CHAPTER VIII.
DEPARTURE OF THE MORMONS FOR THE GREAT SALT LAKE
VALLEY—COLONEL KANE'S
DESCRIPTION OF NAUVOO AFTER
THE SIEGE—THE EXODUS OF THE PEOPLE—INCIDENTS
OF TRAVEL—ARRIVAL IN LOWER
CALIFORNIA—THE GREAT SALT LAKE.
THE "Great Salt
Lake Valley" was ultimately fixed upon as the halting-place and future
home of the sect; and thither the successive detachments of Mormons had
directed their steps. Whilst one party went overland to Upper California,
another party chartered the ship Brooklyn, at New York, and sailed round
to the Pacific, by Cape Horn. This party was amongst
the earliest of the arrivals in California, and its members were exceedingly
fortunate at the "diggings," and amassed large quantities of gold.
But the great bulk of
the Mormons proceeded overland to the Valley of the Great Salt Lake ; a
remarkable pilgrimage, which has not been paralleled in the history of
mankind since Moses led the Israelites from Egypt. The
distance to be traversed was enormous-- the perils of the way were great—the
whole circumstances were highly interesting and peculiar, and the
zeal and courage of the sect were as remarkable as their faith.
It is fortunate that a record of these events of the Mormon exodus was
kept by a person who knew how to use his eyes, his understanding, and his
pen ; and that he has been induced to give it to the world.
The following narrative of Colonel Kane, who accompanied the Mormons
from Nauvoo to the Salt Lake, has all the interest of a romance.
It was originally delivered as a lecture before the Historical Society
of Pennsylvania, and is here reproduced from the American edition:—
A few years ago (said
Colonel Kane), ascending the Upper Mississippi in the autumn when its waters
were low, I was compelled to travel by land past the region of the Rapids.
My road lay through the Half-Breed Tract, a fine section of Iowa, which
the unsettled state of its land-titles had appropriated as a sanctuary
for coiners, horse thieves, and other outlaws. I had
left my steamer at Keokuk, at the foot of the Lower Fall, to hire a carriage,
and to contend for some fragments of a dirty meal with the swarming flies,
the only scavengers of the locality. From this place
to where the deep water of the river returns, my eye wearied to see everywhere
sordid, vagabond, and idle settlers; and a country marred, without being
improved, by their careless hands.
I was descending the
last hill-side upon my journey, when a landscape in delightful
contrast broke upon my view. Half encircled by a bend of the
river, a beautiful city lay glittering in the fresh morning sun;
its bright new dwellings, set in cool green gardens, ranging up around
a stately dome-shaped hill, which was crowned by a noble marble edifice,
whose high tapering spire was radiant with white and gold.
The city appeared to cover several miles; and beyond it, in the background,
there rolled off a fair country, chequered by the careful lines of fruitful
husbandry. The unmistakeable marks of industry, enterprise,
and educated wealth everywhere, made the scene one of singular and most
striking beauty.
It was a natural impulse
to visit this inviting region. I procured a skiff, and rowing
across the river, landed at the chief wharf of the city. No one met
me there. I looked, and saw no one. I could hear no one move; though the
quiet everywhere was such that I heard the flies buzz, and the water-ripples
break against the shallow of the beach. I walked through
the solitary streets. The town lay as in a dream, under
some deadening spell of loneliness, from which I almost feared to wake
it; for plainly it had not slept long. There was no grass growing up in
the paved ways; rains had not entirely washed away the prints of dusty
footsteps.
Yet I went about unchecked.
I went into empty workshops, rope-walks, and smithies. The spinner's wheel
was idle : the carpenter had gone from his work-bench and shavings, his
unfinished sash and casing. Fresh bark was in the tanner's vat, and
the fresh-chopped lightwood stood piled against the baker's oven. The blacksmith's
shop was cold; but his coal heap, and ladling pool, and crooked water horn,
were all there, as if he had just gone off for a holiday. No work-people
anywhere looked to know my errand. If I went into the gardens, clinking
the wicket-latch loudly after me, to pull the marygolds, heart's-ease,
and lady-slippers, and draw a drink with the water-sodden well-bucket and
its noisy chain; or, knocking off with my stick the tall heavy-headed dahlias
and sun-flowers, hunted over the beds for cucumbers and love-apples—no
one called out to me from any opened window, or dog sprang forward to bark
an alarm. I could have supposed the people hidden in the houses, but the
doors were unfastened; and when at last I timidly entered them, I found
dead ashes white upon the hearths, and had to tread a-tiptoe, as if walking
down the aisle of a country church, to avoid rousing irreverent echoes
from the naked floors.
On the outskirts of
the town was the city graveyard ; but there was no record of plague there,
nor did it in anywise differ much from other Protestant American cemeteries.
Some of the mounds were not long sodded ; some of the stones were newly
set, their dates recent, and their black inscriptions glossy in the mason's
hardly dried lettering ink. Beyond the graveyard, out in the fields, I
saw, in one spot hard by where the fruited boughs of a young orchard had
been roughly torn down, the still smouldering remains of a barbecue fire,
that had been constructed of rails from the fencing round it. It was the
latest sign of life there. Fields upon fields of heavy-headed yellow grain
lay rotting ungathered upon the ground. No one was at hand to take in their
rich harvest. As far as the eye could reach, they stretched away—they sleeping
too in the hazy air of autumn.
Only two portions of
the city seemed to suggest the import of this mysterious solitude. On the
southern suburb, the houses looking out upon the country showed, by their
splintered wood-work, and walls battered to the foundation, that they had
lately been the mark of a destructive cannonade. And in and
around the splendid Temple, which had been the chief object of my admiration,
armed men were barracked, surrounded by their stacks of musketry and pieces
of heavy ordnance. These challenged me to render an account
of myself, and why I had had the temerity to cross the water without a
written permit from a leader of their band.
Though these men were
generally more or less under the influence of ardent spirits, after I had
explained myself as a passing stranger, they seemed anxious to gain my
good opinion. They told the story of the Dead City : that it had been a
notable manufacturing and commercial mart, sheltering over 20,000 persons
; that they had waged war with its inhabitants for several years, and had
been finally successful only a few days before my visit, in an action fought
in front of the ruined suburb ; after which, they had driven them forth
at the point of the sword. The defence, they said, had been obstinate,
but gave way on the third day's bombardment. They boasted greatly of their
prowess, especially in this battle, as they called it; but I covered they
were not of one mind as to certain of the exploits that had distinguished
it; one of which, as I remember, was, that they had slain a father and
his son, a boy of fifteen, not long residents of the fated city, whom they
admitted to have borne a character without reproach.
They also conducted
me inside the massive sculptured walls of the curious Temple, in which
they said the banished inhabitants were accustomed to celebrate the mystic
rites of an unhallowed worship. They particularly pointed out to
me certain features of the building, which, having been the peculiar objects
of a former superstitious regard, they had, as matter of duty, sedulously
defiled and defaced. The reputed sites of certain shrines they had
thus particularly noticed ; and various sheltered chambers, in one of which
was a deep well, constructed, they believed, with a dreadful design. Beside
these, they led me to see a large and deep chiselled marble vase or basin,
supported upon twelve oxen, also of marble, and of the size of life, of
which they told some romantic stories. They said the deluded persons, most
of whom were emigrants from a great distance, believed their Deity countenanced
their reception here of a baptism of regeneration, as proxies for whomsoever
they held in warm affection in the countries from which they had come.
That here parents ' went into the water' for their lost children, children
for their parents, widows for their spouses, and young persons for their
lovers; that thus the Great Vase came to be for them associated with all
dear and distant memories, and was therefore the object, of all others
in the building, to which they attached the greatest degree of idolatrous
affection. On this account, the victors had so diligently desecrated
it, as to rend the apartment in which it was contained too noisome to abide
in.
They permitted me also
to ascend into the steeple, to see where it had been lightning-struck on
the Sabbath before ; and to look out, east and south, on wasted farms like
those I had seen near the city, extending till they were lost in the distance.
Here, in the face of the pure day, close to the scar of the Divine wrath
left by the thunderbolt, were fragments of food, cruises of liquor, and
broken drinking vessels, with a brass drum and a steam-boat signal bell,
of which I afterwards learned the use with pain.
It was after nightfall,
when I was ready to cross the river on my return. The wind had freshened
since the sunset, and the water beating roughly into my little boat, I
hedged higher up the stream than the point I had left in the morning, and
landed where a faint glimmering light invited me to steer.
Here, among the dock
and rushes, sheltered only by the darkness, without roof between them and
sky, I came upon a crowd of several hundred human creatures, whom my movements
roused from uneasy slumber upon the ground.
Passing these on my
way to the light, I found it came from a tallow candle in a paper funnel
shade, such as is used by street venders of apples and pea-nuts, and which,
flaming and guttering away in the bleak air off the water, shone flickeringly
on the emaciated features of a man in the last stage of a bilious remittent
fever. They had done their best for him. Over his head was something
like a tent, made of a sheet or two, and he rested on a but partially ripped
open old straw mattress, with a hair sofa cushion under his head for a
pillow. His gaping jaw and glazing eye told how short a time he would
monopolize these luxuries; though a seemingly bewildered and excited person,
who might have been his wife, seemed to find hope in occasionally forcing
him to swallow awkwardly, sips of the tepid river water, from a burned
and battered bitter-smelling tin coffee-pot. Those who knew better
had furnished the apothecary he needed; a toothless old bald-head, whose
manner had the repulsive dullness of a man familiar with death scenes.
He, so long as I remained, mumbled in his patient's ear a monotonous and
melancholy prayer, between the pauses of which I heard the hiccup and sobbing
of two little girls, who were sitting up on a piece of drift-wood outside.
Dreadful, indeed, was the suffering of these forsaken beings; bowed and
cramped by cold and sunburn, alternating as each weary day and night dragged
on, they were, almost all of them, the crippled victims of disease. They
were there because they had no homes, nor hospital, nor poor-house, nor
friends to offer them any. They could not satisfy the feeble cravings of
their sick : they had not bread to quiet the fractious hunger-cries of
their children. Mothers and babes, daughters and grand-parents, all
of them alike, were bivouacked in tatters, wanting even covering to comfort
those whom the sick shiver of fever was searching to the marrow.
These were Mormons,
in Lee county, Iowa, in the fourth week of the month of September, in the
year of our Lord 1846. The city —it was Nauvoo, Illinois.
The Mormons were the owners of that city, and the smiling country
around. And those who had stopped their ploughs, who
had silenced their hammers, their axes, their shuttles, and their workshop
wheels; those who had put out their fires, who had eaten their food, spoiled
their orchards, and trampled under foot their thousands of acres of unharvested
bread; these were the keepers of their dwellings, the carousers
in their temple, whose drunken riot insulted the ears
of the dying.
I think it was as I
turned from the wretched nightwatch of which I have spoken,
that I first listened to the sounds of revel of a party of the guard within
the city. Above the distant hum of the voices of many,
occasionally rose distinct the loud oath-tainted exclamation, and the falsely
intonated scrap of vulgar song: but lest this requiem should go unheeded,
every now and then, when their boisterous orgies strove to attain
a sort of ecstatic climax, a cruel spirit of insulting frolic carried some
of them up into the high belfry of the Temple steeple, and there, with
the wicked childishness of inebriates, they whooped, and shrieked, and
beat the drum that I had seen, and rang in charivaric unison their loud-tongued
steam-boat bell.
They were, all told,
not more than six hundred and forty persons who were thus lying on the
river flats. But the Mormons in Nauvoo and its dependencies had been numbered
the year before at over twenty thousand. Where were they ? They had
last been seen, carrying in mournful train their sick and wounded, halt
and blind, to disappear behind the western horizon, pursuing the phantom
of another home. Hardly anything else was known of them : and people asked
with curiosity, ' What had been their fate—what their fortunes ?'
Since the expulsion
of the Mormons to the present date, I have been intimately conversant with
the details of their history. But I shall invite your attention most particularly
to an account of what happened to them during their first year in the wilderness;
because at this time more than any other, being lost to public view, they
were the subjects of fable and misconception. Happily it was during this
period I myself moved with them ; and earned, at dear price, as some among
you are aware, my right to speak with authority of them and their character,
their trials, achievements, and intentions.
