The Pioneer Story
 





The Convert Immigrants

Companion to controversy wherever it appeared in the early days, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints nevertheless grew at a phenomenal rate. Hundreds of converts were baptized each month in 1850s England and Wales. But Brigham Young's Zion—and the new proselytes' surest refuge—was in America. As noted by author Arthur King Peters in his Seven Trails West, "the Mormon Trail of those years stretched all the way from Liverpool to Salt Lake City, making it by far the longest of any trail west."

Worldwide Gathering to "Zion"

"And it shall come to pass that the righteous shall be gathered out from among all nations, and shall come to Zion, singing with songs of everlasting joy." (Doctrine and Covenants 45:71)

Inherent to the belief of early Latter-day Saints was the spirit of gathering. They sought to build a centralized "Zion" community with fellow Saints, safe from ridicule and strife.

As the Church spread through Europe, tens of thousands of new converts emigrated to America for this reason, leaving everything behind them for their faith and desire to be with fellow members. Of the 60,000 to 70,000 Saints who emigrated to the Salt Lake Valley in the late 1800s, more than 98 percent of the survivors were from Europe and 75 percent were from Britain. The British converts began to emigrate with the arrival of Apostle Brigham Young to Britain in 1840. As American members faced persecution, new European members brought strength and refreshment. "They have so much of the spirit of gathering," Brigham said, "that they would go if they knew they would die as soon as they got there or they knew that the mob would be upon them and drive them as soon as they got there."

First Missionaries to Europe

In 1837, just seven years after the establishment of the Church, Apostles Heber C. Kimball and Orson Hyde went to England as missionaries. Elder Kimball felt inadequate with his assignment.

"O, Lord," he said, "I am a man of stammering tongue, and altogether unfit for such a work; how can I go to preach in that land, which is so famed throughout Christendom for learning, knowledge and piety . . . and to a people whose intelligence is proverbial!"

Pushing doubts aside, Elder Kimball trusted in God and left for his mission. When the boat approached Liverpool, Elder Kimball enthusiastically leapt ashore, becoming the first missionary in Europe. Nine people sought baptism after one week. About 1,500 were baptized during his missionary service. A result of his efforts, the Preston branch (congregation), established in 1837, still functions as the oldest continuous branch in the Church, predating the Salt Lake branch by 10 years.

Apostles Visit England

Just when Church President and prophet Joseph Smith faced the greatest persecution, he sent those closest to him across the ocean to build the Church abroad. Beginning in 1839, the Church Apostles left to preach the gospel in England. They went without money or provisions, relying on God for their keep. According to Apostle Brigham Young's reports, from 1839 to 1841 they baptized between 7,000-8,000 people, printed 5,000 copies of the Book of Mormon, 3,000 hymn books, 2,500 volumes of the newspaper Millennial Star and established a shipping agency for emigrant Saints. The Apostles helped 1,000 European converts emigrate to America during that time.

Emigration Organized

On June 6, 1840, the first official emigration company left on the ship Britannia. These 41 Preston Saints were led by John Moon and blessed by Apostles Heber C. Kimball and Brigham Young before they left for New York. They arrived on July 20. In all, Brigham Young organized 800 emigrants into seven companies for the journey overseas. For the next five years, New Orleans became the preferred destination for the emigrant companies, who would then take a steamboat up the Mississippi River to Nauvoo.

Funding for the Journey

To pay for the trip, many Saints worked several months or years prior to their trek or after arriving at their port of entry in America. Some immigrants paid passage for half or all of their way, while others relied heavily upon the Perpetual Emigrating Fund (PEF) provided by the Church for its members journeying west. The fund was replenished by repayment of loans or donations from members. In 1852, Church leaders opened the PEF to the 30,000 Saints in Britain and other converts in Europe (prior to that year, the PEF was mainly used by the pioneers' trek in America). Now, European members could use the fund with the promise of pay-back through money or labor. Because of the high price of travel, it took several years for immigrants to pay their debt—many were unsuccessful.

Typical Day Onboard Ship

The historian Leonard Arrington wrote:

"The companies arose at an early hour, made their beds, cleaned their assigned portion of the ship, and threw the refuse overboard. At seven they assembled for prayer, after which breakfast was had. All were required to be in their berths ready for retirement at eight o'clock. Church services were held morning and evening of each day, weather permitting. Many of the companies had excellent choirs which sang for the services. During the time of passage, which occupied something like a month, concerts, dances, contests, and entertainments of various types were held. Schools were held almost daily for both adults and children. The classes were particularly popular with Scandinavians who learned English en route."

Other journals record that on sunny days women and children would busy themselves on deck. The children would play while the women would sew wagon covers and tents for the upcoming journey in America.

Charles Dickens Visits Emigrant Ship

A visitor to the ship Amazon, leaving the London dock in 1863, was the novelist Charles Dickens. "I . . . had come aboard this Emigrant Ship to see what eight hundred Latter-day Saints were like," he wrote. "Indeed, I think it would be difficult to find eight hundred people together anywhere else, and find so much beauty and so much strength and capacity for work among them."

Fully expecting to bear testimony against the Latter-day Saints, Dickens changed his opinion after observing the passengers—"to my great astonishment," he said, "they did not deserve it."

