Showing posts with label Joseph Chadwick. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joseph Chadwick. Show all posts

Monday, October 2, 2017

Life Sketch of Sarah Goode Marshall




Sarah Goode Marshall
Life Sketch of Sarah Goode Marshall


From Robert Oral and Myrtle Welch Hatch: Their Life Stories, Posterity, and Pioneer Ancestors compiled by Marjorie Eddy and Kathleen Savage Judd, 2004—may be reproduced for family purposes only, not commercial. Some of the following information came from “Life Sketch of Sarah Goode” written by an unsigned granddaughter. In addition, information has been gathered from “Handcart Companies by William G. Hartley, the Millennial Star, and “Mormon Pioneer Overland Travel” information provided on the lds.org website. Thomas and Sarah’s Beginnings Thomas was born on August 28, 1820 to Richard and Margaret Clay Marshall in Linton Hill, Herefordshire, England. We have no other information about his birth or youth. Meanwhile, Sarah Goode, the daughter of George and Selena Mary Ann Holder Goode, was born March 2nd or 4th, 1822 at Abenhall, Gloustershire, England. As a girl, Sarah learned the art of making kid gloves. She always worked hard; she was famous for saying, “Idleness is the devil’s workshop.” She learned to read and write, but had a limited education. She loved to read the Bible and read it often. She often remarked, “There is something more in the Bible than the ministers understand.” Mixing Marriage and Religion Sarah Goode married Thomas Marshall on May 7,1843. Their first daughter, Lovinia, was born March 12, 1844 in Lea, Gloustershire. They then moved to Linton in Herefordshire. Tom and Sarah then had three more of their children: Selina, born February 22, 1846; Tryphena, February 4, 1848; and Louisa, March 12, 1850. During this early part of their married life, they lived comfortably and happily until Sarah became interested in the Restored Gospel. She often had to walk many miles (with her baby in her arms) to hear the Elders preach. Tom opposed this religion bitterly and would sometimes follow her to the meeting to cause a scene and disturbance. When Sarah did manage to attend alone, she was often impressed by the prompting of the spirit: “Sarah, you had better go. Tom is coming.” She would leave the meeting immediately, but often took a severe whipping from Tom before reaching home. In spite of the persecution, she was baptized on August 22, 1851 at Edge Hills by Joel Arkwell and confirmed August 25 by Joel Arkwell (verified in Linton Branch records 1840 1865, film #0087011, item #10). The next year, Sarah gave birth to George Thomas on November 9, 1952. Even with a new child, the family was not at peace. Sarah continued to live under difficult conditions until the summer of 1853. She had wanted to travel to Zion, but she knew that Tom would oppose it. She told her grandchildren later, “I was so anxious to come to Zion that in my prayers I would ask my Heavenly Father to remove the stumbling blocks from my pathway. Little did I think he would remove them by the death of my husband. I was hopeful that Tom would embrace the Gospel with me.” We do not understand all of the circumstances surrounding Tom’s life or his anger against this new religion, but there may have been some unknown struggles that led him to commit suicide on July 10, 1853. His death certificate recorded that he was a laborer and that he died in the Linton district. Tom’s death left Sarah penniless, pregnant, and alone with five small children. Baby Sarah was born January 11, 1854, six months after her father’s death. But Tom’s death did open the way for ten-year-old Lovinia and eight-year-old Selina to be baptized. The girls were baptized on August 13, 1854. “She Shall Go To Zion” Now the way for them to join the saints in Zion was open, but it still seemed utterly impossible. She prayed for help in this great undertaking and worked very hard to save money for their immigration. During the day she worked as “lady’s maid” and at night she made gloves; after two years she had saved enough. Lovinia and Selina, ages 11 and 9 respectively, had to help care for the other children. The night before leaving her native land, Sarah’s relatives and close friends had planned a party to say goodbye. She always lived an honest life and was respected by many. Some of the presiding Elders of the British Mission were invited guests at this party. Unfortunately, the spirit of discouragement spread through the group. Sarah’s friends and family began to gather around her, trying to persuade her to stay, telling her she would lose her children and probably her own life on the way. One of the Elders overheard the discouraging remarks. He arose to his feet and by the power of God, raising his hands above her head he exclaimed: “I will promise Sister Marshall in the name of Israel’s god that she shall go to Zion and shall not lose one of her children by the way.” Journey Across the Sea The following day, Saturday, April 19, 1856, Sarah, her sister Maria Goode, and the children: Lovinia, Selina, Tryphena, Louisa, George, and Sarah boarded the ship S. Curling and sailed from Liverpool, England under the direction of Dan Jones who was returning from a mission to Wales. They were among the 707 British Saints on board. Notes from that voyage recorded: “As soon as the ship was fairly under way, the usual organizations were effected; several severe storms were encountered, and on several occasions the brethren assembled for prayers and curbed the fury of the winds and waves by the power of the holy priesthood. During the passage six children died, and two were born.” But Sarah and her children were fine, just as the Elder had promised. “On the twenty third of May the Samuel Curling was towed to quarantine ground, at Boston. In a few hours the inspectors came on board welcomed by the spontaneous three cheers of seven hundred people, ‘and strange as it may seem,’ writes Elder Dan Jones, ‘called the names of all and passed them in less than one hour and a half without any further complaint than that ‘I was taking all the handsome ladies to Utah.’ “‘The passengers were all remarkably clean, as well as the ship, which commanded the admiration of all. In proof of the latter I would say, that I had made a wager with Captain Curling, upon leaving Liverpool, that the lower decks would be whiter than his cabin floors, and the quarantine doctor decided in my favor.’ “On the twenty fourth of May, President Jones contracted with the railroad officials to take about four hundred of the passengers to Iowa City, for $11.00 per adult over 14 years old, children half price. The kindhearted captain allowed the passengers to remain on board the ship till Monday the 26th of May, when the journey was continued to Iowa City” (Millennial Star, Vol XVIII, pages 283, 411, 426, 542; Deseret News, Vol. VI, page 160). The First Handcart Company By the mid 1850s, LDS Church leaders were looking for less expensive ways to move poor immigrants to Utah. The Perpetual Emigration Fund that loaned passage and transportation money to the needy was depleted while costs for wagons and ox teams were high. Therefore, Brigham Young announced on October 29, 1855 a handcart system by which the church would provide carts to be pulled by hand across the Mormon Trail. Leaving from Iowa City, the distance to Salt Lake was 1, 300 miles. Handcarts, assembled at outfitting points in Iowa City and then later in Florence, resembled carts pulled by porters in large cities. The carts had hickory or oak wagon beds and hickory shafts, side pieces, and axles. Wheels were as far apart as normal wagon wheels. Each cart carried 400 to 500 pounds of foodstuffs, bedding, clothing, and cooking utensils, and needed two able bodied people to pull it. Five people were assigned to each cart. Adults could take only seventeen pounds of baggage, and children ten pounds. Families with small children traveled in covered or family carts which had stronger axles made of iron. Arriving in Iowa, Sarah, age 34; Maria, age 25; and the children, ages 12 down to two did not have the money to purchase a wagon, oxen, supplies, etc. They decided to try this new, less expensive way to travel; they petitioned to join the first handcart company which was being formed. Edmund Ellsworth, a returned missionary from Britain, was designated as captain. Sarah procured a handcart and asked the captain if she could join with his company in crossing the plains. The company was large, and this was the first attempt in crossing the plains with handcarts. Captain Ellsworth answered, “Sister Marshall, it would be unreasonable for you to expect such a thing. You are a widow with six small children. You would only be a hindrance to the company.” Her answer was, “Well, Captain Ellsworth, I’m going and I’ll beat you there.” The Difficult Journey West The first handcart company under Edmund Ellsworth departed from Iowa City in the late afternoon on June 9, 1856 with 280 people and 52 handcarts. The McArthur handcart company was just a few days behind. Joining the first handcart company were the Birmingham Brass Band. They only made four miles their first day, and then had to rest two days while lost cattle was found. The next day, two of the handcarts broke down. This was followed by a windy, rainy crossing of Iowa. On July 8th, they arrived at and were ferried across the Missouri River. At Florence they spent 10 days repairing handcarts. Here, 20 Italian saints joined the company. They left Florence on July 20 with 55 handcarts. Their initial progress had been slow, making seven miles a day. By the time they reached Florence, they were covering 20 miles per day. They crossed the Elkhorn River, the Loup Fork River, and Prairie Creek. The thunderstorms were terrifying and one man was killed by lightning. Once they had to wait an hour for a buffalo herd to cross the road. When the company drank water from a buffalo wallow, diarrhea spread through the camp. Sarah had not realized how tedious and difficult the journey would be. After traveling a few weeks, food had to be rationed. Only two ounces of flour was allowed for each member of the family a day to exist on, and at night they took turns in using the “bake ovens.” Tents were used at night. 