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MORMON BATTALION CHANGES FACE
OF AMERICA
They marched under their nation's
flag through prairies, deserts, and
mountain passes. Following orders
from an ambitious U.S. President,
they charted a course through some
of the toughest terrain in America.
They helped secure the Pacific coast
for the United States and found themselves
at the epicenter of the California
gold rush. On their way to build a
new religious utopia in the West,
the Mormon Battalion would shape the
future of America.
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"Through
their service in the War with
Mexico and the discovery of gold,
this handful of unlikely heroes
changed the way the nation viewed
itself and its future."--Ken
Verdoia |
Ken Verdoia's two-hour documentary
BATTALION, premiering on KUED-Channel
7 Monday, July 21, at 8:00 p.m.,
uncovers the story of the Mormon Battalion
during the War With Mexico. Marching
2,000 miles through a mostly uncharted
American Southwest, the 500-man battalion
was a pivotal force in fulfilling
the national dream of Manifest Destiny.
Their experiences, shared in this
film through personal correspondence,
journals and historical accounts,
changed the face and fate of the American
West.
The story opens in 1846 with a plan
forged by two determined men, both
looking west to secure new land for
their people. In Council Bluffs, Iowa,
LDS Church leader Brigham Young had
resolved to leave the United States
and create a Mormon settlement in
the unknown lands of the American
West. In Washington, D.C., U.S. President
James K. Polk was courting a war with
two foreign powers as he planned to
expand the nation's reach to the Pacific
Ocean.
The leaders' visions would converge
over a mutual tradeoff. After being
violently forced out of their homes
in Illinois, the impoverished Mormons
needed financial support to undertake
a westward migration. Polk needed
a loyal band of soldiers to fight
a war with Mexico-and possibly Great
Britain-in his push to fulfill his
goal of Manifest Destiny. He also
needed to squelch thepotential for
a Mormon alliance with Great Britain.
In a deft move that would secure the
western states while easing relations
with Young's persecuted followers,
the president called for a band of
Mormons to march on California with
U.S. General Stephen Kearney. By accepting
the offer, Brigham Young would secure
a government-sponsored westward migration
along with the much-needed revenue
from the soldiers' military compensation.
"Out of a political deal between
two legendary leaders comes one of
the great, little known stories in
American history," says Ken Verdoia,
producer of BATTALION.
The journey itself stretches across
2,000 miles of the North American
continent. BATTALION visits
key points along this perilous route,
including:
- Mount Pisgaah and Council Bluffs,
Iowa, the refugees camps where the
Saints first enlisted for the Battalion;
- Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where
the Battalion was outfitted with muskets
and sworn in to the army;
- The Great Plains of Kansas, where
the soldiers saw their first Buffalo;
- Point of Rocks, New Mexico, where
contention flared over leadership
and a growing number of insurgent
soldiers;
- Santa Fe, New Mexico, where the
Battalion came under the stern leadership
of Lt. Col. Cooke;
- The area surrounding Tucson, Arizona,
where troops prepared to fight Mexican
forces and were instead attacked by
a herd of stampeding bulls;
- Imperial Sand Dunes, California,
where the Battalion struggled to survive
as they ran out of food and water;
- San Luis Rey, California, where
the weary Battalion first gazed upon
the rolling waves of the Pacific Ocean
and were called upon to secure key
outposts for the U.S.;
-Sutter's Fort, California, near
which Mormons became part of the original
California gold discovery; and in
- Carson's Pass, the Sierra Nevada
immigrant trail charted by Battalion
veterans which became the preferred
gateway to the California gold fields.
Along this route, the Latter-Day
Saints would face food shortages,
crippling fevers, days without water,
dramatic changes in leadership near
rebellions, and for some, death. The
long march across the prairie lands
of Kansas and the desert sands of
New Mexico, Arizona and California
would plunge the Battalion headlong
into the arduous school of Western
survival-experience that would be
vital to the settlement of the Utah
territory years later.
The most perilous stretch of the
journey was completed under the hard-nosed
leadership of Lt. Col. Phillip St.
George Cooke. Marching 15 miles a
day through the desert landscape between
Santa Fe and the Pacific Coast, the
thirsty soldiers would be winnowed
down to two-thirds of their original
troop as the sick and women were sent
on to a camp in Pueblo, Colorado.
More than 20 soldiers would die en
route, while nearly 10 times that
number were sent to a detachment camp
in Pueblo, Colorado. Prospects for
the soldiers seemed bleak. "We
are wretched creatures, and almost
worn out with fatigue," wrote
soldier Levi Hancock. "Our provisions
scarce, and here we are on this vast
plain of sand and gravel."
BATTALION illuminates the
overlooked struggles and hardships
undertaken by this unlikely band of
soldiers. Though the Battalion never
saw battle in the War with Mexico,
they were vital in securing the outposts
of San Diego, Los Angeles and San
Luis Rey on the West Coast. Their
presence would ease relations with
the local Mexican population and give
muscle to Gen. Kearney's disposal
of the ambitious leader who had declared
martial law in California, John Fremont.
The Battalion's great feats were
not accomplished by men alone. Though
most of the soldiers' wives and children
were left behind in Iowa, 20 women
would accompany their husbands on
much of the harrowing journey. One
of those women, Melissa Coray, would
see immense hardship and sorrow before
the age of 21. After marching for
several months while pregnant, Coray
would lose her baby in childbirth
in Monterey, California, and ultimately
would lose her husband to tuberculosis
upon their arrival in the Salt Lake
Valley. BATTALION weaves the
personal story of the Coray family
through the Battalion narrative to
illustrate the individual hardships
sustained along one of the longest
continuous marches recorded in history.
"I do not feel to complain,"
says Melissa Coray, "Yet I think
my trials are great for one so young."
Of the 500 men who marched off with
the Mormon Battalion in July 1846,
nearly 400 reunited with their families
and settled in the Utah territory.
None died at the hands of another
army, fulfilling a prophecy set forth
by Brigham Young. "In as much
as you will go forth and do your duty
like good soldiers, not a man of you
will fall by a ball of an enemy."
The achievements of the Battalion
would quickly be eclipsed by the gold
rush and, later, the Civil War. Ten
years after they were disbanded, the
troop's veterans would be called to
action once again. In 1857, President
James Buchanan ordered the U.S. army
to occupy the Utah territory. In an
ironic twist, Philip St. George Cooke
would lead the U.S. army through the
territory's capital city. The troops
were disciplined and soon left, and
Cooke was reported to have tipped
his hat at the Battalion vets as he
marched by. Their shared struggle
had not been forgotten.
BATTALION premieres on KUED-Channel
7 Monday, July 21, at 8:00 p.m. and
re-airs Wednesday, July 23 at 11:00
p.m.
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