richards, as the highest-ranking official in Florence, Nebraska area, was the official who would have had the authority and capability to have averted the tragedy by halting their late departure.<ref>Stegner (1992), p. 259</ref><ref>Christy (1997), pp. 21, 56.</ref> Christy also pointed out that Brigham Young and the other members of the church's [[First Presidency (LDS Church)|First Presidency]] had consistently pointed out that departure from what is now Omaha, Nebraska needed to happen by the end of May to safely make the journey.<ref>Christy (199&0, p. 12</ref>


Many survivors of the tragedy refused to blame anyone. Survivor John Jacques wrote, "I blame nobody. I am not anxious to blame anybody&nbsp;... I have no doubt that those who had to do with its management meant well and tried to do the best they could under the circumstances."<ref>Christy (1997), p. 57.</ref> Another survivor, Francis Webster, was quoted as having said, "Was I sorry that I chose to come by hand cart? No. Neither then nor any minute of my life since. The price we paid to become acquainted with God was a privilege to pay and I am thankful that I was privileged to come in the Martin Hand Cart Company."<ref>{{citation |last= Palmer |first= William R. |title= Pioneers of Southern Utah |journal= [[The Instructor]] |volume= 79 |issue= 5 |date=May 1944 |pages= 217–218 |url= https://archive.org/stream/instructor795dese#page/n22/mode/1up }}.</ref> On the other hand, survivor John Chislett, who later left the church, wrote bitterly of Richards promising them that "we should get to Zion in safety."<ref>Stegner (1992), p. 143.</ref>
As early as November 2, 1856, while the Willie and Martin companies were still making their way to safety, Young responded to criticism of his own leadership by rebuking Franklin Richards and Daniel Spencer for allowing the companies to leave so late.<ref>Christy (1997), pp. 22–23</ref><ref>Stegner (1992), pp. 256–258.</ref><ref>Richards was the highest ranking church official in the area at the time the companies left Florence, and Spencer was the church's agent in Iowa City.</ref> Many authors argued that Young, as author of the plan, was responsible. [[Ann Eliza Young]], daughter of one of the men in charge of building the carts and a former plural wife of Brigham Young, described her ex-husband's plan as a "cold-blooded, scheming, blasphemous policy".<ref>{{citation |last= Young |first= Ann Eliza |author-link= Ann Eliza Young |title= Wife No. 19, or the story of a life in bondage. Being a complete exposé of Mormonism, and revealing the sorrows, sacrifices and sufferings of women in polygamy |location= Hartford, Conn. |publisher= Dustin, Gilman & Co. |year= 1876 |pages= [https://archive.org/stream/wifenoorstoryofl00youniala#page/204/mode/2up 204–205] }}.</ref> Most survivors refused to blame anyone.<ref>Christy (1997), p. 57.</ref> One traveler, Francis Webster, said it was a privilege to be part of the Martin company.<ref>{{citation |last= Palmer |first= William R. |title= Pioneers of Southern Utah |journal= [[The Instructor]] |volume= 79 |issue= 5 |date=May 1944 |pages= 217–218 |url= https://archive.org/stream/instructor795dese#page/n22/mode/1up }}.</ref> One survivor, John Chislett, wrote bitterly of Richards's promise that "we should get to Zion in safety."<ref>Stegner (1992), p. 143.</ref>


American West historian, [[Wallace Stegner]], described the inadequate planning and improvident decisions of leadership caused the struggles of the companies.<ref>Stegner (1992), p. 222.</ref> He described Richards as a [[scapegoat]] for Young's fundamental errors in planning, though Howard Christy, professor emeritus at [[Brigham Young University]], noted that Richards had the authority to halt the companies' late departure because he was the highest-ranking official in the Florence, Nebraska area.<ref>Stegner (1992), p. 259</ref><ref>Christy (1997), pp. 21, 56.</ref> Christy also pointed out that Young and the other members of the church's [[First Presidency (LDS Church)|First Presidency]] had consistently pointed out that departure from what is now Omaha, Nebraska, needed to happen by the end of May to safely make the journey.<ref>Christy (199&0, p. 12</ref>
In May 2006, a panel of researchers at the annual conference of the [[Mormon History Association]] blamed the tragedy on a failure of leadership. Lyndia Carter, a [[Mormon Trail|trails]] historian, said Franklin D. Richards "was responsible, in my mind, for the late departure" because "he started the snowball down the slope" that eventually "added up to disaster". Christy agreed that "leadership from the top, from the outset, was seriously short of the mark." Robert Briggs, an attorney, said "It's almost a foregone conclusion&nbsp;... there is evidence of negligence. With leaders all the way up to Brigham Young, there was mismanagement."<ref>{{citation |url= http://www.deseretnews.com/article/635210728/Historians-fault-leaders-in-LDS-handcart-tragedy.html |newspaper= [[Deseret News]] |title= Historians fault leaders in LDS handcart tragedy |date= May 27, 2006 |first= Carrie A. |last= Moore}}</ref> On the other hand, Rebecca Bartholomew and [[Leonard J. Arrington]] wrote, "Memories of what was perhaps the worst disaster in the history of western migration have been palliated by what could also be regarded as the most heroic rescue of the Mormon frontier."<ref>Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), p. 44.</ref>


{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center"
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==1857–60: Last five companies==
==1857–60: Last five companies==
A number of lessons had been learned from the 1856 disaster that allowed the church to continue the handcart system while avoiding another disaster. Never again would a handcart company depart Florence later than July 7. The construction of the handcarts was modified to strengthen them and reduce repairs. The handcarts would now be regularly greased. Arrangements were made to replenish supplies along the route.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 143–144.</ref>
The church enacted many changes following the journeys of the Williams and Martin companies. Handcart companies were not to depart Florence after July 7. The construction of the handcarts was modified to strengthen them and reduce repairs, and they would be regularly greased. Arrangements were made to replenish supplies along the route.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 143–144.</ref> By 1857 the Perpetual Emigration Fund was exhausted; almost all of the handcart emigrants that year and in subsequent years had to pay their own way. With the increased cost, the number of handcart emigrants dropped from nearly 2,000 in 1856 to about 480 in 1857.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 148–149, 193.</ref> In 1857 two companies made the trek, both arriving in Salt Lake City by September 13.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 153–164.</ref>


