Showing posts with label Selena Marshall Gregory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Selena Marshall Gregory. Show all posts

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. 


Thursday, March 22, 2012

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.

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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

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Sources:
Ancestry.com
International Society Daughters of Utah Pioneers

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Selena Marshall's Life Story

Selena Marshall Gregory
SELENA MARSHALL’S LIFE STORY
Author Unknown - Posted as Written
Selena Marshall was the daughter of Thomas Marshall and Sarah Goode. Selena was born February 22, 1844 at Linton Hill, Herefordshire, England. She was baptized August 13, 1854.

They had joined the saints, but Brother Thomas Marshall did not have good health and died in England. After his death sister Marshall still was very anxious to come to America. She had the courage and desire to emigrate to Utah. She had five daughters and one son. One of the daughters was a frail sickly child, and on that account she hesitated to leave their comfortable home, but she had a blessing given to her, in which she was promised, she would go to Salt Lake Valley and not lose a child. This was a great encouragement to her. She made preparations as fast as she could for their departure from England. She and her children left Linton Hill, Herefordshire, England in April, 1856 by railroad to Liverpool, where they sailed on the ship “S. Curling” with Samuel Curling as master. Dan Jones was president of the company on board, comprising 800 souls of L.D.S. saints, mostly all of them were Welsh stock.

Selena’s mother also paid emigration for her sister, Maria Goode, who was unmarried. Sister Marshall was 34 years of age, and the children were: Lavinia 12, Selena 10, Tryphinia 8, Louisa 6, George 4, and Sarah 2 and Maria Goode 25 years of age. They sailed from Liverpool on the 19th of April, 1856, and landed in Boston on the 23rd of May, 1856 where they boarded a train for Iowa City, arriving there on June 2, 1856.

A few days after their arrival on camp grounds, they joined the handcart company and headed for Salt Lake Valley with Edmund Ellsworth and Daniel McArthur as their captain and leader. This was the first hand cart company headed for Salt Lake Valley. Selena was next to the oldest child, and she had the responsibilities of helping her younger sisters and brothers along while her mother and eldest sister pulled the handcart. Everyone, even the small children had to walk, unless they were ill.

Every person in the company was given a pint of flour a day to make whatever they wanted to do with it. Selena always made her share into bread, and kept most of it to coax her sisters and brother along and it helped a great deal when they were so tired and weary. She sometimes helped others in their camp by gathering wood for their campfires. Some were thought wealthier than others for they had more supplies in their camp. These people at times gave bread to Selena for her help. She would keep it to coax the children along, as it helped so much to keep the children moving along ahead of the hand carts. Selena asked her Father in Heaven to take away her appetite so that she could give her rations to the younger ones more easily. She got very weak and made tea from wild herbs to strengthen her, but she seldom got hungry.

Selena with sisters Sarah and Louisa
Selena is sitting
When the children were tired, she offered them a small piece of bread if they would go to a bush or rock that she would point out ahead, and she took turns carrying them a little ways to rest them. When they reached the chosen place, she would give them a bite of bread. This was a very long and tiresome journey for these brave souls. 
Tryphena Marshall Hunt
They encountered a very disheartening experience on their journey. When the company had stopped to make camp after a long hard day, they found that one of Selena’s sisters was missing.(Tryphinia) Many were alarmed but the captain tried to quiet them by saying that the wolves would have her by that time, and he didn’t want anymore lives lost by trying to rescue her. Selena and her mother really felt that they could find the child and started back in search for her. After going a short distance from camp, they both knelt down in prayer. Her mother had a feeling immediately that she would find her child and they did find her huddled up close to a large bunch of grass near the trail. They hurried along with light and happy hearts with the finding of her. The wolves howled on all sides of them, but they were so thankful to find the lost one, that they were not afraid. The mother didn’t forget the promise made to her in the beginning of her journey westward, and it buoyed her on the road to her goal. On their way back to camp, three men of the company came to meet them. They arrived back to camp in the early morning in time to go on with the company that day. 
Brother Brigham brought a treat of ginger snap cookies
When the company was two days from Salt Lake Valley, Brigham Young and a few other men came to welcome and cheer them on. Brother Young brought them a treat of ginger snaps. Each child was given three cookies. There was not enough for all the grown ups. Selena kept most of hers for her little brother and sisters. Their journey proved a very hard one, and conditions were very bad in Salt Lake Valley. They arrived on September 26, 1856 and camped a week to rest. As conditions were so bad, they went on to Ogden and made their home at William Wadleighs residence for a while. He was very good to them and helped them in many ways. Mrs. Marshall married Joseph Chadwick in 1857. Mr. Chadwick didn’t prove to be a good husband to Selena’s mother, and she obtained a divorce in the beginning of 1860. That spring she left Ogden and took her family to Cache Valley, arriving in Franklin, Idaho April 14, 1860 where she made her home.

