Edward Bunker (Mormon pioneer)

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Edward Bunker (born August 1, 1822) was a Mormon pioneer and city founder of Bunkerville, Nevada.

Contents

[edit] Early life

He was born in Atkinson, Maine, the youngest of Silas and Hannah Berry Bunker's nine children. As a teenager in the fall of 1841, he struck out on his own with his brother-in-law John Berry to Wisconsin "to see the country."

[edit] Conversion to Mormonism

Bunker did not make it to Wisconsin that winter. Because the rivers and lakes were frozen by the time they reached Ohio, he and John decided to visit a friend in Kirtland, Ohio. There, they met Martin Harris.

John and Edward both read the Book of Mormon and Parley P. Pratt's A Voice of Warning. John eventually went to see members of his family in Pittsburg, while Edward remained in nearby Cleveland, attending meetings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and being baptized in April 1845.

In the spring, Edward and John finally made it to Wisconsin, but they soon left for Nauvoo, Illinois with a letter of introduction to George A. Smith.

[edit] Nauvoo and Iowa

Bunker arrived in Nauvoo nearly a year after the martyrdom of the Prophet, Joseph Smith, and the saints were busily preparing to abaondon Nauvoo. He worked briefly across the river in Montrose, Iowa, where he met Emily Abbott. They were married in Nauvoo in February 1946, just before the pioneers began their first long trek across Iowa.

Edward and Emily soon left Nauvoo and traveled halfway across Iowa, helping to found the settlement at Garden Grove. He and a friend built a one-room log cabin and moved their wives into it. Edward then went to Missouri with the intention of earning enough money to buy a team, a wagon, and supplies for the journey.

[edit] Mormon Battalion

While he was in Missouri, Edward heard about the call for volunteers to form the Mormon Battalion. He returned to Garden Grove and was one of the first to volunteer.

The Battalion marched to Santa Fe, Tucson, San Diego, and finally to Los Angeles, where Edward finished the six months he had left in his tour of duty. He was discharged in July 1847.

He then traveled north with other Battalion members to Sutter's Mill, where gold was discovered, and then to Salt Lake City, arriving on October 16, 1847. They stayed only briefly, and then set out for Winter Quarters, Nebraska to rejoin their families.

They had a very difficult journey, having left so late in the season. The Platte River was frozen, and they were reduced to eating rawhide saddles and a mule that fell through the ice before they reached Winter Quarters on December 18. Edward spent the night with some friends, not realizing that Emily and their son had moved from Garden Grove to Winter Quarters and were nearby.

[edit] Pioneer

He moved his family to Missouri to earn money for an outfit, and then to Mosquito Creek in Iowa, where he raised corn. He bought a team and wagon for his family, and with his mother-in-law and her two small sons, they emigrated in 1949. They settled in Ogden, and he served on the first Weber Stake High Council of the Church and Ogden's first city council.

When polygamy began to be lived openly in 1852, he took a second wife, Sarah Ann Browning Lang, a widow with two daughters.

He was called on a mission to England in 1852, and he presided over the Bristol, Sheffield, Bradford, Lincolnshire, and Scotland conferences of the Church.

On the way home from his mission, he led a wagon train to the Salt Lake Valley in 1856, arriving just before the early winter set in and trapped the Martin and Willie handcart companies in Wyoming.

He returned to Ogden, serving as a bishop there for several years.

He pioneered again in Santa Clara, Utah. This was one of the most difficult settlements because the pioneers were repeatedly washed out by floods of the Virgin River and the Santa Clara River. They also had to deal with extremes of heat and drought. He served as the bishop in Santa Clara for 12 years.

Bunker, on his own initiative but with permission from Brigham Young, moved his large polygamous family 25 miles southwest to Bunkerville after the settlers in Santa Clara had failed to live the communitarian United Order. The residents of Bunkerville, so named by Brigham Young, shared the work and the fruits of their work, with all land being held in common.

[edit] Sources

  • Much of the information in this article was taken from Saints without Halos; The Human Side of Mormon History by Leonard J. Arrington and Davis Bitton, published by Signature Books; Salt Lake City, Utah, 1981.