A grand chapter: Omaha sites retell pioneer epoch
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OMAHA, Neb. As the public open house for the new Winter Quarters Nebraska Temple concluded April 15, it had been 154 years almost to the day since Brigham Young and the advance company of pioneer saints departed from here on April 14, 1847, to continue their trek to the Rocky Mountains.
The main body of the Church stayed behind. Church members would build some 80 temporary settlements in the middle Missouri River Valley along the Nebraska-Iowa border before Church leaders issued the directive for the last of them to make their way to the gathering place in the Salt Lake Valley in 1852.
Elder D. Spencer Nilson, director of the Church's Mormon Trail Center at Historic Winter Quarters, calls this area of Nebraska and Iowa "the best historical site in the Church system," rich as it is in Church history. The new temple is just one more reason Church members and other visitors might consider the Winter Quarters-Kanesville area in their vacation planning, he said.
Elder Nilson has identified a number of events of major importance to the Church that occurred in the area.
WINTER QUARTERS
Stopping first on the Iowa side of the Missouri River, Church members soon moved across the river into present-day Omaha, Neb. There, they established Winter Quarters to await more favorable traveling conditions the following year and to raise crops to aid those who would come later. Among important events in Winter Quarters:
- Section 136 of the Doctrine and Covenants, the "Word and Will of the
Lord," was given to President Brigham Young at Winter Quarters on Jan. 14,
1847. It provided vital instruction for the organizing of the pioneer
companies. But it also gave timeless counsel for all Church members,
whatever might be the period of time when they live.
Photo by R. Scott LloydMormon Trail Center recounts pioneers' migration to Salt Lake Valley. - Winter Quarters was the temporary camp for the saints migrating
westward from Nauvoo, Ill., from the fall of 1846 to summer 1848. Maximum
population ranged from 3,483 in December 1846 to nearly 5,000 by May 20,
1847, Elder Nilson said.
- It was the location of Church headquarters from the fall of 1846
through April 4, 1847.
- The Winter Quarters settlement in Nebraska was on Indian land. Because
the Saints had obtained permission to stay on it for only two years, the
settlement was abandoned in the summer 1848. Unprepared to move westward,
some 3,000 Church members moved back across the Missouri River into Iowa,
where they established Kanesville and some 80 other communities. Soon
thereafter, though, Nebraska was opened for homesteading. It became a U.S.
territory, and the former Winter Quarters area became the city of Florence
in 1854. Florence was eventually annexed by the city of Omaha.
- The handcart companies of emigrating saints used Florence as an
outfitting post from 1856 through 1860.
- Leaving from Salt Lake City, the "down-and-back" wagons shuttled emigrants from Florence to the Salt Lake Valley from 1861-1863. Thereafter, Wyoming City in Nebraska and Fort Laramie in Wyoming were points from which they were shuttled.
KANESVILLE
- Though intended to be only a temporary camp for the saints, Kanesville
became a semi-permanent town, including such amenities as a restaurant,
bakery, hotel and schools. By 1852, in a sternly worded letter, President
Brigham Young called for Church members to leave Kanesville and other Iowa
settlements and come to the Salt Lake Valley. Some 5,500 left in 1852. By
the following year, Kanesville was abandoned. Still in all, Kanesville was
occupied by Church members for six years, nearly as long as was Nauvoo,
Ill., the beautiful temple city from which they had been driven.
Maps show location of historic sites. - In the spring of 1846, before the saints had moved across the Missouri
River into Nebraska and established Winter Quarters, the Grand Encampment
was established about four miles southeast of what would later be
Kanesville. There the Mormon Battalion, about 500 enlistees recruited from
among the saints for the war with Mexico, was "mustered in." Besides
demonstrating the patriotism of Church members despite the persecution they
had endured, the soldiers contributed to the cause by donating their pay
and uniform allowance to help finance the westward trek.
- On Dec. 5, 1847, the First Presidency of the Church was reorganized by
the Quorum of the Twelve at the home of Elder Orson Hyde about eight miles
southeast of Kanesville. On Dec. 27 of that year, about 1,000 saints
sustained the new First Presidency in a general conference at a log
tabernacle in Kanesville constructed in just 18 days for that purpose.
- Oliver Cowdery, who with Joseph Smith had received the priesthood in
this dispensation and helped establish the Restoration of the gospel but
had later become estranged from the Church, rejoined the Latter-day Saints
in Kanesville. At a special conference Oct. 21, 1848, he humbly asked for
rebaptism, having earlier been excommunicated from the Church. He was
rebaptized by Elder Orson Hyde. He had intended to join the migration to
the Salt Lake Valley but died while visiting relatives in Richmond, Mo.