Selena worked very hard to help her mother get a home, and they planted a garden and small crops. She went to the canyon for wood and also plowed with an ox team. She became acquainted with a good man who was a widower, and who had just previously come to Franklin. He was from England and Selena was 18 years old now and anxious to get a home of her own. She married Robert Gregory, son of John Gregory and Elizabeth Sylvester, on the 2nd of January, 1863. Bishop Preston Thomas performed the ceremony. They were quiet about their marriage, and Bishop Thomas left a dance during intermission to marry the couple at the bride’s home. They lived a short time with Selena’s mother, then made a home out in the Franklin Fort. Selena was very happy and contented with her fine husband, and she gave birth to a daughter on October 17, 1863.

The town Franklin was divided in 1864 into one-fourth acre lots. With eight lots to a block, Selena’s husband was given a lot on the south of the public square. They raised a good crop of potatoes that year, and started to build them a house on their lot. They had this year for their share, 80 bushels of wheat, which they sold for flour and other necessities. Wheat was worth $5 a bushel and potatoes $2 a bushel. They surely felt like they were on the road to prosperity. They bought a team and wagon, which they badly needed. In January, 1865, they received their endowments and Selena acted as proxy for her husband’s first wife, Mary Stevens Gregory, who died while they were crossing the plains at Fort Laramie Wyoming. The weather was extremely cold and their ears were frozen while returning home from Salt Lake City. When they got back as far as Smithfield, their little daughter was very sick and broke out with measles. They stayed with brother McCann until Mary Lavinia was well enough to be moved to Franklin.

Brother Gregory purchased more land out south of Franklin, which they called the south field, but which later was named Mount Hope, then later called Cove. When the ward was divided into two precincts, Cove was the south ward. On January 6, 1866, Selena gave birth to another girl, whom they named Sarah Selena.

Wild Parsnip
In the summer of 1867, a sad experience happened. Their daughter, Mary, with two other little girls of the neighborhood wandered away into the south fields near spring creek. They picked a bouquet of poison parsnips and ate some of them on the way home. The girls became deathly sick. With great difficulty they saved Mary’s life, and the life of Emma Pree, but the neighbor girl could not be made to vomit up the poison, thus causing her death.

Another daughter was born February 1, 1868 and named Charlotte Maria. This year, their crops were much better and grasshopper pests were not so bad.

In November, 1883, the Y.L. M.I.A. (Young Ladies Mutual Improvement Association) was organized, with Selena taking the office of President. Her husband, Robert, acted as first counselor in the Y.M.M.I.A. (Young Men’s Mutual Improvement Association). In 1894, the primary organization was effected and Selena served as counselor, continuing to labor in this organization for six years. Selena served as Relief Society visiting teacher until her health would not permit her to serve any longer. She enjoyed good health, however, until her family was grown and all married. She was the mother of thirteen children, eight girls and five boys. Three children died in infancy, but all the rest married and had large families, also. They all worked in the church in their respective wards. Her husband, Robert Gregory died suddenly while asleep in bed at the home of their second daughter, Sarah G. Porter, which whom he was visiting for a few days. The date of his death was December 28, 1900.

Selena Marshall Gregory 1888

Selena acted as nurse and midwife and helped many, many people through sickness, epidemics and childbirth. It is estimated that she brought 2000 or more babies into the world, including all her grandchildren. She also nursed under doctor Adaminson and he swore by her. There were many, many times a doctor would send patients to Selena, telling them that she could do more for them than he could do. She was good and stayed by her patients until they were out of danger.

Selena Marshall Gregory
 She was very kind and helpful to everyone, a very good cook and home maker. She knew how to work and do many kinds of art and needle work. She could knit a stocking or mitten with her eyes closed, and did this many times while telling stories to her grandchildren, of her many experiences crossing the plains. Selena never had a chance for book learning or to go to school during her whole life.

In 1914, she bought a small home in south Franklin, Idaho, thereby leaving the home in Cove to her boys, George and Thomas. They each bought an equal part of the farm from her. She became a victim of sugar diabetes and suffered several years from that disease. She cared for herself until December, 1917, when she became bedfast and died at the home of Charlotte G. Preece, on January 1, 1918.

She left numerous posterity- sons and daughters, grandchildren and great-grandchildren. She was a noble wife and other with a sterling character, and did much good in this world. All loved her and her wonderful ways. She was buried in Franklin, Idaho.

Robert and Selena Gregory Monument
Franklin Cemetery Idaho
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Source:
Author unknown