With the uncertainty caused by the [[Utah War]], the church prevented European emigration for 1858. In 1859 one handcart company crossed the plains. The emigrants could travel by rail to [[Saint Joseph, Missouri|Saint Joseph]], Missouri, after which they went by riverboat to Florence, where they were outfitted with handcarts and supplies. When the 1859 company reached Fort Laramie, they discovered their food was running dangerously low, so they cut back on rations.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 173–174.</ref> The hunger worsened when expected supplies were not available when they reached the [[Green River (Colorado River)|Green River]]. Three days later wagons from Utah carrying provisions arrived to be distributed to the emigrants.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 165–178.</ref> The last two handcart companies made the journey in 1860, following the route through St. Joseph. Although the journey proved to be difficult for the emigrants, these companies had relatively uneventful trips and experienced little loss of life.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 179–190.</ref>
By 1857 the Perpetual Emigration Fund was exhausted; almost all of the handcart emigrants that year and in subsequent years had to pay their own way. With the increased cost, the number of handcart emigrants dropped from nearly 2,000 in 1856 to about 480 in 1857.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 148–149, 193.</ref> Nevertheless, in 1857 two companies made the trek, both arriving in Salt Lake City by September 13. Perhaps the most notable incident was when a captain of the U.S. Army's [[Utah War|Utah Expedition]], on its way to Utah to enforce federal authority over Young and the Latter-day Saints, donated an ox to the hungry emigrants.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 153–164.</ref>


The outbreak of the [[American Civil War]] likely hastened the handcart system's demise by disrupting immigration from Europe and placing severe restrictions on rail travel from the East Coast. At the end of that conflict, the church implemented a new system of emigration in which wagon trains travelled east from Salt Lake City in the spring and returned with emigrants in the summer. The [[First Transcontinental Railroad|transcontinental railroad]] was being constructed in the mid-to-late 1860s and was completed in 1869; the railroad terminus gradually moved westward, progressively shortening the trip.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 191–192.</ref>
With the uncertainty caused by the [[Utah War]], the church called off all European emigration for 1858. In 1859 one handcart company crossed the plains. The emigrants were now able to travel by rail to [[Saint Joseph, Missouri|Saint Joseph]], Missouri, after which they went by riverboat to Florence, where they were outfitted with handcarts and supplies. When the 1859 company reached Fort Laramie, they discovered their food was running dangerously short, so they cut back on rations. When they reached Devil's Gate the last flour was distributed. Emigrant Ebeneezer B. Beesley recalled an incident in which a group of rough [[mountain man|mountain men]] fed the hungry emigrants. One of the mountain men then asked a young woman from the company to stay with him, which the tired woman agreed to do. (William Atkin recalled another version of the story in which two young women married two mountain men.)<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 173–174.</ref> The hunger worsened when expected supplies were not available when they reached the [[Green River (Colorado River)|Green River]]. Three days later wagons from Utah carrying provisions finally rescued the famished emigrants.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 165–178.</ref>

The last two handcart companies made the journey in 1860, again following the route through St. Joseph. Although the journey proved to be difficult for the emigrants, these companies had relatively uneventful trips and experienced little loss of life.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 179–190.</ref>

The outbreak of the [[American Civil War]] likely hastened the handcart system's demise by disrupting immigration from Europe and placing severe restrictions on rail travel from the East Coast. In any case, by the end of that conflict the church had implemented a new system of emigration in which wagon trains travelled east from Salt Lake City in the spring and returned with emigrants in the summer. The [[First Transcontinental Railroad|transcontinental railroad]] was being constructed in the mid-to-late 1860s and was completed in 1869; therefore the railroad terminus gradually moved westward, progressively shortening the trip.<ref>Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 191–192.</ref>


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==Legacy==
==Legacy==
Handcart pioneers and the handcart movement are important parts of [[Culture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints|LDS culture]], [[Mormon music|music]] and [[LDS fiction|fiction]]. Arthur King Peters described the importance of this part of Mormon history in ''Seven Trails West'':<ref>Peters (1996), p. 145.</ref>
Handcart pioneers and the handcart movement are important parts of [[Culture of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints|LDS culture]], [[Mormon music|music]] and [[LDS fiction|fiction]]. Arthur King Peters described these journies as important parts of Mormon history and stated that these journeys caused the qualities of discipline, devotion, and self-sacrifice to be shown among the Mormon people.<ref>Peters (1996), p. 145.</ref> Wallace Stegner said the handcart pioneers were one of the greatest stories of the the American West.<ref>Stegner (1956), p. 85.</ref>

{{quote|This heroic episode of Mormon history exemplifies many of the enduring qualities of nascent Mormonism itself: thorough organization, iron discipline, unswerving devotion to a cause, and limitless self-sacrifice. ... The true Mormon Trail was not on the prairie but in the spirit.}}
Wallace Stegner praised the examples of those of the handcart companies, particularly in comparison to other pioneer parties:<ref>Stegner (1956), p. 85.</ref>

{{quote|Perhaps their suffering seems less dramatic because the handcart pioneers bore it meekly, praising God, instead of fighting for life with the ferocity of animals and eating their dead to keep their own life beating, as both the [[John C. Frémont|Fremont]] and [[Donner Party|Donner]] parties did. ... But if courage and endurance make a story, if humankindness and helpfulness and brotherly love in the midst of raw horror are worth recording, this half-forgotten episode of the Mormon migration is one of the great tales of the West and of America.}}

===Reenactments===
[[Historical reenactment|Reenactments]], in which a group dressed in 19th-century garb travels for one or more days pushing and pulling handcarts, have become a popular activity among LDS [[ward (LDS Church)|wards]], youth groups, and families.<ref>For example: {{citation |url= http://www.utsandiego.com/uniontrib/20060715/news_lz1c15trail.html |title= Trials of the trail |first= Sandi |last= Dolbee San |date= July 15, 2006 |newspaper= [[San Diego Union-Tribune]] |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131021190600/http://www.utsandiego.com/uniontrib/20060715/news_lz1c15trail.html |archive-date= October 21, 2013 }}; {{citation |url= http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/get_out/article_18f0a27c-2572-5773-8f97-f454a1b762b0.html |title= Gilbert Ward connects with ancestors by re-enacting Mormon trek |first= Lawn |last= Griffiths |date= November 12, 2005 |newspaper= [[East Valley Tribune]] }}; {{citation |url= http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/get_out/article_e89f4e4f-5829-5fa3-9433-ada7aff14002.html |title= Faith of the pioneers |first= Lawn |last= Griffiths |date= June 19, 2004 |newspaper= East Valley Tribune }}</ref>

