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Settling the Great Basin. Chapter 7 Utah Studies. Exploring the Valley. On July 27 th , just a few days after the advanced pioneer company had entered the valley, a group of sixteen men set out to explore their new home.
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Settling the Great Basin Chapter 7 Utah Studies
Exploring the Valley • On July 27th, just a few days after the advanced pioneer company had entered the valley, a group of sixteen men set out to explore their new home. • They explored the entrance of the Tooele Valley, Bear River and Cache Valley. • They said Cache Valley “looked beautiful from the summit of the mountain.” • At Miles Goodyear’s Fort Buenaventura the found some log buildings and corrals with animals.
Tooele Valley Bear River Valley Ogden, Utah (Originally Fort Buenaventura) Cache Valley
Building a New Home • The three most important tasks facing the Mormon Pioneers were planting, building homes, and exploring the valley. • They found timber in the mountains, and made it into lumber to build houses. • They built a fort and put log cabins inside the fort. • Anyone not cutting timber or making adobe bricks at digging irrigation to bring water to crops. • They planted potatoes, corn and wheat.
Laying out Salt Lake City • Brigham Young assigned Orson Pratt and H.G. Sherwood to lay out a grid pattern for a new city. • They had use this same pattern when they had developed Nauvoo, Illinois. • There were 135 blocks, each having 10 acres divided into eight lots, where homes and gardens could be made. • The streets were wide enough for a wagon and team to turn around if needed. • Four public squares were placed in different parts of the city.
Public Squares in SLC City County Block Temple Square Pioneer Park Liberty Park
Miracle of the Seagulls • The first winter was very difficult for them. • The Mormons lost all of their crops except for potatoes because they were trampled by animals. • The next spring just as their crops were starting to grow, clouds of black crickets starting eating the crops. • Some people even talked about leaving Utah and going to California as this problem got worse. • People tried to fight these crickets in many ways: with pots and pans, brooms and buckets.
Miracle of the Seagulls • For weeks the settlers fought the crickets, but they still were eating all of their crops. • The story goes that the Mormon people prayed for a solution to the problem. • Soon Seagulls flew in and there were so many that they blocked the sun. • They would eat the crickets, go over and throw them up and then go eat more. • This game them the relief they needed to save their crops.
Gold in California • In 1848, some members of the Mormon Battalion were working at a sawmill at Sutter’s Fort, California. • One day gold was discovered in a stream by the fort. • This changed the west forever. • In 1849, over 80,000 people moved to California looking for the opportunity to become rich quick. • All of these “49ers” passed through Mormon settlements on their way to California. • Some of these 49ers brought to much or too little and the Mormons were happy to supply or buy from them.
A Great Gathering • While the Mormons in the Salt Lake Valley were building their homes and farms, missionaries were still being sent out to convert people in North America and foreign lands. • All of these converts were encouraged to make the difficult journey to the Great Basin. • Brigham Young wanted them to come and strengthen the settlements. • He also wanted their working skills. • Remember, their were building and growing everything they needed to survive.
A Great Gathering • During the 1840’s and 1850’s millions of immigrants entered the United states to find jobs and freedoms. • A large number of Mormons from Canada, Great Britain and Scandinavia came in this rush of immigration. • First they had to cross the ocean, then they would go by riverboat or train as far as they could go. • From there they would come by wagon train the rest of the way to the valley. • By 1857, there were 35,000 immigrants in the Salt Lake Valley.
A Great Gathering • Brigham Young wanted a way to bring more LDS members who were poor to the Salt Lake Valley. • This was done with the Perpetual Emigration Fund (PEF). • The fund was built up with contributions from members in the Valley who had benefited from trading with 49ers. • This allowed poor church members to borrow money and supplies to get to the valley. • Once, the immigrants made it to the valley, they were required to pay the loan back. • This got over 30,000 members in Great Britain to the valley.
A Great Gathering • When Brigham Young wanted to establish a new community he often “called” the people to go. • This was often done in church meetings, and was usually unexpected or unknown before it happened. • They would have to leave what they had established and start over again. • Sometimes people were chosen by their skills because a community needed a certain skill. • Sometimes people would establish their own communities without being called. • Germans, Italians, Welsh, Icelandic and Swiss converts did this.
Germans came to Providence Italians came to Logan Swiss came to Midway Icelanders came to Spanish Fork
A Great Gathering • People were sent to certain places to produce certain goods. • People were sent to Cedar City to produce iron. • St. George was started to grow cotton and flax. • Sugar House was started to make sugar from sugar beets. • Other towns were started to raise large herds of cattle and sheep. • Some towns were established as missions to Indian groups. • Las Vegas, Nevada; Harmony, Utah and Lemhi, Idaho were all started this way. • In all of these communities agriculture was the main occupation.