In Dickens' book, The Uncommercial Traveler, he describes the scene he beheld with wonder:

"Nobody is in an ill temper, nobody is the worse for drink, nobody swears an oath or uses a coarse word, nobody appears depressed, nobody is weeping, and down upon the deck, in every corner where it is possible to find a few square feet to kneel, crouch, or lie in, people in every unsuitable attitude for writing, are writing letters."

Early Newspaper Reports

An article from a Philadelphia paper recorded in the Millennial Star (Sept. 5, 1857) describes the 536 Latter-day Saints aboard the ship Tuscarora. According to the article, two-thirds of the passengers would remain in the state until they earned enough money to complete the trek to Salt Lake:

"It is unfair to characterize these Mormons as unlettered, or charge them with embracing the creed for the mere sake of promised happiness in an ideal country. On the contrary, they seem fully to realize the hardships before them and to have their eyes open to the fact that they must earn their bread by patient toil, upon arriving in Utah."

The Edinburgh Review of January 1862 recorded:

"The ordinary emigrant is exposed to all the chances and misadventures of a heterogeneous, childish, mannerless crowd during the voyage, and to the merciless cupidity of land-sharks the moment he has touched the opposite shore. But the Mormon ship is a Family under strong and accepted discipline, with every provision for comfort, decorum, and internal peace. On his arrival in the New World the wanderer is received into a confraternity which speeds him onwards with as little hardship and anxiety as the circumstances permit and he is passed on from friend to friend, till he reaches the promised home."


Jane Robinson

I believed in the principle of the gathering and felt it my duty to go although it was a severe trial to me, in my feelings to leave my native land and the pleasing associations that I had formed there; but my heart was fixed. I knew in whom I had trusted and with the fire of Israel's God burning in my bosom, I forsook home.

(Jane Carter Robinson Hindly, "Jane C. Robinson Hindly Reminiscences and Diary," LDSCA.)


Jane Rio Griffiths Baker

January 4, 1851

"I this day took leave of every Acquaintance I could collect together, in all human probability, never to see them again on Earth; I am now with my children about to leave my Native land, in order to gather with the Church of Christ, in the Valley of the Great Salt Lake, in North America.

February 14

"I can hardly describe the beauty of this night, the Moon nearly at full with a deep blue Sky studded with stars, the reflection of which makes the sea appear like an immense sheet of diamonds, and here are we walking the deck at 9 o'clock in the evening without bonnet or shawl.

February 22

"At _ past 5 p.m. my dear little Josiah breathed his last. He had sunk rapidly since Tuesday, when he partially lost his speech.

February 23

"Sunday—A beautiful morning, the body of my dear Boy is removed to a snug little cabin . . . where the male adults of my family have watched it all night. The second mate, with the assistance of Uncle Bateman, have just sewn up the body of our dear little fellow, ready for burial. At 11 o'clock the tolling of the ship bell informed us that the time had come that the mortal part of my dear Child was to be committed to the deep.

September 29, 1851

"I ascended the hill before us, and had my first view of the city, which is laid out in squares, or blocks as they call them here. . . . I stood and looked; I can hardly anylise my feelings, but I think my prevailing ones were joy and gratitude for the protecting care over me and mine during our long and perillous journey."

(Jane Rio Griffiths Baker [Pearce], Journal, 1851, Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University.)


John Moon

July 22, 1840

I feel myself glad to find my feet upon the Land of Joseph after so long and tedious a journey; we have had a very long voyage. . . . The captain said we had a very hard voyage for the season. . . . On the 8th [June] was had a very high wind and water came over the bulwarks all that day and all was sick. I never saw such a day in all my days. Some crying, some vomiting; pots, pans, tins, and boxes walking in all directions; the ship heaving, the sea roaring and so we passed that day.

I feel glad that we have got so far on our journey. I feel somewhat sorry for all those who have to come after us. . . . You must expect great tribulation on the way to Zion.

(As quoted by William Clayton to Brigham Young, 19 August 1840, Brigham Young Papers, LDSCA.)


Jens Chrstian Anderson Weibye

May 27, 1862

Some of the emigrants carried the measles with them from home and the disease soon spread to all parts of the ship. . . . Many of the emigrants were also suffering with diarrhea, which caused much weakness of body. We lost the appetite for sea biscuits but learned to soak them in water or tea for eight to ten hours, which softened them so that they became more palatable. . . . Most every day we amused ourselves a short time by dancing on deck to music played by some of our brethren or members of the crew. We could thus have had an enjoyable time, had it not been for the sorrow occasioned by the many sick and dying amongst us on account of the measles. Up to this date three adults and 43 children have died, nearly all from measles.

(Jens Christian Anderson Weibye, Journal, 29 May 1862, LDSCA.)


William Clayton

Aug 19, 1840

I feel glad that we have got so far on our journey. I feel somewhat sorry for all those who have to come after us. . . . You must expect great tribulation on the way to Zion.

(As quoted by William Clayton to Brigham Young, 19 August 1840, Brigham Young Papers, LDSCA.)

Journal photographs courtesy of Infobases, Inc. [an error occurred while processing this directive]

  ÿ