U.S. Military steel bayonet purchased from Johnston’s Army by John Smith. Johnston’s Army Case, Carriage House Basement (DUP Photo Collection)
John Carson (DUP Photo Collection)
Ann Hough Carson (DUP Photo Collection)
Abraham Hunsaker (DUP Photo Collection)
Allen Hunsaker (DUP Photo Collection)
John Toone (DUP Photo Collection)
Emma Toone (DUP Photo Collection)
Jemima Toone (DUP Photo Collection)
Leather primer pouch. The single pocket was latched by a brass button. Two leather straps secured it to a soldier’s belt. Johnston’s Army Case, Museum Carriage House Basement. Donor: W.F. Carson (DUP Photo Collection)
John Sampson Hacking, pioneer of 1851, in front of the hole and store he shared with his wife, Jane Clark Hacking, circa 1915 (Photo courtesy of Vicki Chambers)
Camp Floyd (DUP Photo Collection)
Camp Floyd Commissary (DUP Photo Collection)
Valley Tan newspaper masthead (www.utahhumanities.com)
Daniel Spencer (DUP Photo Collection)
Howard Spencer (DUP Photo Collection)
Mercy Ellen Westwood Tuckett (DUP Photo Collection)
Ammunition purchased by John Hindley from Johnston’s Army. Johnston’s Army Case, Carriage House Basement (DUP Photo Collection)
Steel cannon ball brought to Utah in 1858 by Johnston’s Army (DUP Photo Collection)
Philip St. George Cooke (DUP Photo Collection)
Burial site of General Albert Sidney Johnston (www.wikipedia.org)
Stagecoach Inn before restoration (Camp Floyd Stagecoach Inn State Park)
Stagecoach Inn after restoration (www.stateparks.utah.gov)
Holes in two walls of Stagecoach Inn. According to local legend, a guest at the inn was cleaning a gun in his room when it fired, passing through two walls, narrowly missing a guest across the hall who had just laid down in his bed. (Julie Thompson photo)
Rocking chair used by John Carson at the Stagecoach Inn (Julie Thompson photo)
Camp Floyd Cemetery (DUP Photo Collection)
John Sampson Hacking at the Johnston’s Army memorial marker at the Camp Floyd Cemetery on October 19, 1913 (Photo courtesy of Vicki Chambers)