Location:
Upper Platte (Mormon)
Ferry
Distance: 914 miles from Nauvoo
Near Red Buttes, a few miles above present-day Casper,
Wyoming, the Latter-day Saints established what was probably
the first commercial ferry on the Platte River. With a view
toward creating funds which could assist later pioneer
companies, Brigham Young had nine men of the vanguard
company remain behind and run the operation. Each year the
Church sent men to run the ferry just before the beginning
of the emigration season, monopolizing the traffic until the
California goldrush began and competing ferries were
established. The location of the Mormon ferry varied, and
the 1847 site was abandoned for another location in 1849.
The ferry was discontinued by 1853 with the construction of
John Richard's toll bridge. In this vicinity during October
1856, the impoverished Willie and Martin handcart companies
crossed the Platte in the freezing water, the effects of
which hastened the death of many who were already in failing
health.
Wilford Woodruff
June16, 1847
"President Young thought it wisdom to leave a
number of the brethren here & keep a ferry until our
Company Came up. Emegrants will pay for ferrying $1.50 cts
per waggon."
(Wilford Woodruff Journals, HDC.)
Patience Loader
October 19, 1956
"We halted for a short time and took shelter
under our carts. After the storm had passed we traveled on
until we came to the last crossing of the Platte River. . .
. The water was deep and very cold and we . . . drifted out
of the regular crossing and we came near being drowned, the
water coming up to our arm pits. . . .
". . . After we got out of the water we had to travel in
our wet clothes until we got to camp and our clothing was
frozen on us. . . . When we got to camp, we had but very
little dry clothing to put on.
"We had to make the best of our poor circumstances and
put our trust in God our Father that we may take no harm
from our wet clothes. It was too late to go for wood and
water, and wood was too far away that night. The ground was
frozen [so] hard we was unable to drive any tent pins in. As
the tent was wet when we took it down in the morning it was
somewhat frozen, so we stretched it open the best we could
and got in under it. . . .
"Every day we realized that the hand of God was over us.
. . . We knew that we had not strength of our own to perform
such hardships if our heavenly Father had not help us. . .
."
(Wallace Stegner, The Gathering of Zion: The Story of
the Mormon Trail [University of Nebraska Press, 1992],
3, 247.)
Vincent E. Geiger
June 1849
"The Mormons have established a blacksmith shop here also
at which they are making lots of money. So that with the
ferry and shop they have as good a gold mine as any in
California."
(Dale L. Morgan, "The Ferries of the Forty-Niners,"
Annals of Wyoming [April 1959], 23.)
Peter O. Hansen
Monday, July 2, 1849
"The weather was windy and dusty. We traveled
about 21 miles to the ferry [Upper Platte Ferry] and found
good feed on the bench and bottoms."
Tuesday, July 3
"Cloudy, cool weather; we laid by to repair wagons, etc.
Some of the troops going to Oregon and California were here
trying to cross the river. More than half of them had
deserted already and about half of the rest were fixing
themselves up to leave likewise. It was a great joy that we
met some of our brethren who were ferrying at this place."
(As printed in the Journal History, July 1849, HDC.)
Josiah Rogerson, Martin Handcart Company
October 1856
"The crossing of the North Platte was fraught
with more fatalities than any other incident of the entire
journey. . . . More than a score or two of the young female
members waded the stream that in places was waist deep.
Blocks of mushy snow and ice had to be dodged. The result of
wading of this stream by the female members was immediately
followed by partial and temporary dementia from which
several did not recover until the next spring."
(Josiah Rogerson, Salt Lake Tribune, 14 Jan. 1914,
as quoted in LeRoy R. Hafen and Ann W. Hafen, Handcarts
to Zion [Glendale, Ca.: The Arthur H. Clark Company,
1960], 109.)
Elizabeth Horrocks Jackson Kingsford, Martin Handcart
Company
October 19, 1856
"Some of the men carried some of the women on
their back or in their arms, but others of the women tied up
their skirts and waded through, like the heroines that they
were, and as they had gone through many other rivers and
creeks. My husband (Aaron Jackson) attempted to ford the
stream. He had only gone a short distance when he reached a
sandbar in the river, on which he sank down through weakness
and exhaustion. My sister, Mary Horrocks Leavitt, waded
through the water to his assistance. She raised him up to
his feet. Shortly afterward, a man came along on horseback
and conveyed him to the other side. My sister then helped me
to pull my cart with my three children and other matters on
it. We had scarcely crossed the river when we were visited
with a tremendous storm of snow, hail, sand, and fierce
winds. . . .
"About nine o'clock I retired. Bedding had become very
scarce so I did not disrobe. I slept until, as it appeared
to me, about midnight. I was extremely cold. The weather was
bitter. I listened to hear if my husband breathed, he lay so
still. I could not hear him. I became alarmed. I put my hand
on his body, when to my horror I discovered that my worst
fears were confirmed. My husband was dead. I called for help
to the other inmates of the tent. They could render me no
aid; and there was no alternative but to remain alone by the
side of the corpse till morning. Oh, how the dreary hours
drew their tedious length along. When daylight came, some of
the male part of the company prepared the body for burial.
And oh, such a burial and funeral service. They did not
remove his clothinghe had but little. They wrapped him in
a blanket and placed him in a pile with thirteen others who
had died, and then covered him up with snow. The ground was
frozen so hard that they could not dig a grave. He was left
there to sleep in peace until the trump of God shall sound,
and the dead in Christ shall awake and come forth in the
morning of the first resurrection. We shall then again unite
our hearts and lives, and eternity will furnish us with life
forever more.
"I will not attempt to describe my feelings at finding
myself thus left a widow with three children, under such
excruciating circumstances. I cannot do it. But I believe
the Recording Angel has inscribed in the archives above, and
that my suffering for the Gospel's sake will be sanctified
unto me for my good."
(Elizabeth Jackson, as quoted in LeRoy and Ann Hafen,
Handcarts to Zion [Glendale, Ca.: The Arthur H. Clark
Company, 1960], 110-13.)
Journal photographs
courtesy of Infobases, Inc.
Painting: The Pioneers of 1847 Crossing the
Platte by Dan
Weggeland
Courtesy of International Society, Daughters of Utah
Pioneers
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