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Devil's Gate: Brigham Young and the Great Mormon Handcart Tragedy Kindle Edition

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 194 ratings

The little-known story of a deadly 1,300-mile trek by Mormon converts in 1856: “This compelling account of a major frontier catastrophe is hard to put down.” —Booklist

In 1856, led by the church’s second Prophet and new leader, Brigham Young, the Mormon faithful headed west to escape persecution. They arrived in what is now Utah the following year and established a new Zion in the wilderness. Nine years later, fearing a federal invasion, Young and other Mormon leaders debated how to bring thousands of impoverished European converts, mostly British and Scandinavian, from the Old World to Zion. Young conceived of a plan in which the European Mormons would travel by ship to New York City and by train to Iowa City. From there, instead of crossing the plains by covered wagon, they would push and pull wooden handcarts all the way to Salt Lake.

But the plan was badly flawed and the food provisions were woefully inadequate as the travelers navigated the handcarts across plains and mountains for 1,300 miles. Five companies left Iowa that spring and summer, but the last two left late. As a consequence, some 900 Mormons were caught in early snowstorms in Wyoming. When the church leadership in Salt Lake became aware of the dire circumstances, Young launched a heroic rescue effort. But for more than 200 of the immigrants, the rescue came too late.

This story has never before been told in full despite its stunning human drama: At least five times as many people died in the Mormon handcart tragedy than in the more famous Donner Party disaster. David Roberts has researched this story in Mormon archives and elsewhere, and traveled along the route where the pioneers came to grief. Based on his research, he concludes that the tragedy was entirely preventable. Brigham Young and others in the Mormon leadership failed to heed the abundant signs of impending catastrophe, including warnings from other Mormon elders in the East and Midwest, where the journey began.
Devil’s Gate is a powerful indictment and a gripping story of survival and suffering, superbly told.

“A gripping story of impoverished Europeans brought to the New World with a promise of hope, who died in the wilderness of the American West under the most appalling circumstances. . . . This book is proof that people who are serenely certain they know the mind of God are not only presumptuous, they are dangerous.” —Douglas Preston, #1
New York Times–bestselling author of The Lost City of the Monkey God

“Vivid prose truly brings to life the dangers and deprivations these immigrants suffered along their perilous cross-country trek.” —
Library Journal
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In 1856, two groups of Mormon emigrants using handcarts to transport their belongings got a disastrously late start on their westward trek to Utah. Unexpected October blizzards and the lack of restocked supplies left them stranded in Wyoming, coping with frostbite, starvation and disease. While Mormon retellings of this story have emphasized the subsequent daring rescue, Roberts sees the whole episode as an entirely preventable disaster from start to finish. Moreover, he fixes the blame at the top, arguing that Brigham Young, then president of the church, consistently undervalued human life, created dangerous situations with regard to provisions in order to pinch pennies and dissembled after the fact about not having any knowledge of the emigrants' late start. Roberts builds a persuasive case, arguing from dozens of primary sources and using the emigrants' own haunting words about their experiences. He competently situates the tragedy within the context of the 1856–1857 Mormon Reformation, a time of religious extremism. This is a solid and well-researched contribution to Mormon studies and the history of the American West. (Sept.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Although well known among the Mormon faithful, the story of the Mormon handcart tragedy remains unfamiliar to most others. Roberts seeks to remedy this via his passionate account of one of the most disastrous and ill-conceived cross-country journeys in the history of the American West. Laying the blame squarely on the shoulders of Mormon leader Brigham Young, who hatched the preposterous plan to transport more than 3,000 European converts on foot from Iowa to Utah, pushing all their belongings in handcarts, Roberts smashes the Mormon myth embellished and spun by Young that somehow managed to turn tragedy into triumph. Although some may be uncomfortable with his searing indictment of Young, this compelling account of a major frontier catastrophe is hard to put down. --Margaret Flanagan

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B001FA0HTS
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Simon & Schuster; Illustrated edition (September 16, 2008)
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ September 16, 2008
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 2606 KB
  • Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 609 pages
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 194 ratings

About the author

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David Roberts
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David Roberts (born 1943) is a climber, mountaineer, and author of books and articles about climbing. He is particularly noted for his books The Mountain of My Fear and Deborah: A Wilderness Narrative, chronicling major ascents in Alaska in the 1960s, which had a major impact on the form of mountaineering literature. In thirteen seasons spent in the Alaskan wilderness, Roberts is well known for many first ascents, including the Wickersham Wall on Mount McKinley, the West rib of Mount Huntington, climbing in the Western Brooks Range and the Kichatna Spires, and on the East Face of Mount Dickey.

Roberts is the son of Walter Orr Roberts and mentor to Jon Krakauer.

David Roberts attended Harvard University, where he received a mathematics degree in 1965. He was a member of and former president of the Harvard Mountaineering Club. He also received a Ph.D. in English from the University of Denver in 1970.

From 1970 to 1979 Roberts was a professor of literature at Hampshire College, in Amherst, Massachusetts, as well as designing the college's Outdoors Program.

Bio from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
194 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on March 28, 2024
Written through thorough research, I learned so much about Mormon history and what led up to the implementation of the handcart companies. Using the cheaper way of handcarts instead of oxen pulled wagons was more important than the lives of people. In Brigham Young's detachment of all the human suffering this decision caused, the immigrant Saints were expendable. And to make them pay for their rescue food and high interest rates through Perpetual Emigration Fund is just plain evil! So much unnecessary suffering.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 1, 2016
I would like to thank the author for writing this well thought meticulously researched book. Let me begin by saying that I am an LDS faithful. I am sure that many of my fellow Mormons will find fault with this book for several reasons including: The author blames Brigham Young for the tragedy. He is an unbeliever who is obviously skeptical of our beliefs. His book points out that many of our cherished origin myths regarding the pioneers
aren't true.

