Mormon pioneer trails bill
E-mail story
It's easy. Send a link to the story you were just reading to a friend. Just fill out the form on this page and we'll send it along.
Your name and e-mail address are transmitted to the recipient. Otherwise, it is considered private information; see Privacy policy.
WASHINGTON D.C. The U.S. Senate passed a bill the last week of July that would allow the National Park Service to add to the National Trail System the variant routes taken by Mormon pioneers.
"These trails are the highways of our history," said bill sponsor Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah. It allows adding variants, or occasional alternate routes, not only of the Mormon trail, but also the Pony Express, California and Oregon National Historic Trails. "This legislation will help to preserve the stories of the early pioneers who settled in Utah and throughout the West."
When those historic trails were originally established, Congress allowed only one point-to-point path for each. The route followed by Brigham Young in 1847, for example, became the Mormon Pioneer Trail, although most other Mormon pioneers used the other starting points. The bill now goes to the House for consideration.

