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Location:
Iowa City:
1856
The Handcart Pioneers
Thousands of immigrants from England and Wales who joined
the Church and the trek west took on a new form of
transportation to Salt Lake City. They couldn't afford
wagons after leaving their homeland, so they pulled
handcarts. The human-powered handcarts, which were
envisioned by Brigham Young, proved to be one of the most
brilliantand tragicexperiments in all western migration.
Iowa City was the end for the west-bound railroad in
1856. It was here that the convert emigrants were outfitted
with handcarts to begin their trek. With nearly empty carts
they made good time across Iowa to Council Bluffs. Here they
acquired the remaining provisions for their long march.
The Handcart
This was a man-powered wagon, really a wooden wheelbarrow
of sorts. Although modifications in design were adapted as
experience tutored, the standard handcart "box" measured
three-feet by four-feet, with eight-inch walls, centered
over a single axle with wagon-style wheels. From the front
box of the handcart extended a cross bar against which the
person pulling could lean into the load and pull. Some
handcarts were covered with a bow-frame canvas assembly.
Fully loaded, a handcart could hold around 500 pounds of
provisions and possessions, within which adults were allowed
17 pounds of clothing and bedding, children 10 pounds.
Frequently, even this amount became onerous and belongings
were abandoned all along the trail.
Perpetual Emigrating Fund
The Church inaugurated the Perpetual Emigrating Fund
Company (PEF) in 1849. The PEF used Church assets and
private contributions to assist poor emigrants from the
eastern U.S. and Europe on their journey to the Salt Lake
Valley. The funds were extended as a loan rather than as a
gift, and sponsored emigrants signed a note obligating
themselves to repay the PEF once having arrived in Utah.
This obligation could be met through cash, commodities, or
labor. It is estimated that previous to its dismantling in
1887, the PEF assisted more than 30,000 people to travel to
Utah by wagon, by pulling a handcart or (subsequent to 1869)
by rail.
Ten Handcart Companies
Ten companies of handcart pioneers walked the 1,300 miles
from Iowa City (end of the rail line) to Salt Lake City
between 1856 and 1860, pulling and pushing all that they
owned. Of the total of 2,962 handcart immigrants, about 250
died along the way, 220 of them in companies four and five,
the Willie and Martin companies of 1856.
"Many a father pulled his cart, with his little children
on it, until the day preceding his death." (LeRoy R. Hafen
and Ann Hafen, Handcarts to Zion, 102.)
"This heroic episode of Mormon history exemplifies many
of the enduring qualities of nascent Mormonism itself:
thorough organization, iron discipline, unswerving devotion
to a cause, and limitless self-sacrifice. The true Mormon
Trail was not on the prairie but in the spirit." (Arthur
King Peters, Seven Trails West [New York:
Abbeville Press Publishers, 1996], 124.)
Tragedy of the Martin and Willie Handcart Companies of
1856
Two handcart companies of poor European emigrants980
people and 233 handcartsstarted on the journey across the
plains late in the year due to a series of mishaps.
Eventually, nearly 220 members of the two companies died on
the high plains, the majority freezing to death in early
snowstorms near the Continental Divide in central Wyoming.
Many others suffered trail-side amputations of fingers, toes,
and legs due to frostbite. Rescue parties from Salt Lake
City averted further tragedy.
"Perhaps their suffering seems less dramatic because the
handcart pioneers bore it meekly, praising God, instead of
fighting for life with the ferocity of animals and eating
their dead to keep their own life beating, as both the
Fremont and Donner parties did. But if courage and endurance
make a story, if humankindness and helpfulness and brotherly
love in the midst of raw horror are worth recording, this
half-forgotten episode of the Mormon migration is one of the
great tales of the West and of America." (Wallace Stegner,
"Ordeal by Handcart," in Collier's, July 6, 1956,
78-85.)
