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Location:
Sugar Creek
Distance: 7 miles from Nauvoo
This first major campsite in Iowa, about seven miles
inland from the Mississippi River, served an estimated 2,000
people in February 1846, including most of the Church
leadership. It was known as the "Camp of Israel." The Sugar
Creek camp also served as a portent of things to come.
Bone-chilling cold, wind, snow and ice plagued the refugees
with sickeness and death. Uncertainty about routes and
destinations to the West, in addition to mounting problems
with supplies and equipment, kept the advance party from
departing Sugar Creek for nearly a month.
Joseph Fielding
February, 1846
"The campground is by Sugar Creek where they have
plenty of wood and water, a good place for such a purpose.
On the night of the 13th, the snow fell and covered the
ground and the 14th was a very rough day, snowing all the
day long. I felt much for them. Some had tents and some
wagon covers and some, neither of them. This day is also
rough, snowing all the day from the north, but it is not
very cold, when I think that men, with some women and
children, should be so exposed."
(Joseph Fielding, Diary, as quoted in "Nauvoo Journal,"
BYU Studies 19 [1979], 161.)
William Pace
February 18, 1846
"Our camp was made in the snow about 8 inches
deep and was a rather uncomfortable introduction into camp
life without tent or any shelter save it be a wagon cover
made from common sheeting. Here we stayed for some time
waiting the arrival of all those who could possibly supply
themselves with teams."
(William Pace Autobiography, Harold B. Lee Library,
Brigham Young University.)
Helen Mar Kimball Whitney
"Camplife in February [1846] was quite a novel
experience. . . . The band played every evening. I there
took my first lesson in the Danish waltz. The weather was so
cold that it was impossible to keep warm with exercise."
(Helen Mar Kimball Whitney Autobiography, typescript,
Harold B. Lee Library Special Collections, Brigham Young
University.)
Brigham Young
Encampment on Sugar Creek, IowaFebruary 26,
1846
"The fact is worthy of remembrance that several thousand
persons left their homes in midwinter and exposed themselves
without shelter, except that afforded by a scanty supply of
tentsand wagon covers, to a cold which effectually made an
ice bridge over the Mississippi river which at Nauvoo is
more than a mile broad. We could have remained sheltered in
our homes had it not been for the threats and hostile
demonstrations of our enemies, who, notwithstanding their
solemn agreements had thrown every obstacle in our way, not
respecting either life, liberty or property, so much so,
that our only means of avoiding a rupture was by starting in
midwinter.
"Our homes, gardens, orchards, farms, streets, bridges,
mills, public halls, magnificent Temple, and other public
improvements we leave as a monument of our patriotism,
industry, economy, uprightness of purpose and integrity of
heart; and as a living testimony of the falsehood and
wickedness of those who charge us with disloyalty to the
Constitution of our country, idleness and dishonesty."
(History of the Church, 7:603.)
Journal photographs
courtesy of Infobases, Inc.
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