The first known modern-era reenactment took place in 1966 from [[Henefer, Utah]], to the mouth of [[Emigration Canyon, Utah|Emigration Canyon]] by young men from [[Phoenix, Arizona]], using handcarts between metal wheels repurposed from old farm wagons. In 1968, 44 girls from [[Long Beach, California]] reenacted that same stretch of the Mormon Trail with homemade handcarts. From the mid-1970s until the early 1990s, participation in handcart reenactments were offered at BYU in a program, spearheaded by Doug Cloward, that was a [[wilderness survival]] activity for [[BYU Division of Continuing Education#Conferences and workshops|youth conference]] participants. Beginning in 1977, similar treks were offered as part of [[Ricks College]]'s [[outdoor recreation]] program, on connected [[jeep trail]]s from [[Rexburg, Idaho]] and into [[Montana]].<ref>{{Cite web|last=Bashore|first=Melvin|date=2018-04-06|title=Op-ed: Ever wondered where the Mormon youth trek phenomenon came from?|url=https://www.deseret.com/2018/4/6/20642916/op-ed-ever-wondered-where-the-mormon-youth-trek-phenomenon-came-from|url-status=live|website=Deseret News}}</ref>

The reenactments have been lauded by LDS leaders; for example, [[M. Russell Ballard]] of the [[Quorum of the Twelve Apostles (LDS Church)|Quorum of the Twelve Apostles]] said, "Through music, drama, and stirring reenactments, we will be reminded of incredible pioneer journeys, both temporal and spiritual."<ref>{{citation |last= Ballard |first= M. Russell |author-link= M. Russell Ballard |date=May 1997 |url= https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/ensign/1997/05/you-have-nothing-to-fear-from-the-journey?lang=eng |title= You Have Nothing to Fear From the Journey |journal= [[Ensign (LDS magazine)|Ensign]] }}</ref> The reenactments have become so popular that the [[Bureau of Land Management]] is studying the impact on the trail and its environment, especially in the area around Rocky Ridge, Wyoming.<ref>See: [http://www.nrel.colostate.edu/~aldridge/research.htm Research] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060912013832/http://www.nrel.colostate.edu/~aldridge/research.htm |date=2006-09-12 }} by Cameron Leonard Aldridge, Warner College of Natural Resources, [[Colorado State University]]</ref> According to the ''[[Casper Star-Tribune]]'', the BLM has had to impose a fee to offset the costs of monitoring the impacts of reenactors and other campers on the trail.<ref>{{citation |last= Royster |first= Whitney |title= Enzi mulls Mormon Trail fees |newspaper= [[Casper Star-Tribune]] |date= 2004-09-01 |url= http://trib.com/news/state-and-regional/enzi-mulls-mormon-trail-fees/article_2a373b19-4709-5192-a79e-ba8325c92765.html |access-date= 2013-06-04 }}</ref>


[[Historical reenactment|Reenactments]], in which a group dressed in 19th-century garb travels for one or more days pushing and pulling handcarts, have become a popular activity among LDS [[ward (LDS Church)|wards]], youth groups, and families.<ref>For example: {{citation |url= http://www.utsandiego.com/uniontrib/20060715/news_lz1c15trail.html |title= Trials of the trail |first= Sandi |last= Dolbee San |date= July 15, 2006 |newspaper= [[San Diego Union-Tribune]] |url-status= dead |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20131021190600/http://www.utsandiego.com/uniontrib/20060715/news_lz1c15trail.html |archive-date= October 21, 2013 }}; {{citation |url= http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/get_out/article_18f0a27c-2572-5773-8f97-f454a1b762b0.html |title= Gilbert Ward connects with ancestors by re-enacting Mormon trek |first= Lawn |last= Griffiths |date= November 12, 2005 |newspaper= [[East Valley Tribune]] }}; {{citation |url= http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/get_out/article_e89f4e4f-5829-5fa3-9433-ada7aff14002.html |title= Faith of the pioneers |first= Lawn |last= Griffiths |date= June 19, 2004 |newspaper= East Valley Tribune }}</ref> The first known modern-era reenactment took place in 1966 from [[Henefer, Utah]], to the mouth of [[Emigration Canyon, Utah|Emigration Canyon]] by young men from [[Phoenix, Arizona]], using handcarts between metal wheels repurposed from old farm wagons. In 1968, 44 girls from [[Long Beach, California]] reenacted that same stretch of the Mormon Trail with homemade handcarts. From the mid-1970s until the early 1990s, participation in handcart reenactments were offered at BYU as a [[wilderness survival]] activity for [[BYU Division of Continuing Education#Conferences and workshops|youth conference]] participants. Beginning in 1977, similar treks were offered as part of [[Ricks College]]'s [[outdoor recreation]] program, on connected [[jeep trail]]s from [[Rexburg, Idaho]] and into [[Montana]].<ref>{{Cite web|last=Bashore|first=Melvin|date=April 6, 2018|title=Op-ed: Ever wondered where the Mormon youth trek phenomenon came from?|url=https://www.deseret.com/2018/4/6/20642916/op-ed-ever-wondered-where-the-mormon-youth-trek-phenomenon-came-from|url-status=live|website=Deseret News}}</ref>
A re-creation of the 1856 handcart disaster was featured on the [[History (U.S. TV channel)|History Channel]] show ''[[Wild West Tech]]''.<ref>{{citation |contribution= Episode 13: The Road West |title= [[Wild West Tech]] |publisher= TV.com |date= 2006-12-13 |contribution-url= http://www.tv.com/wild-west-tech/the-road-west/episode/407585/summary.html |access-date= 2006-12-13 }}</ref>


