If you have an ancestor who was in any of the handcart companies (there were ten companies of handcart pioneers that journeyed to Utah between 1856 and 1860), please let Sister Dawnie Baxter, our stake young women's president, know the name so you can represent your ancestor on the trek. Email her at
http://lds.org/churchhistory/library/pioneercompanysearch
"We suffered beyond anything you can imagine, and many died of exposure and starvation. . . . [But we] 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 only go 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.
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." Francis Webster (Andrew D. Olsen, The Price We Paid, 2006, pp. 2-3).
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