I am assuming you mean the move from Illinois to Utah? They didn't have much time to prepare. They tried to sell what they could, but most ended up abandoning what they could not carry. They also packed up stores of food and seeds to plant, as well as gathered weapons, ammunition, clothing, and blankets.
The Mormons traveled west in wagons, with handcarts and later by train.
The Mormons
The Mormons were searching for a place where they could practice their religion in peace and found that place in Utah.
young wanted to move the Mormons far from hostile neighbors
Nobody. The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "Mormon" church) was founded in the US - so the first Mormons were already in the US! :) If you are speaking of the first Mormons to move from another country to the US, rather than the first Mormons ever in the US, the answer is still nobody. The first Mormons to move from another country to the US came from Canada, and were not 'brought' by any specific person, only encouraged to move so that they could be nearer to the main body of the church.
Many of what are now the Western United States were settled by "Mormons." You may be referring to Utah, however, which was the primary destination of the move west.
The Mormons moved out of Kirtland, Ohio because they were being pursecuted and tortured by mobs. There was never a largely Mormon town called Kirkland.
I believe you are asking about Kirtland, Ohio. There was never a large Mormon settlement in any town called "Kirkland". The main body of Mormons began to move to Kirtland in 1831 after a large conversion took place there.
yes because they were looking for food to and land
The Mormons were being persecuted in the Eastern United States, and they decided to move West to form their own settlement, where they would be free to live as they pleased and according to their own religious rules, free from persecution.
The majority of Mormons moved to Utah in 1847 after being kicked out of Ohio, Missouri, and Illinois.
Mormons