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Go directly to the collection, Trails to Utah and the Pacific: Diaries and Letters, 1846-1869, in American Memory, or view a Summary of Resources related to the collection.

The materials of Trails to Utah and the Pacific: Diaries and Letters, 1846-1869, provide unique ways to improve critical thinking skills while learning about U.S. History. Practice chronological thinking by analyzing and depicting the two decades of Mormon immigration to Great Salt Lake City. Use the collection's diaries to better understand the important concept of manifest destiny, or to practice analysis and interpretation of outsiders' views of the Mormon Church. Finally, examine maps pertaining to the transcontinental railroad to practice issue-analysis and decision-making, or read one of the collection's trail guides to research the tragic story of the Donner party.

Chronological Thinking: Mormon Migration

Immigrants with wagons
Immigrants/Coleville
Immigrants with wagons going through a canyon
Mormon immigrants/ Echo Canyon, down & back

In the early spring of 1846, Brigham Young led the Mormon community of Nauvoo, Illinois, into the West to establish a settlement where they could practice their religion free from persecution. The following spring, Young and the first company of emigrants stepped out of a dark canyon into the Great Salt Lake Valley in present day Utah and decided to settle there. Over the next twenty years, more than 60,000 Mormons made the same journey across the Great Plains to join the Mormon community in Great Salt Lake City. Use this collection to create a timeline tracing the Mormon immigration from 1846 to 1869, when the completion of a cross-continental railroad changed the Mormon migration experience forever.

Use "Where the Prophets of God Live": A Brief Overview of the Mormon Trail Experience, to learn how The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints encouraged Mormons throughout the world to immigrate to the Salt Lake basin through the doctrine of gathering and through a series of emigration programs. Use the Trail Name Index heading Mormon Pioneer National Historic Trail, to access diaries, letters, maps, photographs, and illustrations that provide information about the twenty years of migration on this trail. Refer to the Special Presentation of Interactive Maps for visual representations of the trail. Compare and contrast the experiences of the first wave of Mormon immigrants to those that followed nearly a generation later and depict historical continuity and change on your timeline. Illustrate your timeline with images and excerpts of text from the collection.

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Last updated 02/24/2005