The party encountered
by me at the river shore were the last of the Mormons that left the city.
They had all of them engaged, the year before, that they would vacate their
homes, and seek some other place of refuge. It had been the condition of
a truce between them and their assailants; and as an earnest of their good
faith, the chief elders, and some others of obnoxious standing, with their
families, were to set out for the West in the spring of 1846. It had been
stipulated in return, that the rest of the Mormons might remain behind
in the peaceful enjoyment of the Illinois abode, until their leaders, with
their exploring party, could, with all diligence, select for them a new
place of settlement beyond the Rocky Mountains, in California, or elsewhere,
and until they had opportunity to dispose, to the best advantage, of the
property which they were then to leave.
Some renewed symptoms
of hostile feeling had, however, determined the pioneer party to begin
their work before the spring. It was, of course, anticipated that this
would be a perilous service; but it was regarded as a matter of self-denying
duty. The ardour and emulation of many, particularly the devout and the
young, were stimulated by the difficulties it involved, and the ranks of
the party were therefore filled up with volunteers from among the most
effective and responsible members of the sect. They began their march in
mid-winter; and by the beginning of February, nearly all of them were on
the road, many of the waggons having crossed the Mississippi on the ice.
Under the most favouring
circumstances, an expedition of this sort, undertaken at such a season
of the year, could scarcely fail to be disastrous. But the pioneer company
had set out in haste, and were very imperfectly supplied with necessaries.
The cold was intense. They moved in the teeth of keen-edged north-west
winds, such as sweep down the Iowa Peninsula from the ice-bound regions
of the timber-shaded Slave Lake and Lake of the Woods; on the Bald Prairie
there, nothing above the dead grass breaks their free course over the hard
rolled hills. Even along the scattered water-courses, where they broke
the thick ice to give their cattle drink, the annual autumn fires had left
little wood of value. The party, therefore, often wanted for good camp
fires, the first luxury of all travellers ; but, to men insufficiently
furnished with tents and other appliances of shelter, almost an essential
to life. After days of fatigue, their nights were often past in restless
efforts to save themselves from freezing. Their stock of food, also, proved
inadequate; and as their systems became impoverished, their suffering from
cold increased.
Sickened with catarrhal
affections, manacled by the fetters of dreadfully acute rheumatisms, some
contrived for a while to get over the shortening day's march, and drag
along some others. But the sign of an impaired circulation
soon began to show itself in the liability of all to be dreadfully frost-bitten.
The hardiest and strongest became helplessly crippled.
About the same time, the strength of their beasts of draught began to fail.
The small supply of provender they could carry with them had given out.
The winter-bleached prairie straw proved devoid of nourishment; and they
could only keep them from starving by seeking for the browse, as it is
called, a green bark, and tender buds, and branches of the cotton-wood,
and other stinted growths of the hollows.
To return to Nauvoo
was apparently the only escape; but this would have been to give occasion
for fresh mistrust, and so to bring new trouble to those they had left
there behind them. They resolved at least to hold their ground,
and to advance as they might, were it only by limping through the deep
snows a few slow miles a day. They found a sort of comfort in comparing
themselves to the exiles of Siberia, and sought cheerfulness in earnest
prayers for the spring(longed for as morning by the tossing sick.
The spring came at last.
It overtook them in the Sac and Fox country, still on the naked prairie,
not yet half way over the trail they were following between the
Mississippi and Missouri rivers. But it brought its own
share of troubles with it. The months with which it opened
proved nearly as trying as the worst of winter.
The snow and sleet and
rain which fell, as it appeared to them, without intermission, made the
road over the rich prairie soil as impassable as one vast bog of heavy
black mud. Sometimes they would fasten the horses and oxen of four or five
waggons to one, and attempt to get a-head in this way, taking turns; but
at the close of a day of hard toil for themselves and their cattle, they
would find themselves a quarter or half a mile from the place they left
in the morning. The heavy rains raised all the water-courses: the most
trifling streams were impassable. Wood fit for bridging was often not to
be had, and in such cases the only resource was to halt for the freshets
to subside—a matter in the case of the headwaters of the Clariton, for
instance, of over three weeks' delay.
These were dreary waitings
upon Providence. The most spirited and sturdy murmured most at their forced
inactivity. And even the women, whose heroic spirits had been proof against
the lowest thermometric fall, confessed their tempers fluctuated with the
ceaseless variations of the barometer. They complained, too, that the health
of their children suffered more. It was the fact, that the open winds of
March and April brought with them more mortal sickness than the sharpest
freezing weather.
The frequent burials
made the hardiest sicken. On the solder's march
it is matter of discipline, that after the rattle of musketry over his
comrade's grave, he shall tramp it to the music of some careless tune in
a lively quick-step. But, in the Mormon camp, the companion
who lay ill and gave up the ghost within view of all, all saw as he stretched
a corpse, and all attended to his last resting-place.
It was a sorrow, too, of itself to simple-hearted people, the deficient
pomps of their imperfect style of funeral. The general
hopefulness of human(including Mormon—nature, was well illustrated by the
fact, that the most provident were found unfurnished with undertaker's
articles; so that bereaved affection was driven to the most melancholy
makeshifts.
The best expedient generally
was to cut down a log of some eight or nine feet long, and slitting it
longitudinally, strip off its dark bark in two half cylinders. These, placed
around the body of the deceased and bound firmly together with withes made
of the alburnum, formed a rough sort of tubular coffin which surviving
relations and friends, with a little show of black crape, could follow
with its enclosure to the hole, or bit of ditch, dug to receive it in the
wet ground of the prairie. They grieved to lower it down
so poorly clad, and in such an unheeded grave.
It was hard—was it right, thus hurriedly to plunge it in one of the undistinguishable
waves of the great land-sea, and leave it behind them there, under the
cold north rain, abandoned to be forgotten ? They had
no tombstones; nor could they find rocks to pile the monumental cairn.
So, when they had filled up the grave, and over it prayed a miserère
prayer, and tried to sing a hopeful psalm, their last office was to seek
out landmarks, or call in the surveyor to help them to determine the bearings
of valley bends, head-lands, or forks and angles of constant streams, by
which its position should in the future, be remembered and recognised.
The name of the beloved person, his age, the date of his death, and these
marks were all registered with care. This party was then
ready to move on. Such graves mark all the line of the first year
of the Mormon travel—dispiriting milestones to failing stragglers in the
rear.
It is an error to estimate
largely the number of Mormons dead of starvation, strictly speaking.
Want developed disease, and made them sink under fatigue, and maladies
that would otherwise have proved trifling. But only those
died of it outright who fell in out-of-the-way places, that the hand of
brotherhood could not reach. Among the rest no such thing
as plenty was known, while any went an hungered. If but
a part of a group was supplied with provision, the only result was, that
the whole went on the half or quarter ration, according to the sufficiency
that there was among them ; and this so ungrudgingly and contentedly, that,
till some crisis of trial to their strength, they were themselves unaware
that their health was sinking, and their vital force impaired. Hale young
men gave up their own provided food and shelter to the old and helpless,
and walked their way back to parts of the frontier States, chiefly Missouri
and Iowa, where they were not recognised, and hired themselves out for
wages, to purchase more. Others were sent there to exchange for meal and
flour, or wheat and corn, the table and bed furniture, and other last resource
of personal property which a few had still retained.
In a kindred spirit
of paternal forecast, others laid out great farms in the wilds, and planted
in them the grain saved for their own bread, that there might be harvests
for those who should follow them. Two of these, in the Sac and Fox
country, and beyond it, Garden Grove and Mount Pisgah, included within
their fences above two miles of land a-piece, carefully planted in grain,
with a hamlet of comfortable log-cabins in the neighbourhood of each.
Through all this,
the pioneers found redeeming comfort in the thought, that their own suffering
was the price of humanity to their friends at home. But
the arrival of spring proved this a delusion. Before the warm weather
had made the earth dry enough for easy travel, messengers came in from
Nauvoo to overtake the party, with fear-exaggerated tales of outrage, and
to urge the chief men to hurry back to the city, that they might give counsel
and assistance there. The enemy had only waited till the emigrants were
supposed to be gone on their road too far to return to interfere with them,
and then renewed their aggressions.
The Mormons outside
Nauvoo were indeed hard pressed; but inside the city they maintained themselves
very well for three or four months longer.
Strange to say, the
chief part of this respite was devoted to completing the structure
of their quaintly devised but beautiful Temple. Since
the dispersion of Jewry, probably, history affords us no parallel to the
attachment of the Mormons for this edifice. Every architectural
element, every most fantastic emblem it embodied, was associated for them
with some cherished feature of their religion. Its erection
had been enjoined upon them as a most sacred duty : they were
proud of the honour upon their city, when it grew up in its splendour to
become the chief object of the admiration of strangers upon the Upper Mississippi.
Besides, they had built it as a labour of love : they could count up to
half a million the value of their tithings and free-will offerings laid
upon it. Hardly a Mormon women who had not given up to it some trinket
or pin money ; the lowest Mormon man had at least served the tenth of his
year upon its walls ; and the coarsest artizan could turn to it with something
of the ennobling attachment of an artist for his fair creation. Therefore,
though their enemies drove on them ruthlessly, they succeeded in parrying
the last sword thrust till they had completed even the guilding of the
angel and trumpet on the summit of its lofty spire. As a closing
work, they placed on the entablature of the front, like a baptismal mark
on the forehead—
THE HOUSE OF THE LORD :
BUILT BY THE CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS.
HOLINESS TO THE LORD !
Then, at high noon,
under the bright sunshine of May, the next only after its completion, they
consecrated it to divine service. There was a carefully studied ceremonial
for the occasion. It was said the high elders of the sect travelled furtively
from the Camp of Israel in the Wilderness; and throwing off ingenious disguises,
appeared in their own robes of holy office, to give it splendour.
For that one day the
Temple stood resplendent in all its typical glories of sun, moon, and stars,
and other abounding figured and lettered signs, hieroglyphs, and symbols
: but that day only. The sacred rites of consecration
ended, the work of removing the sacrosancta proceeded with the rapidity
of magic. It went on through the night; and when
the morning of the next day dawned, all the ornaments and furniture, everything
that could provoke a sneer, had been carried off; and, except some fixtures
that would not bear removal, the building was dismantled to the bare walls.*
* This building, so
dear to the Mormons, is no longer in existence : " On
Monday, the 19th November, 1848," says the Nauvoo Patriot, " our citizens
were awakened by the alarm of fire, which, when first discovered, was bursting
out through the spire of the Temple, near the small door that opened from
the east side to the roof, on the main Building. The fire was
seen first about three o'clock in the morning, and not until it had taken
such hold of the timbers and roof as to make useless any effort to extinguish
it. The materials of the inside were so dry, and the fire spread
so rapidly, that a few minutes were sufficient to wrap this famed edifice
in a sheet of flame.
" It was evidently the
work of an incendiary. There had been, on the evening
previous, a meeting in the lower room; but no person was in the upper part,
where the fire was first discovered. Who it was, and
what could have been his motives, we have now no idea.
Some feeling, infinitely more unenviable than that of the individual who
put the torch to the beautiful Ephesian structure of old, must have possessed
him. To destroy a work of art, at once the most elegant
in its construction and the most renowned in its celebrity of any in the
whole West, would, we should think, require a mind of more than ordinary
depravity ; and we feel assured that no one in this community could have
been so lost to every sense of justice, and every consideration of interest,
as to become the author of the deed. Admit that it was
a monument of folly and of evil, yet it was, to say the least of it, a
splendid and a harmless one.
" Its loss, no doubt,
will be more forcibly felt by the people of this place than any other ;
because even the most dreamy will hardly think of soon seeing another such
ornament, and because it was on the eve of changing hands, and being converted
into a commodious building of useful education, such as the West greatly
needs, and such as no one ought to be envious of."