In 2006, Harriet Petherick Bushman created a concert opera called "1856: Long Walk Home.".<ref>{{citation|url= http://mha.wservers.com/conferences/2006.php|title= 2006 Casper Conference, held at the Parkway Plaza Hotel and Conference Centre, Casper, Wyoming, May 25–28, 2006|publisher= [[Mormon History Association]].|url-status= dead|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060614115744/http://mha.wservers.com/conferences/2006.php|archive-date= June 14, 2006}}</ref> A musical called ''1856'', produced by Cory Ellsworth, a descendant of [[Edmund Ellsworth]], was performed in [[Mesa, Arizona|Mesa]], [[Arizona]] and Salt Lake City in July 2006.<ref>[http://www.1856themusical.com/ "1856" The Musical].</ref><ref>{{citation |url= http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/spirituallife/article_a042509a-4d2b-5405-b19c-87a74fe047a7.html |title= Musical marking Mormon trek is back |date= May 20, 2006 |newspaper= East Valley Tribune }}</ref> Filmmaker [[Lee Groberg]] and historian Heidi Swinton created a documentary for [[Public Broadcasting Service|PBS]] called ''Sweetwater Rescue: The Willie & Martin Handcart Story'' and first broadcast on December 18, 2006.<ref>See [http://www.sweetwaterrescue.com Sweetwater Rescue] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061214024204/http://www.sweetwaterrescue.com/ |date=December 14, 2006 }}, [http://www.grobergfilms.com/news.html Groberg Communications] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061031213855/http://www.grobergfilms.com/news.html |date=October 31, 2006 }} and [http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,635211310,00.html Deseret News: Documentary explores handcart tragedy]. The companion book is Swinton and Groberg (2006).</ref>
===150th anniversary===
A number of events were held during 2006 to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the 1856 handcart companies:
*The 2006 conference of the [[Mormon History Association]] was held in [[Casper, Wyoming]] from May 25–28 and featured a specially commissioned concert opera by Harriet Petherick Bushman, "1856: Long Walk Home," as well as several research papers on the handcart trek.<ref>{{citation|url= http://mha.wservers.com/conferences/2006.php|title= 2006 Casper Conference, held at the Parkway Plaza Hotel and Conference Centre, Casper, Wyoming, May 25–28, 2006|publisher= [[Mormon History Association]].|url-status= dead|archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20060614115744/http://mha.wservers.com/conferences/2006.php|archive-date= 2006-06-14}}</ref>
*From June 9–11, a symposium and festival were held in Iowa City on the anniversary of the departure of the first company. [[Gordon B. Hinckley]], the then-current [[President of the Church (LDS Church)|president]] of [[The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints]], spoke at the closing ceremony [[Fireside (Mormonism)|fireside]].<ref>{{citation |url= http://www.deseretnews.com/article/640185613/Pres-Hinckley-to-honor-handcart-pioneers.html |title= Pres. Hinckley to honor handcart pioneers |first= Carrie A. |last= Moore |date= June 9, 2006 |newspaper= [[Deseret Morning News]]}}.</ref><ref>{{citation |url= http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=303693 |title= President Hinckley pays tribute to handcart pioneers |date= June 11, 2006 |publisher= KSL-TV/[[Associated Press|AP]] }}</ref>
*A musical called ''1856'', produced by Cory Ellsworth, a descendant of [[Edmund Ellsworth]], was performed in [[Mesa, Arizona|Mesa]], [[Arizona]] and Salt Lake City in July 2006.<ref>[http://www.1856themusical.com/ "1856" The Musical].</ref><ref>{{citation |url= http://www.eastvalleytribune.com/spirituallife/article_a042509a-4d2b-5405-b19c-87a74fe047a7.html |title= Musical marking Mormon trek is back |date= May 20, 2006 |newspaper= East Valley Tribune }}</ref>
*Filmmaker [[Lee Groberg]] and writer/historian Heidi Swinton created a documentary for [[Public Broadcasting Service|PBS]], ''Sweetwater Rescue: The Willie & Martin Handcart Story'', which features reenactments of the rescue. The one-hour film was shown nationally in the United States on December 18, 2006. A companion book was also published.<ref>See [http://www.sweetwaterrescue.com Sweetwater Rescue] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061214024204/http://www.sweetwaterrescue.com/ |date=December 14, 2006 }}, [http://www.grobergfilms.com/news.html Groberg Communications] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061031213855/http://www.grobergfilms.com/news.html |date=2006-10-31 }} and [http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,635211310,00.html Deseret News: Documentary explores handcart tragedy]. The companion book is Swinton and Groberg (2006).</ref>
*Brigham Young University created a daily journal of the Willie Handcart Company on its Web site.<ref>See the ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20060819065019/http://handcart.byu.edu/ Willie Handcart Company Chronology] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060819065019/http://handcart.byu.edu/ |date=2006-08-19 }}'' at BYU.edu.</ref>


==See also==
==See also==
Line 215: Line 150:
*[[Carl Christian Anton Christensen|C. C. A. Christensen]] – Sub-captain of the seventh company and an artist known for his illustrations of LDS history
*[[Carl Christian Anton Christensen|C. C. A. Christensen]] – Sub-captain of the seventh company and an artist known for his illustrations of LDS history
*[[John Jaques (Mormon)|John Jaques]] – Member of the Martin Company, missionary, and company historian
*[[John Jaques (Mormon)|John Jaques]] – Member of the Martin Company, missionary, and company historian
*[[Heber Robert McBride]] - traveled in the Martin Handcart Company as a youth and recorded his experience in a journal. Later helped settle Ogden Valley
*[[Heber Robert McBride]] traveled in the Martin Handcart Company as a youth and recorded his experience in a journal. Later helped settle Ogden Valley
* [[Jens Nielson]], Danish entrepreneur that later settled several communities in the [[Cedar City Historic District]]
* [[Jens Nielson]], Danish entrepreneur that later settled several communities in the [[Cedar City Historic District]]
*[[Nellie Unthank]] – Member of the Martin Company
*[[Nellie Unthank]] – Member of the Martin Company
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|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20131021190601/https://byustudies.byu.edu/showTitle.aspx?title=6479
|archive-date = 2013-10-21
|archive-date = October 21, 2013
}}
}}
* {{cite journal
* {{cite journal
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|archive-url = https://archive.today/20130626175152/https://byustudies.byu.edu/showTitle.aspx?title=201
|archive-url = https://archive.today/20130626175152/https://byustudies.byu.edu/showTitle.aspx?title=201
|url-status = dead
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|archive-date = June 26, 2013
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* {{cite book
* {{cite book
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|url-status=dead
|url-status=dead
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131021184841/https://byustudies.byu.edu/showtitle.aspx?title=7194
|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131021184841/https://byustudies.byu.edu/showtitle.aspx?title=7194
|archive-date=2013-10-21
|archive-date=October 21, 2013
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* {{cite book
* {{cite book
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| title=Ordeal by Handcart
| title=Ordeal by Handcart
| date=July 6, 1956
| date=July 6, 1956
| journal=[[Collier's]]
| journal=[[Collier's]]
| volume=138
| volume=138
| issue=1
| issue=1

Revision as of 15:11, 4 December 2021

The Handcart Pioneer Monument, by Torleif S. Knaphus, located on Temple Square in Salt Lake City, Utah

The Mormon handcart pioneers were participants in the migration of members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to Salt Lake City, Utah, who used handcarts to transport their belongings.[1] The Mormon handcart movement began in 1856 and continued until 1860.

Motivated to join their fellow church members in Utah, but lacking funds for full teams of oxen or horses, nearly 3,000 Mormon pioneers from England, Wales, Scotland and Scandinavia made the journey from Iowa or Nebraska to Utah in ten handcart companies. The trek was disastrous for two of the companies, which started their journey dangerously late and were caught by heavy snow and severe temperatures in central Wyoming. Despite a dramatic rescue effort, more than 210 of the 980 pioneers in these two companies died along the way. John Chislett, a survivor, wrote, "Many a father pulled his cart, with his little children on it, until the day preceding his death."[2]

Although fewer than 10 percent of the 1846–1868 Latter-day Saint emigrants made the journey west using handcarts, the handcart pioneers have become an important symbol in LDS culture, representing the faithfulness and sacrifice of the pioneer generation. They continue to be recognized and honored in events such as Pioneer Day, church pageants, and similar commemorations.

