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Location:
Bear River
Crossing
Distance: 1216 miles from Nauvoo
One of the last river crossings on the Mormon Trail. A
short distance east of the river crossing, Lansford W.
Hastings and his company turned north, but the Reed-Donner
Company turned south. Near this site mountaineer Miles
Goodyear met the vanguard company on July 10, 1847, and
tried to persuade them to take the northern track toward his
trading post at the confluence of the Weber and Ogden
rivers.
William Clayton
"Mr. Miles Goodyear came into camp; . . . we are
now within two miles of Bear River. His report of the [Great
Salt Lake] valley is more favorable than some we have heard
but we have an idea he is anxious to have us make a road to
his place through selfish motives; . . . there is scarcely
any wagon track to be seen on the northern road, only a few
wagons of Hasting's company having come this route; the
balance went the other road and many of them perished in the
snow."
(William Clayton, as quoted in J. Roderic Korns and Dale
L. Morgan, ed., West from Fort Bridger, rev. Will
Bagley and Harold Schindler [Logan, Utah: Utah State
University Press, 1994], 132, 209.)
Eliza R. Snow
September 30, 1847
At the Bear River Crossing, Caroline Grant, wife
of Jedediah Grant, died September 26, 1847. Jedediah made a
forced day-and-night wagon ride to bury his wife in the Salt
Lake Valley, arriving September 30, 1847. She was the first
white woman buried in the Salt Lake Valley. Of Caroline,
Eliza R. Snow wrote:
"I was with her much, previous to her death, which
occurred so near Salt lake Valley, that by forced drive
night and day, her remains were brought through for
internment. Not so, however, with her beautiful babe
[Margaret] of eight or ten weeks; it was buried in the
desert."
(Eliza R. Snow, as quoted in Edward W. Tullidge, Women
of Mormondom [New York: Tullidge & Crandall, 1877],
335.)
Wilford Woodruff
July 8, 1847
"I went and flung my fly onto the [water]. And it
being the first time that I ever tried the Artificial fly in
America, . . . I watched it as it floated upon the water
with as much intense interest as Franklin did his kite when
[he] tried to draw lightning from the skies. And as Franklin
received great Joy when he saw electricity . . . descend on
his kite string, in like manner was I highly gratified when
I saw the nimble trout dart my fly hook himself and run away
with the line, but I soon worried him out and drew him to
shore."
(Wilford Woodruff Journals, HDC.)
Journal photographs
courtesy of Infobases, Inc.
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