|
Share the article on
this page with a friend.
Click
here.
|
|
| 
Lesson 35
"A
Mission of Saving"
D&C 4:4-7; 18:10-16;
52:40; 81:5-6;
Moroni 7:45-48; Our Heritage, 77-80
by Philip A. Allred
The
rescue of the Willie and Martin handcart companies as a
symbol of the spiritual rescue called for by the gospel
of Jesus Christ.
Historical
Context
Gathering to Zion in Utah
posed significant challenges to the Church during the 1850's.
Not only did many Saints in the States desire to head west,
but also thousands of members in England and other European countries hoped to unite with the
main body of the Church. It is interesting to note that
in 1850, Utah had 11,380 church members, while the British Isles had more than 30,000. In 1849 the Perpetual
Emigration Fund provided for many to travel to Utah, particularly
those camped in Iowa. However, due to a grasshopper plague
in the summer of 1855, the Utah economy was struggling,
and the resultant financial difficulty caused the Church
leaders to look for ways to cut the costs of immigration
(see Church History in the Fulness
of Times, Religion 341-43 Institute Manual, 356-61).
Franklin
D. Richards, president of the European Mission, wrote to
Brigham Young in the fall of 1855: "We cannot afford
to purchase wagons and teams as in times past, I am consequently
thrown back upon my old plan ― to make hand-carts,
and let the emigration foot it, and draw upon them the necessary
supplies, having a cow or two for every ten. They can come
just as quick, if not quicker, and much cheaper ―
can start earlier and escape the prevailing sickness which
annually lays so many of our brethren in the dust"
("Foreign Correspondence," Millennial Star,
22 Dec. 1855, 813; cited in Church History in the Fulness
of Times, 358). Consequently, the First Presidency read
a letter detailing instructions on handcart travel in October
of 1855. The following summer, three handcart companies
successfully, though not without incident, trekked to Salt
Lake City, arriving in late September and early October.
"Go
and Bring in those People now on the Plains"
Meanwhile, unbeknownst
to the leadership in Utah, more Saints were en route to
Zion, having made an ill-advised decision to leave England
without understanding the dangers of starting late to cross
the plains. In early October, many of the Saints had gathered
to Salt Lake City and were preparing for general conference. They had
naturally assumed that the arrival of the three handcart
companies signaled the end of that year's emigration. However,
President Richards, also arriving in Utah for the conference, informed Brigham Young that two
more companies of handcarts (and two ox-cart trains with
supplies) had started late and were still on the plains
― placing them in need of significant help.
President
Brigham Young immediately addressed the conference one day
earlier than planned (October 5), poignantly and powerfully
calling them to mount a rescue into Christ-like service.
"The response was impressive. Sixteen wagonloads of
food and supplies were quickly assembled; and on the morning
of 7 October, sixteen good four-mule teams and twenty-seven
hardy young men (known as Brigham Young's 'Minute Men')
headed eastward with the first provisions. More help was
solicited and obtained from all parts of the territory.
By the end of October, two hundred and fifty teams were
on the road to give relief" (details from Hafen
and Hafen, Handcarts to Zion,
124-25; quoted from Church History in the Fulness
of Times, 360). In this way, President Young's impassioned
call for rescuers in those terrible circumstances gave almost
unparalleled opportunity for selfless service.
Books have
been written about the intervening suffering, courage, and
blessing that arose out of those terrible days. Before it
was through, more than two hundred men, women and children
from the Willie and Martin handcart companies lost their
lives before they arrived in Salt Lake City on November 2 and November 30 respectively.
Heroes
of the Rescue
At the time and over the years, many have questioned why
this tragedy occurred. Why were these last two teams allowed
to press forward from Iowa City as late and as ill prepared
as they were for the journey? We may never know in mortality
― nor care in eternity, who
is to blame. Thankfully, many of the 1856 Saints were less
concerned with blaming than with helping.
Two historians
recently wrote: "A lesser-known aspect of the handcart
immigration, however, provides one of the most satisfying
episodes in Mormon history. The rescue effort mounted by
Brigham Young before anyone in Utah suspected the critical
situation of the companies, the munificent response of the
communities throughout the territory, and the courage and
endurance of the rescue parties make a heartening story.
In many immigrant journals, memory of the rescue and the
welcome in Salt Lake City dominates other experience; the drama and the timelines
of the deliverance is dwelt on
far more often than grief and disillusionment over the predicament.
Those embittered were in the minority; and even these, decades
later, wrote emotionally, gratefully, of the heroic men
who saved them from starvation and death" (Rebecca
Bartholomew and Leonard Arrington, Rescue of the 1856
Handcart Companies, 3).
Bartholomew
and Arrington give brief biographical data on forty-eight
of the handcart rescuers (Rescue, 45-49). Following
are several specific individuals whose bravery and character
stand worthy of note.
Levi Savage
was a sub-captain in the Willie Company and one of the dissenters
in the Iowa City Councils against forging ahead to let the
handcart companies cross the plains so late in the season.