Background to the migration

The Latter Day Saints were first organized in 1830. Early members of the church often encountered hostility, primarily due to their practice of withdrawing from secular society and gathering in locales to practice their religious beliefs. People who were not Mormon were threatened by the church's rapid growth in numbers, its tendency to vote as a bloc and acquire political power, its claims of divine favor, and the practice of polygamy.[3] Violence against the church and its members caused the body of the church to move from Ohio to Missouri, then to Illinois. Despite the frequent moves, church members were unable to prevent opposition, culminating in the extermination order against all Mormons living Missouri by the state's governor Lilburn Boggs in 1838 and the death of their leader Joseph Smith in 1844. Brigham Young said that he had received divine direction to organize the church members and head beyond the western frontier of the United States.[4][5]

Need for handcart companies

When the first Mormon pioneers reached Utah in 1847, the church encouraged its converts in Europe to emigrate to Utah. From 1849 to 1855, about 16,000 European Latter-day Saints traveled to the United States by ship, through the eastern states by rail, and to Utah by ox and wagon. Although most of these emigrants paid their own expenses, the church established the Perpetual Emigration Fund to provide financial assistance for poor emigrants to trek west, which they would repay as they were able. Contributions to expand the fund were encouraged.[6]

When contributions and loan repayments decreased in 1855 after a poor harvest in Utah, Young began to use handcarts because the church members who remained in Europe were mostly poor. Young also believed it would speed the immigrate's journey.[7] Young proposed the plan in a letter to Franklin D. Richards, president of the European Mission, in September 1855. Young's letter and an editorial endorsing Young's plan by Richards was published in the Millennial Star the church's England-based periodical, on December 22, 1855. The cost of the migration was expected to be reduced by one-third. The response was overwhelming– in 1856 the Perpetual Emigration Fund supported the travel of 2,012 European emigrants, compared with 1,161 the year before.[8]

Outfitting

Emigrants departed from an English port (generally Liverpool) and travelled by ship to New York or Boston, then by railroad to Iowa City, Iowa, the western terminus of the rail line, where they would be outfitted with handcarts and other supplies.[9]

Reenactment: Pioneers crossing the Platte River, from PBS documentary Sweetwater Rescue

Built to Young's design, the handcarts resembled a large wheelbarrow, with two wheels. They were five feet (1.5 metres) in diameter and a single axle four and a half feet (1.4 m) wide, and weighing 60 pounds (27 kg). Running along each side of the bed were seven-foot (2.1 m) pull shafts ending with a three-foot (0.9 m) crossbar at the front. The crossbar allowed the carts to be pushed or pulled. Cargo was carried in a box about three feet by four feet (0.9 m by 1.2 m), with 8 inches (0.20 m) walls. The handcarts generally carried up to 250 pounds (110 kg) of supplies and luggage, though they were capable of handling loads as heavy as 500 pounds (230 kg). Carts used in the first year's migration were made entirely of wood ("Iowa hickory or oak"); in later years a stronger design was substituted, which included metal elements.[10][11][12]

The handcart companies were organized using the handcarts and sleeping tents as the primary units. Five people were assigned per handcart, with each individual limited to 17 pounds (7.7 kg) of clothing and bedding. Each round tent, supported by a center pole, housed 20 occupants and was supervised by a tent captain. Five tents were supervised by the captain of a hundred (or "sub-captain"). Provisions for each group of one hundred emigrants were carried in an ox wagon, and were distributed by the tent captains.[13][14]

1856: First three companies

The first two ships departed England in late March and mid-April and sailed to Boston before boarding trains for Iowa City. The emigrants spent several weeks in Iowa City, where they constructed their handcarts and were outfitted with supplies before beginning their trek of about 1,300 miles (2,100 km).[15]

Mormon handcart train in Iowa, 1903 illustration

About 815 emigrants from the first two ships were organized into the first three handcart companies, headed by captains Edmund Ellsworth, Daniel D. McArthur, and Edward Bunker.[16] The captains were missionaries returning to their homes in Utah and were familiar with the route. Most of the sub-captains were also returning missionaries.[17]

Across Iowa they followed an existing road about 275 miles (443 km) to Council Bluffs, following a route that is close to current U.S. Route 6. After crossing the Missouri River, they paused for a few days at a Mormon outpost in Florence, Nebraska (now part of Omaha), for repairs, before beginning the remaining 1,030-mile (1,660 km) journey along the Mormon Trail to Salt Lake City.[18]

Initial problems with the carts occurred because the wood used to construct them was said to have been "green timber", or wood from trees that were recently chopped down and not given sufficient time to dry, causing an increase in breakdowns. When the first handcart company reached Winter Quarters, Ellsworth had a member of the company "tin" the wooden axles and also installed "thick hoop iron skeins" which enabled the handcart axles to turn more easily and resist breakage much better.[19]

The companies made good time, and their trips were largely uneventful. The emigrant companies included many children and elderly individuals, and transporting handcarts was difficult. Journals and recollections describe periods of illness and hunger. Hafen and Hafen's Handcarts to Zion lists 13 deaths from the first company, seven from the second, and fewer than seven from the third. The first two companies arrived in Salt Lake City on September 26 and the third followed less than a week later. The first three companies were regarded as having demonstrated the feasibility of emigrating using handcarts.[20]

Handcart company Captain Ship Arrived Iowa City Departed Iowa City Departed Florence, Nebraska Arrived Salt Lake City Number of individuals Number died en route
First[21] Edmund Ellsworth Enoch Train, sailed March 23, 1856, to Boston May 12 June 9 July 20 September 26 274 13
Second Daniel D. McArthur Enoch Train, sailed March 23, 1856, to Boston;
S. Curling, sailed April 19 to Boston
passengers from Enoch Train – May 12;
passengers from S. Curling – early June
June 11 July 24 September 26 221 7
Third (Welsh) Edward Bunker S. Curling, sailed April 19, 1856, to Boston early June June 23 July 30 October 2 320 < 7

1856: Willie and Martin handcart companies

The last two handcart companies of 1856 departed late from England. The ship Thornton, carrying the emigrants who became the Willie Company, left England on May 4. The leader of the Latter-day Saints on the ship was James G. Willie. Horizon departed eleven days later, carrying the emigrants who later formed the Martin Company. The late departures may have been the result of difficulties in procuring ships in response to the unexpected demand.[22]

With slow communications in the era before the transatlantic telegraph, the church's agents in Iowa City were not expecting the additional emigrants and made frantic preparations for their arrival. Weeks were spent hastily assembling the carts and outfitting the companies. When the companies reached Florence, additional time was lost making repairs to the poorly built carts.[23] Emigrant John Chislett describes the problems with the carts:[24]

The axles and boxes being of wood, and being ground out by the dust that found its way there in spite of our efforts to keep it out, together with the extra weight put on the carts, had the effect of breaking the axles at the shoulder. All kinds of expedients were resorted to as remedies for the growing evil, but with variable success. Some wrapped their axles with leather obtained from bootlegs; others with tin, obtained by sacrificing tin-plates, kettles, or buckets from their mess outfit. Besides these inconveniences, there was felt a great lack of a proper lubricator. Of anything suitable for this purpose we had none at all.

