Clio Logo
Highlights of Temple Square Walking Tour, Salt Lake City
Item 4 of 15
The Mormon Pioneer Memorial Monument is dedicated to the more than 6,000 pioneers who died making the journey to Utah from Illinois and other parts of the world between 1847 and 1869. It is also contains the gravesite of Brigham Young and other early Mormon leaders. The monument is open to the public daily.

Mormon Pioneer Memorial. Depicts a young pioneer couple burying a child while trekking west

Mormon Pioneer Memorial. Depicts a young pioneer couple burying a child while trekking west

The Brigham Young Cemetery portion of the Memorial Monument

The Brigham Young Cemetery portion of the Memorial Monument

President Brigham Young circa 1870

President Brigham Young circa 1870

Some of the plots in the cemetery

Some of the plots in the cemetery

undated photo of Eliza R. Snow

undated photo of Eliza R. Snow

During 1847 and 1869, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from all over the world immigrated to the Salt Lake Valley and environs to escape religious persecution, to join with the main body of the church, and to strengthen the church. The Mormon Pioneer Memorial Monument is dedicated to the more than 6,000 pioneers who died making the journey.

The monument is located in a one-acre cemetery on First Avenue in Salt Lake City. It is known as the Brigham Young Cemetery because Brigham Young, second president of the Church of Jesus Christ is buried there.

Brigham Young was born in 1801 in Vermont. In 1847, he led the migration of members of the church from Illinois to Utah. The first president, Joseph Smith, was martyred in Illinois in 1844. Within a few years after settling in the Salt Lake Valley in the Utah Territory, Young sent members of the Church of Jesus Christ to colonize surrounding areas, including Arizona, Idaho, and Nevada. He was territorial governor from 1850 to 1856. Young died in 1877 and was buried in a corner of his own property that had been designated as a graveyard. The site once overlooked Young’s homestead and the Salt Lake Valley. The Young Men’s and Young Women’s Mutual Improvement Associations, which Young had organized, added the bronze marker in 1938.

Approximately eleven other people are interred there, including six of Brigham Young’s wives and two of his sons. Possibly more of his children were buried there because ten of his children died in infancy or childhood.

Richard W. Young (one of President Young’s descendants) deeded the property to the Church of Jesus Christ in 1927 with the stipulation that the burials not be disturbed. On June 1, 1974, the 173rd anniversary of Young’s birth, N. Eldon Tanner, of the First Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ, dedicated the cemetery.

The cemetery was restored and redesigned in 2000. At that time the statues and two monuments that remember two hymn writers were added. One of the monuments is dedicated to Eliza R. Snow, who wrote many of the church’s hymns. She was also president of the Relief Society for twenty-one years. She was married to Joseph Smith until his death and then married Brigham Young. She is buried in the cemetery. The other monument is dedicated to William Clayton, the author of the hymn “Come, Come Ye Saints.” He is buried in the Salt Lake Cemetery.

Just eleven persons have been buried in the cemetery. These include:

  1. Brigham Young — an American leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and a settler of the Western United States. He was the President of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) from 1847 until his death in 1877, he founded Salt Lake City, and he served as the first governor of the Utah Territory, United States. Young also led the founding of the precursors to the University of Utah and Brigham Young University.
  2. Eliza R. Snow — was sealed to Joseph Smith. Following his death she was sealed to Brigham Young for time. She was one of the most celebrated Latter-day Saint women of the nineteenth century. A renowned poet, she chronicled history, celebrated nature and relationships, and expounded scripture and doctrine.
  3. Mary Ann Angell Young — the sister of Salt Lake Temple architect, Truman O. Angell. Brigham's first wife died before he joined the Church. Mary was his second wife. She bore him 6 children. Brigham's first wife, Miriam Works, bore him 2 children before she died in 1832.
  4. Joseph Angell Young — the first son of Brigham and Mary Angell
  5. Alice Young Clawson — Alice Young Clawson was the 4th child of Brigham and Mary Ann Angell.
  6. Lucy Ann Decker — Lucy Ann Decker was 20 when she became Brigham's first polygamous wife, 14 Jun 1842. She was previously married to and divorced from William Seeley, who was alcoholic and abusive. She always felt her polygamous relationship with Brigham was superior to her monogamous relationship with William. She was well organized and efficiently ran the Lion House. Her younger sister, Clarissa (Clara) Decker, became Brigham's 4th polygamous wife two years later, at age 16, and crossed the plains with him and her mother, Harriet Wheeler Decker
  7. Mary Van Cott Young — wife number 51. She married her first husband, James Cobb, three months before being married to Brigham. Her father, John Van Cott, was well known and respected.

The Brigham Young family cemetery was dedicated by N. Eldon Tanner as a memorial park to the Mormon pioneers on June 1, 1974, which was the 173rd anniversary of Brigham Young’s birth. The park was redesigned and restored in 2000.

The monument is open to the public daily.

Spotlight on historic sites: Brigham Young Cemetery, Memorial", Church News, 1 April 2000. "Cemeteries and Burial Database", history.utah.gov (Utah State History, Utah Department of Heritage and Arts, State of Utah). "Mormon History and Heritage", Utah.com (Utah Office of Tourism). Shill, Aaron (4 April 2009), "Significant sites, artifacts, often go unnoticed", Deseret News Creager, Janine S. (23 October 2008), "Markers of the past", The Salt Lake Tribune "Markers and Monuments Database", history.utah.gov (Utah State History, Utah Department of Heritage and Arts, State of Utah).