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"History To Nauvoo"
The Mormon church was founded in 1830 in upper state New York. Joseph Smith under divine instruction organized the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in a small log-cabin. When persecutions started, Joseph led church members to Kirtland, Ohio.*
Not long after arriving in Kirtland,
church headquarters was established in Jackson County, Missouri (Independence).
Soon local residents in Jackson County started a new wave of persecution that continued until the Mormons moved north into Illinois. The persecution was so extreme that government got involved when the Governor of Missouri issued an 'Extermination Order' requiring the State Militia to either drive the Mormons out of Missouri or exterminate them.
In the middle of Winter, they were expelled from their lands, without compensation for homes or property. The saints gathered at a desolate area in Illinois on the eastern side of the Mississippi River. A place that no one else cared for provided a safe haven from persecution but not from mosquitoes and disease when grounds thawed to reveal the forsaken swamp they had camped on.
Be as it may, the hearty Mormons would make something out of the area and started to drain the swamp, build cabins, plant crops, re-establish the church headquarters, and gather other members of their faith. Soon businesses started, commerce followed amongst the Mormons, and they felt safe from persecution. The city was named Nauvoo, meaning beautiful city.* It rivaled in size to Chicago at the time. What had brought them there seemed inexplicable but it only strengthened their faith. Peaceful and content, the Mormons started work on a temple. Finally, they had a place they had built with their own hands. a home, a peaceful and beautiful place they were proud of.
"Nauvoo Exodus"
Less predicable than fiction, history has a way of revealing people's insecurities, hatred, and bigotry in the persecution of others with only slightly different beliefs from their own. This was no more true than in 1844. Hatred had followed the Mormons to Nauvoo and slowly it began to show its face when farmers in Illinois joined with the Mormon's old enemies from Missouri. Together, they decided to take matters into their own hands.
Initial attempts to force the Mormons to leave their city failed. Homes and farmhouses were set on fire. Threats against church members continued, even death threats against church leaders. When a local newspaper printed an attack on the Church's policies and beliefs, Joseph ordered the press be destroyed. It culminated in the governor having Joseph, his brother Hyrum, and other leaders arrested and locked in nearby Carthage, Illinois. They were being protected for their "own good." One day went without serious incident but on the fateful day of June 27, 1844, a lynch mob showed up. It was clear the church leaders would not be sufficiently guarded. They could hear the mob making their way past the guard. Trapped on the second floor with no choices other than a small window, adrenaline took over. What seemed like just in the nick of time, Hyrum was the only one to jump out while the cell was being entered but a bullet shot from his jail cell caught him before he reached the ground. Joseph realized his brother had been shot for only moments before succumbing to the same treatment, being shot multiple times.
Justice was never served. The action was supposed to dissolve the church but anticipating his assassination, Joseph Smith had appointed a quorum to run the church following any martyrdom. Brigham Young was on a mission in New York at the time of the murders and upon learning of the fate of the church's leaders returned immediately to Nauvoo. Brigham brought comfort to the grieving congregation and soon was appointed President of the Quorum.
For over a year the community prospered. Accelerated building on the temple showed that the scare tactics had failed. Acts of terrorism increased, mobs attacked isolated farms. The Illinois governor had sided with the anti-Mormons. After implied threats from the governor, the church agreed to move during the spring and summer of 1846. Agreements were made guaranteeing no violence until the church had time to move. Those promises were broken, and other acts of violence intensified.
Brigham Young had closely studied the reports just published of Lieutenant John C. Frémont's expedition to the Pacific, in which the Salt Lake area was described as "lush green countryside." Brigham knew they had to move west, and this sounded like a perfect spot.
The church had already planned to move west again. The only problem was there were a lot of people to move. To ease the strain, church leaders decided to start early taking around 300 people west with them to help determine and blaze a suitable trail for others to follow. When other church members heard of the leaders leaving them behind, many insisted on joining in on the initial journey.
On February 4th, 1846, long lines started forming at the Mississippi. Unsympathetic ferry owners took advantage of the situation, charging excessive rates for crossing, more than most families or the entire populous could afford. A hell of unjustified bigotry and hatred had wrapped up around them trapping them in the heavenly place they had created from scratch.
Miraculously, on February 24th, the river froze over and even allowed for wagon and oxen to make it across. Making the crossing of the Mississippi easy created its own problem. The initial planned 300 quickly grew to 3,000, many deciding in haste with little time to properly prepare for the long journey across Iowa.
