
Site and Scene
Volume 4, Number 1
Fall 2002
Dedication of Saluda Memorial in Lexington, Missouri
Fred E. Woods
Lexington Saluda commemoration, 9 April 2002, Lexington, Missouri. Left to right: JoAnna Woods, Fred E. Woods (Associate professor, Church History and Doctrine, BYU), William G. Hartley (Associate professor, Joseph Fielding Smith Institute, BYU), Michael L. Hutchings (Secretary, Mormon Historic Sites Foundation), Martha Hutchings, Roger Slusher (Lexington Historian, Wentworth Academy instructor), Brant Neer (Co-chairman of the Saluda 150-year committee), Tom Hayes (Mayor of Lexington). Photograph by Fred E. Woods. |
This Saluda sesquicentennial commemoration was the highlight of the Lexington Steamboat Days which were held April 6-9. On the final day of Lexington’s festivities, the commemoration recalled the tragic event of the explosion of the steamboat Saluda in which many were killed, including 26 Latter-day Saint emigrants who were traveling west on the Missouri River, bound for the Salt Lake Valley. The Mormon Historic Sites Foundation provided a generous contribution to create a beautiful plaque listing the names of all known victims. It was erected at a quaint little park specifically donated for the commemoration, located on the northwest corner of 13th and Franklin Avenues. This historic site is also home to a bell which is from the same era as the bell which was blown from the Saluda. During the ceremony, several descendants of Saluda victims each took turns ringing the bell in remembrance of their lost loved ones.
Local citizens portraying injured Saluda victims for an upcoming KBYU film documentary depicting the disaster. Photograph by Fred E. Woods. |
This moving story will be told on KBYU-TV this coming fall in a historical documentary which is currently being produced by Professor Woods.