Location:
Independence
Rock
Distance: 965 miles from Nauvoo
This site also is noted by most overland journalists due
to the countless names carved on it. Its use as a name
registry was already well established by the time Brigham
Young and the vanguard company passed it in June 1847.
Wilford Woodruff
June 21, 1847
"We examined the many names & lists of names
of the trappers, traders, travellers and emegrants which are
painted upon these rocks. Nearly all the names were put on
with read Black & yellow paint. Some had washed out
& defaced. The greatest number was put on within a Few
Years. Some of them were quite plain of about 30 years
standing."
(Wilford Woodruff Journals, HDC.)
Samuel Harrison Bailey Smith
"We moved on until we arrived at Independence
Rock. The evening of our arrival I went up to the top of the
Rock to hear the Band play, and also to sing several hymns;
while here, one of the company's cows was poisoned by
drinking below where two snakes were fighting."
(Samuel Harrison Bailey Smith, Reminiscences and Diary,
April 1856-July 1863, HDC.)
Rachel Emma Wooley Simmons
Summer 1848
"We heard so much of Independence Rock before we
got there. They said we should have a dance on top of it, as
we had many a dance while on the plains. We thought it would
be so nice, but when we got there, the company was so small
it was given up. We nooned at this place, but Father staid
long enough for us children to go all over it. I went with
the boys and with Catherine. It is an immense rock with
holes and crevices where the water is dripping cool and
sparkling. We saw a great many names of persons that had
been cut in the rock, but we were so disappointed in not
having a dance. Our company was so small, and we had not a
note of music or a musician. I was told afterwards by some
of the girls that we had travelled with that they had a
party there, but President Young had all the music with
him."
(Kate B. Carter, ed., "Journal of Rachel Emma Wooley
Simmons," Heart Throbs of the West [Salt Lake City,
Utah: Daughters of the Utah Pioneers, 1950], 162.)
Curtis Edwin Bolton
July 1848
"Near Independence Rock I gathered about 50 lbs.
saleratus [alkali soda]. The evening we camped there, the
band played most beautifully til late. Some danced up on top
of the rock where the band were. It was a clear night and
full moon. My team became so weak here that I left Bro.
Brigham's company and stopt on good feed one week to recruit
[recruit is a nineteenth-century term for resting and
recuperating stock], and killed and dried some buffalo
meat."
(Cleo H. Evans, Curtis Edwin Bolton, Pioneer
Missionary: History, Descendants and Ancestors [Fairfax,
Va.: Mrs. Cleo H. Evans, 1968], 21; see also Curtis Edwin
Bolton Reminiscences and Journals, 1846-1853, HDC.)
Journal photographs
courtesy of Infobases, Inc.
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