After being vociferously voted down, he declared, "Brethren
and sisters, what I have said I know to be true [that the
risks were too great]; but seeing you are to go forward,
I will go with you, will help you all I can, will work with
you, will rest with you, will suffer with you, and, if necessary
I will die with you. May God in his mercy bless and preserve
us" (Handcarts to Zion, 96-97). Brother Savage's
sentiments echo an earlier leader, Mormon, whose people
were facing overwhelming odds as recorded in Mormon 2-4.
Mormon couldn't resist trying to help his people either,
though he knew the difficulties from the start.
When the
Martin company reached the ice clogged Sweetwater River in early November,
the specter of crossing it under those conditions nearly
broke their hearts and spirits. Due to the unusually early
winter season that year the normally undaunting
stream was became a formidable obstacle. Reportedly three
eighteen-year-old boys, who had come from Salt Lake as part
of the relief party, literally carried nearly every handcart
company member across the river. When several of those being
assisted offered to thank them, one of the youths said,
"We don't want any of that. You are welcome. We have
come to help you" (Rescue, 27). Upon hearing
of this bravery and selflessness, Brigham Young declared,
"That act alone will ensure C. Allen Huntington, George
W. Grant, and David P. Kimball an everlasting salvation
in the Celestial Kingdom of God, worlds without end"
(Handcarts to Zion, 132-33; also President Monson,
Ensign, May 1990, 46-47).
Reddick N. Allred, a relative of
mine, was also part of the relief effort. The details surrounding
his resolve and determination to the mission are inspiring
and instructive. He had taken seven fresh teams and provision
wagons with men from Utah and camped at South Pass, just
west of Devil's Gate in Wyoming. There on October 25 he
helped to give relief to the Willie Company by allowing
for the weary to ride in the wagons and discard their carts.
The intervening weeks waiting for the Martin Company [who
were behind the Willie group] to materialize apparently
caused some of the rescuers to feel that they should abandon
the effort. Ephraim K. Hanks later explained that Allred
and his men had resisted the efforts of some to return to
Salt Lake when the immigrants were not immediately or conveniently
located. Listen to the account, and the lesson, in the words
of Elder Henry B. Eyring:
There
are few comforts so sweet as to know that we have been
an instrument in the hands of God in leading someone else
to safety. That blessing generally requires the faith
to follow counsel when it is hard to do. An example from
Church history is that of Reddick
Newton Allred. He was one of the rescue party sent out by Brigham
Young to bring in the Willie and Martin Handcart Companies.
When a terrible storm hit, Captain Grant, captain of the
rescue party, decided to leave some of the wagons by the
Sweetwater River as he pressed ahead to find the handcart
companies. With the blizzards howling and the weather
becoming life threatening, two of the men left behind
at the Sweetwater decided that it was foolish to stay.
They thought that either the handcart companies had wintered
over somewhere or had perished. They decided to return
to the Salt Lake Valley and tried to persuade everyone
else to do the same.
Reddick Allred refused to budge. Brigham
had sent them out and his priesthood leader had told him
to wait there. The others took several wagons, all filled
with needed supplies, and started back. Even more tragic,
each wagon they met coming out from Salt Lake they turned back as well. They turned back
77 wagons, returning all the way to Little Mountain, where
President Young learned what was happening and turned
them around again. When the Willie Company was finally
found, and had made that heartrending pull up and over
Rocky Ridge, it was Reddick
Allred and his wagons that waited for them. (See Rebecca Bartholomew
and Leonard J. Arrington, Rescue of the 1856 Handcart
Companies [1992], 29, 33-34.)
In this
conference you will hear inspired counsel, for instance,
to reach out to the new members of the Church. Those with
the faith of Reddick Newton
Allred will keep offering friendship
even when it seems not to be needed or to have no effect.
They will persist. When some new member reaches the point
of spiritual exhaustion, they will be there offering kind
words and fellowship. They will then feel the same divine
approval Brother Allred felt
when he saw those handcart pioneers struggling toward
him, knowing he could offer them safety because he had
followed counsel when it was hard to do. While the record
does not prove it, I am confident that Brother Allred
prayed while he waited. I am confident that his prayers
were answered. He then knew that the counsel to stand
fast was from God. We must pray to know that. I promise
you answers to such prayers of faith (Henry B. Eyring,
"Finding Safety in Counsel," Ensign,
May 1997, 26).
Ephraim
K. Hanks met up with the Martin company
on November 11. "Hanks' heart almost melted within
him at the sight of the immigrants. That evening he went
about the camp administering to the sick and dying. One
man had been pronounced dead by Daniel Tyler.
Hanks said
to George Grant, Jr., and William Kimball, 'Will you do
just as I tell you?' They brought warm water and helped
him wash the man from head to foot and then anoint him with
consecrated oil …Then they 'laid hands on him and commanded
him in the name of Jesus Christ to breathe and live.' The
man sat up and 'commenced to sing a hymn'" (Rescue,
29). Thankfully this servant of the Lord did not rely on
his own strength, but instead exercised himself and others in the priesthood to rescuing even the dead.
