Showing posts with label Christensen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christensen. Show all posts

Saturday, October 3, 2020

Life Sketch of Maria Elizabeth Hendrickson Johnson


 With the permission of David R. Gunderson, we include the following book to our blog.   I will do a few increments at a time, as I have done with Andrew Madsen and James Monsen's histories.  

Maria Elizabeth was born on 21 September 1802, in Rasvåg, on the island of Hidra in Norway, to Hendrick Pettersen of Pomerania, Germany and Rachel Cecelia Rasmussen of Rasvåg. Her parents were both born in about 1774 in Rasvåg and were married on 13 Nov 1801 By 1807, the family had moved (probably by ship) to Risør, Norway where she grew up. Her siblings; Rasmuss, Hendriette, and Catharina were born on 26 Feb 1807, 4 Oct 1809, and 19 Dec 1811 respectively. Nothing further is known about her siblings. On 18 Dec 1827, Maria Elizabeth married Lars Johnson who was born in about 1802 in Risør. They had 3 children: Johan, Ole, Caroline Cecilia (our ancestor), and born: 14 Mar 1828, 9 Dec 1830, and 3 June 1834 respectively. Nothing further is known about Johan or Ole.

 Maria Elizabeth must have been a normal Norwegian housewife and mother living in a small fishing village. She is reported to have been a very good seamstress making excellent clothing for her family and others. She taught this skill to her daughter who also became a skilled seamstress. At some point, she became a widow and also lost her eyesight, although she may not have been totally blind. 

In September 1851 the first Mormon Missionaries came to Risør, Norway, Maria Elizabeth and her daughter Caroline Cecilia became the 7th and 8th members respectively. They were both baptized and confirmed on 25 June 1852. J. A. Ahmanson baptized both of them and also confirmed Maria Elizabeth. Caroline was confirmed by H.P. Jensen.

 As the Gundersons and other families, one-by-one, left Risør to go to Zion, Caroline also longed to go to Zion, but she just couldn’t leave her blind and widowed mother alone in Norway, Recognizing the strong desire of her daughter to join the Saints in Zion, Maria Elizabeth encouraged her to go also. However, Caroline always replied that she could never leave her mother alone in Norway. Finally, Maria said, “If you won’t go without me, I will have to go with you” When Caroline asked how they could do this, her mother said that “they would just face the problems, one-at-a-time.” In the spring of 1857 they did just that. Maria Elizabeth (age 54) and Caroline (age 22) departed from Norway on Saturday, 11 Apr 1857, with a group of Saints from Christiania (Oslo), Norway and sailed to Copenhagen aboard the Norwegian steamship Viken. 

In a calm sea, the vessel arrived at the Danish port the following day. After a five-day delay this company, about 540 emigrants under the direction of Hector C. Haight, president of the Scandinavian Mission, boarded the Danish screw steamer L. N. Hvidt and traveled to Grimsby (just south of Hull). From that English, port they traveled by train to Liverpool. Soon after they arrived in Liverpool, they boarded the Ship Westmoreland. The Westmoreland sailed from Liverpool on Saturday, 25 April 1857 and arrived at Philadelphia Pa. on Pentecost, Sunday 31 May 1857 after a 36-day passage. 

The emigrants then boarded the train to go to the trailhead in Iowa City passing through Baltimore and Wheeling along the way. About 330 of the 544 emigrants on the Westmoreland were also planning to cross the plains by handcart, so Caroline and her Mother had much in common with their fellow passengers. At Iowa City, they joined the 7th or Christian Christiansen Handcart Co. which departed on 12 June. The leader of the saints onboard the Westmoreland was Matthias Cowley and Orson Pratt was the travel agent for the Saints leaving Liverpool at that time. The fare on the ship for each passenger was £5.5.0. Rail fare was $12.50 each, with another $15 per person for the handcart. Another source of this information reports that the total for sail, rail, and trail in dollars was $ 86 dollars per person. 

Caroline and her mother were of modest means and they were able to deposit only 1 £ each. They must have received private help because help from the PEF (Perpetual Emigration Fund) was not available in 1857.

Since the handcarts were small and had to be shared by several people, the weight and bulk of the luggage were severely limited. Many had to leave books and other cherished positions at the trailhead. C. C. A. Christensen, who also came in the 7th Handcart Co., recalled that “One of the people we had was a blind sister from Norway, who was about sixty years old (actually 54 years old), and she walked the whole way. But she was always cheerful, and as she pushed the handcart her young daughter was helping to pull we could often hear her merry laughter when she unexpectedly found herself wading through one or another of the many streams of water which were found along our way. "Now, Mother, we are bout to cross some water,"we could hear her daughter warning her, “Is it deep?" or "How deep is it?" we heard the reply from the blind woman; and when the explanation was satisfactory, she walked cheerfully out into the water.” Family tradition recalls that Maria followed along holding the back of the handcart to feel or sense the road conditions ahead, and to brace herself if she stumbled, and to lend a hand by helping to push the cart. “For some must push and some must pull”.

 As everyone else did, Maria Elizabeth walked every step of the way across the plains to Zion, solving the problems one-at-a-time as she had predicted. They passed large herds of wild buffalo, Indian villages, and forded many streams. But they had some fun times as well. 

Dances and Hard Times Parties were held. One night, an old Danish pioneer, who had lost his sense of smell, proudly brought a small black and white animal into camp that he had managed to kill with his cane. He had planned to use it for food. It took a few days before he was welcomed back into polite company.

 The 7th Handcart Co. arrived in Salt Lake on 13 September 1857 (after a 65-day crossing). It was probably no coincidence that Maria Elizabeth and Caroline had traveled in the Christiansen Handcart Company since it had crossed the plains together with the Cowley Ox Cart Company. Erick Gunderson’s younger brother, Jens Gunderson, and his family were members of the Cowley Ox Cart Company. They had also been members of the Risør Branch of the Church in Norway and had probably been friends of Maria Elizabeth and Caroline since their childhood, Since they were friends from “home” and had crossed the plains together, it would only be natural for Jens and his family to invited Maria Elizabeth and Caroline to join them in Spanish Fork where the Gunderson family had settled. Erick Gunderson, who had lost his first wife in 1855 at Mormon Grove, Iowa had arrived in Utah in Sep 1856, was living with his parents. Erick and Caroline quickly became interested in each other and on Monday, 12 October 1857, about four weeks after Caroline’s arrival; they were married by none other than Brigham Young himself in the President’s Office in Salt Lake City at 12:30 PM.

