“Remember”

"THE SACRIFICE, LOVE, DEVOTION,OBEDIENCE AND COURGE OF OUR PIONEER FATHERS, WHICH IN TURN WILL HELP US “REMEMBER” WHO WE ARE. ULTIMATELY THIS PERSPECTIVE WILL LEAD US TOWARD OUR SAVIOR.

Medical Reminders for TREK


1.    Martin's Cove has reported Ticks this season.  Before each hike, spray skirt bottoms, trouser bottoms and shoes with DEET Repellent.  And as much as possible STAY ON THE TRAIL!

2.    Rattle snakes seen.  No bites for the past 10 years at Martin's Cove.  Let's not break their record.  Stay on the trails.  Stay away from rock walls.  DO NOT CHASE snakes.

3.  Weather is HEATING UP.  They expect some cloud cover.  But O, O, PLEASE DRINK, DRINK, DRINK.  I know it is SO tough on the girls to find a bathroom AND deal with all the paraphernalia.  But OH, you can get sick in a hurry in the burning sun when not drinking enough water and fluids.  Ask our Female Medical Support Staff for some ideas for the girls bath rooming on the Trail.

4.  And SUNSCREEN.   Apply morning, afternoon and Sunny evenings.

5.   BLISTERS ON HEELS AND TOES.  It is much better to prevent than to treat.  If you feel a hot spot inside your shoes (like you skiers are used to looking or feeling for),  stop and remove shoes and socks and apply duct tape, TegaDerm, Medipore, or Moleskin to the area.  If there is a blister use Poly Mem.  (Find Medical Staff Handcart with the white and Red Cross Flag and show Trek Medical Person).

6.  Sick Call :   At the Medical Treatment Tent (Set up near Food Prep Area) 
     Thursday evening  after tent set up and around dinner time.
      Friday morning at breakfast time.
      Friday afternoon upon return to camp from Trek to Martin's Cove
      Saturday morning at breakfast time

7.   Please stay together with your Family.  Sometimes one can get discouraged and just want a few minutes alone.  This is wilderness country.  Getting lost is not too hard.  And getting hurt is even easier.  If you need some time alone, and go somewhere out of site, you MUST take someone along. I know...)

8. LIGHTNING:   Each 5 seconds between lightning flash and thunder is one (1) mile distance away.   If you find yourself  in a situation with 15 seconds or less, time between flash and thunder, you are in imminent danger.  Separate, at least 15 feet apart, and away from Handcarts and buildings, outhouses, etc.   Crouch in a low area, and balance on the balls of your feet.  Lean forward and keep your head low.  Only balls of feet touch the ground (Except to get your balance).

9.  If you feel threatened in any way, out there.   First, stop and THINK.  What is the danger?  What am I going to do to reduce or remove myself from the danger?   What can I do to assist others in danger (without risking my own safety)?

10.  Some Handcarts will have Supplemented First Aid Paks, and trained Medical Personnel.  These Handcarts will fly a Red Cross Flag.  The Medical Personnel will have a Red Arm Band.  Please ask for help if you have concerns.

TREK Schedule


Trek Devotionals

Trek Devotionals
Day 1 – Night 
Remember Devotion: Walking with Christ
Stories: One story from a member of the family