" In May 1850, another
calamity occurred to the devoted City of Nauvoo: at that time occupied
by a colony of Icarians, who had emigrated thither from Paris, under the
super-intendence of M. Cabet.
" The dreadful tornado
of May 27th," says the Handcock Patriot, "which invaded the City of Nauvoo
and neighbouring places, has been for us, Icarians, (little accustomed
to such revolutions in the atmosphere), a spectacle of frightful sublimity,
and also a source of mortal anguish, on account of the disasters and catastrophes
which have resulted from it, to the inhabitants of this county, and to
us.
" The Temple, which
we were preparing so actively and resolutely to rebuild ; the Temple which
we hoped to cover this year; and in which we were to settle our refectories,
our halls of reunion, and our schools; that gigantic monument has become
the first victim of the tornado.
" How many projects
are buried under those heaps of rubbish! How much outlay and days
of hard labour has been lost to us! It was for that magnificent
edifice to again give a soul to that great body, that one of our agents
in the north pineries has just bought all the great beams necessary for
its rebuilding; it is for it, that we were adding a saw machine to the
mill, and establishing a vast shed, to shelter our labourers; in a word,
it was for it that all our efforts and strength have been employed; and
now, one gale of the tempest brings to naught all our endeavours; has violently
ended what incendiary had begun in October 1848, and what union fraternity
tried to repair in 1850. We resign without murmuring
to that catastrophe.
" There now remains
nothing of the gigantic work of the Mormons, except the west face, strongly
united by its sides to another wall in the interior part, and surmounted
by an arch; between the two walls at the north and south are the two towers
or seat of the staircases."
It was this day saw
the departure of the last elders, and the largest band that moved in one
company together. The people of Iowa have told me, that
from morning to night they passed westward like an endless procession.
They did not seem greatly out of heart, they said; but at the top of every
hill, before they disappeared, they were seen to be looking back, like
banished Moors, on their abandoned homes, and the far seen Temple and its
glittering spire.
After this consecration,
which was construed to indicate an insincerity on the part of the Mormons
as to their stipulated departure, or at least a hope of return, their foes
set upon them with renewed bitterness. As many fled as
were at all prepared; but by the very fact of their so decreasing the already
diminished forces of the city's defenders, they encouraged the enemy to
greater boldness. It soon became apparent that
nothing short of an immediate emigration could save the remnant.
From this time onward
the energies of those already on the road were engrossed by the duty of
providing for the fugitives who came crowding in after them. At a last
general meeting of the sect in Nauvoo, there had been passed an unanimous
resolve, that they would sustain one another, whatever their circumstances,
upon the march; and this, though made in view of no such appalling exigency,
they now with one accord set themselves together to carry out.
Here begins the touching
period of Mormon history; on which, but that it is for me a hackneyed
subject, I should be glad to dwell, were it only for the proof it has afforded
of the strictly material value to communities of an active common faith,
and its happy illustrations of the power of the spirit of Christian fraternity
to relieve the deepest of human suffering. I may
assume that it has already fully claimed the public sympathy.
Delayed thus by their
own wants, and by their exertions to provide for the
wants of others, it was not till the month of June that the advance of
the emigrant companies arrived at the Missouri.
This body, I remember,
I had to join there, ascending the river for the purpose from Fort Leavenworth,
which was at that time our frontier post. The fort was the interesting
rendezvous of the army of the West, and the head-quarters of its gallant
chief, Stephen F. Kearney, whose guest and friend I account it my honour
to have been. Many as were the reports daily received at the garrison
from all portions of the Indian territory, it was a significant fact how
little authentic intelligence was to be obtained concerning the Mormons.
Even the region in which they were to be sought after, was a question not
attempted to be designated with accuracy, except by what are very often
called in the West, " Mormon stories," none of which bore any sifting.
One of these averred, that a party of Mormons in spangled crimson robes
of office, headed by one in black velvet and silver, had been teaching
a Jewish pow-wow to the medicine men of the Sauks and Foxes. Another averred
that they were going about in buffalo robe short frocks, imitative of the
costume of Saint John, preaching baptism and the instance of the kingdom
of heaven among the Ioways. To believe one report, ammunition and whiskey
had been received by Indian braves at the hands of an elder with a flowing
white beard, who spoke Indian, he alleged, because he had the gift of tongues,
this, as far north as the country of the Yanketon Sioux. According to another,
yet which professed to be derived officially from at least one Indian sub-agent,
the Mormons had distributed the scarlet uniforms of H. B. M.'s servants
among the Pottawatamies, and had carried into the country twelve pieces
of brass cannon, which were counted by a traveller as they were rafted
across the East Fork of Grand River, one of the northern tributaries of
the Missouri. The narrators of these pleasant stories
were at variance as to the position of the Mormons, by a couple of hundred
leagues; but they harmonized in the warning, that to seek certain of the
leading camps would be to meet the treatment of a spy.
Almost at the
outset of my journey from Fort Leavenworth while yet upon the edge
of the Indian border, I had the good fortune to fall in with a couple of
thin-necked sallow persons, in patchwork pantaloons, conducting northward
waggon loads of Indian corn, which they had obtained, according to their
own account, in barter from a squatter for some silver spoons and a feather
bed. Their character was disclosed by their eager request
of a bite from my wallet; in default of which, after a somewhat superfluous
scriptural grace, they made an imperfect lunch before me off the softer
of their corn ears, eating the grains as horses do, from the cob.
I took their advice to follow up the Missouri; somewhere not far from which,
in the Pottawatamie country, they were sure I would encounter one of their
advancing companies.
I had bad weather on
the road. Excessive heats, varied only by repeated
drenching thunder squalls, knocked up my horse, my only travelling companion;
and otherwise added to the ordinary hardships of a kind of life to which
I was as yet little accustomed. I suffered a sense of discomfort,
therefore, amounting to physical nostalgia, and was, in fact, wearied to
death of the staring silence of the prairie, before I came upon the objects
of my search.
They were collected
a little distance above the Pottawatamie
agency. The hills of the " High Prairie" crowding in
upon the river at this point, and overhanging it, appear of an unusual
and commanding elevation. They are called the Council
Bluffs, a name given them with another meaning, but well illustrated by
the picturesque congress of their high and mighty summits.
To the south of them, a rich alluvial flat of considerable width follows
down the Missouri, some eight miles, to where it is lost from view at a
turn, which forms the site of the Indian town of Point aux Poules.
Across the river from this spot the hills recur again, but are skirted
at their base by as much low ground as suffices for a landing.
This landing, and the
large flat or bottom on the east side of the river, were crowded with covered
carts and waggons; and each one of the Council Bluff hills opposite was
crowned with its own great camp, gay with bright white canvass, and alive
with the busy stir of swarming occupants. In the clear
blue morning air, the smoke streamed up from more than a thousand cooking
fires. Countless roads and by-paths checkered all manner
of geometric figures on the hill sides. Herd boys were dozing
upon the slopes; sheep and horses, cows and oxen, were feeding around them,
and other herds in the luxuriant meadow of the then swollen river.
From a single point I counted four thousand head of cattle in view at one
time. As I approached the camps, it seemed to me the
children there were to prove still more numerous. Along
a little creek I had to cross were women in greater force than blanchisseuses
upon the Seine, washing and rinsing all manner of white muslins,
red flannels, and parti-coloured calicoes, and hanging them to bleach upon
a greater area of grass and bushes than we can display in all our Washington
Square.
Hastening by these,
I saluted a group of noisy boys, whose purely vernacular cries had for
me an invincible home-savouring attraction. It was one of them, a bright
faced lad, who, hurrying on his jacket and trowsers, fresh from bathing
in the creek, first assured me I was at my right destination. He was a
mere child; but he told me of his own accord where I had best go seek my
welcome, and took my horse's bridle to help me pass a morass, the bridge
over which he alleged to be unsafe.
There was something
joyous for me in my free rambles about this vast body of pilgrims.
I could range the wild country wherever I listed, under safeguard of their
moving host. Not only in the main camps was all stir and life, but
in every direction, it seemed to me, I could follow "Mormon Roads," and
find them beaten hard, and even dusty, by the tread and wear of the cattle
and vehicles of emigrants labouring over them. By day,
I would overtake and pass, one after another, what amounted
to an army train of them; and at night, if I encamped at the places where
the timber and running water were found together, I was almost sure to
be within call of some camp or other, or at least within sight of its watch-fires.
Wherever I was compelled to tarry I was certain to find shelter and hospitality,
scant, indeed, but never stinted, and always honest and kind.
After a recent unavoidable association with the border
inhabitants of Western Missouri and Iowa, the vile scum which our
own society, to apply the words of an admirable gentleman and eminent
divine, " like the great ocean washes upon its frontier shores," I can
scarcely describe the gratification I felt in associating again with persons
who were almost all of Eastern American origin—persons of refined and cleanly
habits and decent language—and in observing their peculiar
and interesting mode of life ; while every day seemed to bring with it
its own especial incidents, fruitful in the illustration of habits and
character.
It was during the period
of which I have just spoken, that the Mormon battalion of five hundred
and twenty men was recruited and marched for the Pacific coast.
At the commencement
of the Mexican war, the President considered it desirable to march a body
of reliable infantry to California at as early a period as practicable,
and the known hardihood and habits of discipline of the Mormons were supposed
peculiarly to fit them for this service. As California
was supposed also to be their ultimate destination, the long march might
cost them less than other citizens. They were accordingly
invited to furnish a battalion of volunteers early in the month of July.
The call could hardly
have been more inconveniently timed. The young, and those who could
best have been spared, were then away from the main body, either with pioneer
companies in the van, or, their faith unannounced, seeking work and food
about the north-western settlements, to support them till the return of
the season for commencing emigration. The force was,
therefore, to be recruited from among fathers of families, and others,
whose presence it was most desirable to retain.
There were some, too,
who could not view the invitation without jealousy. They had twice been
persuaded by (State) Government authorities in Illinois and Missouri, to
give up their arms on some special appeals to their patriotic confidence,
and had then been left to the malice of their enemies. And now they were
asked, in the midst of the Indian country, to surrender over five hundred
of their best men for a war march of thousands of miles to California,
without the hope of return till after the conquest of that country.
Could they view such a proposition with favour ?
But the feeling of country
triumphed. The Union had never wronged them : "You shall have your battalion
at once, if it has to be a class of our elders," said one, himself a ruling
elder. A central " mass meeting" for council, some harangues at the more
remotely scattered camps, an American flag brought out from a storehouse
of things rescued, and hoisted to the top of a tree mast, and in three
days the force was reported, mustered, organized, and ready to march.
There was no sentimental
affectation at their leave-taking. The afternoon before
was appropriated to a farewell ball; and a more merry dancing rout I have
never seen, though the company went without refreshments, and their ball-room
was of the most primitive. It was the custom, whenever
the larger camps rested for a few days together, to make great arbours,
or boweries, as they called them, of poles and brush and wattling, as places
of shelter for their meetings of devotion or conference.
In one of these, where the ground had been trodden firm and hard by the
worshippers of the popular Father Taylor's precinct, was gathered now the
mirth and beauty of the Mormon Israel.
If anything told the
Mormons had been bred to other lives, it was the appearance of the women,
as they assembled here. Before their flight, they had
sold their watches and trinkets as the most available resource for raising
ready money; and hence, like their partners, who wore
waistcoats cut with useless watch-pockets, they, although their ears were
pierced and bore the loop-marks of rejected pendants, were without ear-rings,
finger-rings, chains, or brooches. Except such ornaments, however,
they lacked nothing most becoming the attire of decorous maidens. The neatly
darned white stocking, and clean bright petticoat, the artistically clear-starched
collar and chemisette, the something faded, only because too well washed,
lawn or gingham gown, that fitted modishly to the waist of its pretty wearer—these,
if any of them spoke of poverty, spoke of a poverty that had known its
better days.