Prior to the Willie Company departing Florence, the company met to debate if they should continue the journey immediately or wait for the spring. Because the emigrants were unfamiliar with the trail and the climate, they deferred to the returning missionaries and church agents. One of the returning missionaries, Levi Savage, urged them to spend the winter in Nebraska. He argued that such a late departure with a company consisting of the elderly, women, and young children would lead to suffering, sickness, and death. All of the other church elders argued that the trip should go forward, expressing optimism that the company would be protected by divine intervention. Some members of the company, perhaps as many as 100, decided to spend the winter in Florence or in Iowa, but the majority, about 404 in number (including Savage) continued the journey west. The Willie Company left Florence on August 17 and the Martin Company on August 27. Two ox-wagon trains, led by captains W.B. Hodgett and John A. Hunt, followed the Martin Company.[25]

Near Wood River, Nebraska, a herd of bison caused the Willie Company's cattle to stampede, and nearly 30 cattle were lost. Left without enough cattle to pull all of the wagons, each handcart was required to take on an additional 100 pounds (45 kg) of flour.[26] In early September, Richards, returning from Europe where he had served as the church's mission president, passed the emigrant companies. Richards and the 12 returning missionaries who accompanied him, traveling in carriages and light wagons pulled by horses and mules, pressed on to Utah to obtain assistance for the emigrants.[27][28]

Disaster and rescue

In early October the two companies reached Fort Laramie, Wyoming. They expected to be restocked with provisions, but they were unavailable. The companies cut back food rations down to 12 oz (340 g) per person, hoping that their supplies would last until help arrived from Utah. To lighten their loads, the Martin Company cut the luggage allowance to 10 pounds (4.5 kg) per person, discarding clothing and blankets.[29][30]

Dramatization of man pulling handcart through snow

On October 4, the Richards party reached Salt Lake City and conferred with Brigham Young and other church leaders. The next morning the church held a general conference, where Young and the other speakers called on church members to provide wagons, mules, supplies, and teamsters for a rescue mission. On the morning of October 7, the first rescue party left Salt Lake City with 16 wagon-loads of food and supplies, pulled by four-mule teams with 27 young men serving as teamsters and rescuers. Throughout October more wagon trains were assembled, and by the end of the month 250 relief wagons were sent.[31][32]

The Willie and Martin companies were running out of food and encountering extremely cold temperatures. On October 19, a blizzard struck the region,[33] halting the two companies and the relief party. The Willie Company was along the Sweetwater River approaching the Continental Divide. A scouting party sent ahead by the main rescue party found and greeted the emigrants, gave them a small amount of flour, encouraged them that rescue was near, and then rushed onward to try to locate the Martin Company.[34] The members of the Willie Company had reached the end of their flour supplies and slaughtered the handful of broken-down cattle that still remained. On October 20, Captain Willie and Joseph Elder went ahead by mule through the snow to locate the supply train and inform them of the company's desperate situation. They arrived at the rescue party's campsite near South Pass that evening, and by the next evening, the rescue party reached the Willie Company and provided them with food and assistance. Half of the rescue party remained to assist the Willie Company while the other half pressed forward to assist the Martin Company. On October 23, the second day after the main rescue party had arrived, the Willie Company faced the most difficult section of the trail—the ascent up Rocky Ridge. The climb took place during a howling snowstorm through knee-deep snow. That night 13 emigrants died.[35][36][37]

On October 19, the Martin Company was about 110 miles (180 km) further east, making its last crossing of the North Platte River near present-day Casper, Wyoming.[38] Shortly after completing the crossing, the blizzard struck. Many members of the company suffered from hypothermia or frostbite after wading through the frigid river. They set up camp at Red Bluffs, unable to continue forward through the snow. Meanwhile, the original scouting party continued eastward until it reached a small vacant fort at Devil's Gate, where they had been instructed to wait for the rest of the rescue party if they had not found the Martin Company. When the main rescue party rejoined them, another scouting party consisting of Joseph Young, Abel Garr, and Daniel Webster Jones was sent forward. The Martin company remained in their camp at Red Bluffs for nine days until the three scouts arrived on October 28; 56 members of the company had died while they waited. The scouts urged the emigrants to begin moving again. During this interval, the party was met by Ephraim Hanks, bringing meat from a recently slaughtered buffalo. The meat likely saved many lives as the nutritive value was much higher than that of the other supplies. He also performed many blessings and helped in some amputations to stop the progression of the frostbite and gangrene that would have otherwise killed more members of the company. Three days later the main rescue party met the Martin Company and the Hodgett and Hunt wagon companies, and they helped them on to Devil's Gate.[39][40][41]

George D. Grant, who headed the rescue party, reported to Young:[42]

It is not of much use for me to attempt to give a description of the situation of these people, for this you will learn from [others]; but you can imagine between five and six hundred men, women and children, worn down by drawing hand carts through snow and mud; fainting by the wayside; falling, chilled by the cold; children crying, their limbs stiffened by cold, their feet bleeding and some of them bare to snow and frost. The sight is almost too much for the stoutest of us; but we go on doing all we can, not doubting nor despairing.