C.C.A. Christensen
"At the campground we encountered our first
trials, in that we had to give up books. . . . We were only
allowed to take fifteen pounds in weight for each person who
was to travel with the handcarts, and that included our
tinware for eating, bedding, and any clothing we did not
wish to carry ourselves. . . . Our train consisted of
between thirty and forty handcarts. Each of these had an
average of five person. . . . It was usually necessary for
small children to ride in the handcart which the father,
mother, and older brothers and sisters of the family pulled.
. . . The sick and the blind women [in the group] were
allowed to ride in one of our freight wagons, for we had
three wagons drawn by mules, which carried our tents."
(Richard L. Jensen, trans., "By Handcart to Utah: The
Account of C.C.A. Christensen," Nebraska History 66
[Winter 1985], 337-43.)
Emma James
July 1856
"It was now six weeks since the companies had arrived at
Camp Iowa," Emma James remembers. Concerning the council
meeting which was called, she says, "We were called together
in a meeting one evening and there was quite a bit of
guessing as to the reason for it. It was a large group that
gathered, circling the leader. The meeting was called to
order, one of the brethren offered prayer, then we were told
for the reason for the counseling. We were told it was 300
miles to Council Bluff which was the actual place for
starting the trek and that was just a mile to what we had to
go to reach the valley. We would have carts, such as they
were, but the season was late and bad weather could prove
dangerous to us if we were in the mountains. Even if we had
no trouble, we would be late getting to Utah. There had been
much talk of these dangers by experienced men in camp, but I
think that the thing which I will remember for the rest of
my life and wish that we had heeded was said by a Brother
Savage. With tears streaming down his cheeks he pleaded with
the people, 'Brothers and sisters, wait until Spring to make
this journey. Some of the strong may get through in case of
bad weather, but the bones of the weak and old will strew
the way.' I can remember that when he finished there was a
long time of silence I was frightened. Father looked pale
and sick. I turned to mother to see what she was thinking,
and all that I saw was her old determined look. She was
ready to go on tomorrow. There were many others like her. We
really didn't have much choice. There was no work here for
us to keep ourselves through the winter, and our family had
to live. 'We must always put our trust in the Lord', said
Mother, and that was that.
"There was nearly one hundred people of the companies who
decided to winter over and come in the spring. The majority
voted to go on as soon as everything was ready. July 15th,
under the direction of Captain Willy, with 500 people, 120
carts and four or five wagons left Camp Iowa for an
outfitting station at Council Bluffs. It was great fun
pulling empty carts and imitating the wagon drivers with
their 'eeh' and 'hah' ."
(Stewart E. Glazier, ed., Journal of the Trail
[Salt Lake City, Utah: 1996], 19-20.)
J.D.T. McAllister
The Handcart Song
Ye saints who dwell on Europe's shore,
Prepare yourselves for many more
To leave behind your native land,
For sure God's judgments are at hand.
For you must cross the raging main
Before the promised land you gain,
And with the faithful make a start
To cross the plains with your handcart.
Chorus
For some must push and some must pull
As we go marching up the hill;
So merrily on the way we go
Until we reach the Valley-o!
As on the roads the carts were pull'd,
'Twould very much surprise the world
To see the old and feeble dame
Thus lend a hand to pull the same!
And maidens fair will dance and sing,
Young men more happy than a king,
And children too will laugh and play;
Their strength increasing day by day.
Chorus
And long before the valley's gained,
We will be met upon the plains
With music sweet and friends so dear
And fresh supplies our hearts to cheer.
And then with music and with song
How cheerfully we'll march along
And thank the day we made a start
To cross the plains with our handcart.
Chorus
Levi Savage
July 1856
"Brothers and sisters, wait until Spring to make
this journey. Some of the strong may get through in case of
bad weather, but the bones of the weak and old will strew
the way."
"What I have said I know to be true; but seeing you are
to go forward, I will go with you, will help you all I can,
will work with you, will rest with you, will suffer with
you, and, if necessary, I will die with you. May God in his
mercy bless and preserve us."
(Stewart E. Glazier, ed., Journal of the Trail
[Salt Lake City, Utah: 1996], 19-20.)
Journal photographs
courtesy of Infobases, Inc.
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