"Perhaps
thou shalt say … his punishments are just … "
When we consider the selfless and courageous efforts of
the rescuers, we must also consider the "natural man"
reaction to situations like the Willie and Martin handcart
companies. We imagine there were those then who felt that
these two companies brought on their own suffering ―
not that they deserved it, but that their own mistakes brought
it on. Such reasoning, while justified in the world many
times, has no place in the kingdom of God. King Benjamin
warned against such self-righteous stinginess in his marvelous
benedictory speech.
And
also, ye yourselves will succor those that stand in need
of succor; ye will administer of your substance unto him
that standeth in need; and ye
will not suffer that the beggar putteth
up his petition to you in vain, and turn him out to perish.
Perhaps thou shalt say: The man has brought upon himself his misery; therefore
I will stay my hand, and will not give unto him of my food,
nor impart unto him of my substance that he may suffer,
for his punishments are just ― But I say unto you,
O man, whosoever doeth this the same hath great cause to
repent; and except he repenteth
of that which he hath done he perisheth
forever, and hath no interest in the kingdom of God (Mosiah
4:16-18).
The Lord
confirms in modern revelation that interest in His kingdom
is shown by true service, regardless of how the need arose.
"And remember in all things the poor and the needy,
the sick and the afflicted, for he
that doeth not these things, the same is not my disciple"
(D&C 52:40).
Isn't the
whole point that someone is in need, rather than how that
need came about? King Benjamin further declared: "…are
we not all beggars? Do we not all depend on the same Being,
even God, for all the substance which we have, for both
food and raiment, and for good, and for silver, and for
all the riches which we have of every kind?" (Mosiah
4:19).
Perhaps
the greatest needs are produced by personal weaknesses at
any rate. Consider the greatest need we have ― forgiveness
and refreshing from the Lord's spirit.
"And
behold …ye have been calling on his name, and begging for
a remission of your sins. And has he suffered that ye have
begged in vain? Nay; he has poured out his Spirit upon you,
and has caused that your hearts should be filled with joy,
and has caused that your mouths should be stopped that ye
could not find utterance, so exceedingly great was your
joy" (Mosiah 4:20).
Clearly,
the Lord, having every justification to withhold blessings
from us because of our rebellious wills and weaknesses before
him, is the great example of service! He gives 'liberally,
and upbraideth not' (James 1:5).
I am grateful beyond words for such a Father and such a
Savior.
Pray
with all the Energy of Heart
How do we move from the natural man tendency to selfishly
scapegoat and shirk our way out of Christ-like service?
For years as a youth I struggled with the Apostle Paul and
Moroni's beautiful descriptions of charity. Every thing about
charity seemed to be everything I was not! I literally tuned
out when I would hear these words spoken, embarrassed and
frustrated at my lack. As frustrating as anything was the
fact that several people around me (especially my parents)
seemed to have this "charity." I pretty much concluded
that one was either born with it or was not. No doubt because
I was tuning out during those potential learning moments
when Moroni was read, it was several
years before I came to understand that Moroni had also given a key to how uncharitable individuals
can become 'converted' into a Christ-like persons filled
with His kind of love.
"Wherefore,
my beloved brethren, pray unto the Father with all the energy
of heart, that ye may be filled with this love, which he
hath bestowed upon all who are true followers of his Son,
Jesus Christ; that ye may become the sons of God; that when
he shall appear we shall be like him …" (Moroni
7:48).
When I read
this and the Spirit bore witness to me that this was true,
I did pray, and continue to pray, that He will bestow that
love upon and in and through me. While there is much converting
left to do, I gratefully acknowledge His rescue of me from
my fallen and self-centered state. I know that humbling
following the Savior in selfless service ― inspired
by those wonderful examples of those who helped the Lord
rescue his children in the past ― and asking in faith
for his love to become in me, He will purify us "even
as he is pure" (Moroni 7:48). Thereby allowing us the sweet experiences of
being "saviors on mount Zion" (Obadiah 1:21).
© 2005 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
|
| |
|
| About
the Author: |

Philip Allred is a Professor of Religion at Brigham Young University — Idaho, and a member of the Honors Program faculty. He loves to teach the gospel by the Spirit as only a university system like BYU allows. He has taught in the Church Educational System in Utah and Southeastern Idaho.
While Brother Allred was born in Ankara, Turkey, he was raised in Burley, Idaho. He attended Brigham Young University — Provo and obtained a Bachelors degree in Political Science. He also received a Masters degree in Theology from the University of Notre Dame, and is currently completing a Doctoral degree in Political Science from Idaho State University.
Brother Allred is married to Jennifer Lindeman Allred, from Rochester, New York; and they are the grateful parents of three children—two boys and one girl. He has had the privilege of serving as an Elder's Quorum President, Deacon's Quorum Advisor, Stake High Councilor, in a Stake Young Men's Presidency and as a Bishop. He is currently serving as the High Priest's Group Leader in his ward. |
| Related
Resources: |
| |
| What
do you think? |
| Share
your thoughts, comments, and impressions about this article. |
Format
for Print
Click Here |
|
|
|