The first group to leave stopped after making it nine miles into Iowa, setting up camp at a place called Sugar Creek. After what was presumed sufficient time to get reorganized, the group started across Iowa.
On top of the harsh cold winter that was difficult enough to deal with, most were not prepared for the travel. Tents had no floor or end flaps, food provisions, supplies, and medication supplies were not adequate for the journey, thousands got sick, and hundreds lost their lives along the way. When the cold weather ended, the rains started, continuing almost continuously on into July, the worst torrential rains in Iowa's history. What would normally take three to three and a half weeks to travel the 327 mile distance across Iowa turned out to be four and a half months. For much of the time, the mud reached the bottom of the wagon beds.
Perseverance won out and the Mormons eventually reached the Missouri River. The exodus from Nauvoo continued throughout the spring with the latest group reaching the Missouri in late summer. Some were not able to leave Nauvoo due to the expense. To make the trip also required having a group large enough to help out in emergencies. Without a wagon, a team, and adequate supplies, taking on the trek would be no less than a suicide venture. Unfortunately, remaining behind to be subjected to constant persecution was no less an easy path to take.
"First Ferry"
The Mormons first reached the Missouri River on June 14, 1846. The next challenge was crossing the Missouri River and then crossing the Indian country ahead. First, it would be necessary to regroup, acquire the proper outfitting, and determine the best method of continuing the journey. The initial obstacle was that the only ferry wasn't large enough to handle such a large number of wagons and it was a little south of where the Mormons were arriving.
Gen. Peter A. Sarpy operated a trading post between St. Mary's* and Council Point (Belle-vue). He also operated a dingy-type ferry boat on the Missouri River near the trading post.
The ferry didn't have a lot of traffic so it was sufficient to handle the load, that is up until the Mormons arrived. The Mormons had no intention of staying in the Iowa area being aware of the lands west of the Missouri. Settlers were already reaching the west coast from the San Francisco area north to Oregon Territory. The Mormons had plans to travel to a place further west than Iowa without actually knowing exactly what it looked like or where exactly it was but it was definitely west of the Missouri River. The only thing they had to go on was Brigham Young's study of John C. Frémont's travels where he described the Salt Lake area.
The first day that the Mormons arrived at the Missouri River, they decided they would need to build a ferry themselves to handle the great number of wagons traveling west. Instead of building their own ferry, they approached Peter Sarpy to discuss a joint venture. Both parties agreed to work together.
The first Mormons arriving camped in the southern part of present day Council Bluffs near present day Iowa School for the Deaf. The area west of where the Mormons were camped was chosen to construct a ferry. A volunteer workforce of around a 100 workers were called upon to build the ferry and improve the river sites to accommodate the new ferry.
The ferry was completed and operational shortly after the first of July 1846, barely two weeks after the Mormons first arrived. The ferry rope ended up on the Omaha side in the South Omaha area around the L Street bridge. The new ferry was built to carry 3 or 4 fully loaded wagons and oxen in a single crossing so the ferry was huge by any standards.
A ferry needs to have a cutout in the river bank to get out of the way of the flow of the river while being loaded and unloaded. Three of these need to be made in order to adequately transfer goods both ways. Modern ferries use a motor powered floating barge of sorts and need only two such cutouts. In 1846, that wasn't the case. The power to get the ferry across the river is provided by the river itself.
The ferry is attached to ropes anchored at the cutouts to guide it to the other side. As the river attempts to drag the ferry downstream, it traverses a path slightly downstream as it crosses to the other side. The same operation is repeated to get the ferry back across. This means that one side has to be the point of a V where the ropes are attached. On the other side, ropes are attached upstream and downstream of the apex of the V.
The point of the V was on the Council Bluffs side. The ferry was poled out into the force of the water and then allowed to travel downstream, then poled back into the cutout on the other side. After unloading, the ferry is poled back out into the force of the river but it is also firmly attached to a team of horses, mules, or oxen that drag it upstream so it can be poled into the third cutout and reattached to the upper leg rope.
If necessary, the ferry is loaded with goods for transportation back across the river before poled back out into the force of the river. The force of the stream carries it back to the starting point.
Loads were almost always on wagons with harnessed oxen so loading and unloading took little time. The entire process, a full loop, took about an hour so 12 to 16 crossing could be made in a full day, depending upon the number of hours of daylight available.
In the heaviest traffic periods, the ferry was busy starting early in the morning and worked until past sunset. The starting point was easy to spot in the early morning as a big fire was already started. Just before the sun broke over the horizon, fat burning lanterns provided the first working hours light for the workers.