 Maria Elizabeth made her home with Caroline and Erick for the rest of her life, first in Spanish Fork and later in Mt. Pleasant. She assisted Caroline in the delivery of all 11 of her children and also helped Caroline through the loss of all three of her daughters and one of her sons. Maria Elizabeth remained as positive and cheerful as she had been while immigrating to Zion and helped Caroline and the family to the best of her ability throughout her life. She was loved by all. She was truly one of the great pioneer women of Utah immigration.

 Maria Elizabeth Johnson died: 30 April 1890, in Mt. Pleasant, Utah in the 88th year of her life. She made great sacrifices so that we could live in the United States and enjoy religious liberty She is truly an inspiration to us all. It is an honor and a responsibility to be one of her Descendents. A New Tomb Stone For Maria Elizabeth Johnson In 2007, it was discovered that the grave marker of Maria Elizabeth Hendrickson Johnson, which was installed in the 1890s, had deteriorated to the point that the inscription could no longer be read. It was decided that a new marker was needed. When asked, family members were enthusiastic and readily gave funds for the project. They also helped to finalize the new inscription. All agreed that pictures a sailing ship and a handcart would remind us all of the courage Grandma Johnson exhibited in immigrating to Utah. A Picture of the old Stone taken in 1995, more than a century after Maria’s death and one of the New Stone: installed in May of 2008. On 26 May 2008, The family met to dedicate the new stone. 





Contrary to the predictions, the day of the dedication started with rain then went to intermittent rain, hail, snow, and wind, with an occasional sunshine break. Some suggested that we were having a reenactment of Martin’s cove experience. Others said that it was just to let us know what the pioneers had to go through. We were too late to get a reservation for one of the two pavilions in the Mt. Pleasant Park. On the morning of the 26th, I called a friend in Mt. Pleasant to check on the weather since we had been too late to reserve a pavilion. He immediately said, “Take our reservation; we had to cancel our activity. I’ll go right down and post our reservation receipt so no one will take the pavilion before you get there.” What a blessing that turned out to be! Front View of the New Stone & Inscription When we arrived, at least 50 family members had assembled at the gravesite and the sun was shining. However, there was a huge black storm cloud rapidly approaching from the south. So I quickly asked Roger P. Monson, a descendent of Erick Gunderson Jr. to give the dedicatory prayer. (He offered a beautiful and spiritual prayer) He finished just as the bad weather arrived and we all quickly went to the pavilion for the program and the Potluck luncheon. There were representatives from the families of all the sons of Erick & Caroline except for Lars, Carl, and Jens. We all had a grand time visiting and meeting with our new friends and cousins. Just as the Luncheon and the program ended, the wind started to blow, making it hard to properly clean up the Pavilion, but we did the best we could. It was a great day. We even had Potato Starch Cake, an old Gunderson family favorite Roger Monson presented a beautifully bound keepsake booklet to the members of the family detailing the program and activities of the day, as listed below, plus eleven pages of color pictures and maps of the Gunderson family home towns of Southern Norway. 




Betty G. & Walt Woodbury also handed out sheets giving the names of the parents, children, and grandchildren of Erick & Caroline Gunderson.
The layout of the Mt. Pleasant Cemetery Showing the Gravesites of Many Family Members



Saturday, May 9, 2020

A Journey of Faith ~ Erick and Carolyn Gunderson ~~~David R. Gunderson





With permission of David R. Gunderson, we include the following book to our blog.   I will do a few increments at a time, as I have done with the Andrew Madsen and James Monsen histories.  I will also paste the pages over to David's own blog page: http://davidrgunderson.blogspot.com/













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Saturday, June 15, 2013

Andrew Madsen Sr. Journal

Andrew Madsen Sr.
About the middle of August, 1958, James R. Ivie, Ben E. Clapp, Joseph R. Clemens, Isaac Allred, Sr., James Allred, Jr., James Allred Sr., Reubin W. Allred and Richard Ivie were chosen at Ephraim as an Exploring Committee to select a suitable location for a new settlement in Northern Sanpete Valley.

This committee traveled northward until they reached the spot where Madison D. Hamilton, five years previous attempted to colonize and settle, but was later driven away by the terrorizing Indians.  The Indians regarded the retreat of Madison D. Hamilton as an indication of weakness on the part of their white foes, and rejoiced that the waters of Hamilton Creek and the grasses of the broad meadows were to remain undisturbed as the famous hunting ground of the Red Men of Central Utah, but such a site could not be overlooked by men in search  of homes and desirous of founding a city where the natural facilities were everywhere present and where the climate is tempered by the altitude and pleasant breeze, never too hot in summer or too cold in the winter.  The cool mountain waters fresh from the snow and the clear bracing atmosphere, made life a continuous round of pleasure.

These brave men determined that this was the ideal spot for the location of a city and returned  and reported their views to the emigrants, who had reached Ephraim to remain over the winter.  A meeting was called and a petition was drafted, signed by sixty men who were desirous of locating further north, at the place selected.  Not knowing just how to proceed or what  to do, James R. Allred and James Ivie were chosen as a committee to go to Salt Lake City and present the petition to President Brigham Young.

The committee arrived in Salt Lake City, September 6th, met Elder Orson Hyde on the street and at once stated their purpose, after which, he kindly escorted them to President Young's office.  After the petition was considered, the President expressed himself as perfectly in favor of the place designated.  President Young, not being desirous  of choosing their leaders or Bishop at this time, drafted the following letter, which was sent back with the committee and submitted to the petitioners.

Great Salt Lake City, Sept. 6, 1858
"To Brother John Reese and the rest of the Brethren whos names are on the list.
I am perfectly willing that you shall go ahead and make a settlement, but we must consider whether it will be safe or not.  You wish to know my mind on the subject.  It is this:  That you must build you a good substantial Fort to live in.  Use every caution that is necessary against the Indians.  Your Fort wall must be 12 feet hig, 4 ft. thick and good stone or dobies laid in lime mortar.
I also wish you to select one of your members as President and one for a Bishop.

