|
|
Location:
Grand
Encampment
Distance: 255 miles from Nauvoo
This broad, open area became the stopping place for
pioneer companies as they approached the Missouri River. At
this site, the current location of the Iowa School for the
Deaf, more than 500 volunteers of the Mormon Battalion were
officially mustered into the U.S. Army for service in the
war with Mexico.
Thomas L. Kane
Summer 1849
"This landing, and the large flat or bottom on
the east side of the river, were crowded with covered carts
and wagons; and each one of the Council Bluffs hills
opposite was crowned with its own great camp, gay with
bright white canvas, and alive with the busy stir of
swarming occupants. In the clear blue morning air, the smoke
streamed up from more than a thousand cooking fires.
Countless roads and bypaths checkered all manner of
geometric figures on the hillsides. Herd boys were dozing
upon the slopes; sheep and horses, cows and oxen, were
feeding around them, and other herds in the luxuriant meadow
of the then swollen river. From a single point I counted
four thousand head of cattle in view at one time. As I
approached the camps, it seemed to me the children there
were to prove still more numerous."
(Thomas L. Kane, The Mormons: A Discourse Delivered
Before the Historical Society of Pennsylvania, March 26,
1850 [Philadelphia: Ing & Baird, Printers, 1850].)
"They did dance! None of your minuets or other mortuary
porcessions of gentles in etiquette, tight shoes, and
pinching gloves, but . . . French fours, Copenhagen jigs,
Virginia reels, and the like forgotten figures executed with
the spirit of people too happy to be slow, or bashful, or
constrained. Light hearts, lithe figures, and light feet,
had it their own way from an early hour till after the sun
had dipped behind the sharp skyline of the Omaha hills.
Silence was then called, and a well cultivated mezzo-soprano
voice, belonging to a young lady with fair face and dark
eyes, gave with quartette accompaniment a little song, the
notes of which I have been unsuccessful in repeated efforts
to obtain since-a version of the text, touching to all
earthly wanderers:
By the rivers of Babylon we sat down and wept. We wept
when we remembered Zion."
(Wallace Stegner, The Gathering of Zion: The Story of
the Mormon Trail [New York: McGraw-Hill, 1964, in the
series: The American Trail Series, reprinted by Bison
Book, 1992], 81-82.)
Journal photographs
courtesy of Infobases, Inc.
[an error occurred while processing this directive] |