With the rest attended
the Elders of the Church within call, including nearly all the chiefs
of the High Council, with their wives and children. They,
the gravest and most trouble worn, seemed the most anxious of any to be
first to throw off the burden of heavy thoughts. Their leading
off the dancing in a great double cotillion was the signal bade the
festivity commence. To the canto of debonnair violins,
the cheer of horns, the jingle of sleigh-bells, and the jovial snoring
of the tambourine, they did dance ! None of your minuets
or other mortuary processions of gentles in etiquette, tight shoes, and
pinching gloves, but the spirited and scientific displays of our venerated
and merry grandparents, who were not above following the fiddle to the
Fox-Chase Inn or Gardens of Gray's Ferry. French fours,
Copenhagen jigs, Virginia reels, and the like forgotten figures, executed
with the spirit of people too happy to be slow, or bashful, or constrained.
Light hearts, lithe figures, and light feet, had it their own way from
an early hour till after the sun had dipped behind the sharp sky line of
the Omaha hills. Silence was then called, and a well-cultivated
mezzo-soprano voice, belonging to a young lady with fair face and dark
eyes, gave, with quartette accompaniment, a little song, the notes of which
I have been unsuccessful in repeated efforts to obtain since,—a version
of the text, touching to all earthly wanderers:—
" By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept :
We wept when we remember Zion."
There was danger of
some expression of feeling when the song was over, for it had begun to
draw tears ; but breaking the quiet with his hard voice, an Elder asked
the blessing of Heaven on all who, with purity of heart, and brotherhood
of spirit, had mingled in that society, and then all dispersed, hastening
to cover from the falling dews. All, I remember, but some splendid
Indians, who, in cardinal scarlet blankets and feathered leggings, had
been making foreground figures for the dancing rings, like those in Mr.
West's picture of our Philadelphia Treaty, and staring their inability
to comprehend the wonderful performances. These loitered
to the last, as if unwilling to seek their abject homes.
Well as I knew the peculiar
fondness of the Mormons for music, their orchestra in service on this occasion
astonished me by its numbers and fine drill. The story
was, that an eloquent Mormon missionary had converted its members in a
body at an English town, a stronghold of the sect, and that they took up
their trumpets, trombones, drums, and hautboys together, and followed him
to America.
When the refugees
from Nauvoo were hastening to part with their table-ware, jewellery,
and almost every other fragment of metal wealth they possessed that was
not iron, they had never a thought of giving up the instruments of this
favourite band. And when the battalion was enlisted,
though high inducements were offered some of the performers to accompany
it, they all refused. Their fortunes went with
the Camp of the Tabernacle. They had led the Farewell
Service in the Nauvoo Temple. Their office now was to
guide the monster choruses and Sunday hymns; and like the trumpets of silver
made of a whole piece " for the calling of the assembly, and for the journeying
of the camps," to knoll the people in to church. Some
of their wind instruments, indeed, were uncommonly full and
pure-toned, and in that clear dry air could be heard to a great distance.
It had the strangest effect in the world, to listen to their sweet
music; winding over the uninhabited country. Something
in the style of a Moravian death-tone blown at day-break, but altogether
unique. It might be when you were hunting a ford over the Great Platte,
the dreariest of all wild rivers, perplexed among the far-reaching sand-bars
and curlew shallows of its shifting bed :—the wind rising would bring you
the first faint thought of a melody ; and, as you listened, borne down
upon the gust that swept past you a cloud of the dry sifted sands, you
recognised it—perhaps a home-loved theme of Henry Proch or Mendelssohn.
Mendelssohn Bartholdy, away there in the Indian Marches!
The battalion gone,
the host again moved on. The tents, which had gathered on the hill summits,
like white birds hesitating to venture on the long flight over the river,
were struck one after another, and the dwellers in them and their waggons,
and their cattle, hastened down to cross it at a ferry in the valley, which
they made ply night and day. A little beyond the landing, they formed their
companies, and made their preparations for the last and longest stage of
their journey. It was a more serious matter to cross the mountains then
than now, that the thirst of our people for the gold of California has
made the region between them and their desire such literally trodden ground.
Thanks to this wonderful
movement, I may dismiss an effort to describe the incidents of emigrant
life upon the Plains, presuming that you have been made more than familiar
with them already, by the many repeated descriptions of which they have
been the subject. The desert march, the ford, the quicksand, the
Indian battle, the bison chase, the prairie fire :—the adventures of the
Mormons comprised every variety of these varieties ; but I could not hope
to invest them with the interest of novelty. The character
of their every-day life, its routine and conduct, alone offered any exclusive
or marked peculiarity. Their romantic devotional observances, and their
admirable concert of purpose and action, met the eye at once.
After these, the stranger was most struck, perhaps, by the strict order
of march, the unconfused closing up to meet attack, the skilful securing
of the cattle upon the halt, the system with which the watches were set
at night to guard them and the lines of corral— with other similar circumstances
indicative of the maintenance of a high state of discipline.
Every ten of their waggons was under the care of a captain.
This captain of ten,
as they termed him, obeyed a captain of fifty ; who, in turn,
obeyed his captain of a hundred, or directly a member of what they call
the High Council of the Church. All these were responsible
and determined men, approved of by the people for their courage, discretion,
and experience. So well recognised were the results of
this organization, that bands of hostile Indians have passed by comparative
small parties of Mormons, to attack much larger, but less compact bodies
of other emigrants.
The most striking feature,
however, of the Mormon emigration, was undoubtedly their formation of the
Tabernacle Camps, and temporary Stakes, or Settlements, which renewed,
in the sleeping solitudes everywhere along their road, the cheering signs
of intelligent and hopeful life.
I will make this remark
plainer by describing to you one of these camps, with the daily routine
of its inhabitants. I select at random, for my purpose, a large camp upon
the delta between the Nebraska and Missouri, in the territory disputed
between the Omaha and Otto and Missouri Indians. It remained pitched here
for nearly two months, during which period I resided in it.
It was situated
near the Petit Papillon, or
Little Butterfly River, and upon some finely-rounded hills that encircle
a favourite cool spring. On each of these a square was
marked out; and the waggons, as they arrived, took their positions along
its four sides in double rows, so as to leave a roomy street or passage-way
between them. The tents were disposed also in rows, at intervals,
between the waggons. The cattle were folded in high-fenced yards
outside. The quadrangle inside was left vacant for the
sake of ventilation, and the streets, covered in with leafy arbour
work, and kept scrupulously clean, formed a shaded cloister walk.
This was the place of exercise for slowly-recovering invalids, the day-home
of the infants, and the evening promenade of all.
From the first formation
of the camp, all its inhabitants were constantly and laboriously occupied.
Many of them were highly educated mechanics, and seemed only to need
a day's anticipated rest to engage them at the forge, loom, or turning-lathe,
upon some needed chore of work. A. Mormon gunsmith is
the inventor of the excellent repeating rifle, that loads by slides instead
of cylinders ; and one of the neatest finished fire-arms I have ever seen
was of this kind, wrought from scraps of old iron, and inlaid with the
silver of a couple of half dollars, under a hot July sun, in a spot where
the average height of the grass was above the workman's shoulders.
I have seen a cobbler, after the halt of his party on the march, hunting
along the river bank for a lap-stone, in the twilight, that he might finish
a famous boot-sole by the camp fire; and I have had a piece of cloth, the
wool of which was sheared, and dyed, and spun, and woven, during a progress
over three hundred miles.
Their more interesting
occupations, however, were those growing out of their peculiar circumstances
and position. The chiefs were seldom without some curious
affair on hand to settle with the restless Indians; while the immense labour
and responsibility of the conduct of their unwieldy moving army, and the
commissariat of its hundreds of famishing poor, also devolved upon them.
They had good men they called Bishops, whose special office it was to look
up the cases of extremest suffering, and their relief parties were out
night and day to scour over every trail.
At this time, say two
months before the final expulsion from Nauvoo, there were already,
along three hundred miles of the road between that city and our Papillon
Camp, over two thousand emigrating waggons, besides a large number of nondescript
turn-outs, the motley make-shifts of poverty, from the unsuitably heavy-cart,
that lumbered on mysteriously, with its sick driver hidden under its counterpane
cover, to the crazy two-wheeled trundle, such as our own poor employ for
the conveyance of their slop-barrels, this pulled along, it may be, by
a little dry, dogged heifer, and rigged up only to drag some such light
weight as a baby, a sack of meal, or a pack of clothes and bedding.
Some of them were in
distress from losses upon the way. A strong trait of
the Mormons was their kindness to their brute dependents, and particularly
to their beasts of draught. They gave them the holiday
of the Sabbath whenever it came round. I believe they
would have washed them with old wine, after the example of the emigrant
Carthaginians, had they had any. Still, in the Slave-coast
heats, under which the animals had to move, they sometimes foundered.
Sometimes, too, they strayed off in the night, or were mired in morasses,
or oftener were stolen by Indians, who found market covert for such plunder
among the horse-thief whites of the frontier. But the great mass
of these pilgrims of the desert was made up of poor folks, who had fled
in destitution from Nauvoo, and been refused a resting-place by the people
of Iowa.
It is difficult fully
to understand the state of helplessness in which some of these would arrive,
after accomplishing a journey of such extent, under circumstances of so
much privation and peril. The fact was, they seemed to
believe that all their trouble would be at an end if they could only come
up with their comrades at the great camps. For this they calculated
their resources, among which their power of endurance was by much the largest
and most reliable item, and they were not disappointed if they arrived
with these utterly exhausted.
I remember a signal
instance of this at the Papillon Camp :
It was that of a joyous-hearted
clever fellow, whose songs and fiddle-tunes were the life and delight
of Nauvoo in its merry days. I forget his story, and
how exactly it fell about, that, after a Mormon's full peck of troubles,
he started after us, with his wife and little ones, from some "lying-down
place " in the Indian country, where he had contended with an attack of
a serious malady. He was just convalescent, and the fatigue of marching
on foot again, with a child on his back, speedily brought on a relapse.
But his anxiety to reach a place where he could expect to meet friends
with shelter and food, was such that he only pressed on the harder.
Probably for more than a week of the dog-star weather, he laboured on under
a high fever, walking every day till he was entirely exhausted.
His limbs failed him
then; but his courage holding out, he got into his covered cart, on top
of its freight of baggage, and made them drive him on while he lay down.
They could hardly believe how ill he was, he talked on so cheerfully: "
I'm nothing on earth ailing but home-sick. I'm cured the very minute I
get to camp and see the brethren."
Not being able thus
to watch his course, he lost his way, and had to regain it through a wretched
tract of low meadow-prairie, where there were no trees to break the noon,
no water but what was ague-sweet or brackish. By the
time he got back to the trail of the high prairie, he was, in his own phrase,
pretty far gone. Yet he was resolute in his purpose as
ever, and to a party he fell in with avowed his intention to be cured at
the camp, " and nowhere else." He even jested with them, comparing
his jolting couch to a summer cot in a white-washed cock-loft.
" But I'll make them take me down," he said, "and give me a dip in the
river when I get there. All I care for is to see the brethren."
His determined bearing
rallied the spirits of his travelling house-hold, and they kept on their
way till he was within a few hours' journey of the camp.
He entered on his last day's journey with the energy of increased hope.
I remember that day
well, for in the evening I mounted a tired horse to go a short errand,
and in mere pity, had to turn back before I had walked him a couple of
hundred yards. Nothing seemed to draw life from the languid
air but the clouds of gnats and stinging midges; and long after sun-down,
it was so hot that the sheep lay on their stomachs panting, and the cattle
strove to lap wind like hard-fagged hunting-dogs. In camp, I had
spent the day in watching the invalids, and the rest hunting the
shade under the waggon-bodies, and veering about them like the shadows
round the sun-dial. I know I thought myself wretched
enough to be of their company.
Poor Merryman had all
that heat to bear, with the mere pretence of an awning to screen out the
sun from his close muslin cock-loft.
He did not fail till
somewhere hard upon noon. He then began to grow restless, to
know accurately the distance travelled. He made them
give him water, too, much more frequently; and when they stopped for this
purpose, asked a number of obscure questions. A little
after this he discovered himself that a film had come over his eyes.
He confessed that this was discouraging, but said with stubborn resignation,
that if denied to see the brethren, he still should hear the sound of their
voices.