20 people were assigned to each tent. One night when Sarah was preparing her rations for the next day’s journey, a young man came to her and said, “Will you please give me something to eat? I am starving to death.” She shared what she had with him. Later she recounted, “I have thanked the Lord many times for sharing my food with this young man, for he was found dead in his bed the next morning and should I not have done so, my conscience would have condemned me the rest of my days.” By mid-August, the handcarts were traveling beside the Platte River. Each night after stopping to camp, Sarah’s first impulse was to look for her children, as they would get scattered among the company during the day’s travel. One night, Sarah was horrified to discover Tryphena, age eight, was missing. Immediately, she reported the situation to Captain Ellsworth and said, “I cannot rest until my child is found.” He asked for volunteers to go back to search. Sarah and some men started out, but after going some distance were forced to return because of hungry wolves circling them. Sarah returned to camp worried and frantic. As they approached, they heard shouts and to their great joy found Tryphena safe in camp. She had walked with an Italian man during the day. He had lain down for a rest. She stayed with him until it got dark when she realized he had died. She began walking and saw a fire, but she did not know if it was a fire from her camp or Indians. She crawled up and to her relief found it was the handcart company. After traveling on the north side of the Platte, they forded it at Fort Laramie on August 26. They had to recross it and the North Platte until they reached Deer Creek where they met five supply wagons that had been sent from the Salt Lake Valley to assist them. On September 3rd they crossed the Platte for one last time. The next day it rained and snow, making it impossible for them to start fires. To make matters worse, some cattle had strayed, so they spent another cold day recovering them. The company reached Devil’s Gate and passed old Fort Seminoe trading post on September 8th. On September 11th, they took the Seminoe Cutoff, a route that tracked south of Rocky Ridge and bypassed four crossings of the Sweetwater River. On September 18, they forded the Green River. An eastbound group of missionaries saw the company descending the ridge to the river. It was an impressive sight, and they got out of their wagons and formed a line for the oncoming pioneers to pass through, cheering them with a Hosanna shout. The members of the handcart company cheered back so loudly that the hills rang with echoes. Three days later, the company camped at Fort Bridger. Even through the mountains where they encountered thunderstorms and cold, the company averaged 20 miles a day. Proving their fitness, they climbed up and over Big Mountain in less than three hours. They camped at the foot of Little Mountain, ready to enter the valley the next day. Sarah and her family were lucky; none of them had died on the trail, but 13 people in the company did die. They endured hardships, hunger, thirst, fatigue, and ceaseless toil, pulling her handcart the entire distance. The First Handcart to Arrive The night before entering the valley, Sarah asked the captain if she, Maria, and the children could start out ahead of the company since this would be their last day of travel. Permission was granted and very early the next morning the little family started out. After traveling some distance from the company, they discovered some men on horseback coming in their direction. As the men approached, they started yelling and cheering for the arrival of the handcart. The little family, however, thought they were Indians. Sarah and Maria gathered the frightened children about them. The horsemen, seeing the family’s mistaken terror, stopped their noise and rode quietly down to them. They were scouts from Salt Lake sent out to meet the handcart Saints, as the settlers in the valley had been anxiously waiting for the arrival of this company. These men assisted Sarah and Maria by taking the children on their horses to the settlement, leaving the two women free to pull the cart. Sarah, Maria, and her children were the first of this company to arrive in Salt Lake; thus her statement to Captain Ellsworth became a prophecy: “I’m going and I’m going to beat you there.” Family tradition has Sarah being the very first handcart pioneer to enter the Salt Lake Valley, arriving on September 26, 1856. When the company reached the valley, a welcoming committee including Brigham Young, the other members of the First Presidency, and the Nauvoo Brass Band greeted them. Shortly afterwards, the second handcart company caught up with them. The First Presidency, the band, and the two handcart companies then paraded down into Salt Lake where they were cheered and joined by the local saints. Captain Ellsworth later stated that though some had questioned the ability of women and children to travel by handcart, the children had walked the whole way, and the women had withstood the rigors of the trail better than men of comparable age. A Second Marriage At first Sarah and her children lived in the Salt Lake Fort. Her next home was in Ogden, where she lived for some time at the home of William Wasleigh, known to her in Britain. Sometime at the end of 1856 or early 1857, Sarah married Joseph Chadwick. Their first son William was born October 6, 1857 in Ogden, Utah. Around this time Tryphena was probably baptized though the first date has been lost. Lovinia married Clinton Bishop in the Endowment House on March 9, 1858. Sarah and Joseph were among the first settlers in Franklin, Idaho and endured some troubles with the Indians in that area. Unfortunately, Sarah’s worst treatment was from her husband. He was very unkind. Their second son Charles Frederick was born August 6, 1860 in Franklin, Idaho. Sarah continued to raise the children in her care. She was a great mother. Her children continued to grow in the Gospel. In 1862, George was baptized. Yet for Sarah, life became unbearable. Robert Gregory reported that she divorced Joseph near the end of 1862. Early in 1863, Selina married Robert Gregory, also of Franklin. Louisa and young Sarah were baptized in October. In November of 1864, Tryphena married Bethuel Hunt. There is another family story about Sarah, but it implies that she was still married to Joseph in 1865. On the night of February 23, 1865, Sarah awoke from her sleep startled with howling and barking of dogs. She went outside and distinctly heard cries of help. Rushing into the house, she went to her husband’s room and asked him to get up, that she had heard someone calling for help; but he told her to go back to bed, that it was only wolves howling. The following morning, teams were sent out to break the snowy road between Franklin and Oxford. They discovered the frozen bodies of John Boice, Jr. and George Barzee—the men Sarah had heard. That May, Louisa married Martin Boice, the dead young man’s brother. This contradicts Robert Gregory’s own account, stating that Sarah divorced Joseph in 1862, but since this story came from Louisa’s family, perhaps there was a reconciliation between Joseph and Sarah. Divorced or not, Sarah eventually moved to Dayton, Idaho where Joseph had a small mercantile business. Young Sarah married Peter Pool in the Endowment House on March 14, 1868. And on December 20, 1870, George married Elvira Van Curen in the Endowment House. Returning home one evening, tired and hungry, Sarah discovered her ax had been stolen. Having great faith, she prayed and asked that she might find the missing tool. A few days later, she and a neighbor were on their way to the river with their water pails when she was prompted to dig at the side of the road. She paid no attention until the third time. She went back. Digging in the earth a few inches, she discovered her ax. She learned some days later that it was Joseph who had taken the ax. Joseph died in 1876. Sarah’s step-children took the merchandise from the little business, and Sarah suffered a big financial loss, left again in strained circumstances. One of her friends said, “Oh Sister Chadwick, why do you let them rob you?” Sarah replied, “The Lord says, ‘Vengeance is mine, I will repay.’” Her friend’s answer was, “Oh Sister Chadwick, the Lord is so slow.” Sarah continued to raise her last two sons and provide for them as best she could. A Widow, Again Sarah worked hard to survive. After the crops were harvested, the farmers let Sarah glean in their fields, so for a few days she and her children gathered the scattered grain to have flour. After working in the fields one day, Sarah returned home to discover Indians had ransacked her home, helping themselves to what they could find they left the house. Sarah found everything was topsy-turvy and most of her provisionshad been taken. Another time, she discovered someone had stolen the buckskins which she kept under her straw tick mattress. She had intended to make her boy a buckskin suit for winter. She was so disappointed that she asked the Lord to bother the thief until he/she could not rest. The next morning Sarah discovered the buckskins stuffed between willows under the shed. Because of the threat from Indians, it was dangerous to travel the roads alone. As a result, one harvest time Sarah had prepared everything to be ready on short notice to take her grain to the grist mill. Early one morning she saw some men with sacks of grain headed in their wagon for the mill. She wanted to follow closely behind them for safety, so she and her children got her wagon ready just as the men were passing her home. But when the men saw her, they assumed that she was trying to get ahead of them, and they began lashing their oxen. In their commotion, a sack of wheat slipped off their wagon. Sarah called to them, but they pretended not to hear her. Finally they came to a hill, but their oxen became stubborn and ran off the road into the willows at the foot of the hill. While the men were trying to get them back on the road, Sarah and her oxen went steadily up the grade. This made the men more upset and two of them ran up the hill with clubs and began to beat their oxen. The man at the flour mill was standing by the mill river (or the mill race) and witnessed the event. When Sarah drove up with her ox-team, he said. “I have seen horse racing, but that is the first ox-team race I ever saw. Those men ought to be ashamed of themselves for treating a widow in such a manner.” Her last two children by Joseph married: William to Lauretta Neely on November 25, 1879, in the Endowment House; and Charles to Luna Nelson on June 2, 1881, in Franklin. George married again to Mary Jane Alder in 1882 in the Salt Lake Temple. Trust in Her Heavenly Father Sarah became a midwife and helped bring many children into the world. Her granddaughter wrote, “She was surrounded with a comforting influence which gave courage and hope to suffering humanity in the hour of distress. She would never allow anybody to say anything about her religion or nationality. She always put her trust in her Heavenly Father, as she was a firm believer in prayer. She suffered many trials, no doubt that accounts for her exceeding faith. Grandmother reached her desired haven here on earth, and no doubt rich blessings await her in eternity. She left a numerous posterity to mourn her departure.” Sarah Goode Marshall Chadwick died in Dayton on April 26, 1904 and was buried in Franklin, Idaho. At the time of her death, the prophecy of that elder in England the night before her departure had remained true. None of her children had died before her, though Lovinia’s death would occur that December. Even after her death, her children did not forget her. On May 8, 1912, Selina, Louisa, George, and Sarah met in the Logan Temple and sealed Sarah and Thomas Marshall. Then they had themselves sealed to their parents along with their deceased sister Lovinia and deceased brothers William and Charles Chadwick. Tryphena was alive at the time, but was sealed to her parents after her death.