You will have to  be very careful of your stock or you will lose them.  You should have a good, substantial corral for them.  In choosing your farming land get it as near together as possible.  It would be better to have only one piece, fenced, then you are compact in case of an attack on you of Indians or white men.

I think this is all I have to say on this subject.

Perhaps you would like to hear the news.  Everything is quiet here in the City.  There are a good many gentiles but they behave themselves pretty well.

May God bless you, is my prayer for all other  good men."

(Signed) Brigham Young.

P.S. This is my counsel to you.


September 14th.  The committee returned from Salt Lake City and notified the petitioners, who at once called a meeting.

The letter received from President Young was presented and read and the contents therein noted, which advice was favorably received.

At this time a committee of three, viz; James R. Ivie, James K. Clemens and Isaac Allred were chosen to go with the surveyors to choose and select a site where th Fort should be built and to lay out city lots and twenty more tracts of farming land.  This was done and 1300 acres of choice farming land was selected and platted, together with a number of city lots, after which the committee returned home about the middle of October.

Upon the return, a meeting was called by the petitioners.  Their report was accepted and later thy drew lots by number for the land aned lots which were pointed out to them by the committee the following Spring.

January 10th, 1859 the petitioners  again called a meeting which was held in the school house for the purpose of organizing and to make preparations for moving to the new quarters.  After a discussion of some length James R. Ivie was chosen their President and Redick Allred was chosen Bishop, after which the meeting adjourned.

Redick Allred not being sure whether or not he would move north with the party in the Spring declined to accept the position as Bishop over the colony.

About the last of February I, Andrew Madson, in the company with my four brothers Mads, Peter, Christian and Neils, and George Frandsen, Rasmus Frandsen, Neils Widergreen Anderson, C.W. Anderson, Sidney Allred, Peter Monsen, Christian Jensen1st, , Alma Allred, Peter Johansen, Mikle Christensen, soren Jacobsen, James Meiling, moved north until we were just west of where the settlement was to be located.  We pitched our camp in a ravine on the west side of the Sanpitch River and began cutting posts, which were to be used for fencing farms as soon as Spring opened up.

Here we were joined by Alma Zabriskie, James Allred and Sidney Allred, who had gone up prior to us with cattle and horses to winter, they being the first to move towards the new settlement.

After remaining at the camp for a short time, Alma Zabriskie, James Allred and Sidney Allred, with five yoke of cattle, their wagons with seed wheat, drove through the deep snow to the present site where Mt. Pleasant now stands.

March 20th we broke up camp and moved our wagons and tents to where the Fort was to be built and pitched our camps on the bank of the creek, which is now Pleasant Creek.  Some of our party remained and myself with the balance returned to Fort Ephraim to see our families and get a supply of provisions.  We returned again to the new quarters on April 10th in company with President Ivie, Isaac Allred and their sons.  Also C.C.A. Christensen, P.M. Peel, Martin Aldrich, together with a great many others, carrying with us our farming tools (such as they were, all homemade) and a supply of seed wheat and grain.

Neils M. Burrison, Phillip Burrison, James Hansen, frederick Fechser and a number of others from Utah Valley arrived there about the same time.

My farming in 1859 was very limited.  The sagebrush on my land was large and dense, the soil being very rich.

I like the other settlers, had to work hard for we had all we could do and no mans to hire help with.

We began plowing on the 16th day of April and settlers continued to arrive from various parts.  It became necessary for President Ivie to call upon the surveyors to plat out more land and at this time there was 1200 acres more platted making a total of 2500 acres claimed.

On April 20th, President Ivie directed a letter to Brigham Young advising him of the organisation they had affected and also of the move from Ephraim and the progress of the colony.  He also made mention of the constantly arriving settlers.
A short time later the following letter was received from President Young in reply to the one sent.

(James R. Ivie,
Pleasant Creek
Sanpete County

Dear Brother:

In reply to your letter oof the 20th inst.  I have to inform you that I have heard no complaint concerning your new settlement and trust there will be no grounds for any reasonable complaint by anyone disposed to do right.  In your location it would seem to be an easy matter to manage your affairs justly for the benefit of all concerned and to take early and efficient steps for building a secure Fort that you may be safe in an Indian Country and conduct all your affairs upon wise principles, living industriously and humble that you may make your settlement pleasant and beneficial to yourself, the Country and territory at large, in all of which you have the best wishes of your Brother in the Gospel."

(signed)  Brigham Young

We continued in planting crops until we had cleared and cultivated about 1000 acres, built a number of irrigation ditches and conveyed the water upon the land.

Later in May, when the planting of crops ceased, we united ourselves together and built and erected two and one half miles of fence along the east side of the big field.

Much trouble was experienced in taking care of our oxen, as they would stray off for miles during the night.

On May 11th Isaac Allred was assaulted and killed by Thomas Ivie, resulting from a quarrel over the differences of a small herd bill.  Mr. Ivie at once left the territory and never returned.

Just as soon as the opportunity afforded, myself and brother, Mads Madsen, built a dugout jointly and about May 12th we went to Fort Ephraim for our families, returning a few days later.

May the 15th, a number of families arrived from Pleasant Grove amongst who were W.S. Seely, John Carter, Moroni Seeley, Jesse W. Seeley, Justus Wellington Seeley, Orange Seely, John Tidwell, George Farnsworth, Harvey Tidwell, Jefferson Tidwell, Nelson Tidwell, John Meyrick, George Meyrick and others.  They were received with welcome.  Allotments of land were given them upon arrival and they began to till the soil.

On May 30th, President Ivie called a meeting for the purpose of discussing the building of the Fort and as to what methods to pursue.  In conclusion four men were appointed to supervise the construction of the wall.  Jahu Cox was allotted the north side, Thomas Woolsey the west side, Wm. S. Seely the south side and John Tidwell the east side.  Workmen were organized in companies of ten and the work commenced immediately with rapid progress.

This list herein contains a complete record of every person who contributed labor towards the erection of this great stone wall.

