Monthly Feature

GREEN FLAKE

On Saturday, July 24, 1847, the first company of Mormon pioneers arrived in the valley of the Great Salt Lake. Those first 148 settlers were later to be followed by some 86,000 persons. They came primarily from Nauvoo, Illinois, from all parts of the eastern United States and from Europe. This was the largest migration of a people in the history of the West.

Green Flake is one of the three black pioneers whose names are immortalized on the back of the Brigham Young monument in Salt Lake City.

He was born in North Carolina and moved with his family to Nauvoo, Illinois in April 1844. Three years later, Green Flake was chosen to join Brigham Young and the Vanguard Company as the first pioneers to reach the Salt Lake Valley. He was a driver of one of the wagons when they entered this valley.

Green built a cabin for the James and Agnes Flake family and returned to Nebraska to lead them to their new home. On this second journey, he fell in love and married a beautiful young woman named Martha Crosby.

Brigham Young and Green Flake were good friends, and Green and Martha's children have memories of sitting on Brigham Young's lap.


COUNCIL WAGON 

This wagon served as Brigham's council chamber, speaking platform, and home on the historic trip from Nauvoo, Illinois to the Salt Lake Valley on July 24, 1847.

“When John W. Young made the trip to Moencopie Indian Village in Northern Arizona, he drove the very same wagon in which his father, Brigham Young, was riding when he first viewed Salt Lake Valley and uttered the prophetic works, “THIS IS THE PLACE.” John W. later drove this wagon to Apache Co., and abandoned it at the Windmill Ranch, belonging to Ammon Tenney, about twenty-five miles northeast of St. Johns, considering it as an old worn out wagon.

During my first year in St. Johns, 1880, I learned of the whereabouts and history of this wagon and that it was in danger of being dismantled and carried away by passing Indians. I hired a man to go out with a team of oxen and bring this wagon to St. Johns. We built a shed for it on the tithing lot where it was stored.

In 1897, the year of the Golden Jubilee of the Church, a call was sent out for all pioneer relics to be sent to the church headquarters. I notified them that this old historic wagon was in St. Johns, Arizona. The committee sent $10.00 to cover the cost of crating the wagon, and Elijah M. Freeman, one of the first pioneers, hauled it over to the Railroad at Navajo Station from where it was shipped to Salt Lake City. For many years it was in the Museum of Relics at the Utah State Capitol. It is now in the ‘Pioneer Memorial Museum' in Salt Lake City, Utah.”

Signed – DAVID KING UDALL