- Even after Kanesville was abandoned by Church members, Council Bluffs served as a major outfitting post for other Church members moving westward. Most of the 100,000 Latter-day Saints who migrated to the Salt Lake Valley by 1900 came through Council Bluffs (Kanesville) and Florence (Winter Quarters, now known as northeast Omaha).
What to do and see here
Sites of importance to Church history in and around Omaha, Neb., and Council Bluffs, Iowa, are numerous. But there are a few prominent ones that stand out.
HISTORIC WINTER QUARTERS
- The Mormon Trail Center, dedicated by President Gordon B. Hinckley in
1997, contains elaborate displays telling the story of the pioneer
migration. It is child friendly: Youngsters can dress as pioneers, pull a
handcart, lie down in a simulated emigrant ship bunk, step inside a replica
of a pioneer cabin, and turn a wagon wheel that moves a "roadometer" like
the one designed by Elder Orson Pratt of the advance pioneer company.
- The Pioneer Cemetery contains the remains of more than 350 Latter-day Saints who died in Winter Quarters in 1846, having been weakened and exposed to disease due to the hasty and forced exodus from Nauvoo, Ill., earlier in the year. Most of their graves are unmarked; what headstones do exist mark the graves of later Florence residents. The most prominent feature of the cemetery is the famous statue by Avard Fairbanks, dedicated by President Heber J. Grant in 1930, depicting a grieving father and mother standing before the open grave of their child. Already sanctified by the presence of the pioneer graves, the cemetery is further hallowed by the adjacency of the new Winter Quarters Nebraska Temple. The temple and cemetery are across the street from the Mormon Trail Center.
HISTORIC KANESVILLE
- A replica of the log tabernacle where President Brigham Young was
sustained as Joseph Smith's first successor in the presidency of the Church
is the most prominent attraction in historic Kanesville. Constructed by a
citizens group in the latter 1990s, it was conveyed to the Church last
year. An adjacent visitors center, which once operated as a shopping lobby,
now houses an exhibit that includes a painting of Christ and panels
containing the names of Mormon Battalion members. The tabernacle itself
contains a large painting, "Passing the Keys of Authority," showing the
members of the Quorum of the Twelve present at the sustaining of Brigham
Young. It contains a 150-year-old wagon from the Mormon pioneer era and two
handcarts. Mushrooms grow out of the green cottonwood logs used in the
tabernacle's reconstruction, which arejust like the ones used in the
original.
"Henry Miller and 200 men built this tabernacle in 18 days, and it took my group of people four and a half years," reflected Monte C. Nelson, who was president of Kanesville Restoration, the group that recreated the log tabernacle.
Brother Nelson said that when he commissioned artist Bill Hill of Mendon, Utah, to do the painting, Brother Hill requested pictures of the apostles as they would have appeared in 1847, with as much information as could be gathered about their appearance and physical builds.
- Exhibits around the log tabernacle replica include newly placed panels
set in granite and displaying the First Presidency proclamation on the
family, the First Presidency and the Apostles Testify of Christ, and an
explanation of the principle of succession in the Church. Two of the panels
reproduce Section 136 of the Doctrine and Covenants, the Word and Will of
the Lord.
That, in fact is the overarching purpose of the log tabernacle site, Brother Nelson noted. He said the president of the Church urged him not to allow a lot of monuments to be placed around the log tabernacle grounds.
"He said it would detract from the real purpose of that tabernacle. The real purpose is to proclaim to the world the principle of apostolic succession, the fact that the priesthood is passed by the laying on hands to laying on hands, which is called the apostolic succession. And when I read those panels, I think to myself how could anybody even question for a moment that the keys of authority rested with the apostles."
Authentic 1850s wagon is displayed inside reconstructed Kanesville Tabernacle; maps show location of historic sites. - The Grand Encampment site, where the pioneers stopped after their
arduous trek across Iowa, is located on the grounds of the present-day Iowa
School for the Deaf. Markers and National Park Service information panels
tell the story of the Mormon Trail and of the mustering in of the Mormon
Battalion.
- Hyde Park is the site of Elder Orson Hyde's 1847 home, where the Twelve
determined the time had come when the First Presidency was to be
reorganized with Brigham Young as president of the Church. Today, a plaque
marks the location amidst rolling hills and fertile farmland.
- The Mormon Trail Historic Site is located not far from Hyde Park and consists of a marker and information panel marking the end of the Mormon Trail through Iowa and recounting how joyful the saints were to finally catch site of the Middle Missouri Valley as a place where they could rest.