During the month of June we were kept very busy utilizing every spare moment in attending to our crops and the building of the large Fort Wall, which was four feet wide at the bottom, two feet wide at the top and twelve feet high, enclosing one of the large blocks in the center of the colony of about five and one half acres.  This wall was constructed, leaving port holes for every family therein, and the space between was utilized for the erection of one house for each port hole.

July 9th, Apostle George A. Smith and Amasa Lyman visited the Colony, giving much good advice and instructions unto the people, stating that they had come for the purpose of perfecting an organization and to organize them into an ecclesiastical Ward.  Wm. Stewart Seeley was chosen, sustained and ordained as Bishop, Harvey Tidwell his first councilor and  Peter Y. Jensen, his second councilor.

The office of President was vacated and Brother Ivie felt much pleased from being released of the responsibility placed upon him in the establishing of the Colony with which he had worked so faithfully.

The name Mt. Pleasant was adopted for the Colony, giving credit to its pleasant location, the beautiful fields and surroundings.

Work continued on the Fort Wall until July the 18th, when the same was completed.

A few days prior to July 24th, thepeople assembled together and arranged for a program and grand celebration, it being the anniversary in honor of the Pioneers arrival in Salt Lake Valley, July 24, 1847.

A bowery was erected in the southwest corner of the fort.  Much time was spent in arranging for the program and luncheon.

Pitch pine wood was brought from the mountains to be burned in order to furnish light for the dance and amusements in the evening.

On the morning of July 24th, salutes were fired at daybreak, drums were beat and at 9 a.m. the people gathered together at the bowery.

The services were commenced with singing by the choir.  The invocation was rendered by Bishop Wm. S. Seely,  the remaining program consisted of singing, speech making,  music, recitations etc., which kept up until about 1 p.m. when luncheon and picnic was served in abundance.  At 3 p.m. everything was cleared away for amusements and dancing, which continued until 2 a.m. July 25th. A good many of the people danced in their bare feet and on the bare ground.  The celebration was characterized all the way through by the good feelings which prevailed among the Saints.

About August 1st, we began harvesting our hay crops which consisted of the natural grasses, which grew in abundance in the lowlands between Mt. Pleasant and Ephraim, som of it being hauled as far as ten and twelve miles.  We were not equipped with modern machinery and our only means of cutting the grass was with homemade cythes and swathes, raking with wooden rakes and pitchforks, which were made from the native wood.

Much time was consumed haying on account of this simple method and the use of ox teams and the hauling of the hay at so great a distance.

As soon as the hay crops were put up, harvesting of grain began, which was handled in about the same manner as haying.  The grain was cradled, raked up into bundles and bound by hand, then hauled to the yards and thrashed by being trtramped with oxen or flailed by men.

The system of separating the grain from the chaff was accomplished by waiting for a light wind or breeze, at which time the farmers would toss it into the air, the grain falling on a canvas, while the chaff was blown off.  This was continued over and over several times until the wheat would be thoroughly seperated.  The crops were good and much grain was raised.  However, some of it matured very late; some was frozen, owing to the fact that some of the settlers arrived late in the Spring and did not get their seed planted early enough in the season.

More to come.







Sunday, October 16, 2011

7th Handcart Company ~ Written by C.C.A. Christensen~ Shared by David R. Gunderson

Folks,
While I was doing the research for the Gunderson Book, I listened to a conference commemorating the 150th anniversary of the ten Handcart Companies which crossed the plains during the 1850's . Pres. Boyd K. Packer gave the keynote talk which quoted from an article on the 7th handcart company. This article was written in Danish by C. C. A. Christensen and published in the late 1890 time frame. The article was translated into English during the 1980's and published is the Nebraska History Magazine.The article speaks of a young Norwegian woman who was crossing the plains in this Company with her blind mother.  I knew instantly that he was speaking of Caroline Johnsen and her Mother Elizabeth.
On the following Monday morning, I called Pres. Packer's office to ask how I could get a copy of the article and his secretary agreed to send Pres. Packers own copy of the C. C. A. Christensen's article for our use.
David R. Gunderson
 
Handcart Crossing by CCA Christensen


By Handcart to Utah:
       The Account of C. C. A. Christensen            
          Nebraska History Vol. 66, Number 4, Winter 1985

   Translated from Danish by Richard L. Jensen

INTRODUCTION



Between 1856 and 1860 approximately 3,000 Latter-day Saints made the overland journey from Iowa City, Iowa, to Salt Lake City, Utah, carrying their provisions and belongings in handcarts. This novel mode of travel was an attempt to help emigrants with limited resources gather to Utah at a time
when. their church and its Perpetual Emigrating Fund had
incurred heavy indebtedness for teams and wagons in earlier years. Despite the tragedy of two Mormon handcart companies caught in the snow in late 1856, Brigham Young en­couraged the continuation of the handcart scheme, which was quite effective under favorable circumstances. By 1861 another approach, using mostly teams and wagons from Utah. proved more satisfactory, and a colorful chapter in American pioneer transportation came to an end.
One of those who pulled a handcart in 1857 was Carl Chris­tian Anton Christensen (1831-1912), a Danish immigrant. Christensen's reminiscences of the trek, much like his well known paintings of Mormon history, incorporate charmingly detailed vignettes into the telling of the broader story.1 Thus Christensen shares with the reader a feeling for the nature of the human experience of crossing plains and mountains with very limited resources. There are not more than a half dozen detailed accounts by participants of traveling by handcart, so Christensen's, published here in English translation for the first time, is significant. 2
Born in Copenhagen, Christensen was apprenticed to a decorative painter and was simultaneously studying at the. Royal Academy of Art when at the age of 18 in 1850, he was converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.



