Handcart story need revision?
Questions also arose about how many people actually died among the Martin Handcart Company.
Gary Long, with the Bureau of Land Management in Cheyenne, said he has spent "much of my free time and some of my work time" during the past 14 years investigating the history of what occurred where along the Mormon Trail. His duties include the planning and design of interpretive sites and historical markers for the BLM.
Journal entries from William Woodward, clerk for the Willie Handcart Company, along with those of Levi Savage, members of the rescue party and remembrances of Capt. James Willie, "show definitively" that a place called Sixth Crossing was the rescue site for that group, he said. Historians have debated the rescue location.
Long also said that "stories over the years have placed the (Willie company) camp (after crossing Rocky Ridge) at Rock Creek." The LDS Church has purchased property at Rock Creek and erected a monument there, memorializing 15 company members who were said to have died and been buried there.
But Long said he has found "no evidence those pioneers were buried there. But there is strong evidence that the camp site and burial place is the confluence of Rock Creek and the Sweetwater River," near Willow Creek.
The LDS monument was placed at Rock Creek in the mid 1990s after the leadership of the Riverton Wyoming Stake put together a project to do LDS temple ordinances for members of the Willie and Martin companies. As part of that project, dubbed "the Second Rescue," they arranged for placement of the monument, which has long been believed to be the site of the Willie company burials.
Lyndia Carter, a trails historian who is writing a book about the Martin company, said traditional accounts of that company's tragic events "often collapse six weeks" of starvation, hypothermia and death "into five days and four nights at Martin's Cove. That's only part of a much bigger picture," she said.



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