In April 1857 a California-bound wagon
train estimated at 40 wagons, 120 to 150 men, women,
and children, and as many as 900 head of beef cattle,
in addition to draft and riding animals, assembled near
the Crooked Creek, approximately four miles south of
present-day Harrison, Arkansas. Most of these emigrants
were from northwestern Arkansas and were families, relatives,
friends, and neighbors. Also included in the group may
have been some from Missouri, Illinois, Ohio, Tennessee,
and northeastern Texas.
When they began their journey, their wagon train was
identified by some as the Baker train. En route it was
known as the Perkins train; in Utah it became known
as the Fancher train. However, there were probably individuals
and perhaps elements of other wagon trains that joined
the Fancher train along the way. The emigrants arrived
in Salt Lake City on or about 10 August--a most crucial
stop. There they had to refurbish their equipment, refresh
themselves and their stock, and replenish their supplies.
They also had to decide whether to take the shorter,
cooler northern route or the longer, warmer southern
route to California. The lateness of the season was
the determining factor. They started on the northern
route and then retraced their steps to take the southern
route.
Their arrival in Utah could not have been at a more
critical time. The once friendly Mormons, usually eager
to trade agricultural commodities for manufactured goods,
were now hostile and reluctant to trade. War hysteria
permeated the area. President Buchanan had secretly
dispatched an expedition to Utah to suppress what he
believed was a rebellion. Governor Brigham Young subsequently
issued a proclamation of martial law on 5 August (reissued
on 15 September) which, among other things, forbade
people from traveling through the territory without
a pass. The citizens of Utah were discouraged from selling
food to immigrants, especially for animal use.
The territorial militia (affectionately, the Nauvoo
Legion), which included every able-bodied man between
the ages of eighteen and forty-five, was on full alert.
Staff officers, who were also church and civic officials,
were dispatched to every settlement under their command
to explain and enforce militia decisions. George A.
Smith, who commanded all of the southern militia units,
arrived in Parowan on 8 August and began the task of
preparing the people psychologically, militarily, and
materially for war. The units of the Tenth Regiment
of the territorial militia were mustered and drilled,
and the impending battle plan was explained. Smith,
an effective orator and founder of Iron and Washington
counties, made several impassioned speeches and apparently
accomplished his purpose. The people were convinced
that they were in a state of war and were ready to take
action.
As the Fancher train moved south without a pass from
the Mormons, contact with the local settlers became
more abrasive. Stories of both fact and fancy were embellished
with each telling. By the time the wagon train reached
Cedar City, reports of gross misconduct were believed.
The old troubles in Missouri and Illinois were rehashed.
The murder of beloved apostle Parley P. Pratt in May
of that year in northwest Arkansas was also remembered.
Several meetings were held in Cedar City and Parowan
to determine how the "War Orders" should be
implemented. The militia decided that the Fancher train
should be eliminated. Cooler heads prevailed temporarily
and an express rider was sent to Salt Lake City to solicit
Brigham Young's advice. The round trip--more than 500
miles--took six days. In the meantime, things got completely
out of hand. Orders and counterorders were misinterpreted,
deliberately or otherwise.
The Fancher train moved westward from Cedar City with
hungry bellies, injured feelings, and jaded stock to
Mountain Meadows, a well-known and much-needed campsite
on the old Spanish Trail/California Road used by travelers
to and from California until well into the present century.
It was on the edge of the much-feared desert area between
Utah and California. It is located in the southwest
corner of Utah, about thirty-five miles southwest of
Cedar City via the old pioneer road (fifty-four miles
via the current paved highway), and thirty-two miles
northwest of St. George. The shape of the meadows area
resembles an elongated diamond, approximately six miles
long and one and one-half miles wide; it is divided
into northern and southern halves by a low bald ridge,
which John C. Fémont identified as the south
rim of the Great Basin and measured at 5,280 feet above
sea level. This ridge is almost imperceptible and divides
the drainage area--the south half of which eventually
reaches the Pacific Ocean via the Colorado River. Mountains
surround the meadows.