Friday, August 11, 2017

A Sketch of Sarah Goode Marshall Chadwick

Sarah Goode Marshall Chadwick

     This sketch is written by Luna Chadwick, daughter-in-law and May Chadwick Jones, grand-daughter.

     She was born March 2, 1822, in Michaeldeen, England.  We have heard her tell about working for the well-to-do families as a girl.  When she was middle-aged, the Mormon elders visited their home.  She was interested in the principles at once, and began to investigate.  She would walk several blocks to get to hear the Mormon elders speak, which caused some disturbance in the home, for her husband was very much opposed to Mormonism.

     She was converted and baptized, and to the best of our knowledge, she came from England to America about two years after her husband's death.

     She walked every step of the way from New York to Salt Lake Valley, in the year of 1856, pushing  a hand-cart all the way.  She felt the responsibility of making the journey with six small children, so went to President Young for advice.  He said, "Sister Marshall, I promise you in the name of the Lord, that you shall make the journey safely, and not lose one of your children by the wayside.  You will live to see them all grow to man and woman-hood".  She lived to see her family all grown and with families of their own.  One kind man would often take some of the children on his hand-cart to lighten her load.  Some days she would have but one pint of flour for herself and six children.

     One incident happened that was rather pathetic.  When camp was made one evening two of the children were missing.  Some men went back to hunt for them and found them sitting down gnawing at some bones they had found.

     When they landed in Salt Lake Valley, Sarah and the older girls worked wherever they could find something to do.  It was there that she met and married Joseph Chadwick.  A son William was born in Slatersville, Utah, October 6, 1857.  They moved to Franklin, Idaho, and there Charles Frederick was born in the year 1860, on the 6th day of August. They had many experiences with the Indians while there.  Some were friendly, but the greater part were hostile, because they felt that their land was being taken from them.

    We have heard Sarah tell that when they would hear the Indians make their war whoops, she would send the larger children with the smaller ones to the school house in the middle of the Fort for protection, a place the women and children often went when they saw approaching danger, while the men were on guard.  Many times of an evening the Indians would sneak up and peek in through the windows.  They would be so heavily painted, it would give them a big scare.  Not a great deal of harm was done, only the stealing of their horses and oxen.

     In about the year 1868, the family moved to Dayton, Idaho.  They built two log rooms, and had a little store in the north room.  They carried groceries, meats, and supplies for the freighters and travelers.  They raised cattle and some grain.

     In the year 1876, her husband caught a severe cold and died in less than a week.

     The Marshall children were grown and married by this time, which left Sarah and the two boys, Will and Fred to make their living the best they could.  They kept on with the little store and kept her cows and made butter to sell. 

     Fred did freighting from Corrinne to Montana when only 17 years old.

     Sarah was a staunch Latter Day Saint, and remained so until her death.  We remember her asking for the sacrament to be brought to her home after a sick spell, saying it always gave her strength.  She lived quite close to our home and we have known her to be called out as much as four times in one night for sickness.  She was a good mid-wife and helped bring dozens of babies into the world. 

     She was exceptionally good to the poor.  One of her pet sayings was, "I never gives a happle where there's a horchard" and her every day life proved that that was her actual feeling.  She never failed to have some little thing, such as licorice, peppermints or a handful of nuts or raisins in the house to give to her grand-children as well as all other children.

     She had a very pleasing disposition, always trying to make peace in place of confusion.  She was a good house-keeper and cook.  She could beat the world making bread and did never waste food or anything else.  She would be imposed upon, rather than take advantage of others, and held to the golden rule, "do to others as you would have them do unto you".

     We don't know how large a family there was of them, but told of her brother Fred who roamed a great deal.  He went to Australia, as he was a miner, and went where-ever  he thought there might be some prospecting to be done.

     It was while he was in Canada that he advertised for his sister, Sarah.  Her daughter, Scelena [sic]saw it in the paper and she brought the clipping from the paper to her mother.  Then Fred who lived near his mother, took care of her business answered the advertisement.  Sarah and Fred Goode corresponded for some length of time.

     She believed from the first that he was her brother, but wanted to prove it beyond a doubt.  These letters were a test.  She asked many questions of their childhood days, and of certain incidents that happened while she lived in England.  They had been parted 45 years, and when she was convinced, she invited him to her home in Dayton, Idaho.  He came and partook of her hospitality as long as she lived, which was three or four years.

     Sarah was no hand to put on a big show.  We loved her for what she really was.  Her health was unusually good.  She looked after her garden, her cow and chickens up to the last.  We well remember of one sick spell she had when her great faith and the administration of the elders restored her to health.  Her children all but the two oldest were with her when she died on the 23rd of April 1904, and was buried in Franklin.

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Georgia Drake Publishers Note:  It is known that Brigham Young was in Salt Lake City, Utah when Sarah and her children were preparing to come to America.  However, there were other LDS Missionaries during the time Sarah would have been considering the journey to America with the last name Young in England.  It is apparent Sarah would not be referring to President Brigham Young. 

Sarah's brother Fred referred to in this history would be her younger brother George Frederick Goode born in 1835.  Out of the fourteen children of George and Selena Goode, apparently four or five left England and came to America.  Patience arrived in Salt Lake with her husband John Herbert the same year as Sarah and Mariah though they left England a year earlier.  Patience's history mentions a brother that traveled with them and eventually went to the LDS colonies in Mexico.  She does not mention a name.  There are two men in this family whose death place is not indicated, George Frederick and an older brother Samuel Goode.  I have had no luck as yet verifying a sibling going to the Mexico colonies. 

This traveling group from England rode by train to Iowa City.  Here they were outfitted with handcarts and began their trek to Salt Lake City by foot.


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Transcribed as written by Luna Chadwick, wife of Charles Frederick Chadwick (taken from her original personal papers) and a grand-daughter of Joseph Chadwick, May Chadwick Jones. 


Friday, December 6, 2013

Charles Frederick Chadwick

Charles Frederick Chadwick

A Sketch by his Daughter, May
 
Charles Frederick Chadwick was born August 6, 1860, at Franklin, Cache County, Idaho.  He was the son of Joseph and Sarah Goode Chadwick.  He moved, with his parents, and brother, Will, to Dayton, Idaho, when he was about 8 years old.
 
He attended school at Oxford, about 11 miles north of Dayton.  He stayed with his sister, Louise, while in school. As a boy, he was husky, and had good health.  His father died when he was about 16.
 
At 17 years of age, he did freighting from Corrine, Utah to Helena, Montana.  It was while freighting, that he bought 2 wool blankets for his mother.  When he was 40 years old, his mother gave him one of the blankets.  It is a relic in the family now.
 
Father had seen and admired my mother, Luna Nelson, when he attended school at Oxford and Franklin, because of her studiousness, and said he would make her his wife some day.  When the trustees at Dayton were looking for a teacher, father suggested h knew where one lived and went to Riverdale with Calvin Boice, a brother-in-law, to see her about teaching school.  Mother had not met father until then.  She went to Dayton with them, boarded at the home of Sarah Pool Callen, and commenced teaching on December 28, 1880.  Father, although older than she, went to her school.  It was there that the romance began and June 2, 1881, they were married in the Endowment House.

