In 1856 the Martin
and Willie Handcart Companies became stranded in the high
plains of Wyoming, due to early snowstorms and food shortage.
President Brigham Young mounted a large rescue effort of many
wagons loaded with food and supplies. Many of these wagons
turned back convinced that it was impossible, and they
themselves were in jeopardy of dying.
A small number of these wagons persisted in the attempt
however, and found the Martin Company in early November on
the Sweetwater River near Devil's Gate. These few wagons
could not carry the hundreds of starving, freezing immigrants,
and they faced this river crossing in such a weakened condition,
that to wade the icy water, which was waist deep and about 100
feet across, would have killed most of them.
Three, maybe four, young men of the rescue party, about
eighteen years of age, saw what must be done. They volunteered
to do the impossible. They spent most of the day carrying
these people across the ice-choked stream, on their shoulders
and in their arms. This act of pure charity and true heroism
proved to be a sacrifice of great cost. The exposure and
exertion these young men experienced that day was so great that
in later years they all died from the effects of it. Because
of their acts of charity they saved the lives of over 300 of
these people.
Brigham Young wept as a child when he heard what these
young men had done, and said that "that act alone will ensure
C. Allen Huntington, George W. Grant, and David P. Kimball and
everlasting salvation in the Celestial Kingdom of God, worlds
without end." The example of these young men will always touch
our hearts and strengthen our resolve.