Patterns of Mormon Settlements • In other areas that were settled in the west, like California and Oregon, families would settle one at a time, away from each other on large farms. • The Mormons wanted to live in towns so they could meet together often for religious instruction, recreation, safety, and so they could work together on building and farming projects. • They build their towns in the valleys where mountain streams flowed from the canyons and provided them drinking water and watered their crops and vegetable gardens. • They would live in their wagons when they first got there until they could build a permanent house.
Patterns of Mormon Settlements • As the towns grew, churches, stores, schools and better homes were made of adobe bricks, wood or stone. • The old buildings wee then used for storage or barns for animals. • Utah settlements had all of these features. • Streets were laid out on a grid pattern. • Streets were very wide. • Irrigation ditches ran beside most streets.
Patterns of Mormon Settlements • City blocks for homes and gardens were large (four acres or larger). • “Squares” in the center of towns contained parks and public buildings, such as a church house, business offices, and stores. Celebrations were often held in the public squares. • Farmlands were planted around the outside of the city. Farms were surrounded by tall trees to shelter crops from the wind.
Salt Lake City Salt Lake City
A Unique Lifestyle • As part of these settlements, Mormons believed that there needed to be order in all things. • The people were divided into “wards”. • Each ward was led by a “bishop.” • These leaders were in charge of religious matters and everyday survival. • Land was given according to the needs of each family. • Bishops gave food to the poor or those who had just arrived and could not grow their own food yet. • Church leaders provided jobs for new immigrants as well.
A Unique Lifestyle • The Mormons practices polygamy during this time. • Mormons saw polygamy as a commandment, and a revival of something that had been done in the Old Testament. • Smaller towns tended to have to have more families living in polygamy. • Most men seldom married more than two or three women. • Brigham Young and other leaders married more often.
A Unique Lifestyle • During the first twenty years people were hungry much of the time. • Crops were still destroyed by grasshoppers, and unpredictable temperatures ruined crops too. • They had to kill animals or eat things like roots or thistles when they could not grow enough food. • They wore their clothes until they were to worn to be of any use. • Then part of the fabric was made into quilts.
The State of Deseret • Within a few years of coming to Utah, LDS Church leaders held a convention and wrote a constitution to set up the State of Deseret. • They chose the name because in an ancient language deseret meant honeybee, which stood for industry. • The boundaries of the proposed state were large, and even included part of the Pacific Coast. • They petitioned the U.S. Government to become a state and were turned down.
Utah becomes a territory • After the United States gained land including Utah when they won the War with Mexico it created some problems. • Leaders of our country wanted a balance between slave and free states in our country. • With all of this new land, there would be more free states than slave states. • As part of a compromise Utah was allowed to become a territory, and choose whether they wanted slavery or not.
Handcart Companies • During the first ten years of settling the Great Basin Mormon immigrants came to Utah using wagon trains supplied by the Perpetual Emigration Fund. • After the gold rush ended in California there was not as much money in the fund, so Mormon leaders had to figure out a lower cost way to get members of the church to Utah. • Brigham Young came up with a handcart system, where pioneers would walk and carry their supplies in a handcart they would pull.
Handcart Companies • This handcart system was mainly used to help poor immigrants who had been converted to the Mormon Church. • Most of these people had lived in cities and been factory workers. • They had never been in open territory like the trail, and did not have any of the skills that they needed to survive on the trail. • They would need to learn all of that.
Martin & Willie Companies • The first four companies left in 1846, and made great time, with almost no deaths, and arrived in Utah in great shape. • Almost all of the Martin and Willie companies were made up of immigrants from Scandinavia and England. • They had many delays in their journey, including not having enough wood to build handcarts. • They did not leave Iowa City until August.
Martin & Willie Companies • Franklin Richards, a Mormon apostle rode rapidly ahead to warn leaders in Salt Lake City that more immigrants were coming. • Leaders in Salt Lake thought that there were no more handcart companies coming in 1856. • The late start would lead to a disaster with the Martin and Willie companies. • When the handcarts reached Wyoming in November, they were caught in mountain snowstorms.
Martin and Willie Companies • When the rescuers from Salt Lake City found them, people were in tents buried in snow, suffering from starvation, along with having frozen feet and fingers. • 280 of the 980 members of the companies had already died by the time rescuers came. • Many more died before they reached the Salt Lake Valley. • The rescuers were very heroic in their attempts, particularly at the Sweetwater River.
The Martin and Willie Handcart Companies experience was a tragedy, but the rescuers were definitely heroic.