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Location:
Devil's Gate
Distance: 970 miles from Nauvoo
A significant landmark noted by most journal keepers,
Devil's Gate is a narrow cut made by the Sweetwater River
through an immense rock with sides measuring three hundred
seventy feet in height and more than a quarter mile in
length. It was here that the suffering members of the Martin
Handcart Company were brought by the rescuers before being
carried west to the Salt Lake Valley during the bitter
winter of 1856. Twenty men, under the leadership of Daniel
W. Jones, remained for the winter at Devil's Gate to guard
freight unloaded there by the independent wagon companies,
in part to make room for exhausted members of the Martin
Company. The Jones party suffered misery and starvation at
Devil's Gate, at one point being reduced to eating boiled
rawhide until friendly Indians gave them some buffalo meat.
The episode was immortalized in Wallace Stegner's story
"The Man Who Ate the Pack Saddle."
George E. Grant
October 1856
"It is not much use for me to attempt to give a
description of the situation of these people, for this you
will learn from your son Joseph A. and Br. Garr, who are the
bearers of this express; but you can imagine between five
and six hundred men, women and children, worn down by
drawing handcarts through snow and mud; fainting by the
wayside; falling, chilled by the cold; children crying,
their limbs stiffened by cold, their feet bleeding and some
of them bare to snow and frost. The sight is almost too much
for the stoutest of us; but we go on doing all we can, not
doubting or despairing."
(Deseret News, 19 Nov. 1856, as quoted in LeRoy and Ann
Hafen, Handcarts to Zion [Glendale, Ca.: The Arthur
H. Clark Company, 1960], 116-17.)
Elizabeth Horrocks Jackson Kingsford
October,1856
"I was six or seven thousand miles from my native
land, in a wild, rocky, mountain country, in a destitute
condition, the ground covered with snow, the waters covered
with ice, and I with three fatherless children with scarcely
nothing to protect them from the merciless storms. 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
sufferings for the Gospel's sake will be sanctified unto me
for my good."
(From "Leaves from the Life of Elizabeth Horrocks Jackson
Kingsford," Archives, The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints.)
Elizabeth Sermon
November 1856
"Many cruel and painful things happening, the dying and
dear ones all around us, poor souls, would sit down by the
roadside and would never move again until carried into camp
on handcarts by someone. It is a wonder any of us lived
through it. My husband's health still failing, a young woman
by the name of Caroline Marchant assisted me with the cart.
. . . Not far from here (Devil's Gate) the Captain called us
together to tell us we must lay our bodies down. Were we
willing to do so for the Gospel's sake? Many poor
half-starved men shouted with what remaining strength they
had, 'Aye.' But mothers could not say that and were quiet.
We went back to our tents, food would have suited us then.
My faith was in my Heavenly Father. I never lost that faith
in Him. It is as sweet today to trust and my prayer is, may
I always trust Him. He is a friend that has never failed."
(Stewart E. Glazier, ed., Journal of the Trail [Salt Lake
City, Utah: 1996], 77.)
Levi Savage
October 15, 1856
"Today we traveled fifteen and a half miles. Last
night Caroline Reeder, aged seventeen years, died and was
buried this morning. The people are getting weak and failing
very fast. A great many are sick. Our teams are also failing
fast, and it requires great exertion to make any progress.
Our rations were reduced last night, one quarter, bringing
the men to ten ounces and the women to nine ounces. Some of
the children were reduced to six and others to three ounces
each."
(Stewart E. Glazier, ed., Journal of the Trail
[Salt Lake City, Utah.: 1996], 56.)
Journal photographs
courtesy of Infobases, Inc.
Painting: The Martin Handcart Company
Rescued by Volunteers by Clark Kelly Price
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