President Henry B. Eyring:
You make choices every day and almost every hour that keep you walking in the light or moving away toward darkness.
For each of us, life is a journey. Heavenly Father designed it for us out of love. Each of us has unique experiences and characteristics, but our journey began in the same place before we were born into this world.
We all were taught by Elohim, the Father of our spirits. We loved Him and wanted to be like Him and to be with Him forever. He told us plainly what it would require for us to have that joy. We would have to receive a physical body, with all of the trials that would bring. We would be subject to illness and have within our bodies the processes which would finally lead to death. And our bodies would have in them powerful cravings for physical satisfaction.
Heavenly Father explained to us what it would take to make the journey from where we were then to be with Him forever and live the life that He lives. We would make the journey through life without a memory of our time with Him in the spirit world. And the only way back to Him would be for us to overcome physical death and the effects of sin which would come from our breaking commandments. He told us that we could not overcome the effects of either death or sin by ourselves—without our having a Savior who would break the bands of death and provide a way for us to be washed clean from the sin which we would surely commit.
Mormon’s words: “Seeing that ye know the light by which ye may judge, which light is the light of Christ, see that ye do not judge wrongfully; for with that same judgment which ye judge ye shall also be judged.
“Wherefore, … ye should search diligently in the light of Christ that ye may know good from evil; and if ye will lay hold upon every good thing, and condemn it not, ye certainly will be a child of Christ. 
“And now, … how is it possible that ye can lay hold upon every good thing?”
Let me tell you of James Kirkwood. James was from Glasgow, Scotland. On the trip west, James was accompanied by his widowed mother and three brothers, one of whom, Thomas, was 19 and crippled and had to ride in the handcart. James’s primary responsibility on the trek was to care for his little four-year-old brother, Joseph, while his mother and oldest brother, Robert, pulled the cart. As they climbed Rocky Ridge, it was snowing and there was a bitter cold wind blowing. It took the whole company 27 hours to travel 15 miles. When little Joseph became too weary to walk, James, the older brother, had no choice but to carry him. Left behind the main group, James and Joseph made their way slowly to camp. When the two finally arrived at the fireside, James, “having so faithfully carried out his task, collapsed and died from exposure and over-exertion.” 1

Day 2 – Morning
Remember Courage: Follow Christ
Stories: One story from a member of the family

Elizabeth Horrocks Jackson Kingsford:
“I believe the Recording Angel has inscribed in the archives above, and that my sufferings for the Gospel’s sake will be sanctified unto me for my good.”
President Faust:
In addition to the legacy of faith bequeathed by those who crossed the plains, they also left a great heritage of love—love of God and love of mankind. It is an inheritance of sobriety, independence, hard work, high moral values, and fellowship. It is a birthright of obedience to the commandments of God and loyalty to those whom God has called to lead this people. It is a legacy of forsaking evil. Immorality, alternative lifestyles, gambling, selfishness, dishonesty, unkindness, and addiction to alcohol and drugs are not part of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Day 2 – Night
Remember Obedience: Faith in Christ
Stories:  One story from a member of the family

The real story is often better than the popularly told tale. Such is the case with Francis Webster, the famous old man in the corner of a Sunday School class who arose to silence criticism directed towards the Willie and Martin handcart companies. While his statement is a moving tribute to the faith and sacrifice of handcart pioneers, it becomes an even more inspiring testimony, and takes on an added significance, when understood in light of the rest of the story.
His obedience and sacrifice extended beyond the handcart companies’ well-documented struggles, to his personal commitment to follow counsel and to reach out to his fellow men. While Latter-day Saints today may never encounter circumstances similar to what the handcart pioneers endured, all face situations where they have to make choices similar to those that Francis Webster encountered both before and during the journey.
The Bible recounts that Jesus told a rich young man, “If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven: and come and follow me” (Matt. 19:21). Although we do not know what became of that young man who went away sorrowful, we do know what became of Francis Webster when faced with a similar decision. Webster’s story is a reminder that testimonies grow largely through personal actions and choices, and not simply because an individual is part of a journey, even if that journey is notable because of tragedy and suffering. Francis Webster became a leader in the Church and a leader in the communities of southern Utah. The following is an account from the writings of William R. Palmer about an incident in an adult Sunday School class in Cedar City at which over fifty men and women were in attendance: 'Nathan T. Porter was the teacher and the subject under discussion was the ill-fated handcart company [Martin] that suffered so terribly in the snow of 1856.
"Some sharp criticism of the Church and its leaders was being indulged in for permitting any company of converts to venture across the plains with no more supplies or protection than a handcart caravan afforded.
"One old man in the corner sat silent and listened as long as he could stand it, then he arose and said things that no person who heard him will ever forget. His face was white with emotion, yet he spoke calmly, deliberately, but with great earnestness and sincerity.
"He said in substance, 'I ask you to stop this criticism. You are discussing a matter you know nothing about. Cold historic facts mean nothing here, for they give no proper interpretation of the questions involved. Mistake to send the Handcart Company out so late in the season? Yes! But I was in that company and my wife was in it, and Sister Nellie Unthank whom you have cited here was there, too. We suffered beyond anything you can imagine and many died of exposure and starvation, but did you ever hear a survivor of that company utter a word of criticism? Every one of us came through with the absolute knowledge that God lives for we became acquainted with Him in our extremities!
'I have pulled my handcart when I was so weak and weary from illness and lack of food that I could hardly put one foot ahead of the other. I have looked ahead and seen a patch of sand or a hill slope and I have said, I can go only that far and there I must give up for I cannot pull the load through it. I have gone to that sand and when I reached it, the cart began pushing me! I have looked back many times to see who was pushing my cart, but my eyes saw no one. I knew then that the Angels of God were there. [See painting below.]
'Was I sorry that I chose to come by handcart? No! Neither then nor any minute of my life since. The price we paid to become acquainted with God was a privilege to pay and I am thankful that I was privileged to come in the Martin Handcart Company."
"The speaker was Francis Webster. And when he sat down there was not a dry eye in the room. We were a subdued and chastened lot. Charles Mabey, who later became Governor of Utah, arose and voice the sentiment of all when he said, 'I would gladly pay the same price to personally know God that Brother Webster has.’"