Martin's Cove, Wyoming

At Devil's Gate, the rescue party unloaded the baggage carried in the wagons of the Hodgett and Hunt wagon companies that had been following the Martin Company so the wagons could be used to transport the weakest emigrants. A small group, led by Jones, remained at Devil's Gate over the winter to protect the property. The severe weather forced the Martin Company to halt for five days; the company moved into Martin's Cove, a few miles west of Devil's Gate, as it was much more protected than the open plains to the east. During this season, the river, though shallow at about 2 feet (0.61 metres), was also 90 to 120 feet (27 to 37 metres) wide. The stream temperature was frigid and clogged with floating ice. Some of the men of the rescue party spent hours pulling the carts and carrying many of the emigrants across the river,[43] while many members of the company crossed the river themselves, with some pulling their own handcarts.[44][45][46] The rescue parties escorted the emigrants from both companies to Utah through snow and severe weather. When the Willie Company arrived in Salt Lake City on November 9, 68 members of the company had died from disease and exposure.[47][48]

Meanwhile, a backup relief party of 77 teams and wagons was making its way east to provide additional assistance to the Martin Company. After passing Fort Bridger, the leaders of the backup party concluded that the Martin Company must have wintered east of the Rockies, so they turned back. When word of the returning backup relief party was communicated to Young, he ordered the courier to return and tell them to turn back east and continue until they found the handcart company. On November 18, the backup party met the Martin Company with the supplies so they could continue the journey. The 104 wagons carrying the Martin Company arrived in Salt Lake City on November 30; at least 145 members of the company had died during the journey. Many of the survivors had to have fingers, toes, or limbs amputated due to severe frostbite.[49] Residents of Utah allowed the compnaies to stay in their homes during the winter. The emigrants would eventually go to Latter-day Saint settlements throughout Utah and the West.[50][51]

Responsibility for the tragedy

As early as November 2, 1856, while the Willie and Martin companies were still making their way to safety, Young responded to criticism of his own leadership by rebuking Franklin Richards and Daniel Spencer for allowing the companies to leave so late.[52][53][54] Many authors argued that Young, as author of the plan, was responsible. Ann Eliza Young, daughter of one of the men in charge of building the carts and a former plural wife of Brigham Young, described her ex-husband's plan as a "cold-blooded, scheming, blasphemous policy".[55] Most survivors refused to blame anyone.[56] One traveler, Francis Webster, said it was a privilege to be part of the Martin company.[57] One survivor, John Chislett, wrote bitterly of Richards's promise that "we should get to Zion in safety."[58]

American West historian, Wallace Stegner, described the inadequate planning and improvident decisions of leadership caused the struggles of the companies.[59] He described Richards as a scapegoat for Young's fundamental errors in planning, though Howard Christy, professor emeritus at Brigham Young University, noted that Richards had the authority to halt the companies' late departure because he was the highest-ranking official in the Florence, Nebraska area.[60][61] Christy also pointed out that Young and the other members of the church's First Presidency had consistently pointed out that departure from what is now Omaha, Nebraska, needed to happen by the end of May to safely make the journey.[62]

Handcart company Captain Ship Arrived Iowa City Departed Iowa City Departed Florence Arrived Salt Lake City Number of people Number died en route
Fourth or Willie Company[63] James G. Willie Thornton, sailed May 4, 1856, to New York June 26 July 15 August 17 November 9 ~500 left Iowa City; 404 left Florence 68
Fifth or Martin Company Edward Martin Horizon, sailed May 25, 1856, to Boston July 8 July 28 August 27 November 30 576 >145

1857–60: Last five companies

The church enacted many changes following the journeys of the Williams and Martin companies. Handcart companies were not to depart Florence after July 7. The construction of the handcarts was modified to strengthen them and reduce repairs, and they would be regularly greased. Arrangements were made to replenish supplies along the route.[64] By 1857 the Perpetual Emigration Fund was exhausted; almost all of the handcart emigrants that year and in subsequent years had to pay their own way. With the increased cost, the number of handcart emigrants dropped from nearly 2,000 in 1856 to about 480 in 1857.[65] In 1857 two companies made the trek, both arriving in Salt Lake City by September 13.[66]

With the uncertainty caused by the Utah War, the church prevented European emigration for 1858. In 1859 one handcart company crossed the plains. The emigrants could travel by rail to Saint Joseph, Missouri, after which they went by riverboat to Florence, where they were outfitted with handcarts and supplies. When the 1859 company reached Fort Laramie, they discovered their food was running dangerously low, so they cut back on rations.[67] The hunger worsened when expected supplies were not available when they reached the Green River. Three days later wagons from Utah carrying provisions arrived to be distributed to the emigrants.[68] The last two handcart companies made the journey in 1860, following the route through St. Joseph. Although the journey proved to be difficult for the emigrants, these companies had relatively uneventful trips and experienced little loss of life.[69]

The outbreak of the American Civil War likely hastened the handcart system's demise by disrupting immigration from Europe and placing severe restrictions on rail travel from the East Coast. At the end of that conflict, the church implemented a new system of emigration in which wagon trains travelled east from Salt Lake City in the spring and returned with emigrants in the summer. The transcontinental railroad was being constructed in the mid-to-late 1860s and was completed in 1869; the railroad terminus gradually moved westward, progressively shortening the trip.[70]

Handcart company Captain Ship Arrived Iowa City Departed Iowa City Departed Florence Arrived Salt Lake City Number of people Number died en route
Sixth Israel Evans George Washington, sailed March 27, 1857, to Boston April 30 May 22 June 20 September 11 149 Unknown (>0)
Seventh (Scandinavian) Christian Christiansen L.N. Hvidt, sailed April 18, 1857, from Copenhagen to Britain; Westmoreland, sailed April 25 to Philadelphia June 9 June 13 July 7 September 13 ~330 ~6
Eighth George Rowley William Tapscott, sailed April 11, 1859, to New York June 9 September 4 235 ~5
Ninth Daniel Robison Underwriter, sailed March 30, 1860, to New York May 12 (Florence) June 6 August 27 233 1
Tenth Oscar O. Stoddard William Tapscott, sailed May 11, 1860, to New York July 1 (Florence) July 6 September 24 124 0

Legacy

Handcart pioneers and the handcart movement are important parts of LDS culture, music and fiction. Arthur King Peters described these journies as important parts of Mormon history and stated that these journeys caused the qualities of discipline, devotion, and self-sacrifice to be shown among the Mormon people.[71] Wallace Stegner said the handcart pioneers were one of the greatest stories of the the American West.[72]

Reenactments, in which a group dressed in 19th-century garb travels for one or more days pushing and pulling handcarts, have become a popular activity among LDS wards, youth groups, and families.[73] The first known modern-era reenactment took place in 1966 from Henefer, Utah, to the mouth of Emigration Canyon by young men from Phoenix, Arizona, using handcarts between metal wheels repurposed from old farm wagons. In 1968, 44 girls from Long Beach, California reenacted that same stretch of the Mormon Trail with homemade handcarts. From the mid-1970s until the early 1990s, participation in handcart reenactments were offered at BYU as a wilderness survival activity for youth conference participants. Beginning in 1977, similar treks were offered as part of Ricks College's outdoor recreation program, on connected jeep trails from Rexburg, Idaho and into Montana.[74]

