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Liverpool to Great Salt Lake

The 1851 Journal of Missionary George D. Watt

LaJean Purcell Carruth editor Ronald G Watt editor Fred E Woods editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:University of Nebraska Press

Published:1st May '22

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Liverpool to Great Salt Lake cover

George Darling Watt was the first convert of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints baptized in the British Isles. He emigrated to Nauvoo, Illinois, in 1842. He returned to the British Isles in 1846 as a missionary, accompanied by his wife and young son. He remained there until 1851, when he led a group of emigrant converts to Salt Lake City, Utah. Watt recorded his journey from Liverpool to Chimney Rock in Pitman shorthand. Remarkably, his journal wasn’t discovered until 2001—and is transcribed and appearing for the first time in this book.

Watt’s journal provides an important glimpse into the transatlantic nature of Latter-day Saint migration to Salt Lake City. In 1850 there were more Latter-day Saints in England than in the United States, but by 1890 more than eighty-five thousand converts had crossed the Atlantic and made their way to Salt Lake City. Watt’s 1851 journal opens a window into those overseas, riverine, and overland journeys. His spirited accounts provide wide-ranging details about the births, marriages, deaths, Sunday sermons, interpersonal relations, weather, and food and water shortages of the journey, as well as the many logistical complexities.
 

"[Liverpool to Great Salt Lake is] an important contributor when considering how we can better understand the complexities and realities of the Latter-day Saint trek."—Samuel Mitchell, Dawning of a Brighter Day
“LaJean Purcell Carruth and Ronald G. Watt make mid-nineteenth-century pioneers speak as if ‘out of the dust,’ bringing us into contact with their hardships, humor, and faith.”—John G. Turner, author of Brigham Young: Pioneer Prophet
“Carruth and Watt expand greatly our understanding of the nineteenth-century Mormon experience, especially the emigrant trek to Utah, and the theology of Orson Pratt. Scholars and general readers alike will appreciate the book’s significance and substance.”—John Sillito, professor emeritus for libraries at Weber State University
Liverpool to Great Salt Lake is a delight. George D. Watt’s newly transcribed journal divides his international journey into three phases: ocean voyage, river steamer, and overland wagons, each marked by Watt’s penchant for observing both the unusual and the mundane. He notes births and deaths, Sunday observances and sometimes the lack thereof, gossip and its consequences, sermons and seasickness, broken pickle jars, pets as passengers, drowning oxen, people overboard, violent thunderstorms at sea and on the Great Plains, dead cattle, and the ‘sin’ of killing buffalo for sport. This and so much more make Watt’s journal a welcome addition to the migrant genre and an absolute pleasure to read.”—W. Paul Reeve, author of Religion of a Different Color: Race and the Mormon Struggle for Whiteness
“Although nineteenth-century migrants did not benefit from Watt’s journal, modern readers can glean much from its pages now. Liverpool to Great Salt Lake has a readable style that is easily accessible to general readers and will appeal to a broad audience. It is suitable for classroom adoption and is also a valuable source for academic research and specialists in the field who study and write about the Atlantic crossing, steamboat travel, and overland migration in the mid-nineteenth century.”—Jay H. Buckley, director of the Charles Redd Center for Western Studies at Brigham Young University

ISBN: 9781496229878

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

260 pages