At that time, the Meadows were covered with a variety
of grasses fed by numerous springs of clear water, and
the area was considered by Parley P. Pratt to be one
of the most delightful places on the entire route. The
Fancher train, and other travelers who may have joined
or followed them, arrived there the first week in September,
anticipating a few days of recuperation. Some of the
emigrants probably continued another four and one-half
miles south to Cane Springs, the site of present-day
Central. At dawn the following Monday, 7 September,
the Fancher train was brought under siege by Indians
and militiamen disguised as Indians. Those camped at
Cane Springs were also attacked and evidently retreated
to the Mountain Meadows. The wagons were drawn into
a circle with their wheels chained together, and then
were lowered to the ground; firing pits were dug and
the dirt thrown under and into the wagons, making a
strong defensive barrier. Seven were killed and sixteen
wounded in the first assault; however, the party resisted
the siege for five days although they were pinned down
and isolated from firewood, water, game food, and outside
help. By Friday, 11 September, low on water and ammunition,
they were in a helpless condition.
Under a flag of truce and led to believe the militiamen
had arrived to save them, the emigrants were made an
offer to leave all of their possessions to the Indians
and be conducted safely back to Cedar City. They accepted
the conditions and began their trek. Seventeen children
too small to walk to Cedar City, some mothers, and the
wounded were placed in the wagons. These wagons were
followed by the women and older children walking in
a group; they were followed by the men, walking alongside
their armed militia protectors.
After traveling approximately 1.5 miles, strung out
and separated by a small rise in the ground and shrubbery,
isolating each group from the others, the emigrants
were massacred by Indians and militiamen. The only known
survivors were the seventeen small children, who were
taken into Mormon homes. The remains of the victims
were hurriedly thrown into shallow depressions and ravines
and covered with whatever was available. These remains
were subsequently scattered over the immediate area
by storms and wild animals.
The messenger so urgently sent to Salt Lake City for
Young's advice returned on Sunday, two days after the
massacre, with Young's advice to let the wagon train
pass and not molest them. The estimated number of victims
ranged from 100 to 150; the exact number may never be
known. Appalled by what had been done, and in fear of
possible repercussions, an effective cover-up plan was
put into force. It blamed the entire episode on the
Indians, and continued to be maintained for the next
few years in the face of outside outrage and investigation.
Eighteen months after the massacre, prompted by relatives
in Arkansas demanding an investigation, an army payroll
escort passed through the area and reinterred the remains
of the victims that could be found and erected stone
cairns over the mass graves--at least two at the massacre
site and one at the siege site. The U.S. Army forces
at Camp Floyd helped return the seventeen small children
to relatives in Arkansas; the children arrived in Carroll
County on 15 September 1859, two years after the massacre.
The federal government prosecuted only one man, John
D. Lee, major of the Fourth Battalion of the militia
at Harmony. He was convicted, some say unjustly, and
executed at the siege site on 23 March 1877 for his
role in the affair. The Mormon Church earlier excommunicated
Lee and a few others believed to have been responsible.
Unsuccessful attempts were made by various groups and
individuals to erect a more suitable monument at Mountain
Meadows but no one assumed maintenance responsibility.
The most enduring was a wall which still stands at the
siege site. It was erected in 1932 and surrounds the
1859 cairn. On 23 July 1988 a bipartisan meeting was
held at the siege site to discuss the possibility of
erecting a more adequate memorial to those who lost
their lives. Two independent and parallel efforts resulted--one
by people in southern Utah and one by Francher party
and John D. Lee descendants. Eventually these two groups
merged and cooperatively completed a new granite memorial.
It was financed by the state of Utah and by contributions
from private sources. It is situated near the highway
(U-19) and overlooks the siege and massacre sites; and
it was dedicated 15 September 1990. The Utah State Division
of Parks and Recreation is now responsible for its maintenance.
Morris A. Shirts