Luna Nelson Chadwick
 
They lived with father's mother, Sarah Chadwick, for about 4 months.  Then Father bought a house and moved to the central part of Dayton, not far from Five Mile Creek.  Their little home was made happy when their first-born, Joseph William was born, April 29, 1882.
 
Grandma lived about 500 yards from them.  Both families used the same corral.  They were busy improving the place by planting lawn, a nice variety of fruit trees, also trees for shade.
 
Father presided over the Mutual Improvement Association the winter of 1881.  He was president until he was called on a mission to the North Western States in 1887.  Their daughter, May, was born July 14, 1884.
 
Father was called to administer to the sick a great deal.  He was always ready to go.
 
When he went on his mission, he left mother with three babies, Joseph, myself, and Charles, who was born July 24, 1886.  We took Father to Franklin in the wagon, to catch the train for his mission.  As the freight train pulled away, father stood in the door, waving good-by.  I jumped up and down, screaming for him to come to me.
 
Mother carried the big responsibility of the home, now that Father was gone.  There were crops to manage, cows to milk, horses and pigs to care for, besides we three children and a school teacher, Miss Ida Wood, who boarded with us.  Mother was a wonderful person and did her jobs nobly and well.

Father was away 21 months, arriving home, December 19, 1888.  He farmed the next summer.  He bought some land on Birch Creek, east by Bear River and it had to be proved upon.  He moved the family there until the 1st of November, 1889.  Then we moved back with Father's mother until after George was born, November 22, 1889.

In the Spring, we all went back to Birch Creek.  Father took a contract to haul rock for the Rail Road track that was being built through Dayton.

Our new home was under construction, the land being entered under the "Timber Act".  He planted thousands of trees and made a beautiful grove.  Many fine entertainments were held there when the trees grew large enough.  Our new house consisted of three rooms.  Two more were added later.  Vera was born at the new home, September 8, 1892.

When the call was made by the church for land to be donated to help the mission cause, Father donated 20 acres of his choicest land.  A part of it was used for the Dayton cemetery.  The rest is still used for a mission farm (1958).  Later, Father gave 5 acres where a new structure is now being built for the Saints to meet.

If there was any one thing Father liked best it was buying and selling cattle.  His judgment was very good, too.  At one time, he took several car loads of cattle to Canada for sale.

After crops were harvested, the next big job was to get the winter wood.  It was eight or ten miles through the "narrows" into the mountains.  It wasn't unusual for Father to bring the winter meat home too, as deer were very plentiful.  Mother was an expert in caring for the meat.  It was delicious dried.

The long winter evenings were spent reading, knitting, and romping.  I shall always remember the many happy evenings we spent romping with father; we kids would all pile on him.  He would laugh so hard, we could get the best of him.

Father was devoted to mother and always looked after her financial affairs.

The summers were spent raising hay and grain, and the winters feeding and caring for the cattle.

Father and mother went out among the sick a great deal.  I can remember father being called out at all hours of the night to administer to the sick.

Our home was always open and a welcome given to missionaries and people travelling through the country.  The family was always taught to work and save.  Donations were always given freely.  Father served as Bishop's counselor for a long time.

Sorrow came to the family when Joseph, the oldest, died October 17, 1901.  Grandmother, father's mother, died April 23, 1904.  It was after her death that Father got the rambling fever and in the spring of 1905, came out in the Snake River Valley looking for a new location.

He liked the country, new the Minidoka Project, and moved the family out in June of 1905.  He bought a relinquishment of 40 acres in Heyburn, Idaho.  He camped by the Snake River for two weeks, then went to Albion, where he and George put hay up for a Mr. Hayden.

George and Vera went to the State Normal school at Albion.  I should have been with them but got the "marry bug", went to the Logan Temple, and was married to Charles Jones.

The folks moved back to Heyburn, February 7, 1906, on the new homestead.  The sage brush cleared off the land, a log house and barn were built, and a large orchard planted.

Father was the Superintendent of the Sunday School in Heyburn until his death.  He served as a home missionary one winter and was always interested in Church and Civic affairs.

Father was an average-sized man, with black hair, blue eyes, and weighed about 160 pounds.  He had rather a serious disposition, but could enjoy fun with the crowd.

He died, January 25, 1910, at his daughter, May's home, in Rupert, Idaho, of typhoid fever.  We took him to Dayton, Idaho for burial.

C. Frederick Chadwick Memorial
1860-1910  Dayton, Franklin, Idaho
 

____________________________
Source:  Family History Document
Ancestry.com

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Sketch of the Life of Joseph Chadwick

Joseph Chadwick Monument
Franklin City Cemetery, Franklin Idaho

SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF JOSEPH CHADWICK


Information by Mary Ann Chadwick Hull, daughter
Compiled by Gretta Merrill, great granddaughter
History at Genealogical Library in Salt Lake City, Utah


Joseph Chadwick, is the son of William and Molly (perhaps Shaw), (Shaws were wealthy.) He was born 9th of May 1809, Yorkshire Co., perhaps came to Oldham, Lan. when quite a young man to work in the Mines at Oldham.

It was here he met Mary Whitehead, and made her his wife, in the year of 1830. Joseph Chadwick, was 6 foot five inches, his eyes and hair were very dark brown. He was of slender build, and weighed about 180 lbs. in young manhood. Before he went into the coal mines to work he was an apprentice, in a rope factory in Oldham.

Oldham from Glodwick by James Howe Carse (1831),
depicts the early skyline and industrial activities of Oldham.

He was very kind and generous to his children, also to those in need. He was all business, a very hard worker, good provider; his health was always very good.

It was in Oldham, Lan. they first heard the Gospel through Wilford Woodruff. He with his wife and older children joined the L.D. S. Church, so in the year 1849, this family consisting of Father, Mother, Sons, Benjamin and James and Daughters, Mary Ann and Sarah, started for America, or Utah, their destination. (They buried four or five children in Oldham, England.)

They came over on a Sailing Ship, named "Samuel Curling". They were nine weeks on the water. The family landed in New Mines, Pennsylvania's coal mines. He and his boys worked for 6 years. Having heard of the wonderful gold mines of California, he took his eldest son Ben and started for the Pacific coast. They traveled by a Sail Boat down the Atlantic Ocean to Central America, and then walked overland to the Pacific Ocean, then on up to California in a sailing boat. They did Mining in a town called Hangtown, California. (Where a life was not considered amongst the Miners, if caught trying to jump another’s Mining Claim, or being dishonest. Miners Law.)

They were in California 2 1/2 years when they left for Utah. Before leaving Pennsylvania they had decided to all meet in Utah in 2 1/2 years, if nothing transpired to prevent this arrangement, as letters in those days were almost unheard of He had left with the Church Authorities in Minersville, Pennsylvania, plenty of money to bring the rest of the family to Utah, at the appointed time.

He and his son, Benjamin, landed in Utah, just in time to help keep the Johnson Army back. He moved south with the Saints and when he came back he bought thirty acres of land in the Ogden business district on Main Street. It extended North and West of where "Wrights" store now stands. He also homesteaded on Mill Creek, west of Ogden; He built a two room house on this land.

About this time Mrs. Sarah Goode Marshall came to Ogden with six little children, she was desirous of a home for them and called on Joseph supposed to get work. They were married and two sons, William and Fredrick were born to them.
Sarah Goode Marshall

After he found out his wife was still alive and was coming to Utah, he left Mrs. Marshall, this home, and came up into Cache Valley to establish a new home for his family. He was one of the first pioneers to Idaho, landing in Franklin, April 16th, 1860 in company with the McCans, Foster and others. In Franklin he built himself a dugout and also a Log house, he suffered with the rest of the pioneers for food. The gold dust he had with him did not help, as there was not any food to buy. He gave his means freely to help emigrants, the poor from England, at one time he gave two cows; he was generous always to those in need.

He also used his right and was the first person to settle on land at Dayton, Idaho. While living at Dayton he opened up a store, he carried groceries, etc., also meats in cold weather. This store was for the benefit of the few scattered Settlers and Freighters going thru this part.

Dayton Idaho Historical Marker

He and his son James, were out trying to collect from people who was owing him money, he was preparing to make his will and come to live with his daughter at (Now) Whitney, when he took suddenly ill and died on the 10th of April, 1876. The funeral services were held at Franklin where he is buried by the side of his wife, Mary, at the Franklin cemetery.

Mary A. Hull says in 1865 her Father bought Factory for Garments for himself and Mother; to go to Salt Lake and have their endowments, but circumstances came up that they did not go. After they were both dead then we had their endowments and all we children were sealed to them.

