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Mormon Island Relocation Cemetery - El Dorado Hills, California
The Mormon Island Relocation Cemetery was constructed in 1954 by the Army Corps of Engineers. It was created in order to used as a new site for several cemeteries that would be submerged by Folsom Lake, newly created by the construction of Folsom Dam on the American River. Remains from the Gold Rush mining camps of Mormon Island, Salmon Falls, Negro Hill, Condemned Bar, Carrollton Bar, McDowell’s Hill, Natural Dam and Doton’s Bar cemeteries, plus five individual graves were relocated to relocation cemetery after its construction. In 1996, remains from the Prairie City Cemetery were interred after being discovered during the construction of the Prairie City Road on-ramp to Highway 50.
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"Adna Vradenburg was one of 500 Mormons who in 1846 had enlisted in the U. S. Army to fight against Mexico. They left Council Bluffs, Iowa July 20, 1846 for California. Adna was in Company A. The Batallion reached Santa Fe New Mexico October 9, and Vradenburg was one of 335 to reach San Diego, California January 29, 1847. By this time "Mormon Batallion" the war was essentially over. They were officially discharged at Fort Moore in Los Angeles July 16, 1847. Within days of their discharge, 223 men and one woman set out for the Salt Lake Valley. Most continued up the Central Valley of California in the heat of August, then continued across the Sierra Nevada, following the route of the Donner Party took just months previously. However, many of these men went to work for John Sutter, and played a pivotal role in the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill. Adna apparently was one of the men that stayed in California (although he could have gone ahead to Salt Lake Valley and come back later).
According to a letter from a cousin of his James V. Williams, Adna was killed for his money at the mining camp of Mormon Island, El Dorado County California. He was buried at Mormon Island, (now beneath the waters of Folsom Reservoir on the American River. However, before the reservoir was filled, the graves were moved."
Mormon Island Relocation Cemetery - El Dorado Hills, California
The Mormon Island Relocation Cemetery was constructed in 1954 by the Army Corps of Engineers. It was created in order to used as a new site for several cemeteries that would be submerged by Folsom Lake, newly created by the construction of Folsom Dam on the American River. Remains from the Gold Rush mining camps of Mormon Island, Salmon Falls, Negro Hill, Condemned Bar, Carrollton Bar, McDowell’s Hill, Natural Dam and Doton’s Bar cemeteries, plus five individual graves were relocated to relocation cemetery after its construction. In 1996, remains from the Prairie City Cemetery were interred after being discovered during the construction of the Prairie City Road on-ramp to Highway 50.
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"Adna Vradenburg was one of 500 Mormons who in 1846 had enlisted in the U. S. Army to fight against Mexico. They left Council Bluffs, Iowa July 20, 1846 for California. Adna was in Company A. The Batallion reached Santa Fe New Mexico October 9, and Vradenburg was one of 335 to reach San Diego, California January 29, 1847. By this time "Mormon Batallion" the war was essentially over. They were officially discharged at Fort Moore in Los Angeles July 16, 1847. Within days of their discharge, 223 men and one woman set out for the Salt Lake Valley. Most continued up the Central Valley of California in the heat of August, then continued across the Sierra Nevada, following the route of the Donner Party took just months previously. However, many of these men went to work for John Sutter, and played a pivotal role in the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill. Adna apparently was one of the men that stayed in California (although he could have gone ahead to Salt Lake Valley and come back later).
According to a letter from a cousin of his James V. Williams, Adna was killed for his money at the mining camp of Mormon Island, El Dorado County California. He was buried at Mormon Island, (now beneath the waters of Folsom Reservoir on the American River. However, before the reservoir was filled, the graves were moved."