                                                      CCA Christensen                                    335

Eager to share his new-found faith with others, he was called in 1853 to serve as a proselytizing missionary, first in Denmark and later that year in Norway.
      Among many young Danish converts also called to be missionaries were brothers Carl Christian Nikolai Dorius and Johan Frederik Ferdinand Dorius. They and Christensen became lifelong friends. In 1857 they were released from mis­sionary labors and given permission to emigrate to Utah-the fulfillment of a fond dream for most European Latter-day Saints in the 19th century. They emigrated with a large com­pany of Scandinavian Latter-day Saints, including three
Norwegian girls whom the friends planned to marry in Salt; Lake City. Christensen's narrative begins with their departure from Norway in March 1857. From Liverpool, England, they. sailed for the United States April 25, 1857, aboard the American ship Westmnoreland.
The present account is translated from writings of C. C. A.
Christensen published in the Salt Lake City Bikuben (The Beehive), a Latter-day Saint Danish-Norwegian newspaper. I have attempted to amalgamate several separate accounts into one, because each contained useful information. In order to avoid too severely fragmenting the narrative, I have retained a few overlapping details. In some cases I have divided long sentences and paragraphs for greater ease in reading. 3


THE REMINISCENCE­

In the spring of 1857 C. C. N. Dorius and his brother Ferdi­nand. . . were released from their missions with permission to emigrate. C. C. A. [Christensen] was given the same privilege and [C.] Dorius and the last-mentioned unmarked at Kris­tiania [now Oslo] directly for Hull [England], while F. Dorius and the emigrants left for Copenhagen. The current of our lives had now again merged, and now it took an entirely new direction. .
Having reached Liverpool, we were able to see and talk with the renowned Apostle Orson Pratt for the first time. 4
He received us with great kindness; but with the dignity of his manner, the veneration his sermons and pamphlets had in­
stilled in us increased even further when we entered his actual








336                         Nebraska History

presence. We attended a meeting at which he spoke on the subject "The Patriarch Jacob blesses his two grandsons, Ephraim and Manasseh" and illustrated his remarks" by laying his hands upon our heads as the two young men, with himself as the patriarch. The feeling that thrilled both of us on this oc­casion was almost one of mixed joy and pride, and although we understood only a very little English, it still seems to me that at that time we caught the gist of the Apostle's remarks !very well.           .            .                      t
When we had finally come on board the ship
Westmoreland which was to take us across the Atlantic
Ocean, we and other brethren were counseled to marry before we left Liverpool Harbor. 5 All three of us had with us our chosen maidens, intending to enter into matrimony at the con­clusion of the journey rather than at its beginning, but we ! found absolutely no reason to object, and therefore all three [couples] were married that very hour by Elder John Kay, who
was at that time on a mission in England. C. Dorius's bride, was Ellen G. Rolfsen from Risør. [C. C. A. Christensen's bride .
was Elise Rosalie Scheel of Fredrikshald.]6                                        .
The voyage across the ocean, which took about five weeks, I proceeded without any unusual occurrences, and we landed at : Philadelphia on Pentecost, Sunday May 31, 1857]. Our first view of the lovely landscape along the Delaware inspired us greatly.
[Christensen must have been inspired to an extent before
ar­riving in America. He composed the following poem while aboard the Westmoreland at sea. In the original Danish it has a marching rhythm.]

HANDCART SONG FROM 1857
Come, brethren, let us all gladly
Go together to Salt Lake City,
And if we get tired, don't be faint-hearted; Spit in your fist, and that's all there is to it.
We’re going to our beloved home,
Always forward. Dulidulidu. 7
And if it seems a little hard, stilI we can take it. The handcart does feel strange and new,
It is true, from one view;
But every fellow in some way




Will take hold better every day
Till in the end it goes right neatly,
Doesn't it? Dulidulidu.
And even if it seems a little hard, we can take it.



So it goes, up and down,
More and more, for several weeks,
Till we get up on the mountain.
At its top we will stop.
There Salt Lake Valley we will see
And a little snow-dulidulidu.                     .
The last tug was a little hard, but we could take it.



Then we go merrily down again; Come, my follower and friend!
Our trip is now almost at an end.
We are free as a bee.
. Now we quickly hurry on
Toward our joyful home-dulidulidu­
And even if it was a little hard,
We could take it.



The journey then continued by rail to Iowa City, which was the westernmost point the iron horse had reached, and there we were to begin our honeymoon trip with handcarts. .
At the campground8 we encountered our first trials, in that we had to give up books which were bound and had been kept carefully for a long time, particularly our “Skandinaviske Stjerner” ["Scandinavian Stars"]9 We were only allowed to take with us fifteen pounds in weight for each person who was to travel with the handcarts, and that included our tinware for eating, bedding, and any clothing we did not wish to carry ourselves. Thus I remember that I sold my best trousers to a passing ox driver for twenty-five cents, and others had to leave valuable articles behind at the campground without any com­pensation. Books were left there in large numbers, and their loss has been felt afterwards with sorrow by others as well as myself.
We were given a returning missionary by the name of
[James P.] Park, a native of Scotland, as captain of the hand­cart company. The less said about this unfortunate choice of a



338                                       Nebraska History

leader for such a people as us, the better for him. We suffered greatly the first two or three hundred miles, traveling through the state of Iowa until we reached the Missouri River. The hot season of the year, frequent rain showers, almost' bottomless roads, exertion and diet to which we were unaccustomed, and the unreasonable, inconsiderate course of action pursued by our leader [Park], brought about much sickness and many deaths among us.10 But through all these trials. the brothers Dorius and I were, as before, always one another's in­separable, faithful helpers. Each of us had a little part of the company to help organize. Then as afterwards, Carl Dorius was the Samaritan among the sick; the encouraging, helpful friend and brother to the despondent and the exhausted. That was no less true of his young wife, and I must say the same of the other newly-married wives and of  F. Dorius.
After we were reorganized in Florence [Nebraska], and were given our well-known Danish brother Christian Chris­tiansen as our leader, things went much better.11 The very weakest persons were left behind; we took a number with us who were half exhausted. He [Christiansen] began with very short daily travel and walked the entire way himself in order to better be near at hand and to be able to assess the strength of the people, rather than riding horseback like other captains. His gentle, fatherly treatment will never be forgot­ten by those whom he led across the plains and the mountains in 1857.
Our train consisted of between thirty and forty handcarts. Each of these had an average of five persons and was loaded with what little bedding, tin eating ware, and other equip­ment was allowed12 . . . . In addition to that, we were to have a couple of hundred pounds of provisions in each handcart. Moreover, it was usually necessary for small children to ride in the handcart which the father, mother, and older brothers and sisters of the family pulled.
One of the people we had was a blind sister from Norway, who was about sixty years old, and she walked the whole way. But she was always cheerful, and as she pushed the handcart her young daughter was helping to pull we could often hear her merry laughter when she unexpectedly found herself wading through one or another of the many streams of water which were found along our way. "Now, Mother, we are about to cross some water ,"we could her