Day 3 – Morning
Remember Love & Sacrifice: Search & Rescue
Stories:  One story from a member of the family

President Faust:
I have wondered why these intrepid pioneers had to pay for their faith with such a terrible price in agony and suffering. Why were not the elements tempered to spare them from their profound agony? I believe their lives were consecrated to a higher purpose through their suffering. Their love for the Savior was burned deep in their souls and into the souls of their children and their children’s children. The motivation for their lives came from a true conversion in the center of their souls. As President Gordon B. Hinckley has said, “When there throbs in the heart of an individual Latter-day Saint a great and vital testimony of the truth of this work, he will be found doing his duty in the Church.”
President Gordon B. Hinckley:
Between 135 and 150 of the Martin company alone perished along that trail of suffering and death. It was in these desperate and terrible circumstances—hungry, exhausted, their clothes thin and ragged—that they were found by the rescue party. As the rescuers appeared on the western horizon breaking a trail through the snow, they seemed as angels of mercy. And indeed they were. The beleaguered emigrants shouted for joy, some of them. Others, too weak to shout, simply wept, and wept, and wept.
There was now food to eat and some warmer clothing. But the suffering was not over, nor would it ever end in mortality. Limbs had been frozen and the gangrenous flesh sloughed off from the bones.
The carts were abandoned, and the survivors were crowded into the wagons of the rescuers. The long rough journey of three hundred, four hundred, even five hundred miles between them and this valley was especially slow and tedious because of the storms. On November 30, 104 wagons, loaded with suffering human cargo, came into the Salt Lake Valley. Word of their expected arrival had preceded them. It was Sunday, and again the Saints were gathered in the Tabernacle. Brigham Young stood before the congregation and said:
“As soon as this meeting is dismissed I want the brethren and sisters to repair to their homes. …“The afternoon meeting will be omitted, for I wish the sisters to … prepare to give those who have just arrived a mouthful of something to eat, and to wash them and nurse them. …
“Some you will find with their feet frozen to their ankles; some are frozen to their knees and some have their hands frosted … we want you to receive them as your own children, and to have the same feeling for them.” (Handcarts to Zion, p. 139.)
The two orphan girls, Maggie and Ellen, were among those with frozen limbs. Ellen’s were the most serious. The doctor in the valley, doing the best he could, amputated her legs just below the knees. The surgical tools were crude. There was no anesthesia. The stumps never healed. She grew to womanhood, married William Unthank, and bore and reared an honorable family of six children. Moving about on those stumps, she served her family, her neighbors, and the Church with faith and good cheer, and without complaint, though she was never without pain. Her posterity are numerous, and among them are educated and capable men and women who love the Lord whom she loved and who love the cause for which she suffered.
President Gordon B. Hinckley:
I wish to remind everyone within my hearing that the comforts we have, the peace we have, and, most important, the faith and knowledge of the things of God that we have, were bought with a terrible price by those who have gone before us. Sacrifice has always been a part of the gospel of Jesus Christ. The crowning element of our faith is our conviction of our living God, the Father of us all, and of His Beloved Son, the Redeemer of the world. It is because of our Redeemer’s life and sacrifice that we are here. It is because of His sacrificial atonement that we and all of the sons and daughters of God will partake of the salvation of the Lord. “For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.” (1 Cor. 15:22.) It is because of the sacrificial redemption wrought by the Savior of the world that the great plan of the eternal gospel is made available to us under which those who die in the Lord shall not taste of death but shall have the opportunity of going on to a celestial and eternal glory.
In our own helplessness, He becomes our rescuer, saving us from damnation and bringing us to eternal life.
In times of despair, in seasons of loneliness and fear, He is there on the horizon to bring succor and comfort and assurance and faith. He is our King, our Savior, our Deliverer, our Lord and our God.
Those on the high, cold plains of Wyoming came to know Him in their extremity as perhaps few come to know Him. But to every troubled soul, every man or woman in need, to those everywhere who are pulling heavy burdens through the bitter storms of life, He has said:
“Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.

