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  1. The Mormon pioneers were members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), also known as Latter-day Saints, who migrated beginning in the mid-1840s until the late-1860s across the United States from the Midwest to the Salt Lake Valley in what is today the U.S. state of Utah.

  2. Today, Latter-day Saints everywhere continue this pioneering legacy in their own countries as the gospel of Jesus Christ spreads throughout the world. The resources on this page provide a glimpse into the lives of these Latter-day Saint Pioneers of both yesterday and today.

  3. Mar 6, 2018 · To better understand this era in Church history, it’s important to know a few key facts: The period of overland emigration of the Mormon pioneers is generally defined as 1847 through 1868. That is when organized companies traveled to Utah by wagon or handcart.

  4. The Church History Biographical Database is a powerful research tool that contains biographical entries on over 100,000 early Latter-day Saints, such as pioneers who traveled to Utah and missionaries who served throughout the world from 1830-1940.

  5. For the last leg of the Latter-day Saint pioneers’ journey, the Mormon Trail diverged and headed southwest from Fort Bridger (in present-day Wyoming) toward Salt Lake City. More than half a million migrants, including the majority of gathering Saints, used this trail system from 1843 until 1868, when the Union Pacific Railroad began to ...

  6. The first Mormon settlers of Salt Lake City came to the area in 1847, and over the next 20 years they were followed by an estimated 70,000 emigrants. Now, nearly two centuries later, a new database provides fresh new insights about these overland pioneers.

  7. Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mormon pioneers. Mormons that emigrated to Utah Territory between April 1847 and May 1869, when the First transcontinental railroad was completed.

  8. Mormon Pioneers. In 1846, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Mormon Pioneers, were driven from their homes in Nauvoo, Illinois. They spent the winter in Nebraska, and the first company left with Brigham Young as their leader in the spring of 1847.

  9. Jun 3, 2024 · History. Joseph Smith and Moroni. Moroni delivering the Book of Mormon to Joseph Smith, lithograph, 1886. In western New York state in 1823, Joseph Smith had a vision in which an angel named Moroni told him about engraved golden plates buried in a nearby hill.

  10. Young’s vanguard company unexpectedly swelled from his intended 1,800 emigrants to around 3,000—many without their own wagons and provisions. On March 1, 1846, some 500 Mormon wagons lurched northwesterly across the winter-bare Iowa prairie toward the Missouri River. Their route is the Mormon Trail.

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