C. C. A. Christensen


339



daughter warn­ing her, “Is it deep?" or "How deep is it?" we heard her reply from the blind woman; and when the explanation was satisfactory, she walked cheerfully out into the water.
One of the most difficult streams that we had to ford was Loup Fork, a tributary of the Platte River. At the time we crossed, it was very wide, and besides that the bottom was loose sand, which was constantly shifting. The sick and the blind woman were allowed to ride in one of our freight wagons, for we had three wagons drawn by mules, which car­ried our tents and cookware, and in extreme emergencies one or more of those who were sick or fatigued were allowed to ride. But such a ride was an object of dread for most, for to be driven over rocky and uneven roads, and with only the tents under oneself, was for sick people usually only a means of in­creasing their suffering, and in some cases of hastening their death.
At the river mentioned above, Loup Fork, several in­teresting and almost amusing scenes also took place.
A large Indian encampment13 was located at that time right at the fording place, and several of the young girls were ferried across by sitting behind a half-naked Indian on horseback, having to hold on to him around the waist in order not to fall off. Those of the emigrants who dared to wade had to hold on to each other in order not to be carried downstream in the strong current, and now and then the handcart also lost its footing and threatened to leave the company, at which time extra resources for rescue had to be utilized. But all went well, and not a thing was lost, nor was anyone hurt.
Early in the morning, generally, the children who could walk-some even under the age of four-were sent ahead, ac­companied by their sisters, partly to avoid the dust and partly to walk as far as possible before the burning sun and exhaus­tion would make it necessary to put them. in the handcart.
For me it is beyond all doubt that the angels of the Lord were with us, though they were unseen, for we were walking defenseless in a long, spread-out row, in what was then the land of wild Indians, and many times we were among great herds of buffalo that could have totally annihilated us if they had been startled or for one reason or another had been led in the same direction we were traveling. But they seemed to be


340                                 Nebraska History

held at a suitable distance the whole time, although they were often only a gunshot away.
I remember a certain sister who came up one morning when the tents were being packed up, with something in her apron. Upon inspection it proved to be a little person who had come to the world the previous evening. The mother had walked with her handcart all day the previous day, and she thought she would also walk as far that day as she could, but she was prevented from doing that and rode for a few days. Both the mother and the child are still alive and living in Monroe, Sevier County, Utah.
We also had "the blind and the lame, the woman with child and her that travaileth with child together. . . ,14 all represented in our traveling company, for we had a girl who had a wooden leg. And oddly enough, these persons made it all the way to their destination, while many younger persons marked our path with their graves, without as much as a nameboard, except where there happened to be a bleached buffalo skull. Yet the mood was, overall, cheerful and jovial, and very seldom were complaints or displeasure heard from anyone, even when sickness or death had invaded the family.
We were only poorly supplied with provisions when we left Florence and had a thousand miles of wilderness to cover before we could expect any more. The little smoked pork, dried beef, and sugar, coffee, salt, and other seasoning with which we were furnished lasted only about three weeks in most cases, and after that there was naturally flour, flour, flour, and only flour to eat. With this .they baked bread, cooked porridge, gruel, soup, coffee, pancakes, and several other nice dishes, but still it was just flour, flour, and flour; and at one point the flour was scarce, too. 15 We only shot one buffalo, and this happened almost like a miracle, for it had lagged behind the rest of the herd. We dared not attack the great herd under our circumstances at that time.
Our supplies were intended to be as few as possible, for the weight of the provisions had to be considered, and the hard daily toil increased our appetite, rather than decreasing it, except in cases of illness. Therefore, as it said in one of our songs of encouragement from those days:

Surely, it was hard. and often we got very tired/
But the carts, with our ap­petite,/
Soon   became light./
And yes, the road was long,/
But there was merry joking, jests, and song/
When we made camp.   


                                                     CCA Christensen                                      341
              .
   But the Camp in the evening was not an absolute resting place for the tired pilgrims, for then it was a matter of preparing a meal from the sparse provisions that we had brought with us…  We also baked our bread in kettles we had brought along.16  This was women’s work and sometimes took till past midnight, for each had to wait for the other to use the dutch oven.  The men fetched water and gathered fuel; where firewood could be found. Otherwise the women and
children helped gather dried “Ko-kasser”17 as we call them in Danish, since on the great plains along the Platt River there was enough of that kind, from the abundant buffalo herds which existed there at that time.  After that the men had to do guard duty for four or five hours every fourth day and then begin the hike anew, after breakfast was prepared and consumed.
    One nice trait characterized these people, both young and old, namely that their prayers and thanksgivings were held regularly every morning and evening. The train started moving at about 6:30. The vanguard of the procession consisted of the few cows which some of those with more means had bought from farmers along the way. The small boys drove them as far ahead of the company as was possible with tolerable safety, for you must remember that we were in the land of the Indians, and one could not always depend upon them for his life. 18 Besides that, we had the great herds of wild buffalo around us for many days, and if they had been alarmed and charged, that would have been the end for us, us: just as we could have been swept away by a tornado      But the Lord held his hand over our defenseless emigrant company, and we were not molested by either wild people or wild animals.
   One of the most important questions every morning, which we usually asked our leader -we called him captain- was: “How far is it to water today?" For he had a book which gave the distance and other information about the rout, par­ticularly with regard to water and grass for the emigrants’ draft animals.19  Only one single night did our captain make a mistake with the directions, and we found it necessary to stop when darkness fell without water. Then some of the brethren had to go back several miles to get water for their crying little ones. But as soon as daybreak came we broke camp and found water a few miles further along our way and soon forgot the privation of that night.