“Take my yoke upon you, and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your souls.  “For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.” (Matt. 11:28–30.)

RIVER CROSSING


Share experiences:  the hardships of crossing the rivers which symbolizes the extreme hardships they had to go through.  What rivers do we cross in our day?

Louisa Mellor
AGE 15
On October 19th, the Martin Company made their final crossing of the N. Platte River. It was very cold and the Saints were already in a weakened condition from rations having been cut recently. Louisa and her sisters tied up their dresses and waded in water up to their waists as they navigated their handcart through the chunks of ice and swift water. When Louisa’s sister, Charlotte (10 yrs old), was older she told about it in these words: “On entering the water, our first impulse was to turn back and not wade across. The water was so cold that it sent pains right to the bone and the muscles cramped. We steadied ourselves as we held on to the cart and pushed. Father pulled. By the time we got across, our limbs were so numb that we could hardly keep from falling as we trudged along. The north wind cut like a sharp knife. We finally camped where we could get some cottonwood and willows for firewood.” Nine days later, the first rescuers would locate them near this place, stranded in deep snow, and many dying. 


PETER MCBRIDE
AGE 6

When they came to the North Platte River, Peter Mcbride who was six years of age said his father “worked hard all day pushing and pulling handcarts through the icy waters of that dangerous river,” helping people reach the other side. Peter’s father had a beautiful singing voice, and before he went to bed that night, he sang about how he longed to be in Zion. “The wind was blowing very cold,” Peter described. “The snow drifted in and covered our tent.” 1 The next morning, Peter’s father was dead. Peter cried as he watched his father’s body being buried beneath the snow.
Peter’s older sister Jenetta was left in charge because their mother was sick. Jenetta often walked to the river to get water for cooking, even though her shoes had worn out. Her bare feet left bloody footprints in the snow wherever she went. Realizing they could go no further, the company camped near the Sweetwater River and hoped that help would arrive before it was too late.

George D. Grant 
Rescuer

“You can imagine between 500 & 600 men, women and children, worn down by drawing handcarts through snow and mud, fainting by the wayside, falling chilled by the cold; children crying, their limbs stiffened by the cold, their feet bleeding, and some of them bare to snow and frost.  The sight is almost too much for the stoutest of us. 

When the handcarts arrived at the bank of the Sweetwater one man, tired and weary worn asked, “Have we got to go through there?”  On being answered yes, he was so much taken back that he was completely spent.  He exclaimed, “Oh, dear I can’t go through that,” and burst into tears.  His wife who was by his side, said soothingly, “Don’t cry Jimmy.  I’ll pull the cart for you.”