When Father took suddenly ill and died, under very questionable circumstances on the 10th of April, 1876, James C. was at Conference at Salt Lake City. We came in from our farm to Franklin, telegraphed to him and he came by way of Slatersville and brought Ben and Adam home with him. Adam was down to Slatersville, visiting Ben.

________________________________
Source:  
Genealogical Library in Salt Lake City, Utah

Joseph Chadwick - Daughters of Utah Pioneers

Joseph Chadwick Monument
Franklin City Cemetery Franklin Idaho
More about Joseph Chadwick.


Sarah Marshall, daughter of Sarah Goode Marshall Chadwick, was only 18 months old when she came across the plains with her mother and siblings. In a history written for her by her daughter, Ida Callan, she says this about Joseph Chadwick, "When Sarah was young in years her mother married a man by the name of Joseph Chadwick. He was a very fine man but very stern and at an early age the children were forced to earn their own living. They were not allowed to come home to visit--so grandmother used to sneak notes to them when she wanted to let them know of something that was of importance. The going was rough for my mother (Sarah Marshall), so at the early age of 14, that she might have a home, she married a wonderful man by the name of John Peter Poole. He died and she married Stephen Callan in 1888."

An older child, Selena, says of Joseph Chadwick, "Mrs. Marshall married Joseph Chadwick in 1857. Mr. Chadwick didn't prove to be a good husband to Selena's mother. She obtained a divorce in 1860. That spring she left Ogden and took her family to Cache Valley, arriving in Franklin, Idaho, 14 April 1860, where she made her home. Selena worked very hard to help her mother get a home; they planted garden and small crops. She went to the canyon for wood, also plowed with an ox team.'' Selena married Robert Gregory Jan. 2, 1863, when she was 18 years old. They were quiet about their marriage and lived a short time with Selena's mother, then made a home out in Franklin Fort.

Evidently Joseph Chadwick had some troubled times. His first wife Mary 'Whitehead came to Utah Aug 31, 1860. Joseph's and Sarah's son, Charles Frederick, was only about three weeks old. 'In a story about Mary Whitehead written by her daughter, it says, "she went to Lehi and took her nephew William Whitehead to join the family and then (moved to mill Creek (Slaterville) to the Joseph Chadwick farm. Joseph Chadwick wanted to leave his second wife and go back to Mary but she was too independent and wouldn't have him. She went to Franklin, Idaho in the fall of 1860. She did washings and sewings for people there." Mary Whitehead died in 1864 at the age of 62. Joseph Chadwick died suddenly in 1876 and was buried next to her in the Franklin Cemetery. Sarah Goode Marshall Chadwick lived in the Chadwick home in Dayton until her death in 1904. She was also buried in the Franklin Cemetery. The story didn't say how close she was buried to her husband and his first wife.

Editor's note:  Sarah is buried on the far southern end of the cemetery, and Joseph and Mary are buried on the northern end.

*******************************
Joseph Chadwick - Daughters of Utah Pioneers

TITLE PAGE
PIONEER NAME Joseph Chadwick
BIRTH DATE AND PLACE 9 May 1809 Yorkshire, England
DEATH DATE AND PLACE 7 Apr 1876 Dayton, Idaho
FATHER William Chadwick
MOTHER Molly Shaw

WHO MARRIED AND DATE

Sarah Goode Marshall Chadwick
Mary Ann Whitehead

YEAR ARRIVED IN UTAH about 1856
NAME OF COMPANY no company. Came from California
WHO WROTE HISTORY AND DATE Theda Judd
WHO SUBMITTED HISTORY AND DATE Theda Judd
ADDRESS 82 W. 600 N. Farmington, Utah 84025
CAMP NAME Helen Mar miller
COMPANY NAME Davis/Farmington
CAMP HISTORIAN Theda Judd
ADDRESS
COMPANY HISTORIAN Wanda Barker
ADDRESS 68 W. 950 N. Farmington, Utah
SOURCE OF INFORMATION AND PAGE NUMBERS:

Histories by daughter (in-law), Tuna Chadwick and granddaughter May C. Jones.

Histories by daughters of first wife, Mary Ann Whitehead, and by daughters, of second wife, Sarah Goode Marshall Chadwick.

I hereby give this history to the National Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers with the understanding that:

1. The Daughters of Utah Pioneers has the right to edit and publish it.
2. If publication is not indicated, it shall become a part of the archives to perfect the record of the Utah pioneers.
3. The Daughters of Utah Pioneers has the right to reproduce this history for the benefit of its members, and descendants of the pioneer.


JOSEPH CHADWICK

Joseph Chadwick was born May 9, 1809 in Yorkshire, England, and died April 7, 1876 at Dayton, Idaho. He was buried in the Franklin, Idaho cemetery.

As a boy he worked as an apprentice in a rope factory and later in the coal mines in England.

He joined the Latter Day Saints Church in 1841 and with his parents and family, sailed for America on the ship "Samuel Curling". They were on the water nine weeks.

He had married Mary Whitehead in England and they had lived in Oldham, Lancashire, England. Nine children were born to them in Oldham, and two more were born in New Mines, Pa., where Joseph first settled and worked for 2½ years.

Evidently he and his wife had some trouble and they separated before he came west. He went to California in 1854 and stayed about three years. His wife stayed in Pennsylvania. He brought one son, Benjamin with him. They somehow ended up in Franklin, Idaho (which was then thought to be in Utah), where he met and married Sarah Goode Marshall.

The writer of Sarah Goode Chadwick's biography says, "Here she met and married Joseph Chadwick, a widower with several children by his first wife. He was a miner and prospector who hailed from the gold fields of California. He also did some farming. Two sons were born to Sarah and Joseph. They were William M. and Charles Fredrick Chadwick. Sarah endured many hardships as Mr. Chadwick was far from being a kind husband to her."

Luna Chadwick, wife of Charles Fredrick, and May Chadwick Jones, her daughter, have this to say about Joseph Chadwick, "He was an average sized man, strong and healthy; was a hard worker and good provider, always thoughtful and kind to his family and the needy."

Mary Whitehead Chadwick, his first wife, died in Franklin, Idaho, on 20 March 1874. It is not clear from the sources I am using when she left Pennsylvania. Four children died when very young (Abraham, Abraham, William Joseph, Sarah), and three more when about 10 (Elizabeth) or 12 (Eliza) years old. Two others died at ages 42 (Adam) and 57 (James). Only one, Benjamin, lived to the ripe old age of 80. Benjamin married Sarah Walker in 1860. Mary Ann lived to be 93. She married Robert Hull.

Luna Chadwick and May Jones, in their sketch of the life of Joseph Chadwick, go on to say, "On his return from California, cat he met and married a widow, Sarah Goode Marshall, who had six children. The hand cart company with which Sarah Goode Marshall came across the plains in 1856 was the Captain Ellsworth Company. (Ellsworth Handcart Company, September 26, 1856)

On October 6, 1857, a son was born to them, William. They were among the first pioneers arriving in Franklin, Idaho in 1860. On August 6, 1860, Charles Fredrick, husband of Luna Nelson and father of May Jones, was born.

The pioneers had many hardships to encounter. Food was scarce and no money to buy with. The Indians gave them considerable trouble, raiding the homes, scaring the women and children, as well as stealing the horses and cattle.

Joseph always gave freely of his scanty means to help the Emigrants coming west, and to help those in need.

In about the year 1868, Joseph and his wife and two boys, as well as some of the stepchildren, went to Dayton, Idaho, (which was first called Chadville), where he used his homestead right on a piece of land of 160 acres. There he built a two-roomed log house near Five-Mile-Creek, using the north room for a little store.

He carried groceries, meats, and supplies for travelers and freighters. He raised some grain and cut considerable wild hay to feed the cattle he raised. Deer was plentiful and they had all the venison they wanted. They were getting along nicely, when Joseph caught a severe cold and died in less than a week with pneumonia. This was in the year 1876. The Marshall children were grown and married by this time, which left Sarah and the two boys, Will and Fred, to make their living the best they could. They kept on with the little store and kept cows and made butter to sell. She lived until 23 April 1904 and was buried in the Franklin Cemetery. The story of Sarah Goode Chadwick is in the DUP files. (Daughters Of Utah Pioneers)

Further research in the DUP files resulted in finding a story of Mary Whitehead, first wife of Joseph Chadwick, which says that she stayed in New Mines, Pa. while Joseph and his oldest living son, Benjamin went to California to earn money to build a home in Utah. The author of this story says "He gave her money to pay her expenses to Utah and they agreed to meet there in two and a half years. After he left she did washings for the miners and took in boarders to keep herself and children. In 1857 she and her three children started for Utah, by way of New York. When they arrived they found there was no emigrants coming west for a month, so they returned to New Mines and took up their labors again as they had no money. She had loaned some money to the presiding elder and he had failed to return it, thus leaving her with nothing to pay her expenses to Utah.