In 2006, Harriet Petherick Bushman created a concert opera called "1856: Long Walk Home.".[75] A musical called 1856, produced by Cory Ellsworth, a descendant of Edmund Ellsworth, was performed in Mesa, Arizona and Salt Lake City in July 2006.[76][77] Filmmaker Lee Groberg and historian Heidi Swinton created a documentary for PBS called Sweetwater Rescue: The Willie & Martin Handcart Story and first broadcast on December 18, 2006.[78]

See also

Notable handcart pioneers

  • C. C. A. Christensen – Sub-captain of the seventh company and an artist known for his illustrations of LDS history
  • John Jaques – Member of the Martin Company, missionary, and company historian
  • Heber Robert McBride – traveled in the Martin Handcart Company as a youth and recorded his experience in a journal. Later helped settle Ogden Valley
  • Jens Nielson, Danish entrepreneur that later settled several communities in the Cedar City Historic District
  • Nellie Unthank – Member of the Martin Company
  • Emily H. Woodmansee – Member of the Willie Handcart Company and one of the most influential Mormon poets in the 19th century

Notable members of the rescue parties

  • Hosea Stout – Member of the second rescue party who carried messages to and from Salt Lake City

Notes

  1. ^ Roberts, David (Fall 2008), "The Awful March of the Saints", American Heritage
  2. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 102.
  3. ^ O'Dea (1957), pp. 41–49, 72–75.
  4. ^ O'Dea (1957), pp. 1–85
  5. ^ Allen and Leonard (1976), pp. 103–256.
  6. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 22–27.
  7. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 28–31.
  8. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 29–34, 46.
  9. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 40, 44, 91, 153, 157, 180.
  10. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 53–55.
  11. ^ Dekker (2006), p. 45
  12. ^ Pratt, Steve (2006) [1989], "1856–60, Handcarts: Construction Plans", Heritage Gateways, Utah State Office of Education and Utah System of Higher Education, archived from the original on May 22, 2013, retrieved June 4, 2013
  13. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 58–59, 157
  14. ^ Dekker (2006), p. 41.
  15. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 43–58.
  16. ^ Exact counts of the number of emigrants are not possible both because of incomplete records and because some emigrants dropped out along the way. For example, see Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 199.
  17. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 53–59.
  18. ^ Kimball (1979).
  19. ^ "Biography of Edmund Lovell Ellsworth". Arizona State University. Retrieved June 16, 2014.
  20. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 59–79.
  21. ^ Source for tables is Hafen and Hafen (1981), except for counts of emigrants and deaths for the Willie and Martin Companies.
  22. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 91.
  23. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 92–94.
  24. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 99–100.
  25. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 96–97.
  26. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 100.
  27. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 97–98, 119.
  28. ^ Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), p. 5.
  29. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 101, 108.
  30. ^ Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 3–4.
  31. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 119–125.
  32. ^ Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 5–11.
  33. ^ Long, Gary Duane (2009). The Journey of the James G. Willie Handcart Company October, 1856.
  34. ^ The various sources disagree regarding the identities of the members of first "express team" that found the Willie Company. Hafen and Hafen [1960] (1981), quoting emigrant John Chislett, name Joseph Young and Stephen Taylor. Jones (1890), a member of the rescue party, names Cyrus Wheelock and Stephen Taylor. Bartholomew and Arrington (1992) name Joseph Young, Abel Garr, and Cyrus Wheelock.
  35. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 101–107, 126
  36. ^ Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 11–18
  37. ^ Christy (1997), pp 37–39.
  38. ^ Christy (1997).
  39. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 108–116, 126
  40. ^ Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 21–25
  41. ^ Christy (1997), pp. 39–47.
  42. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), p. 228
  43. ^ Orton (2006), pp. 10–14.
  44. ^ Orton (2006), pp. 21–24.
  45. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 132–134
  46. ^ Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 25–28.
  47. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 127–131
  48. ^ Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 17–19.
  49. ^ Hafen & Hafen (1981), pp. 134–138; Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 28–37.
  50. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 138–140
  51. ^ Bartholomew and Arrington (1993), pp. 39–42.
  52. ^ Christy (1997), pp. 22–23
  53. ^ Stegner (1992), pp. 256–258.
  54. ^ Richards was the highest ranking church official in the area at the time the companies left Florence, and Spencer was the church's agent in Iowa City.
  55. ^ Young, Ann Eliza (1876), Wife No. 19, or the story of a life in bondage. Being a complete exposé of Mormonism, and revealing the sorrows, sacrifices and sufferings of women in polygamy, Hartford, Conn.: Dustin, Gilman & Co., pp. 204–205.
  56. ^ Christy (1997), p. 57.
  57. ^ Palmer, William R. (May 1944), "Pioneers of Southern Utah", The Instructor, 79 (5): 217–218.
  58. ^ Stegner (1992), p. 143.
  59. ^ Stegner (1992), p. 222.
  60. ^ Stegner (1992), p. 259
  61. ^ Christy (1997), pp. 21, 56.
  62. ^ Christy (199&0, p. 12
  63. ^ Source for counts of emigrants and deaths of Willie and Martin Companies is Christy (1992).
  64. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 143–144.
  65. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 148–149, 193.
  66. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 153–164.
  67. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 173–174.
  68. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 165–178.
  69. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 179–190.
  70. ^ Hafen and Hafen (1981), pp. 191–192.
  71. ^ Peters (1996), p. 145.
  72. ^ Stegner (1956), p. 85.
  73. ^ For example: Dolbee San, Sandi (July 15, 2006), "Trials of the trail", San Diego Union-Tribune, archived from the original on October 21, 2013; Griffiths, Lawn (November 12, 2005), "Gilbert Ward connects with ancestors by re-enacting Mormon trek", East Valley Tribune; Griffiths, Lawn (June 19, 2004), "Faith of the pioneers", East Valley Tribune
  74. ^ Bashore, Melvin (April 6, 2018). "Op-ed: Ever wondered where the Mormon youth trek phenomenon came from?". Deseret News.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  75. ^ 2006 Casper Conference, held at the Parkway Plaza Hotel and Conference Centre, Casper, Wyoming, May 25–28, 2006, Mormon History Association., archived from the original on June 14, 2006
  76. ^ "1856" The Musical.
  77. ^ "Musical marking Mormon trek is back", East Valley Tribune, May 20, 2006
  78. ^ See Sweetwater Rescue Archived December 14, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, Groberg Communications Archived October 31, 2006, at the Wayback Machine and Deseret News: Documentary explores handcart tragedy. The companion book is Swinton and Groberg (2006).

References