VEIL CROSSING

1st Rescue: When the rescuers showed up for the Martin & Willy Handcart companies.
2nd Rescue: When the stake in Wyoming tracked down and did the temple work for all of the members of the Martin & Willy Handcart Company.
3rd Rescue: Going on now through the missionary program and through rescuing souls within and from without the church.
Share testimony about what we can do today to help the 3rd rescue.  We are part of that rescue party.
Joseph Young, Abel Garr, and Dan Jones went ahead of the rescue party and were the first ones to arrive at the camp of the Martin Company. The members of the company were almost entirely out of food and their arrival was expressed by one woman who said, “I see them coming. Surely they are angels from heaven!” Over fifty members had perished, and more would die that evening.
The rescuers were overcome as they arrived to the camp. Patience Loader remembers Joseph Young coming to her and asking, as he wept, “How many are dead and how many are still living?”
Daniel Jones encouraged them to keep moving each day as far as they could in order to keep them alive.
John Oborn
“Those of you who have never had this experience cannot realize how … we thanked God for our rescue,” remembered John Oborn, a child at the time of the rescue. “Mother and I were cared for by a dear brother, who … seemed like an angel from heaven. We left our handcart and rode in his wagon and slowly but safely he brought us to Zion”

Mary Hurren Wight
Rescuers arrived amidst cries of joy on 21 October.  “If help had not come when it did, there would have been no one left to tell the tale,” wrote Mary Hurren Wight, who was a child at the time. “Tears streamed down the cheeks of the men and the children danced for joy. As soon as the people could control their feelings, they all knelt down in the snow and gave thanks to God” (Autobiography, LDS Church Archives, 11–12)

Elder Faust Quoted:
Our souls were subdued when we arrived at the hallowed ground of Martin’s Cove, the site where the Martin Handcart Company, freezing and starving, waited for the rescue wagons to come from Salt Lake City. About fifty-six members of the Martin Handcart Company perished there from hunger and cold.
It was an emotional experience to see the Sweetwater River crossing where most of the five hundred members of the company were carried across the icy river by brave young men.

Also heroic were the rescuers who responded to President Brigham Young’s call in the October 1856 general conference. President Young called for forty young men, sixty to sixty-five teams of mules or horses, wagons loaded with twenty-four thousand pounds of flour to leave in the next day or two to “bring in those people now on the plains.”
These excruciating experiences developed in these pioneers an unshakable faith in God. Said Elizabeth Horrocks Jackson Kingsford, “But I believe the Recording Angel has inscribed in the archives above, and that my sufferings for the Gospel’s sake will be sanctified unto me for my good.”

In addition to the legacy of faith bequeathed by those who crossed the plains, they also left a great heritage of love—love of God and love of mankind. It is an inheritance of sobriety, independence, hard work, high moral values, and fellowship. It is a birthright of obedience to the commandments of God and loyalty to those whom God has called to lead this people.

I cannot help wondering why these intrepid pioneers had to pay for their faith with such a terrible price in agony and suffering. Why were not the elements tempered to spare them from their profound agony? I believe their lives were consecrated to a higher purpose through their suffering. Their love for the Savior was burned deep in their souls, and into the souls of their children, and their children’s children. The motivation for their lives came from a true conversion in the center of their souls. As President Gordon B. Hinckley has said, “When there throbs in the heart of an individual Latter-day Saint a great and vital testimony of the truth of this work, he will be found doing his duty in the Church.”

Above and beyond the epic historical events they participated in, the pioneers found a guide to personal living. They found reality and meaning in their lives.

I hope that this priceless legacy of faith left by the pioneers will inspire all of us to more fully participate in the Savior’s work of bringing to pass the immortality and eternal life of his children.
                                               
The proving of one’s faith goes before the witnessing, for Moroni testified, “Ye receive no witness until after the trial of your faith” (Ether 12:6).

This trial of faith can become a priceless experience. Stated Peter, “That the trial of your faith, being much more precious than of gold that perisheth, though it be tried with fire, might be found unto praise and honour and glory at the appearing of Jesus Christ” (1 Pet. 1:7).