After this, which was
when he was hardly three miles from our camp, he lay very quiet, as if
husbanding his strength ; but when he had made, as is thought, a full mile
further, being interrogated by the woman that was driving, whether she
should stop, he answered her, as she avers, " No, no ; go on!"
The anecdote ends badly.
They brought him in dead, I think about five o'clock in the afternoon.
He had on his clean clothes, as he had dressed himself in the morning,
looking forward to his arrival.
Beside the common duty
of guiding and assisting these unfortunates, the companies in the van united
in providing the highway for the entire body of emigrants.
The Mormons have laid out for themselves a road through the Indian Territory,
over four hundred leagues in length, with substantial well-built bridges,
fit for the passage of heavy artillery, over all the streams, except a
few great rivers where they have established permanent ferries.
The nearest unfinished bridging to the Papillon Camp was that of the Corne
à Cerf, or Elk-Horn, a tributary of the Platte, distant may be a
couple of hours' march. Here, in what seemed to be an
incredibly short space of time, there rose the seven great piers
and abutments of a bridge, such as might challenge honours for the
entire public-spirited population of Lower Virginia.
The party detailed to the task worked in the broiling sun, in water beyond
depth, and up to their necks, as if engaged in the perpetration of some
pointed and delightful practical joke. The chief sport lay in floating
along with the logs, cut from the over-hanging timber up the stream, guiding
them till they reached their destination, and then plunging them under
water in the precise spot where they were to be secured.
This the laughing engineers would execute with the agility of happy, diving
ducks.
Our nearest ferry was
that over the Missouri. Nearly opposite Pull Point, or
Point aux Poules, a trading post of the American Fur Company, and village
of the Pottawatamies, they had gained a favourable crossing by making a
deep cut for the road through the steep right bank.
And here, without intermission, their flat-bottomed scows plied,
crowded with the waggons, and cows, and sheep, and children, and furniture
of the emigrants, who, in waiting their turn, made the woods around smoke
with their crowding camp fires. But no such good fortune as a
gratuitous passage awaited the heavy cattle, of whom, with the others,
no less than thirty thousand were at this time on their way westward ;
these were made to earn it by swimming.
A heavy freshet had
at this time swollen the river to a width, as I should judge, of something
like a mile and a half, and dashed past its fierce current, rushing, gurgling,
and eddying, as if thrown from a mill-race, or scriptural fountain
of the deep. Its aspect did not invite the oxen to their
duty, and the labour was to force them to it. They were gathered in little
troops upon the shore, and driven forward till they lost their footing.
As they turned their heads to return, they encountered the combined opposition
of a clamorous crowd of bystanders, vieing with each other in the pungent
administration of inhospitable affront. Then rose their
hubbub; their geeing and woing, and hawing ; their yelling, and yelping,
and screaming ; their
hooting, and hissing, and pelting.
The rearmost steers would hesitate to brave such a rebuff; halting
they would impede the return of the outermost;
they all would waver ; wavering for a moment, the current
would sweep them together downward. At this juncture a fearless
youngster, climbing upon some brave bull in the front rank, would urge
him boldly forth into the stream; the rest then surely followed; a few
moments saw them struggling in mid current; a few more, and they were safely
landed on the opposite shore. The driver's was the sought
after post of honour here; and sometimes, when repeated failures have urged
them to emulation, I have seen the youths, in stepping from back to back
of the struggling monsters, or swimming in among their battling hoofs,
display feats of address and hardihood, that would have made Franconi's
or the Madrid bull-ring vibrate with bravos of applause.
But in the hours after hours that I have watched this sport at the ferry
side, I never heard an oath, or the language of quarrel, or knew it provoke
the least sign of ill feeling.
After the sorrowful
word was given out to halt, and make preparations for winter, a chief labour
became the making hay; and with everyday dawn brigades of mowers would
take up the march to their positions in chosen meadows, a prettier sight
than a charge of cavalry, as they laid their swarths, whole companies of
scythes abreast. Before this time the manliest, as well as most general
daily labour, was the herding of the cattle ; the only wealth of the Mormons,
and more and more cherished by them, with the increasing pastoral character
of their lives. A camp could not be pitched in any spot
without soon exhausting the freshness of the pasture around it; and
it became an ever recurring task to guide the cattle, in unbroken droves,
to the nearest places where it was still fresh and fattening.
Sometimes it was necessary to go farther, to distant ranges which were
known as
feeding grounds of the buffalo. About these there were sure
to prowl parties of thievish Indians ; and each drove therefore had its
escort of mounted men and boys, who learned self-reliance and heroism,
while on night guard alone, among the silent hills. But generally the cattle
were driven from the camp at the dawn of morning, and brought back thousands
together in the evening, to be picketed in the great corral or enclosure,
where beeves, bulls, cows, and oxen, with the horses, mules, hogs, calves,
sheep, and human beings, could all look together upon the red watch-fires,
with the feeling of security, when aroused by the Indian stampede, or the
howlings of the prairie wolves at moonrise.
When they set about
building their winter houses, too, the Mormons went into quite considerable
timbering operations, and performed desperate feats of carpentry.
They did not come ornamental gentlemen or raw apprentices, to extemporize
new versions of Robinson Crusoe It was a comfort
to notice the readiness with which they turned their hands to wood-craft;
some of them, though I believe these had generally been bred carpenters,
wheel-wrights, or more particularly boat-builders, quite outdoing the most
notable voyageurs in the use of the axe. One of these would fell a tree,
strip off its bark, cut and split up the trunk in piles of plank, scantling,
or shingles; make posts, and pins, and pales—everything wanted almost,
of the branches ; and treat his toil from first to last with more sportive
flourish than a school-boy whittling his shingle.
Inside the camp, the
chief labours were assigned to the women. From the moment, when after
the halt, the lines had been laid, the spring-wells dug out, and the ovens
and fire-places built, though the men still assumed to set the guards and
enforce the regulations of police, the Empire of the Tented Town was with
the better sex. They were the chief comforters of the severest
sufferers, the kind nurses who gave them in their sickness those dear attentions
with which pauperism is hardly poor, and which the greatest wealth often
fails to buy; and they were a nation of most wonderful managers.
They could hardly be called housewives in etymological strictness ; but
it was plain that they had once been such, and most distinguished ones.
Their art availed them in their changed affairs. With
almost their entire culinary material, limited to the milk of their cows,
some store of meal or flour, and a very few condiments, they brought
their thousand and one receipts into play with a success that outdid for
their families the miracle of the Hebrew widow's cruise.
They learned to make butter on a march by the dashing of the waggon, and
so nicely to calculate the working of barm in the jolting heats, that as
soon after the halt as an oven could be dug in the hill-side and heated,
their well-kneaded loaf was ready for baking, and produced good leavened
bread for supper. I have no doubt the appetizing
zest, their humble lore succeeded in imparting to diet which
was both simple and meagre, availed materially for the health as well as
the comfort of the people.
But the first duty of
the Mormon women was, through all change of place and fortune, to keep
alive the altar fire of home. Whatever their manifold
labours for the day, it was their effort to complete them against the sacred
hour of evening fall; for, by that time, all the out-workers, scouts, ferrymen,
or bridgemen, road-makers, herdsmen, or hay-makers, had finished their
tasks, and come in to their rest; and before the last smoke of the supper-fire
curled up, reddening in the glow of sunset, a hundred chimes of cattle
bells announced their looked-for approach across the open hills, and the
women went out to meet them at the camp gates, and with their children
in their laps sat by them at the cherished family meal, and talked over
the events of the well-spent day.
But every day closed,
as every day began, with an invocation of the Divine favour; without which,
indeed, no Mormon seemed to dare to lay him down to rest.
With the first shining of the stars, laughter and loud talking hushed,
the neighbour went his way, you heard the last hymn sung, and then the
thousand-voiced murmur of prayer was heard like bubbling water falling
down the hills.
There was no austerity,
however, about the religion of Mormonism. Their fasting
and penance, it is no jest to say, was altogether involuntary; they made
no merit of that. They kept the Sabbath with considerable strictness;
they were too close copyists of the wanderers of Israel in other respects
not to have learned, like them, the value of this most admirable of the
Egypto-Mosaic institutions. But the rest of the week
their religion was independent of ritual observance. They had the sort
of strong stomached faith that is still found embalmed in sheltered spots
of Catholic Italy and Spain, with the spirit of the believing or dark
ages. It was altogether too strongly felt to be
dependent on intellectual ingenuity or careful caution of the ridiculous.
It mixed itself up fearlessly with the common transactions of their every-day
life, and only to give them liveliness and colour.
If any passages of life
bear better than others a double interpretation, they are the adventures
of travel and of the field. What old persons call discomforts and
discouraging mishaps, are the very elements to the young and sanguine,
of what they are willing to term fun. The Mormons took the young and hopeful
side. They could make sport and frolic of their trials, and often turn
right sharp suffering into right round laughter against themselves.
I certainly heard more jests and Joe Millers while in this Papillon camp
than I am likely to hear in all the remainder of my days.
This, too, was at a
time of serious affliction. Besides the ordinary
suffering from insufficient food and shelter, distressing and mortal sickness,
exacerbated, if not originated by these causes, was greatly prevalent.
In the camp nearest
us on the west, which was that of the bridging party near the Corne, the
number of its inhabitants being small enough to invite computation, I found,
as early as the 31st of July, that 37 per cent. of its inhabitants were
down with the fever, and a sort of strange scorbutic disease, frequently
fatal, which they named the Black Canker. The camps to the east of us,
which were all on the eastern side of the Missouri, were yet worse fated.
The climate of the entire
upper " Misery Bottom," as they term it, is, during a considerable part
of summer and autumn, singularly pestiferous. Its rich
soil, which is to a depth far beyond the reach of the plough as flat as
the earth of kitchen garden, or compost heap, is annually the force-bed
of a vegetation as rank as that of the tropics. To render its fatal
fertility the greater, it is everywhere freely watered by springs and creeks,
and larger streams, that flow into it from both sides. In the season
of drought, when the sun enters Virgo, these dry down till they run impure
as open sewers, exposing to the day foul broad flats, mere quagmires of
black dirt, stretching along for miles, unvaried, except by the limbs of
half-buried carrion, tree trunks, or by occasional yellow pools of what
the children call frog spawn ; all together steaming up thick vapours redolent
of the savour of death.
The same is the habit
of the Great River. In the beginning of August, its shores
hardly could contain the millions of forest logs, and tens of billions
of gallons of turbid water that came rushing down together from its mountain
head-gates. But before the month was out, the freshet
had all passed by ; the river diminished one half, threaded feebly southward
through the centre of the valley, and the mud of its channel, baked and
creased, made a wide tile pavement between the choking crowd of reeds and
sedgy grasses, and wet stalked weeds, and growths of marsh meadow flowers,
the garden homes at this tainted season of venom, crazy snakes, and the
fresher ooze by the water's edge, which stank in the sun like a naked muscle
shoal.
Then the plague raged.
I have no means of ascertaining the mortality of the Indians who inhabited
the Bottom. In 1845, the year previous, which was not
more unhealthy, they lost one-ninth of their number in about two months.
The Mormons were scourged severely. The exceeding mortality among
some of them was no doubt in the main attributable to the low state to
which their systems had been brought by long-continued endurance of want
and hardship. It is to be remembered also that they were the
first turners up of the prairie sod, and that this of itself made them
liable to the sickness of new countries. It was where their agricultural
operations had been most considerable, and in situations on the left bank
of the river, where the prevalent south-west winds wafted to them the miasmata
of its shores, that disease was most rife.
In some of these, the
fever prevailed to such an extent that hardly any escaped it.
They let their cows go unmilked ; they wanted for voices to raise the psalm
of Sundays ; the few who were able to keep their feet, went about among
the tents and waggons with food and water, like nurses through the wards
of an infirmary. Here, at one time, the digging got behind
hand ; burials were slow ; and you might see women sit in the open tents
keeping the flies off their dead children, some time after decomposition
had set in.
In our own camp, for
a part of August and September, things wore an unpleasant aspect enough.