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Nebraska History



Although it was a trial and involved many hardships, there were still also now and then both interesting and happy scenes as well as comical scenes on the way. Our costumes would look fine at one of out so-called “Hard Times Balls." Our hats, or what might once have been called hats, assumed the most grotesque shapes, seeing that the sun, wind, and rain had the superior force. The ladies' skirts and the men's trousers hung in irregular trimmings, and the foot coverings proportional to the rest, with or without bottoms. Our faces were gray from the dust, which sometimes prevented us from seeing the vanguard; our noses with the skin hanging in patches, especially on those who had as much nose as I have; and almost every lower lip covered with a piece of cloth or paper because of its chapped condition, which made it difficult to speak and particularly to smile or laugh.
Bedding was often altered to become everyday clothing, and a gentleman with trousers sewn from bed ticking was no curiosity in those days.. Nor were the ladies so particular about whether their skirts could hide their poor footwear, if indeed they were well enough off to own a pair of shoes, for there were many who had none; but the Scandinavians managed well with wooden shoes in those days.
A very old man, who had completely lost his sense of smell, came into camp one day, after the rest of us had things somewhat in order, with a skunk which he counted on cooking for soup. This almost made the rest of us leave. He had killed it with his cane and knew nothing about its peculiar means of defense.
We had with us a tailor who was getting along in years, but who did not therefore think any the less of his own charm but
wanted to try his luck with one of our Norwegian sisters. There were two who pleased him, but the one was married, and she let him continue with his mistake for some time, to the amusement of those of us who were in on the matter.
At the same time we were traveling as peaceful emigrants to Utah, a considerable military force was also on the way to Utah. But providentially they never came near us, in that they marched along the other side of the Platte River, where we
could see them, and their weapons shone in the sun. They were sent out by the government to suppress a supposed rebellion which did not exist at all in Utah.20 As they


C. C. A. Christensen


343



amounted to several thousand men, large trains of provisions and fat stock were also sent out for their use, and most of these traveled on the same side of the river as we did. But we had no further inconvenience from them other than the dust they raised. One morning after we had been without any sort of meat for several weeks, we passed a large, fat ox, which they had left behind because one of their heavily loaded wagons had run over one of its feet and crushed it.
As we stood looking at the poor animal, the leader of the provision train to which it belonged came back, and in a" coarse yet half-friendly tone he said, "You people can have that ox; I suppose you might need a little meat.”  Again we saw in this instance, the Lord's care for us. We got the ox butch­ered and divided the meat among ourselves, but that was.
not so easily done, for we did not even have a decent ax in the, whole company, for almost everything that was heavy had to be left at the campground at Iowa City.
Since we had a butcher with us, the art of supplying us with fresh meat was turned over to him, but unfortunately he was accustomed to hitting cattle on the forehead. The ax he had brought was, like everything else, of the lightest kind, and the poor animal merely shook its head at his blows. Then came a mighty hunter. In all probability he had belonged to the militia in the town from which he came, and so he shot it through the nose. But finally another, luckier Ninuod came
and felled the animal with his shot and put an end to its suffering.
There lay [at the campground near Iowa City] heaps of
handsomely bound books, good warm clothes, and much else of value, of which we deeply felt the loss wnen we reached Utah, But greatest of all was the loss of many dear relatives and friends, who died along the way, in a sense as voluntary martyrs for their faith in the gathering to this land. 21
Perhaps many would have suffered an even worse fate if President Brigham Young had, not established provision sta­tions where flour could be obtained, and the first of these sta­tions was about 400 miles east of Salt Lake City.22 Afterwards we were met by wagons with flour and fruit, which benefited us greatly, but particularly since these wagons picked up the weakest and sickest among us and thus lightening considerably the responsibility for the rest of us.



344


Nebraska History



None but those who have experienced such a trial of pa­tience, faith, and endurance can form an idea of what it meant to pull a handcart, which frequently even threatened to collapse because of the extreme heat and lack of humidity, which could cause the [wood of the] cart to split and thus deprive them of the last means they possessed to bring with them their absolute necessities.
Along the way lay the skeletons of worn-out oxen, but these heroes and heroines endured. . . . With their lips half eaten up by saleratus dust,23 and clothed in rags, with almost bot­tomless shoes on. their feet, yet they greeted with songs of delight the rising sun which let them see Salt Lake City for the first time.
What changes have taken place since that time In less than one week our emigrants are now brought here from the Atlan­tic coast, where they disembark after a few days pleasant ocean voyage by steamship, while we in those days were tumbled about by sailing ships for several weeks, uncertain of the time when we could expect to see the promised land. And then the journey by land over the great, empty plains and high mountains on foot, poorly supplied with food and clothing-in short, subjected to almost every deprivation that people could bear and endure, and that for all of thirteen weeks.24 .
One can perhaps form a vague idea of our feelings when we finally stopped here in this city and were met by kind brothers and sisters, many of whom brought cakes, milk, and other things that for us were so much needed.
It was a Sunday, and with the Danish flag on the lead hand­cart we marched to our last resting place as far as this journey was concerned. . . . . . . . . A few days later; all these pilgrims had disappeared from their last camping place, having found shelter and hospitality among the Saints in Zion.
Since that time I have traveled back and forth several times across these mountains and plains, but never have I seen peo­ple more patient and devoted to God than those with whom I faced these trying circumstances in the year 1857.



