The Pioneer Story
 




Location:
Garden Grove
Distance: 128 miles from Nauvoo

Church leaders decided to create a substantial camp at this site, a sort of temporary settlement to serve the thousands of weary and destitute pilgrims who would yet come this way. Cabins were erected, grounds were fenced and plowed, crops were planted and individuals were chosen to remain and oversee the place. There also, in a windswept lot known as "the cow yard," the bodies of several Saints were laid to final rest. The site was vacated in the spring of 1848.


Parley P. Pratt

"All things being harmonized and put in order, the camps moved on. Arriving at a place on a branch of Grand River we encamped for a while, having travelled much in the midst of great and continued rains, mud and mire. Here we enclosed and planted public farms of many hundred acres and commenced settlement for the good of some who were to tarry and of those who should follow us from Nauvoo. We called the place 'Garden Grove.'"

(Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt [Salt Lake City, Utah: Deseret Book, 1975], 307-308.)


Allen Stout

"So we kept rolling on from place to place through the mud until the 27th [of April] when we pitched our tents in a beautiful grove of timber where we began to make a farm. This place was called Garden Grove. Here it was determined by the council that those who were out of provisions should stop and raise a crop.

"Scarcely a day passed without some of the cattle being snake bit. Horse that were bitten generally died. But cattle were mostly cured by a seed called Rattlesnakes Master. This was boiled up in milk, the juice given internally and the beed bound on the wound."

(Allen Stout, Journal, typescript at the Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University.)


The Camp of Israel

May 6, 1846

"This is the 'title and address,' which has been adopted by the company of Mormons now on their way Westward. A mail carrier arrived here on Monday last from the Camp, and reported the pioneer party, or bend of the Column, as having crossed the tributaries of the Chariton, over 150 miles distant. By this time they are probably on the banks of the Missouri.

"Thus far, everything has gone favorably with the exception of the breaking down of a few overladen wagons. The party is in good health and spirits—no dissensions exist; and the Grand Caravan moves slowly and steadily and peacefully. Their progress has been materially retarded by the want of fodder for their live stock;—the grass not having fairly started, reduced them to the necessity of laboring for the farmers on the route to supply the deficiency.

"They travel in detached companies, from five to ten miles apart and in point of order, resemble a military expedition." (Hancock Eagle, as reprinted in the Illinois Gazette, 6 May 1846.)

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

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