Its situation was one much praised for its comparative salubrity ; but
perhaps on this account the number of cases of fever among us was increased
by the hurrying arrival from other localities of parties in whom the virus
leaven of disease was fermented by forced travel.
But I am excused sufficiently
the attempt to get up for your entertainment here any circumstantial picture
of horrors, by the fact, that at the most interesting season, I was incapacitated
for nice observation by an attack of fever—mine was what they call the
congestive—that it required the utmost use of all my faculties to recover
from. I still kept my tent in the camp line; but, for as much as a month,
had very small notion of what went on among my neighbours. I recollect
overhearing a lamentation over some dear baby, that its mother no doubt
thought the destroying angel should have been specially instructed to spare.
I wish, too, for my
own sake, I could forget how imperfectly, one day, I mourned the decease
of a poor Saint, who, by clamour, rendered his vicinity troublesome.
He no doubt endured great pain; for he groaned shockingly till death came
to his relief. He interfered with my own hard gained
slumbers, and I was glad when death did relieve him.
Before my attack, I
was fond of conversing with an amiable old man, I think English born, who,
having then recently buried his only daughter and grandson, used to be
seen sitting out before his tent, resting his sorrowful forehead on his
hands, joined over a smooth white oak staff. I missed him when I
got about again; probably he had been my moaning neighbour.
So, too, having been
much exercised in my dreams at this time, by the vision of dismal processions,
such as might have been formed by the union in line of all the forlornest
and ugliest of the struggling fugitives from Nauvoo, I happen to recall,
as I write, that I had some knowledge somewhere of one of our new comers,
for whom the night-mare revived, and repeated without intermission, the
torment of his trying journey. As he lay feeding life
with long drawn breaths, he muttered, " Where 's next water ?
Team—give out ! Hot, hot—God, it's hot: Stop
the waggon—stop the waggon—stop, stop the waggon!" They woke
him ;—to his own content—but I believe returning sleep ever renewed his
distressing visions, till the sounder slumber came on from which no earthly
hand or voice could rouse him : into which, I hope, he did not carry them.
In a half dreamy way,
I remember, or think I remember, a crowd of phantoms like these.
I recall but one fact, however, going far in proof of a considerable mortality.
Earlier in the season, while going westward with the intention of passing
the Rocky Mountains that summer, I had opened with the assistance of Mormon
spades and shovels, a large mound on a commanding elevation, the tomb of
a warrior of the ancient race; and continuing on my way, had left a deep
trench excavated entirely through it. Returning fever-struck
to the Papillon Camp, I found it planted close by this spot.
It was just forming as I arrived ; the first waggon, if I mistake not,
having but a day or two halted into place. My first airing
upon my convalescence took me to the mound, which, probably to save digging,
had been re-adapted to its original purpose. In this
brief interval, they had filled the trench with bodies, and furrowed the
ground with graves around it, like the ploughing of a field.
The lengthened sojourn
of the Mormons in this insalubrious region, was imposed upon them by circumstances
which I must now advert to.
Though the season was
late when they first crossed the Missouri, some of them moved forward with
great hopefulness, full of the notion of viewing and choosing their new
homes that year. But the van had only reached Grand Island
and the Pawnee villages, when they were overtaken by more ill news from
Nauvoo. Before the summer closed, their enemies set upon
the last remnant of those who were left behind in Illinois.
They were a few lingerers, who could not be persuaded but there might yet
be time for them to gather up their worldly goods before removing, some
weakly mothers and their infants, a few delicate young girls, and many
cripples and bereaved and sick people. These had remained
under shelter, according to the Mormon statement at least, by virtue of
an express covenant in their behalf. If there was such a covenant,
it was broken. A vindictive war was waged upon them,
from which the weakest fled in scattered parties, leaving the rest to make
a reluctant and almost ludicrously unavailing defence till the 17th day
of September, when one thousand six hundred and twenty-five troops entered
Nauvoo, and drove all forth who had not retreated before that time.
Like the wounded birds
of a flock fired into toward nightfall, they came straggling on with faltering
steps, many of them without bag or baggage, beast or barrow, all asking
shelter or burial, and forcing a fresh repartition of the already divided
rations of their friends. It was plain now that every
energy must be taxed to prevent the entire expedition from perishing.
Further emigration for the time was out of the question, and the whole
people prepared themselves for encountering another winter on the prairie.
Happily for the main
body, they found themselves at this juncture among Indians, who were amicably
disposed. The lands on both sides of the Missouri in particular were owned
by the Pottawatamies and Omahas, two tribes whom unjust treatment by our
United States, had the effect of rendering most auspiciously hospitable
to strangers whom they regarded as persecuted like themselves.
The Pottawatamies, on
the eastern side, are a nation from whom the United States bought some
years ago a number of hundred thousand acres of the finest lands they have
ever brought into market. Whatever the bargain was, the sellers were
not content with it; the people saying, their leaders were cheated, made
drunk, bribed, and all manner of naughty things besides.
No doubt this was quite as much of a libel on the fair fame of this particular
Indian treaty, as such stories generally are; for the land to which the
tribe was removed in pursuance of it, was admirably adapted to enforce
habits of civilized thrift. It was smooth prairie, wanting
in timber, and of course in game ; and the humane and philanthropic might
rejoice therefore that necessity would soon indoctrinate its inhabitants
into the practice of agriculture. An impracticable few, who may have thought
these advantages more than compensated by the insalubrity of their allotted
resting-place, fled to the extreme wilds, where they could find deer and
woods, and rocks, and running water, and where, I believe, they are roaming
to this day. The remainder, being what the political
vocabulary designates on such occasions as Friendly
Indians, were driven(marched is the word—galley-slaves are marched thus
to Barcelona and Toulon—marched from the Mississippi to the Missouri, and
planted there. Discontented and unhappy, they had hardly
begun to form an attachment for this new soil, when they were persuaded
to change it for their present Fever Patch, upon the Kaw or Kansas River.
They were under this second sentence of transportation when the Mormons
arrived among them.
They were pleased with
the Mormons. They would have been pleased with any whites
who would not cheat them, nor sell them whiskey, nor whip them for their
poor gipsy habits, nor bear themselves indecently toward their women, many
of whom, among the Pottawatamies, especially those of nearly unmixed French
descent, are singularly comely, and some of them educated. But all
Indians have something like a sentiment of reverence for the insane, and
admire those who sacrifice, without apparent motive, their worldly welfare
to the triumph of an idea. They understand the meaning
of what they call a great vow, and think it the duty of the right-minded
to lighten the votary's penance under it. To this feeling
they united the sympathy of fellow-sufferers for those who could talk to
them of their own Illinois, and tell the story how from it they also had
been ruthlessly expelled.
Their hospitality was
sincere, almost delicate. Fanny Le Clerc, the spoiled
child of the great brave, Pied Riche, interpreter of the Nation, would
have the pale-face, Miss Devine, learn duetts with her to the guitar; and
the daughter of substantial Joseph La Framboise, the interpreter of the
United States,—she died of the fever that summer,—welcomed all the nicest
young Mormon Kitties and Lizzies, and Jennies and Susans, to a coffee-feast
at her father's house, which was probably the best cabin in the river village.
They made the Mormons at home there and elsewhere. Upon all their lands
they formally gave them leave to tarry just so long as should suit their
own good pleasure.
The affair, of course,
furnished material for a solemn council. Under the auspices of an officer
of the United States, their chiefs were summoned, in the form befitting
great occasions, to meet in the dirty yard of one Mr. P. A. Sarpy's log
trading house, at their village. They came in grand toilet, moving in their
fantastic attire with so much aplomb and genteel measure, that the stranger
found it difficult not to believe them high-born gentlemen, attending a
costumed ball. Their aristocratically thin legs, of which they displayed
fully the usual Indian proportion, aided this illusion. There is something
too, at all times, very mock-Indian in the theatrical French millinery
tie of the Pottawatamie turban ; while it is next to impossible for a sober
white man, at first sight, to believe that the red, green, black, blue
and yellow cosmetics, with which he sees such grave personages so variously
dotted, diapered, cancelled and arabesqued, are worn by them in any mood
but one of the deepest and most desperate quizzing. From the time of their
first squat upon the ground, to the final breaking up of the council circle,
they sustained their characters with equal self-possession and address.
I will not take it upon
myself to describe their order of ceremonies. Indeed, I ought not, since
I have never been able to view the habits and customs of our Aborigines
in any other light than that of a reluctant and sorrowful subject of jest.
Besides, in this instance, the displays of pow-wow and eloquence were both
probably moderated by the conduct of the entire transaction on temperance
principles. I therefore content myself with observing, generally,
that the proceedings were such as every way became the grandeur of the
parties interested, and the magnitude of the interests involved.
When the Red Men had indulged to satiety in tobacco smoke from their peace-pipes,
and in what they love still better, their peculiar metaphoric rodomontade,
which, beginning with the celestial bodies, and coursing downwards over
the grandest sublunary objects, always managed to alight at last on their
Grand Father Polk, and the tenderness for him of his affectionate coloured
children. All the solemn funny fellows present, who
played the part of chiefs, signed formal articles
of convention with their unpronounceable names.
The renowned chief,
Pied Riche—he was surnamed Le Clerc on account of his remarkable scholarship,—then
rose, and said:—
" MY MORMON BRETHREN,—The
Pottawatamie came sad and tired into this unhealthy Missouri Bottom, not
many years back, when he was taken from his beautiful country beyond the
Mississippi, which had abundant game, and timber, and clear water everywhere.
Now you are driven away the same from your lodges and lands there, and
the graves of your people. So we have both suffered. We must help
one another, and the Great Spirit will help us both. You are now free to
cut and use all the wood you may wish. You can make all your improvements,
and live on any part of our actual land not occupied by us. Because one
suffers, and does not deserve it, it is no reason he shall suffer always,
I say. We may live to see all right yet. However, if we do
not, our children will.—Bon jour."
And thus ended the pageant.
I give this speech as a morsel of real Indian. It was
recited to me after the treaty by the Pottawatamie orator in French, which
language he spoke with elegance. Bon jour is the French,
Indian, and English hail and farewell of the Pottawatamies.
The other entertainers
of the Mormons at this time, the Omahas or Mahaws, are one of the union
tribes of the Grand Prairie. Their Great Father, the United States,
has found it inconvenient to protect so remote a dependency against the
overpowering league of the Dahcotahs or Sioux, and has judged it dangerous,
at the same time, to allow them to protect themselves, by entering into
a confederation with others. Under the pressure of this paternal
embarrassment and restraint, it has therefore happened most naturally,
that this tribe, once a powerful and valued ally of ours, has been reduced
to a band of little more than a hundred families; and these, a few years
more will entirely extinguish. When I was among them,
they were so ill fed, that their protruding high cheek bones gave them
the air of a tribe of consumptives. The buffalo had left
them, and no good ranges lay within several hundred miles reach.
Hardly any other game found cover on their land. What
little there was they were short of ammunition to kill.
Their annuity from the United States was trifling. They
made next to nothing at thieving. They had planted some
corn in their awkward Indian fashion, but through fear of ambush
dared not venture out to harvest it. A chief resource
for them the previous winter had been the spoliation of their
neighbours, the Prairie Field Mice.
These interesting little
people, more industrious and thrifty than the Mahaws, garner up in the
neat little cellars of their underground homes, the small seeds or beans
of the wood pea vine, which are black and hard, but quite nutritious.
Gathering them one by one, a single mouse will thus collect as much as
half a pint, which before the cold weather sets in he piles away in a dry
and frost proof excavation, cleverly thatched and covered in. The Omaha
animal, who, like enough, may have idled during all the season the mouse
was amassing his toilsome treasure, finds this subterranean granary to
give out a certain peculiar cavernous vibration, when briskly tapped upon
above the ground. He wanders about, therefore, striking with a wand in
hopeful spots; and as soon as he hears the hollow sound he knows, unearths
the little retired capitalist, along with his winter's hope. Mouse wakes
up from his nap to starve, and Mahaw swallows several relishing mouthfuls.