346


Nebraska History

NOTES



1. Jane Dillenberger, "Mormonism and American Religious Art,” Sunstone 3 (May-June 1978),pp. 13-17. Richard L. Jensen and Richard G. Oman, C. C. A. Christensen (1831-1912): Mormon Immigrant Artist (Salt Lake City: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1984). Carl Carmer, “A Panorama of Mormon Lire,” Art in America (May-June 1970), pp.52-65.
2. Other accounts of Mormons traveling by handcart in the 1850s are
published in LeRoy R. Hafen and Ann W. Hafen, Handcarts to Zion (Glen­dale, California: Arthur H. Clark Company, 1960; reprint, 1981). Addi­tional information is found in Leonard J. Arrington and Rebecca Cornwall, Rescue of the 1856 Handcart Companies (Provo, Utah: Brigham Young
University Press, 1981).
3. This amalgamated account is taken from the following sources:
C. C. A. Christensen, “.C. C. N. Dorius,” Salt Lake City Bikuben, March
22, 1894.
Christensen, “Haandkarre-Sang fra 1857” [“Handcart Song from 1857"],
Salt Lake City Bikuben, September 23, 1896.
Christensen, “Erindringer fra 1857" ["Memories of 1857"], Salt Lake City
Bikuben, October 1,8, 1903.
Christensen, "Over Praerierne" [“Across the Prairies”], Salt Lake City
Bikuben, September 8, 1910. .
Christensen correspondence, Salt Lake City Bikuben, September 15, 1904.
Christensen, “Et Mindeblad til afdode Soster Laura A. Larsen" ["A Page
in Memory of Deceased Sister Laura A. Larsen"], Salt Lake City Bikuben, February 20, 1902.
4. Orson Pratt was then presiding over Latter-day Saint affairs in Europe and was concurrently president of the Church's British Mission. At least four of Pratt's popular religious tracts had been published in Danish translation by the time Christensen and his friends visited Liverpool, and several of his sermons had appeared in the Scandinavian Mission periodical.
5. The Westmoreland left Liverpool April 25, 1857, with 544 Mormon passengers on board. Conway B. Sonne, Saints on the Seas: A Maritime History of Mormon Migration 1830-1890 (Salt Lake City: -University of Utah Press, 1983), p. 152.
6. Risor and Fredrikshald, on opposite shores of Oslofjord, were among the first towns in Norway proselytized by Latter-day Saints. Fredrikshald has since been renamed Halden.
7.Dulidulidu" was apparently intended to suggest the trill of a fife.
     8. The staging area for the handcart trek was on the banks of Clear Creek, three miles west of Iowa City, in present-day Coralville, Iowa. See Stanley B. Kimball, Discovering Mormon Trails: New York to California 1831-1868
(Salt Lake City: Deseret Book, 1979), p. 36.                                                        .
      9. Skandinaviens Stjerne [The Star of Scandinavia] was the Latter-day
Saint mission periodical for Denmark, Norway, and Sweden.
   10. Christensen explains elsewhere that Park "could not understand our language, nor have any 'particular sympathy for those who were tired, sick, or dissatisfied as a result of the new and unaccustomed circumstances’


C. C. A. Christensen


347



- C. C. A. Christensen, “Erindringer fra 1857” ['Memories of 1857"], Salt Lake City Bikuben, October 1, 1903.
    11.The replacement of Christiansen for Park at Florence was a rather unusual occurrence among a people known for their submission to officially appointed leadership. It must have been the result of complaints by the Scan­dinavians to Latter-day Saint authorities at Florence, although the process is not well documented. Christiansen had emigrated to Utah earlier had presided over Scandinavian Latter-day Saints in the Midwest in 1856-1857 and was preparing to return to Utah with an ox-team party when he was called upon to assist the handcart emigrants.
    12. A. Milton Musser, who assisted with Church emigration arrangements at Florence, reported that the Scandinavian company left there with 68 handcarts and about 330 persons. Musser to William Appleby, July 16, 1957, The Latter-day Saints' Millennial Star, Vol. 19, p. 620. Thus Christensen's estimate of the number of persons per handcart was accurate, while his recollection of the number of persons and handcarts in the company ap­parently was not.
    13. Undoubtedly a Pawnee village. During 1857 the Pawnee ceded other lands to the United States and moved several villages to this vicinity.
    14. Jeremiah 31:8.
    15. Christensen wrote elsewhere, "Our diet was . . . very monotonous, but
our appetite gave it seasoning, so that we ate often and much, and yet were .always hungry.” Christensen, “C. C. N. Dorius,” Salt Lake City Bikuben,
March 22, 1894.                                     .
    16. They baked their bread "without yeast or baking powder”. Christensen, "Et Mindeblad til Afdode Soster Laura A. Larsen" [“A Page in Memory of Deceased Sister Laura A. Larsen"], Salt Lake City Bikuben, February 20, 1902.
    17. Buffalo or cow chips are the corresponding American terms, denoting dried animal dung used as fuel. In Christensen's painting on the cover of this issue of Nebraska History, a woman in the foreground is gathering buffalo chips. ­
18. In an insightful. examination of emigrant-Indian relations along the westward trails, John D. Unruh, Jr., indicates that the threat posed to travelers by Indians was often grossly exaggerated, but that depredations were more common by the mid-1850s than before. He finds that relatively few emigrants were killed by Indians east of South Pass. Unruh, The Plains Across: The Overland Emigrants and the Trans-Mississippi West, 1840-60 (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1979), pp. 156-200.
19. Probably William Clayton, The Latter-day Saints' Emigrants' Guide (St. Louis: Republican Steam Power Press-Chambers & Knapp, 1848). See also William Clayton, The Latter-day Saints' Emigrants' Guide, ed. Stanley B. Kimball (Gerald, Missouri: Patrice Press, 1983).       .
20. In response to complaints from federally appointed officials and a
former mail contractor, the administration of James Buchanan sent troops to Utah under General Albert Sidney Johnston-as it was claimed-to restore federal authority over the territory. For a discussion of the entire episode, see Norman F. Furniss, The Mormon Conflict, 1850-1859 (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1960).



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Nebraska History



21. James Jensen, another Danish immigrant in the same handcart com­pany, stated that one out of every ten in the group died enroute. J. M. Tan­ner, Biographical Sketch. of James Jensen (Salt Lake City, 1911), p. 40.
    22. The aid station mentioned was at Deer Creek, present-day Glenrock,
Wyoming.
    23. Aerated sodium bicarbonate. Perhaps Christensen was also remember­ing alkali dust.
24. Before the adoption of steam transportation, Latter-day Saint im­migrants from Europe took from three to five months to reach Utah. In 1869 the first company of Latter-day Saint immigrants to use both steamship and the newly completed transcontinental railroad traveled from Liverpool to Ogden, Utah in 24 days. By 1877 the entire trip took as little as 17 days. See Richard L. Jensen, "Steaming Through: Arrangements for Mormon Emigra­tion from Europe, 1869-1887”, Journal of Mormon History (1982):21



A list of the members of the 7th Handcart Co follows:


(The number shown in parentheses next to each name is the age of the pioneer at the time of the journey.)




















Aragerup, N. (Unknown)


























































































































































Hansen, Peter (Unknown)
















































































































Lublin, Hyrum (Infant)


































































































Sorenson, Iowa (Infant)








, Karen (Unknown)