The ferry area on both sides became a popular gathering spot as folks waited for their turn to cross the river.
The help of the Mormons to build the ferry was something that wasn't going to happen otherwise for quite some time so the whole area benefited as a result. It is reported that Gen. Sarpy not only allowed crossing free of charge but he also gave supplies to the Mormons.
"Grand Encampment"
The first wagons arriving at the Missouri River (June 14) camped at the area near present day School of the Deaf just southeast of Council Bluffs. While a new ferry was being constructed, the Mormons remained on the Iowa side.. The area was known as the Grand Encampment. The camp area was used on into August before all camped there could be moved across the Missouri.
As more wagons arrived, they camped in the first area available to the east. By the first of July, the ferry was ready for crossing, however there was a backlog of wagons waiting. By late July, the camped wagons stretched nine miles to the east and as much as three miles wide along the way.
Soon it was apparent that the Grand Encampment area could not support the need for grazing cattle and timber for fire and other wood needs. The Mormons started to spread out in search of areas with ample supplies. More than 80 and as many as 100 communities were settled within a 30 mile radius. Most small communities around Council Bluffs have their roots in these early settlements.
The initial arrivals had already crossed the new ferry and initially planned on continuing the journey. As the shift from the Grand Encampment to the camp across the river was occurring, concerns were growing about a late start plus the stragglers and stranded members to the east.
The church members needed to prepare for the oncoming winter and raise funds. Brigham Young propositioned the U.S. government to award contracts to the saints to build roads and bridges, haul supplies, build army posts, deliver mail, and render other services. The reply from the government was hard to swallow. It resulted in an agreement that allowed the Mormons to stay on Indian lands north of the area and on the west side of the Missouri for two years but another part of the deal was that the government needed 500 volunteers to help fight a war.
"Mormon Battalion"
During the time (1846) the Mormons camped at the "Grand Encampment", the government was at war with Mexico (The Mexican War). The Mexican military was led by Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna, who had been victorious at the Alamo. The US military, led by General Zachary Taylor did not want to have a second defeat.
Meanwhile back in Iowa, Brigham Young had petitioned the government for help in locating a place for his people to stay for the winter. In exchange, the Mormons could deliver mail, improve conditions of the passageways to the west, and other services needed so that they could sustain themselves.
The response was a bit of a surprise. The government had worked out a deal with the Indians across the Missouri to allow the Mormons to stay on their land for up to two years but the U.S. government needed a volunteer battalion of 500 soldiers to help fight the Mexican war.
Around July 16th, 1846, Capt. James Allen met the Mormons at the Grand Encampment to enlist the battalion. After having received no help from the government prior, there was little incentive for any members to comply, especially having to leave family and community after having made it this far. It was Brigham Young that realized the value of wages to be earned and the good faith it would create. At first, he asked for volunteers. When only a handful came forward, Brigham spoke with the Captain to ensure that the men would not have to fight in the war but could perform other duties. With a great deal of encouragement, he was finally able to gather enough volunteers to fill the first 4 of the 5 companies needed. Seeing there was still reluctance, Brigham gave an ultimatum of three choices; (1) join the battalion, (2) return to Nauvoo and bring remaining members waiting for assistance, or (3) blaze a trail to the west. In all cases, they would not be allowed to remain with their families. The fifth of five flanks of 100 started to form. At 489 soldiers, 12 teenage boys (aids to officers), and 20 women (laundresses enlisted to perform laundry duties, and meal duties as necessary), the battalion was ready.
On July 21 and 22nd, 1846, the Mormon Battalion set off to march to San Diego, not walk. An additional 40 to 60 family members joined the march. In the hot summer months, the battalion marched 2,030 miles from Kanesville, to Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, then to Pueblo, Colorado, Santa Fe, New Mexico, then on to San Diego. This was the longest infantry march in United States military history. By the time they arrived, the war was already over. Still, the men were enlisted for one year and stayed until they were discharged.
By the time the battalion was discharged, some of their families had left the Grand Encampment area and either moved to Winter Quarters across the river or had continued on to the Salt Lake Valley area with other members of the community. Some of the soldiers traveled straight to Salt Lake Valley, and then some of them traveled back to this area to help bring other family members to Salt Lake Valley, making a trip total of around 5,000 miles. This monumental task is difficult to imagine even today. Consider what it would be like doing this without our modern conveniences, and through "Indian Country."