Criticism of leaders or doctrine is frowned on in the Mormon Church. And I don't believe that we are unique in this particular aspect of human nature. However, I feel that the author treated the subject and the Mormon Church fairly. I believe his criticism was based on his examination of the facts and not a hidden bias or prejudice. Perhaps it is just me, but I felt many instances in the book where admiration for LDS people or beliefs shone through the writing.

I appreciate this book because I believe it tells a side of the story left out of the handcart story I have been given. It pulls back the curtain on our history and shows us the truth as it happened "warts and all." I applaud the Church for opening the LDS archives and records to all, knowing it is a resource that will be used against them by their detractors.

The author places the lion's share of the blame on President Young's shoulders. I agree that Brigham is partly responsible. I think that the one pound ration and 17 pound weight limits should have been remedied by including more wagons or resupply parties along the trail. I agree that he should have applied his famous talents for micromanagement to better effect concerning the handcart companies once they had left. However, President Young's part in this tragedy feels like negligence on his part. I feel the true villain was Elder Richards. Richards pushed these pioneers into a meat grinder because of his willful refusal to accept common sense. I'm certain that he thought he was implementing the Lord's will right up until the snow started falling. My blood boils with anger as I read of their suffering and as I have listened incredulously as some of my fellow saints explain it as having been necessary in order for them to know God. I wonder if these Treks and latter day attempts to justify their suffering makes us complicit with Elder Richards who was the author of their tragedy?

Whatever the answer, this book is excellent and thought provoking. Thank you for telling me the story, the whole story.
69 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 16, 2012
This book is appealing...as a history of the west in the mid-1800s...as an insight into Mormonism...as a tragedy of human-making. It is packed with information while written in a style that is equal parts mystery and exposition. Almost as captivating as Jon Krakauer's "Under the Banner of Heaven," this book offers insights into Mormon culture, religion and thinking at the same time as telling a story of human foibles and catastrophe. Easily revealing events interpreted from both sides (through the eyes of an investigative historian and through the eyes of Mormon believers), a great deal is packed into these pages.

"Devil's Gate..." goes beyond a mere recitation of facts by using a writing style that urges the reader to think about the bigger issues that these events represent. Treatment of the poor, self-sufficiency, providence and reward, even life and death - all have inclusion in this tale of believers some 160 years ago - along with a comfortable style of writing that interjects the author's own historical assessments in understated and entertaining ways. An important read in this election year -or- any year for that matter.
10 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 16, 2013
If you're interested in Mormon history, come from a Mormon family or are the descendents of the early Mormon settlers as I am, this book is for you. It's easy reading except for the fact that deals with horrific and needless suffering on the part of the poor Mormon immigrants who trusted their lives to their prophet, Brigham Young assuming he cared for them. Little did they know how wrong they were.

If you've read other reviews, you know the basics of the story so I won't go into that. What I want to focus on is how these poor English and Scandinavian immigrants sold all that had to cross the ocean to get to `Zion.' A lot of them were elderly, infirm, widows with children and the like, and were the least capable of hard manual labor required to pull a 65 lb handcart loaded with 85 lbs of personal goods, and any members of their group who couldn't walk as was the case more often than not. They had to cover a distance of 1,300 miles which is slightly further than if you walked from Seattle to San Diego down Interstate 5. The handcarts were very poor quality as they were made of green wood, and the wheels didn't have iron around them to hold them together, just straps of leather that quickly wore out.

This was all Brigham Young's bright idea so he could get as many people to the Utah Territory as quickly and cheaply as possible in order to repel and invasion by the US army. He sold it by claiming it was from God so the people had no choice but to submit to it assuming it was divinely inspired.

The thing I came away from reading this book with was the fact that what these people went through was similar to what Soviet prisoners went through in being marched through the snow on starvation rations to Siberia--see the book The Long Walk. At the beginning of the journey, each adult was allotted one pound of flour per day plus a couple of ounces of rice and bacon a couple of times a week. A pound of flour contains 1538 calories which is just slightly above the 1,200 calories a day the UN classifies as starvation. And they were pulling heavy wagons 10 to 15 miles a day through sandy and rocky trails. It didn't take long for malnutrition and starvation to set in, and people started dropping like flies. These were city dwellers who weren't experienced hunters, and a lot of the cows they took to supplement their diet wandered off in the night leaving them in very dire straits.

I was also struck by how Brigham Young ordered 20 young men to stay at a fort in the Utah mountains guarding the pioneers goods after they had been rescued knowing the only food they had was about 100 lbs of flour. He told them they wouldn't receive supplies for 6 months, yet protecting some material possessions was more important to him than the lives of these young men. Being that my second great grandfather was 20 years old at this time, and took part in the rescue mission, I have to wonder if he might have been one of them... Fortunately for these young men, some Indians found them, and provided them with meat so they made it through the winter. I think the author summed it up aptly when he said that Brigham Young valued money and property over human life.
24 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

robert allen
3.0 out of 5 stars I enjoyed this book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 22, 2017
I enjoyed this book, it is a useful contribution to the history of these couragous people who crossed the plains of America in search of their own promised land. The author recounts many balanced accounts of those who suffered on the infamous willie & martin handcart companies where 200 or so died. There are many stories of miracles as well of the hardships and sometimes bad planning that lead to the tragic events. The author is an angostic and sometimes gets church history wrong and critisies unfairly in some cases especially Brigham Young, but he is not a critic of the Mormon faith. Undoubtedly there was some bad planning for this trip but this was one of the first handcart trips, and lessons were learnt and not repeated. It could be improved by giving a short overview of the whole handcart / wagon trek history to put things in context, to see the bigger picture. The picture of faith and hope that emerges from the book was enjoyable and inspiring
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