In a month's time she tried to collect the money left by her husband from Mr. Phroux. Mr. Phroux was advised by Pres. John Taylor (Who was visiting there) to sell all he had and take the Chadwick family along with his own and come to the valleys of the mountains. He did not heed the counsel given him and as a result he suffered greatly.

Mary had written to California and Utah but had received no word from her husband, there being no regular mail. The husband and son had come to Salt Lake and had been misinformed that Mary had died. Benjamin went to work at Camp Floyd near Salt Lake where he met a young man from Pennsylvania who knew his mother and he told Benjamin she was living. Benjamin went East at once to find her. It was a happy meeting, after five years, but also a sad one as he had to tell her that his father had married a widow named Sarah Marshall." The family, after many hardships finally made it to Utah in 1860, with the Robinson Handcart Company.

The writer of Mary's story also says, "After her arrival in Salt Lake on August 31, 1860, she went to Lehi and took her nephew William Whitehead to join the family and then moved to Mill Creek to the Joseph Chadwick's farm." It is not clear if this is Mill Creek near Salt Lake or near Ogden. Benjamin Chadwick lived in Slaterville, near Mill Creek in Ogden, so I presume it was near Ogden. Evidently Joseph and Sarah had just moved to Franklin, Idaho about this time. The writer of Mary's story goes on to say, "Joseph Chadwick wanted to leave his second wife and go back to Mary but she was too independent and wouldn't have him. She went to Franklin in the fall of 1860, where she did washings and sewing for the people there. At the time of her death she was living with her daughter, Mary Ann Hull. She died 20 March 1874 at the age of 62 and was buried in Franklin, Idaho.

There is another discrepancy in the story by Luna and May Chadwick. They said that Joseph Chadwick's family came to America on the ship "Samuel Curling.” The name of the ship was not mentioned in any of Benjamin's or Mary's stories. It was said in Sarah Goode Chadwick's story that she and her children came on the ship "Samuel Curling."

The story of Benjamin Chadwick says that he (and I suppose his father, Joseph) went by sail boat down the Atlantic coast to Panama and then walked overland to the Pacific Ocean, where I presume they got another boat to California. The story of Benjamin Chadwick is in the DUP files and is an exciting and interesting bit of history concerning the Indian troubles in and around Franklin, Idaho.

A family group sheet on file in the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, lists a Mary Duce as another wife of Joseph Chadwick. Not all the sheets on file have her listed. Joseph's granddaughter, daughter of Charles Frederick Chadwick, said, "There was talk that Grandpa was a Polygamist but he seemed to just stay with Grandma (Sarah Goode Marshall Chadwick) and live with just her." Since he died in 1876 and Vera was not born until 1890 she probably didn't know much about the situation.

Family group sheets also reveal that William and Frederick Chadwick were sealed to Sarah's first husband, Thomas Marshall, along with some Marshall children 8 May 1912. The children of Joseph Chadwick and Mary Whitehead were sealed to them 22 Jan 1896. They were sealed to each other in the Logan temple 11 Mar 1891. Since all this was accomplished long after the deaths of all concerned, it is hard to say what their wishes really were.

Theda W. Judd
Wife of Wm. R. Judd, Jr.,
Son of Vera Chadwick Judd,
Daughter of Luna and Charles Frederick Chadwick.

This copy, made available through the courtesy of the International Society DAUGHTERS OF UTAH PIONEERS, may not be reproduced for monetary gain.

(Editor's Note:  There are errors in this history but posted due to other information it contains that is helpful.)


Mary Whitehead Chadwick

Mary Whitehead Chadwick, together with her family, came to Franklin, Idaho in the fall of 1860. Being always very thrifty, she did washing and sewing for the people there. At the time of her death, she lived with her daughter, Mrs. Robert M. Hull. Two days before she died she sang a hymn "When I Read my Title Clear”. Before she died, she told those around her that if they would keep her sister away and if they would all be quiet, at 9 o'clock the next morning she would pass away, which she did, 20 March 1874.`

The Whitehead Family organization was named in honor of this woman and her sister Martha, they being the only members of the family to join the church. It is known as the Mary and Martha Whitehead Organization, and includes all of their descendants which number 200 in 1929.

Source: Ancestry.com

_____________________________________
Sources:
Ancestry.com
International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers

Monday, June 13, 2011

Dauean Louisa Marshall Boyce (Boice)


Louisa Marshall Boyce


Louisa Marshall Boyce/Boice
Lovell, Wyoming

Transcription of History

Louesa Marshall Boice was born at Linton Hill Herforeshire England 12 March 1850.   She was the fourth child of Thomas Marshall and Sarah Goode when she was six years of age she came to America with her widowed mother four sisters and a brother.

At that tender age she walked most of the way across the plains, as her mother was a member of the first handcart company to cross the plains.  The last day of the journey a some horseman from Salt Lake met Grandmother with her little group treaking along pulling their handcart which contained all their earthly possessions, they took up the children on their horses and rode back to Salt Lake.

Louesa had a vivid recollection of a woman holding her on her lap and looking at her arms through the rays of the bright sun, the woman sobbed bitterly when she saw the skin hanging loosely oner the bone.

Her first home was in Ogden Utah.  Her youthful days was spent in the fields gleaning the heads of grain after the harvesting was done.  She truly earned her bread by the sweat of her brow.


"The Gleaners"

Early in life she learned how to manipulate the spinning wheel and she gathered the wool from sage brush and wire fences where the sheep had been feeding, she gathered bones and carcasses, soaked ashes in water, and boiled the bones in the water which she poured off the aches and thus she made soap with which to wash the wool, clothing, etc.

After carding the wool she spun it into yarn and knit stockings for herself and other members of the family.  In fact, she became expert in knitting.  During the world war she won a souvenier for badge for knitting 50 pair sox and a certificate from President Wilson.

She was deprived of schooling having to work hard to help support the members of the family.

Her mother married William Chadwick but his presence in the family only heaped greater hardship on the children, as he compelled them to do manual labor with him in the fields during the summer and when winter came he would not allow the children to stay home, but turned them out to ind a home where elsewhere.  When spring came he forced them to come back only to work hard all summer only to be turned away again when winter came.

Later the family moved to Franklin Idaho.  [High Creek-] When Louisa was fourteen years of age she was driving a yoke of Oxen hitched to a wagon and was on her way to the grist mill with several sacks of wheat which was to be groung up into flour.

As the oxen approached a pole bridge, they beame stupid and Louesa had much difficulty trying to get them to cross ; in so doing, two of the wheels missed the bridge and she found herslef stranded in the ditch.

In the distance, not far away, three men had witnessed the scene and one of them came to her resuce.  In a short time he had the wagon out of the ditch and Louesa was on her way rejoicing.   She made her home with T. H. [Tryphena Hunt?] 

Louesa said that he was the finest type of young manhood she had ever met little did she realize at that time hew as to be her companion for life.

The next spring Louisa was on her way to Montana where she expected to make her home with her sister Tryphena Hunt.  Her first night was spent at Oxford Idaho.  Before starting out the next morning, she found it necessary to do some repair work on her clothing.  Being bashful and shy she hid herself in ath rear of the wagon and was busily engaged darning her stockings when a stranger stepped up and found her in this embarrassing position. 

He went to one of his sons and told him that any young woman who could repair her clothing and darn stockings as this one could would make a good companion for a young man.

Martin Calvin took the hint.  Louesa discontinued her journey to Montana Market Lake and they were married 7 May 1865, being the first couple to be married in Oxford.  There were only two log houses in the settlement at that time.  How happy they must have been as they worked together weaving willows into a shanty which served as their first home.  A wagon box turned upside down was used as a bedstead upon which they slept.  I have often wondered how they managed, living in a willow house when the rains descended.

Louisa was in her fifteenth year and weighed ninety pounds at the time of her marriage.


Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Joseph Chadwick


Joseph Chadwick  Dayton, Utah
 Name: Joseph Chadwick

Birth Date: 09 May 1809
Birth Place: Millen or Cava, Yorkshire, England
Parents: William and Molly Shaw Chadwick
Death Date: 10 Apr 1876
Death Place: Dayton, Idaho. Bur. Franklin, Idaho
Arrival: abt 1857 from California gold fields
Spouse: Mary Whitehead
Marriage Date: 19 Nov 1832
Marriage Place: England
Spouse's Birth Date: 20 Mar 1812
Spouse's Birth Place: England
Spouse's Death Date: 26 Mar 1874
Spouse's Death Place: Franklin, Idaho

Married 2nd: Sarah Goode (widow Marshall ) Date: 1857 , Ogden, Utah Born: 4 Mar 1822 , Mitcheldean, Gloucester, England Died: 24 Apr 1904 , Dayton, Idaho Joseph was apprenticed in a rope factory as a boy and later worked in the coal mines in England . He met and married Mary Whitehead . Nine children were born to them while they lived in England . Six of them died young. The family joined the Church in 1841 . They saved so they were able to come to America about 1849 . For almost three years they lived in Minersville (New Mines), Pennsylvania , where Joseph worked in the coal mines to get enough money to go to the Valley. While there, two more children were born to them. One died as an infant. Joseph and his oldest son, Benjamin , went west to California by way of the Isthmus of Panama to work in the gold fields. His wife agreed to meet in Utah in two and a half years. Apparently she lost the money or was defrauded out of it and was unable to make the long trip. She had no way to let Joseph know so when he got to the valley, he was probably told that his wife had died. Joseph met Sarah Goode Marshall in Ogden, Utah . She was a widow with two boys. They married and had two more boys. In 1860 , son Benjamin found out that his mother was still alive so he went to Pennsylvania to get her and the three children. When she got to the valley and found Joseph had married, even though polygamy was practiced, she felt she could not live that way. Joseph and Sarah , and Benjamin and his mother, moved to Franklin, Idaho where Mary died in 1874 . Joseph took his family and moved to Dayton, Idaho , where he raised grain and cattle. He caught cold and died suddenly. Children of 1st wife: William , b. 1832 , Oldham, England . D. 1836 . Child. Elizabeth , b. abt 1833 , Oldham, England . D. 1840-50 . Abraham , b. 1834 , Oldham, England . D. 1846 . Eliza , b. 1835/6 , Oldham, England . D. 29 Oct 1849 . Benjamin , b. 26 Mar 1837 , Saddleworth, England . Md. 31 Aug 1860 , Sarah Walker . D. 29 Mar 1917 , Slaterville, Utah . William , b. 1840 , Oldham, England . D. 1845 . Child. James , b. 23 Jun/Jul 1840-42 , Saddleworth, England . Md. 20 Jan 1866 , Mary Catherine Candland . D. 5 Mar 1899 , Preston, Idaho . Mary Ann , b. 22 Jan 1844 , Oldham, England . Md. 1 Jun 1863 , Robert McClellan Hull . D. 3 Oct 1937 , Logan, Utah . Sarah , b. 1847 , Oldham, England . D. 1859/61 . Abraham , b. 1849 , Minersville, Pennsylvania . D. 1849 . Child. Adam , b. 10 Aug 1853 , Minersville, Pennsylvania . Md. 12 Dec 1882 , Eliza Jane Fluitt . D. 9 Apr 1895 , Logan, Utah . Children of 2nd wife: William , b. 6 Oct 1857 , Ogden, Utah . Md. 1st, 25 Nov 1879 , Lauretta Geneva Neeley . Md. 2nd, after 1899 , Nettie Wilson . D. 25 Nov 1909 , Franklin, Idaho . Charles Frederick , b. 6 Aug 1860 , Franklin, Idaho . Md. 2 Jun 1880/81 , Luna Nelson . D. 25 Jan 1910 , Burley, Idaho . Theda Judd

Joseph and Mary Whitehead Chadwick
Franklin Cemetery, Franklin Idaho
 
_________________________________
Source:  All Conquerors of the West: Stalwart Mormon Pioneers, Vols. 1-2 results for Joseph Chadwick

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Benjamin Chadwick - Family History of Shoshoni Indian Incident

Ben and Sarah Walker Chadwick Sr 1898 Sarah Walker Chadwick,
Sarah Chadwick Bowns, Ben, Mae, Lizzie, Ada, Nettie
My father was a fearless man. While he was working on an old fashioned thrashing machine operated by horses instead of an engine near Franklin, he showed his courage – daughter Nettie Bybee

Ben and Sarah Chadwick and the children joined his Chadwick parents and siblings in the settlement of Franklin in the Idaho Territory to the north in the spring of 1864 (probably due to the floods and devastated crops from the previous season – A History of Weber County by Richard C. Roberts mentions severe flooding at Mill Creek in 1863.). They probably left the Walkers behind in the log house in Slaterville. At Franklin, Ben protected a Mormon woman and his father Joseph Chadwick from some intoxicated Shoshone Indians – a story that became legendary in early Mormon pioneer history. According to An Early History of Franklin written by Eldon T. Bennet in 2004, Ben Chadwick was threshing grain in the fields outside Franklin Fort when some members of the Eastern Shoshone tribe under friendly Chief Washakie came into town drunk and began to break windows and assault a Mormon woman on the streets. Ben and fellow workers came to her rescue. One of the Indians knocked down Ben's father Joseph with a club and Ben went after the Indian with a knife. 
Chief Washakie
Then Ben grabbed someone else's pistol and shot the Indian through the neck. Ben's father urged him to leave Franklin and hide out from the Shoshone. According to Nettie‘s biography, Ben sometimes hid inside a flour barrel. But the Shoshone wanted revenge and demanded that the Mormons turn Ben over to them. Eventually the Mormons traded them some supplies and oxen from the white men who had originally sold the Shoshone the liquor aka "fire water".

Later in the fall of that year Ben Chadwick and his family returned to the log house with the Walkers in Slaterville." compiled/written by Bill Horten - 2010 (pp 4-5)

Benjamin Chadwick Eldest son of
 Joseph Chadwick and Mary Whitehead
"The legend of the Shoshone shooting continued long after Ben‘s death. Longtime Slaterville resident Orval Holley remembered listening to the story being retold on local radio programs. Details of the incident have been mentioned in numerous LDS life sketches by his descendants. It has been written about in magazines such as a 1930 issue of The Trail Blazer as well as other histories of the town of Franklin, Utah. One such retelling of the story in a newspaper article on pioneer recollections by William G. Smith led to another 1934 article in the Ogden Standard-Examiner to clear up the historical confusion of the Battle Creek Massacre fight of U.S. Army Colonel Connor of January 1863 with this Indian episode of 1864. Sometimes the zeal of the descendants to connect their pioneer ancestors to national history led to some exaggerations and inaccuracies." _________________________________________
Source:
Ben and Sarah Walker Chadwick History by Bill Horten
pp 4-5 and pp 60

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Benjamin Chadwick the Shoshoni Shooter

Chief Washakie 1865
"Washakie told his people: “You must not fight the whites. I not only advise against it, I forbid it!” The settlers were so appreciative of Washakie’s assistance that 9,000 of them signed a document commending the Shoshonis and their chief. He was also on friendly terms with the Mormon leader “Big-Um” or Brigham Young."

Quotation from an unknown old book, apparently from an Indian in the early era:
“Buffalo was recklessly slaughtered by the white man. Buffalo was our food, shelter and clothing --
now the white man is our buffalo.”

“This source also stated that the white man gave three things to the Indian: the horse, the gun, and whiskey.

It was said that the Shoshones had been horse people since 1800 -- maybe 25 to 50 years earlier. The Indian learned to cope only with the horse. He could fight or hunt on horseback, learned to ‘lean’ so as not to expose himself to fire. But he could not learn to cope with the other two things -- guns or whiskey. He didn’t have enough ammunition to waste on practice, so few of them became crack shots; and if the gun jammed or broke he did not know how to repair it.”
_______________________________________
Source: The Bear River Massacre by Hart pp 261.

Following the events of The Bear River Massacre, two significant incidents occured that jeopardized every man, woman, and child living in Franklin, Idaho.  Typed as originally printed.

"The Drunken Indian..."

There are Four Published Versions of this incident in "The Bear River Massacre", by Hart. 
This version is taken from the Trail Blazer, History of the Development of Southeastern Idaho, 1930:
(pp 305-307)  Typed as Printed:

"In the latter part of September, 1864, an event occurred that nearly cost the lives of the inhabitants of Franklin. About 500 Indians that were on their way to Bear Lake, after having a fight with a band of Indians on the Platte River, camped on Muddy River bottoms, north of Franklin.



Chief Washakie in front of Tepee
with members of his family
Some of the Indians procured liquor, became drunken and rode their horses wildly up and down the town. One drunken Indian began breaking the windows in the home of George Alder, who with others had moved from the Fort by this time, north on Muddy river (* early name of Cub River, traditionally a mountain-clear stream). When Mrs. Alder remonstrated with him and tried to drive him away, he picked up a large willow stake and began whipping her and tried to trample her under his horse’s feet.

