Women's journals of the journey surprisingly note little about child care. What is preserved shows that the women used all their wits to combat the discomforts of the journey. "For sores about the mouth a concoction of sage, borax, alum and sugar." But crying babies must have been a continual sound in the wagons with teething and coughs, earaches, diarrhea - all the ordinary childhood illnesses.
Since the journals were a sort of overland instruction manual for future travelers to follow, you would
expect there to be experiences concerning the care of children included also. "How to travel for five or six months out of doors with small children and babies." Maybe children were part of that oral exchange that women shared along with information about marriage, pregnancy, childbirth and so on. Much of a woman's life under normal circumstances was hidden in the 19th century by elaborate taboos.A good time to share those "womanly things" was at the river on wash day where you would see women carrying kettles, washtubs, and piles of unwashed linen. Usually it was hard soap and cold water. Days of sun, wind, soap and water were hard on women's skin as Rebecca Ketchem says "Camilla and I both burnt our arms and very badly while washing.They were red and swollen and painful as though scalded in boiling water. Our hands are blacker than any farmer's and I do not see that there is any way of preventing it, for everything has to be done in the wind and sun."
These women have certainly opened my eyes about the mystique of the pioneer wagon trains!
Next time...The Generation Gap on the Trail
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Today in Pioneer History: On September 24, 1890, faced with the eminent destruction of their church and way of life, Mormon leaders reluctantly issue the "Mormon Manifesto" in which they command all Latter-day Saints to uphold the anti-polygamy laws of the nation.
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