But the mouse has his
revenge in the powerful Sioux, who wages against his wretched red brother
an almost bootless but exterminating warfare. He robs him of his poor human
peltry. One of my friends was offered for sale a Sioux scalp of Omaha,
"with grey hair nearly as long as a white horse's tail."
The pauper Omahas were
ready to solicit as a favour the residence of white protectors among them.
The Mormons harvested and stored away for them their crops of maize; with
all their own poverty, they spared them food enough besides, from time
to time, to save them from absolutely starving; and their entrenched camp,
to the north of the Omaha villages, served as a sort of breakwater between
them and the destroying rush of the Sioux.
This was the Head Quarters
of the Mormon Camps of Israel. The miles of rich prairie
enclosed and sowed with the grain they could contrive to spare, and the
houses, stacks, and cattle shelters, had the seeming of an entire county,
with its people and improvements transplanted there unbroken.
On a pretty plateau, overlooking the river, they built more than seven
hundred houses in a single town, neatly laid out with highways and byways,
and fortified with breast-work, stockade, and blockhouses.
It had, too, its place of worship, " Tabernacle of the Congregation," and
various large workshops, and mills and factories, provided with water power.
They had no camp or
settlement of equal size in the Pottowatamie country.
There was less to apprehend here from Indian invasion ; and the people
scattered themselves, therefore, along the rivers and streams, and in the
timber-groves, wherever they found inviting localities for farming operations.
In this way many of them acquired what have since proved to be valuable
pre-emption rights.
Upon the Pottowatamie
lands, scattered through the border regions of Missouri and Iowa, in the
Sauk and Fox country, a few among the Ioways, among the Poncahs in a great
company upon the banks of the L'Eau qui Coule, or Running Water River,
and at the Omaha winter-quarters;—the Mormons sustained themselves through
the heavy winter of 1846-1847. It was the severest of
their trials; and if I aimed at rhetorical effect, I would be bound to
offer you a minute narrative of its progress, as a sort of climax to my
history. But I have, I think, given you enough of the
Mormon's sorrows. We are all of us content to sympathize
with a certain extent of suffering; but very few can bear the recurring
yet scarcely varied narrative of another's distress without something of
impatience. The world is full of griefs, and we cannot
afford to extend too large a share of our charity, or even our commiseration
in a single quarter.
This winter was the
turning-point of the Mormon fortunes : those who lived through
it were spared to witness
the gradual return of better times; and they now liken it to
the passing of a dreary night, since which they have watched the coming
of a steadily brightening day.
Before the grass-growth
of 1847, a body of one hundred and forty-three picked men, with seventy
waggons, drawn by their best horses, left the Omaha quarters under the
command of the members of the High Council who had wintered there.
They carried with them little but seed and farming implements, their aim
being to plant spring crops at their ultimate destination.
They relied on their rifles to give them food, but rarely left their road
in search of game. They made long daily marches, and
moved with as much rapidity as possible.
Against the season when
ordinary emigration passes the Missouri, they were already through the
South Pass; and a couple of short days' travel beyond it, entered upon
the more arduous portion of their journey. It lay, in earnest, through
the Rocky Mountains. They turned Fremont's Peak, Long's Peak, the Twins,
and other King summits, but had to force their way over other mountains
of the rugged Utah range, sometimes following the stony bed of torrents,
the head waters of some of the mightiest rivers of our continent, and sometimes
literally cutting their road through heavy and ragged timber. They arrived
at the grand basin of the Great Salt Lake much exhausted, but without losing
a man, and in time to plant for a partial autumn harvest.
Another party started
after these pioneers, from the Omaha winter quarters, in the summer. They
had 566 waggons, and carried large quantities of grain, which they were
able to put in the ground before it froze.
The same season also,
these were joined by a part of the Battalion, and other members of the
Church, who came eastward from California and the Sandwich Islands. Together,
they fortified themselves strongly with sunbrick wall and blockhouses,
and living safely through the winter, were able to tend crops that yielded
ample provision for the ensuing year.
In 1848, nearly all
the remaining members of the Church left the Missouri country in a succession
of powerful bands, invigorated and enriched by their abundant harvests
there ; and that year so fully established their Commonwealth of the New
Covenant, the future State of Deseret.
I may not undertake
to describe to you, in a single lecture, the geography of Deseret, and
its great basin. Were I to consider the face of the country, its military
position, or its climate, and its natural productions, each head, I am
confident, would claim more time than you have now to spare me; for Deseret
is emphatically a new country; new in its own characteristic features,
newer still in its bringing together within its limits the most inconsistent
peculiarities of other countries. I cannot aptly
compare it to any. Descend from the mountains,
where you have the scenery and climate of Switzerland, to seek the sky
of your choice among the many climates of Italy, and you may find welling
out of the same hills the freezing springs of Mexico and the hot springs
of Iceland, both together coursing their way to the Salt Sea of Palestine,
in the plain below. The pages of Malte Brun provide me with a less
truthful parallel to it than those which describe the happy Valley of Rasselas,
or the Continent of Balnibarbi.
Let me, then, press
on with my history, during the few minutes that remain for me.
Only two events have
occurred to menace seriously the establishment at Deseret: the first threatened
to destroy its crops, the other to break it up altogether.
The shores of the Salt
Lake are infested by a sort of insect pest, which claims a vile resemblance
to the locust of the Syrian Dead Sea. Wingless, dumpy, black, swollen-headed,
with bulging eyes in cases like goggles, mounted upon legs of steel wire
and clock spring, and with a general personal appearance that justified
the Mormons in comparing him to a cross of the spider and the buffalo,
the Deseret cricket comes down from the mountains at a certain season of
the year, in voracious and desolating myriads. It was
just at this season that the first crops of the new settlers were in the
full glory of their youthful green. The assailants could not
be repulsed. The Mormons, after their fashion, prayed and fought,
and fought and prayed, but to no purpose ; the " Black Philistines" mowed
their way even with the ground, leaving it as if touched with an acid,
or burnt by fire.
But an unlooked for
ally came to the rescue. Vast armies of bright birds, before strangers
to the valley, hastened across the lake from some unknown quarter, and
gorged themselves upon the well-fatted enemy. They were snow-white, with
little heads, and clear, dark eyes, and little feet, and long wings, that
arched in flight " like an angel's." At first the Mormons thought
they were new enemies to plague them ; but when they found them hostile
only to the locusts, they were careful not to molest them in their friendly
office ; and to this end declared a heavy fine against all who should kill
or annoy them with fire-arms. The gulls soon grew to be tame as the
poultry, and the delighted little children learned to call them their pigeons.
They disappeared every evening beyond the lake ; but, returning with sunrise,
continued their welcome visitings till the crickets were all exterminated.
This curious incident
recurred the following year, with this variation, that, in 1849, the gulls
came earlier, and saved the wheat crops from all harm whatever.
A severer trial than
the visit of the cricket locusts threatened Deseret, in the discovery of
the gold of California. It was due to a party of the Mormon Battalion recruited
on the Missouri, who, on their way home, found employment at New Helvetia.
They were digging a mill race there, and threw up the gold dust with their
shovels. You all know the crazy fever that broke out as soon as this was
announced. It infected every one through California. Where the gold
was discovered, at Sutter's and around, the standing grain was left uncut
; whites, Indians, and mustees, all set them to gathering gold, every other
labour forsaken, as if the first comers could rob the casket of all that
it contained. The disbanded soldiers came to the valley; they showed their
poor companions pieces of the yellow treasure they had gained; and the
cry was raised, " To California! To the Gold of Ophir, our brethren have
discovered ! To California! "
Some of you have, perhaps,
come across the half ironic instructions of the heads of the Church to
the faithful outside the Valley :—
" THE TRUE USE OF GOLD
is for paving streets, covering houses, and making culinary dishes ; and
when the saints shall have preached the Gospel, raised grain, and built
up cities enough, the Lord will open up the way for a supply of gold, to
the perfect satisfaction of his people. Until then, let them not be over-anxious,
for the treasures of the earth are in the Lord's storehouse, and he will
open the doors thereof when and where he pleases."
The enlightened virtue
of their rulers saved the people and the fortunes of Deseret. A few only
went away—and they were asked in kindness never to return. The rest remained
to be healthy and happy, to " raise grain and build up cities."
The history of the Mormons
has ever since been the unbroken record of the most wonderful prosperity.
It has looked as though the elements of fortune, obedient to a law of natural
re-action, were struggling to compensate to them their undue share of suffering,
They may be pardoned for deeming it miraculous. But, in truth, the economist
accounts for it all, who explains to us the speedy recuperation of cities,
laid in ruin by flood, fire, and earthquake. During its years of trial,
Mormon labour has subsisted on insufficient capital, and under many trials,
but it has subsisted, and survives them now, as intelligent and powerful
as ever it was at Nauvoo; with this difference, that it has in the meantime
been educated to habits of unmatched thrift, energy, and endurance, and
has been transplanted to a situation where it is in every respect more
productive. Moreover, during all the period of their journey, while some
have gained by practice in handicraft, and the experience of repeated essays
at their various halting-places, the minds of all have been busy framing
designs and planning the improvements they have since found opportunity
to execute.
The territory of the
Mormons is unequalled as a stock-raising country. The finest pastures of
Lombardy are not more estimable than those on the east side of the Utah
Lake and Jordan River. We find here that cereal anomaly, the Bunch grass.
In May, when the other grasses push, this fine plant dries upon its stalk,
and becomes light yellow straw, full of flavour and nourishment. It continues
thus, through what are the dry months of the climate, till January, and
then starts with a vigorous growth, like that of our own winter wheat in
April, which keep on till the return of another May.
Whether as straw or grass, the cattle fatten on it the year round.
The numerous little dells and sheltered spots that are found in the mountains,
are excellent sheep-walks; it is said that the wood which is grown upon
them is of an unusually fine pile and soft texture. Hogs
fatten on a succulent bulb or tuber, called the Seacoe, or Seegose Root,
which I hope will soon be naturalized with us. It is highly esteemed
as a table vegetable by Mormons and Indians, and I remark that they are
cultivating it with interest at the French Garden of Plants.
The emigrant poultry have taken the best care of each other, only needing
liberty to provide themselves with every other blessing.
The Mormons have also
been singularly happy in their Indian relations. They
have not made the common mistake of supposing savages insensible to courtesy
of demeanour ; but being taught by their religion to regard them all as
decayed brethren, have always treated the silly, wicked souls with kind-hearted
civility. Though their outlay for tobacco, wampum, and
vermillion has been of the very smallest, yet they have never failed to
purchase what goodwill they have wanted.
Hence it happens that
in their Land of Promise they are on the best of terms with all the Canaanites,
and Hittites, and Hivites, and Amorites, and Gergashites, and Perizzites,
and Jebusites, within its borders ; while they "maintain their cherished
relations of amity with the rest of mankind," who, in their case, include
a sort of latest remnant of the primeval primates, called the Root Diggers.
The Diggers, who in stature, strength, and general personal appearance,
may be likened to a society of old negro women, are only to be dreaded
for their exceeding ugliness. The tribes that rob and murder in war, and
otherwise live more like white men, are, however, numerous all around them.
Fortunately, upon the
marauding expeditions, and in matters that affect their freebooting relations
generally, they all obey the great war-chief of the tribe called the Utahs,
in the heart of whose proper territory the Mormon settlements are comprehended.
If accounts are true,
the Utahs are brave fellows. They differ obviously from the deceased nations,
to whose estates we have taken it upon ourselves to administer. They ride
strong, well-limbed Spanish horses, not ponies ; bear well cut rifles,
not shot guns, across their saddle-bows, and are not without some idea
of military discipline. They carry their forays far into the Mexican
States, laying the inhabitants under contribution, and taking captive persons
of condition, whom they hold to ransom. They are, as yet at least, little
given to drink; some of them manifest considerable desire to acquire useful
knowledge; and they are attached to their own infidel notions of religion,
making long journeys to the ancient cities of the Colorado, to worship
among the ruined temples there. The Soldan of these red Paynims, too, their
great war chief, is not without his knightly graces. According to some
of the Mormons, he is the paragon of Indians. His name, translated to diminish
its excellence as an exercise in Prosody, is Walker. He is a fine figure
of a man, in the prime of life. He excels in various manly exercises, is
a crack shot, a rough rider, and a great judge of horse flesh.