The screams of Mrs. Alder and the strange actions of the Indians attracted the attention of some men who were threshing at Samuel Handy’s place, a short distance from Alder’s. They ran to the rescue with their pitchforks. Ben Chadwick, who was feeding the threshing machine when Mrs. Alder’s screams were heard, came running up with a butcher knife in his hand, (he had been using the knife to cut the bands that bound the sheaves of wheat).

Benjamin Chadwick Sr. Eldest son of
Joseph Chadwick and Mary Whitehead
Ben gives his experience as follows:

“I ran at the Indian with my butcher knife, my only weapon; he struck my father down and continued to race after Mrs. Alder, striking her down and trying to trample her under his horse. As fast as the men came up, the Indian would knock the pitchforks out of their hands with his long club. William Handy came running up with a pistol and all the men shouted, ‘Shoot! Shoot! Shoot him!’ Handy seemed to hesitate and I said, ‘Give me the pistol! I can shoot!’ I took the pistol from his hand and shot. The Indian fell from his horse, wounded in the neck.

“My father and the other men urged me to leave immediately. I rode Wm. Davis’ horse to the home of John Lard on High Creek (* about five miles south), I disguised myself by shaving and cutting my hair. (Previous to this time Ben had worn a long beard and hair to his shoulders.) I also changed horses and came back to Franklin about 12 o’clock that night with some of the Minute Men.”

Just about a quarter of a mile east of where the Indian was shot, another scene was enacted. Robert Hull and Howard Hunt were on their way to the Indian camp at 5 o’clock in the evening, to try to recover the linsey skirt that had been stolen that morning from Mary Whitehead, by two Indian women. Not knowing what happened, Mr. Hull and his companion were watching Mr. Handy running with something in his arms. They wondered why he was running. Suddenly Mr. Hull felt someone grab him; in another moment he found himself staring into the barrel of Chief Washakie’s pistol. The Chief snapped off the trigger three times, but the gun didn’t discharge. Then he pointed away from Mr. Hull and fired. This time the shot exploded. The Indians who had immediately gathered and witnessed the scene must have thought Mr. Hull a spirit, when the Chief could not shoot him. Mr. Hull was unarmed, having left his pistol at home that noon. This was fortunate, for the Chief would very likely have been killed, and the people of Franklin would have been massacred as a result.

When Washakie grabbed Mr. Hull, Howard Hunt escaped and gave the alarm. Mr. Hull, after being dragged to the Indians camp, was surrounded by young bucks who danced about him. Squaws prodded him with butcher knives.

Chief Washakie would say: “White man killed Indian” and Hull would answer, “No!”

They continued to persecute him, the squaws joining in with their painful prodding. While Mr. Hull was surrounded by the dancing warriors and knife-armed squaws, he recalled a dream that he had had three nights before. This gave him courage to endure the torture inflicted upon him. He had dreamed that he was completely surrounded by snakes that would dart at him from different parts of the circle. One big snake came up and struck at him with its fangs three different times but didn’t touch him. None of the snakes bit him.

He asked for Chief Alma, (who could talk English). The Indian answered “Chief Alma dead, (meaning drunk), on White Man’s fire water.”

Several times during the night the Indians forced Mr. Hull to go closer to town and call for the Bishop. He knew they wanted Bishop Thomas and he could not make them understand that Bishop Thomas had moved away.

It was a bright moonlight night. The Indians saw the glittering of hundreds of fire-arms in the distance. The Minute Men were gathering and had been since 9 o’clock that night. They ceased to prod him with the knives after this.

About 11 o’clock that night Bishop Maughan, Ezra Benson, Bishop Hatch, A. Neeley and Wm. Hull went down to the Indian camp and conferred with the Indians. The Indians finally agreed to let Hull go if they would find the man who shot the Indian. (* local legends say the Indian was killed, not just wounded. Nh)

They returned from the Indian camp about 1 o’clock that morning. After Mr. Hull had greeted his loved ones, he asked about Ben Chadwick. Upon finding that Chadwick was in town, Mr. Hull found him and warned him to leave, and said, “The Indians are determined to get you.”

“I do not believe my friends will give me up to them,” said Mr. Chadwick.

Here are the words of Mr. Chadwick recalling the incident:

“William Whitehead, my wife and sister came and begged me to leave again, so I ran to the home of the Wheeler’s where I had left my horse, then made my way to Slaterville.”

Chief Washakie and tribal members
 Next morning Apostle Ezra Benson and Bishop Maughan called a meeting at 10 o’clock. The Indians, including chief Washakie and some of his braves, were invited. They were given places at the front in the bowery where the meeting was held. While speaking to the people, Bishop Maughan turned to Washakie and said, “What would you do if one of our men should go to your camp and start whipping and killing one of your women?”

Washakie answered, “We kill him!”

Bishop Maughan then said: “That is all we have done.”

Then he continued speaking to the people. “Talk about giving a man up that would save a woman’s life! If you want to give anyone up to the Indians, give the ones up that sold the liquor to them.”

To make peace with the Indians they were given oxen, flour, cheese and other food by the people of Franklin. It seemed that some of the Indians of Washakie’s tribe still had revenge in their hearts, as the following incident will prove:

About two weeks after the peace had been made with them, Mr. and Mrs. Hull were visiting with one of their relatives who lived about two blocks from the Hull home. They were asked to stay over night.

“I do not know why we accepted the invitation to stay all night,” says Mrs. Hull, “but it must have been the hand of Providence that kept us from going home that night. The next morning when we returned home, we found that the chinking had been removed from the wall and two shots had been fired where our heads would have lain. One bullet lodged in the stock of the gun that lay at the head of the bed.”

Note:  Portions taken from other versions:
"Official Program, First Idaho Day, 1910": (pp 302-305) for clarification and interest:  Typed as Printed.

"About a thousand Indians on a migration and hunting expedition were going through the country under the leadership of Chief Washakie. These Indians were a peaceful band and quite friendly with the whites. They camped for a short rest in the river bottoms north of Franklin and while there some of the young warriors came up town.

 During the argument that took place at the peace meeting one of the finest and most picturesque examples of eloquence that is characteristic of the highest type of American savage was made by Chief Washakie.

"Put Yourself in My Place"
Chief Washakie
His theme was, “Put Yourself in My Place.” The savage brought home to the Christian the beauty of the eleventh commandment: “Do Unto Others as You Would That They Should Do Unto You”’ and his brief speech was a temperance sermon besides. He said, “Until the white man come there was no fire water, and the Indian was sober; your people sold fire water to my people and made my warrior loco (crazy). If my people had sold fire water to your braves and made them drunken, how would you feel about it? Would you like to see him shot down like a dog, because he made a fool of himself? Will the “White Father put himself in Washakie’s place?”

 “Military History of Cache Valley", by Martineau: (pp 301-302). Typed as Printed.

"On September 14th, 1864, the small town of Franklin narrowly escaped destruction and massacre.

A drunken Indian endeavored to ride his horse over a white woman, and to beat out her brains with a club. To save her life the woman was compelled to seek shelter under the horse's body, though encountering thus a peril almost as deadly as that threatened by the war club of the savage.

A white man shot the Indian to save the woman, and at once the whole band of savages flew to arms, threatening death and destruction to all unless the offending white man was delivered to them to be killed. The Indians, 300 in number, seized a white named Mayberry, and for a long time threatened him with death from knives held at his throat and tomahawks shaken at his head.

..."A singular incident transpired at this time….. Just as the head chief was departing, he said to Bishop Maugham -- “We have acted badly, but we don’t want you to talk to the Great Spirit about us. Don’t tell him to do anything to us -- don’t tell him what we have done.”

The Bishop answered that he talked to the Great Spirit every day, and could not make the promise desired. The chief urged his request again and again, but being firmly denied, went his way with a downcast look. Two days afterward, the chief sent back a hundred horses they had stolen from the range, but kept about as many more stolen in the valley, saying they needed and must keep them. As by this time they were beyond pursuit, they escaped with their booty. The people were glad to get off so well and without loss of life; for had not help so quickly arrived, Franklin would have seen a desperate and bloody fight, and many must have fallen."

(Franklin's last major threat was posed by 300, 500, or 1,000 Indians) depending upon the version.
All versions are posted under "Bear River Massacre Aftermath in Cache Valley".
_________________________________
Source:
The Bear River Massacre: Being a complete SourceBook and Story Book of the Genocidal Action Against the Shoshones in 1863 and of Gen. P.E. Connor and how he related to and dealt with Indians and Mormons on the Western Frontier.
By Newell Hart (pp.  299-307)