Advertisement

CPT John B. Bartleson

Advertisement

CPT John B. Bartleson

Birth
Rowan County, North Carolina, USA
Death
7 Oct 1848 (aged 61)
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA
Burial
Kansas City, Jackson County, Missouri, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source

The Captain Bartleson Party


The first emigrant party to cross modern-day Utah on the way to the West Coast.


In 1841, a small group of emigrants set out from Sapling Grove, Missouri, to begin a new life in the Far West. Scholars still disagree about how many were actually in the party, but we know the original company, headed by John Bartleson, numbered between 60 and 70 members, and included a new mother by the name of Nancy Kelsey. Kelsey, only 18 years old at the time, and her infant daughter Ann were the first white females to cross the Great Basin.


The emigrant trail up the Platte River to the Far West was still relatively new in 1841, and the Bartleson party had no firsthand knowledge of the way. Luckily, shortly after leaving Missouri they fell in with a group of Jesuit missionaries guided by mountain man Thomas "Broken Hand" Fitzpatrick. The Bartleson party traveled with the missionaries as far as present-day Soda Springs, Idaho. There Fitzpatrick, the Jesuits, and around half of the original company from Missouri chose to continue on to the Oregon Country via Fort Hall on the Snake River, while the other half of the Bartleson party decided to head south toward California. This second group had no experience on the trail and had no one to guide them. They were completely on their own, with only stories of the trail and sketchy advice to aid them.


Following the Bear River down its course to the Great Salt Lake, the party skirted the lake's northern shores, and eventually curved southward across the blazing desert toward Pilot Peak north of modern-day Wendover. Here they abandoned some of their wagons; the rest they abandoned some days later, opting to pack their food and belongings on horses and mules across another stretch of desert to the Humboldt River. Once on the Humboldt, the road was easier. Following the river southwest across what is now Nevada, the emigrants finally reached the Sierra Nevada Range. Crossing the mountains at Sonora Pass, after 6 months on the trail from Missouri, the company finally straggled into the California lowlands. According to historians, the Bartleson party achieved a number of firsts. Not only were they first pioneers to cross northern Utah in wagons, but they were also the first emigrant company to cross the Great Basin and the Sierra Nevadas. They were also the first planned overland party to emigrate to California. Courtesy: Library of Congress.



The Captain Bartleson Party


The first emigrant party to cross modern-day Utah on the way to the West Coast.


In 1841, a small group of emigrants set out from Sapling Grove, Missouri, to begin a new life in the Far West. Scholars still disagree about how many were actually in the party, but we know the original company, headed by John Bartleson, numbered between 60 and 70 members, and included a new mother by the name of Nancy Kelsey. Kelsey, only 18 years old at the time, and her infant daughter Ann were the first white females to cross the Great Basin.


The emigrant trail up the Platte River to the Far West was still relatively new in 1841, and the Bartleson party had no firsthand knowledge of the way. Luckily, shortly after leaving Missouri they fell in with a group of Jesuit missionaries guided by mountain man Thomas "Broken Hand" Fitzpatrick. The Bartleson party traveled with the missionaries as far as present-day Soda Springs, Idaho. There Fitzpatrick, the Jesuits, and around half of the original company from Missouri chose to continue on to the Oregon Country via Fort Hall on the Snake River, while the other half of the Bartleson party decided to head south toward California. This second group had no experience on the trail and had no one to guide them. They were completely on their own, with only stories of the trail and sketchy advice to aid them.


Following the Bear River down its course to the Great Salt Lake, the party skirted the lake's northern shores, and eventually curved southward across the blazing desert toward Pilot Peak north of modern-day Wendover. Here they abandoned some of their wagons; the rest they abandoned some days later, opting to pack their food and belongings on horses and mules across another stretch of desert to the Humboldt River. Once on the Humboldt, the road was easier. Following the river southwest across what is now Nevada, the emigrants finally reached the Sierra Nevada Range. Crossing the mountains at Sonora Pass, after 6 months on the trail from Missouri, the company finally straggled into the California lowlands. According to historians, the Bartleson party achieved a number of firsts. Not only were they first pioneers to cross northern Utah in wagons, but they were also the first emigrant company to cross the Great Basin and the Sierra Nevadas. They were also the first planned overland party to emigrate to California. Courtesy: Library of Congress.





Advertisement