He is besides very clever,
in our sense of the word. He is a peculiarly eloquent master of the graceful
alphabet of pantomime, which stranger tribes employ to communicate with
one another. He has picked up some English, and is familiar with Spanish
and several Indian tongues. He rather affects the fine gentleman. When
it is his pleasure to extend his riding excursions into Mexico, to inflict
or threaten outrage, or to receive the instalments of his black mail salary,
he will take offence if the poor people there fail to kill their fattest
beeves, and adopt other measures to show him obsequious and distinguished
attention. He has more than one black-eyed mistress there, according to
his own account, to whom he makes love in her own language. His dress is
a full suit of the richest broadcloth, generally brown, cut in European
fashion, with a shining beaver hat, and fine cambric shirt. To these he
adds his own gaudy Indian trimmings, and in this way contrives, they say,
to look superbly, when he rides at the head of his troop, whose richly
caparisoned horses, with their embroidered saddles and harness, shine and
tinkle as they prance under the weight of gay metal ornaments.
With all his wild-cat
fierceness, Walker is perfectly velvet-pawed to the Mormons.
There is a queer story about his being influenced in their favour by a
dream. It is the fact, that from the first he has received
the Mormon exiles into his kingdom with a generosity that, in its limited
sphere, transcends that of the Grand Monarch to the English Jacobites.
He rejoices to give them the information they want about the character
of the country under his rule, advises with them as to the advantages
of particular localities, and wherever they choose to make their settlements,
guarantees them personal safety, and immunity from depredation.
From the first, therefore,
the Mormons have had little or nothing to do in Deseret, but attend to
their mechanical and strictly agricultural pursuits. They have
made several successful settlements; the farthest north, at what they term
Brownsville, is above forty miles; and the farthest south, in a valley
called the Sanpeech, two hundred miles from that first formed.
A duplicate of the Lake Tiberius, or Genesareth, empties its waters into
the innocent Dead Sea of Deseret, by a fine river, to which the Mormons
have given the name—it was impossible to give it any other—of the Western
Jordan.
It was on the right
bank of the stream, at a choice spot upon a rich table land, traversed
by a great company of exhaustless streams falling from the highlands, that
the Pioneer band of Mormons, coming out of the mountains in the night,
pitched their first camp in the Valley, and consecrated the ground. Curiously
enough, this very spot proved the most favourable site for their chief
settlement, and after exploring the whole country, they have founded on
it their city of the New Hierusalem. Its houses are spread, to command
as much as possible the farms, which are laid out in wards or cantons,
with a common fence to each ward. The farms in wheat already cover a space
greater than the district of Columbia, over all of which they have completed
the canals, and other arrangements, for bountiful irrigation, after the
manner of the cultivators of the East. The houses are distributed
over an area nearly as great as the City of New York.
They have little thought
as yet of luxury in their public buildings but they will soon have nearly
completed a large common public store- many house and granary, and a great-sized
public bath-house. One of the wonderful thermal springs
of the valley, a white sulphur water, of the temperature of 102° Fahrenheit,
with a head " the thickness of a man's body," they have already brought
into the town for this purpose; and all have learned the habit of indulging
in it. They have besides a yellow brick meeting-house,
one hundred feet by sixty, in which they gather on Sundays and in the week-day
evenings; but this is only a temporary structure. They
have reserved a summit level in the heart of the city, for the site of
a Temple far superior to that of Nauvoo, which, in the days of their future
wealth and power, is to be the landmark of the Basin, and goal of future
pilgrims.
They mean to seek no
other resting-place. After pitching camps enough to exhaust
many times over the chapter of names in 33rd Numbers, they have at last
come to their Promised Land, and, " behold it is a good land and large,
and flowing with milk and honey;" and here again for them, as at Nauvoo,
the forge smokes and the anvil rings, and whirring wheels go round.
Again has returned the merry sport of childhood, and the evening quiet
of old age, and again dear house-pet flowers bloom in garden plots round
happy homes.
It is to these homes,
in the heart of our American Alps, like the holy people of the Grand Saint
Bernard, they hold out their welcome to the passing traveller. Some of
you have probably seen, in the St. Louis papers, the repeated votes of
thanks to them of companies of emigrants to California. These are
often reduced to great straits after passing Fort-Laramie, and turn aside
to seek the Salt Lake Colony in pitiable plights of fatigue and destitution.
The road, after leaving the Oregon trace, is one of increasing difficulty,
and when the last mountain has been crossed, passes along the bottom of
a deep Canon, whose scenery is of an almost terrific gloom.
It is a defile that I trust no Mormon Martin Hofer of this Western Tyrol
will be called to consecrate to liberty with blood. At
every turn, the overhanging cliffs threaten to break down upon the little
torrent river that has worn its way at their base. Indeed,
the narrow ravine is so serrated by this stream, that the road crosses
it from one side to the other something like forty times in the last five
miles. At the end of the ravine, the emigrant comes abruptly
out of the dark pass into the lighted valley, on an even bench or terrace
of its upper table land. No wonder if he looses his self-control
here. A ravishing panoramic landscape opens out below him,
blue, and green, and gold, and pearl; a great sea with hilly highlands,
rivers, a lake, and broad sheets of grassy plain, all set, as in a silver-chased
cup, within mountains whose peaks of perpetual snow are burnished by a
dazzling sun. It is less these, however, than the fore-ground
of old country farms, with their stacks, and thatchings, and stock, and
the central city, smoking from its chimneys, and swarming with working
inhabitants, that tries the men of fatigue-broken nerves.
The " Californeys " scream, they sing, they give three cheers, and do not
count them; a few have prayed, more swear, some fall on their faces, and
cry outright. News arrived a few days since from a poor
townsman of ours, a journeyman saddler, that used to work up Market Street
beyond Broad, by name Gillian, who sought the Valley, his cattle given
out, and himself broke down and half heart-broken. The
recluse Mormons fed and housed him and his party, and he made his way through
to the gold diggings with restored health and strength.
To Gillian's credit for manhood, should perhaps be cited his own allegation,
that he first whistled through his fingers various popular nocturnal, street,
circus, and theatre calls ; but it is certain that, when my tidings speak
of him, which was when he was afterwards hospitably entreated by a Mormon,
whom he knew ten years ago as one of our Chester county farmers, he was
completely dissolved into something not far from the hysterics, and wept
on till the tears ran down his dusty beard.
Several hundred emigrants,
in more or less distress, received gratuitous assistance last year from
the Mormons.
Their community must
go on thriving. They are to be the chief workers and
contractors upon " Whitney's Railroad," or whatever scheme is to unite
the Atlantic and Pacific by way of the South Pass ; and their valley must
be its central station. They have already raised a " Perpetual
Fund " for " the final fulfilment of the covenant made by the Saints in
the Temple at Nauvoo," which " is not to cease till all the poor are brought
to the Valley." All the poor still lingering behind, will be
brought there; so at an early period, will the fifty thousand communicants,
the Church already numbers in Great Britain, with all the other " increase
among the Gentiles." Their place of rendezvous will be
upon what were formerly the Pottawatamie lands. The interests
of the stake have been admirably cared for. It now comprises
the thriving counties of " Fremont" and " Pottawatamie," in which the Mormons
still number a majority of the inhabitants. Their chief
town is growing rapidly, already boasting over three thousand inhabitants,
with nineteen large merchants' stores, the mail lines and five regular
steam-packets running to it, and other western evidences of prosperity;
besides a fine Music Hall and public buildings, and the printing establishment
of a very ably edited newspaper, The Frontier Guardian.
It is probably the best
station on the Missouri for commencing the overland journey to Oregon and
California; as travellers can follow directly from it the Mormon road,
which, in addition to other advantages, proves to be more salubrious than
those to the south of it. Large numbers are expected to arrive at
this point from England during the present spring, on their way to the
Salt Lake. They will repay their welcome; for every working
person gained to the hive of their " Honey State " counts as added wealth.
So far, the Mormons write in congratulation, that they have not among them
"a single loafer, rich or poor, idle gentleman, or lazy vagabond."
They are no communists; but their experience has taught them the gain of
joint-stock to capital, and combination to labour,—perhaps something more
; for I remark they have recently made arrangements " to classify their
mechanics," which is probably a step in the right direction.
They will be successful manufacturers, for their vigorous land-locked industry
cannot be tampered with by protection. They have no gold(they
have not hunted for it; but they have found wealth of other valuable minerals
: rock-salt enough to do the curing of the world,—" We'll salt the
Union for you," they write, "if you can't preserve it in any other way
; " perhaps coal; excellent ores of iron everywhere. They are near
enough, however, to the Californian Sierra to be the chief quartermasters
of its miners ; and they will dig their own gold in their unlimited
fields of admirably fertile land. I should only invite
your incredulity, and the disgust of the Horticultural Society, by giving
you certain measurements of mammoth beets, turnips,
pumpkins, and garden vegetables, in my possession. In that
country where stock thrives care-free—where a poor man's thirty-two potatoes
saved can return him eighteen bushels, and two and a-half bushels of wheat
sown yield three hundred and fifty bushels in a season—or where an average
crop of wheat on irrigated lands is fifty bushels to the acre—the farmer's
part is hardly to be despised. Certainly it will not be under a continuance
of the present prices-current of the region, wheat at four dollars the
bushel, and flour twelve dollars the cwt., with a ready market.
The recent letters from
Deseret interest me in one thing more. They are eloquent in describing
the anniversary of the Pioneers' arrival in the Valley. It
was the 24th of July ; and they have ordained that that day shall be commemorated
in future, like our 21st of December, as their Forefathers' Day.
The noble Walker attended as an invited guest, with two hundred of his
best-dressed mounted cavaliers, who stalked their guns, and took up their
places at the ceremonies and banquet, with the quiet precision of soldiers
marched to mass. The Great Band was there, too, that
had helped their humble hymns through all the wanderings of the wilderness.
Through the many trying marches of 1846—through the fierce winter ordeal
that followed, and the long journey after over plain and mountain—it had
gone unbroken, without the loss of any of its members.
As they set out from England, and as they set out from Illinois, so they
all came into the Valley together, and together sounded the first glad
notes of triumph when the Salt Lake City was founded. It was
their right to lead the psalm of praise. Anthem, song, and
dance—all the innocent and thankful frolic of the day owed them its chief
zest. " They never were in finer key." The
people felt their sorrows ended. FAR WEST, their old settlement
in Missouri, and NAUVOO; with their wealth and ease, like " Pithom and
Ramses, treasure cities built for Pharaoh," went awhile forgotten.
Less than four years had restored them every comfort that they needed.
Their entertainment, the contribution of all, I have no doubt was really
sumptuous. It was spread on broad buffet tables, about
fourteen hundred feet in length, at which they took their seats by turns,
while they kept them heaped with ornamented delicacies, " butter of kine,
and milk, with fat of lambs, with the fat of kidneys of wheat;" " and the
cucumbers, and the melons, and the leeks, and the onions, and the garlic,
and the remembered fish, which we did eat in Egypt freely."
They seem unable to dilate with too much pride upon the show it made.
" To behold the tables,"
says one that I quote from literally, " to behold them filling the Bowery
and all adjoining grounds, loaded with all luxuries of the fields and gardens,
and nearly all the varieties that any vegetable market in the world could
produce, and to see the seats around those tables filled and refilled by
a people who had been deprived of those luxuries for years by the cruel
hand of oppression, and freely offering seats to every stranger within
their borders—and this, too, in the Valley of the Mountains, over a thousand
miles from civilization, where, two years before, naught was to be found
save the wild root of the prairie and the mountain cricket,—was a theme
of unbounded thanksgiving and praise to the Giver of all Good, as the dawning
of a day when the Children of the Kingdom can sit under their own vines
and fig-trees, and inhabit their own houses, having none to make them afraid.
May the time be hastened when the scattered Israel may partake of such
like banquets from the gardens of Joseph !"