Showing posts with label Riggs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Riggs. Show all posts

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Charles Ford and Owlpen, Gloucestershire, England


Charles Ford my 3rd Great-Grandfather came from Owlpen. I have record of 5 generations of Fords living in Owlpen


A short sketch written by Edwin Ford. 
My father, Charles Ford was born November 4, 1807, in the town of Owlpen, Gloucestershire, England. He was went to work as an apprentice to learn the shoe and harness trade at which he served a time of seven years. He learned the weaving trade and also the shoe making trade.


Here are two pictures from the above site just to entice you to take a look.




From Wikipedia article on Owlpen
Owlpen is a small village and civil parish
 in the Stroud district of Gloucestershire, England, set in a picturesque valley in the Cotswold hills. It is about one mile east of Uley, and three miles east of Dursley. The Owlpen valley is set around the settlement like an amphitheatre of wooded hills open to the west. The landscape falls within the Cotswold Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, so designated in 1966. The population of the parish in 2004 was 32 (est.), the smallest in Gloucestershire.

The principal feature of the village is the famous Tudor manor house, Owlpen Manor, of the Mander family. The main economic activities in the village are agriculture, forestry and tourism.


Beautiful Blog on the History of the Fords at Owlpen



Isaiah Hamblin - War of 1812

3rd Great-Grandfather




http://archive.org/details/ourgoldheritage00

Isaiah Hamblin was a large man, six feet six inches tall. He was of mild and even temper and was not easily excited. He was a farmer. Democrat, and Freemason. He was a pious man, believing in the teachings of the Bible. However, he would not allow his children to attend church because he said the preachers did not teach in accordance with the Bible. 

Isaiah was a soldier in the War of 1812, serving under General Dearborn, and was wounded at Plattsburg, New York. His wife heard the guns of the battle, put her babe, some bandages and medicine into a boat, and rowed 20 miles to the scene of the action. She arrived in time to see the British flag go down.



After the war he was engaged in lumbering on the St. Lawrence River in northern New York. Living quarters were very crude in the lumber camp. His workmen, mostly Canadian, slept in bunks arranged around a huge fireplace with their feet toward the fire to keep them dry and warm. They had the habit of stripping naked to go to bed. The 'Kanucks' (Canadians) had a trick they liked to play on the 'Yankees' while they were asleep. They would put pitch wood splinters between their toes and then set them on fire. The men would awake stamping and bellowing. They were not only angered, but sometimes badly burned. When some of the men became disabled because of this sport, Isaiah decided to put a stop to the practice. One night he went to bed and feigned sleep. Soon a big 'Kanuck' came prowling around looking for a victim for his pranks. Spying Isaiah's feet bared to the warmth of the fire, he whispered gleefully to his companions, 'La bushwa! La bushwa!' (The boss! The boss!) Then he prepared some splinters for the fun. Just as he stooped to set fire to them, Isaiah drew back his feet and kicked the big fellow plumb in the chest. He stumbled back and landed stark naked upon the bed of living coals of fire. He gave a roar which aroused the entire camp. The man was rescued, but badly burned. Isaiah regretted the incident, but there were no more burned feet in the camp.

The next spring Isaiah, his brother-in-law, William Haynes, and a Mr. Dodge were floating down the St. Lawrence River on a raft.  Needing supplies, they ran their raft aground near a small settlement and went ashore.  The settlement happened to be the home of the man Isaiah had kicked into the fire.  A crowd soon gathered around them.  One man grabbed Isaiah and another Mr. Haynes, and told them they wanted to wrestle with them.  Isaiah whispered to Dodge to hurry to the raft with the supplies while he and Haynes took care of the men.  They soon threw their men and ran to the raft.  Part of the crowd had followed Dodge to the raft and when his friends arrived he had a large chain and was beating off the mob while he loosened the raft from its moorings.  They soon had the raft afloat and were safely out onto the river, not too badly hurt.

 In 1819 he was sheriff of Geauga County, Ohio.  He had charge of Fowler's flour mills and at one time lived in Bainbridge, Ohio.

Isaiah worked as a missionary among the Indians. Isaiah died in Santa Clara, Washington, Utah, 7 Oct 1856. At the time of his death he was a patriarch in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Obituary - Deseret News March 11, 1857, Page 8
DIED
In Fort Clara, Santa Clara, Sept 7 1856, Isaiah Hamblin, aged 66 years
Elder Hamblin was born in Barnstanoble County, Mass and fought as a volunteer under Gen. Deaborn in the last war with Great Britain: at the Battle of Plattsburgh had his hearing greatly impared by the roar of the cannons; and at the close of the war was honorably discharged.
Hearing of the Latter-day work he went to Nauvoo in 1845 and was baptized; shared in the troubles of the Saints in Nauvoo, produced by the sons of those with whom he had fought side-by-side for his country's liberty! - and had the mortification to see the Government he had fought to establish and maintain avow such acts!!

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Thoms Rogers - Mayflower Passanger


10th Great-Grandfather




Excerpt taken from Wikipedia
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Rogers_(Mayflower_passenger)

Thomas Rogers traveled on the Mayflower with only his eldest son Joseph, leaving behind in Leiden his wife and their three other children – John, Elizabeth and Margaret. In the 1622 poll tax for Leiden, Rogers’ family were found among the poor of Leiden, residing at the rear of Anthony Clement’s home. His possible second wife, who author Eugene Stratton lists as Elizabeth (or Elsgen) in the 1622 poll tax, may have died in Leiden sometime between 1622 and when his son John and possibly his daughters came to Plymouth sometime after 1627.
The embarkation of the Mayflower for America, A.D. 1620.

William Bradford’s later recollection of Thomas Rogers and his son embarked on the Mayflower: “Thomas Rogers, and Joseph, his sone. His other children came afterwards.

Thomas Rogers and his 18 year old son Joseph departed Plymouth, England aboard the Mayflower on September 6/16, 1620. The small, 100-foot ship had 102 passengers and a crew of about 30-40 in extremely cramped conditions. By the second month out, the ship was being buffeted by strong westerly gales, causing the ship‘s timbers to be badly shaken with caulking failing to keep out sea water, and with passengers, even in their berths, lying wet and ill. This, combined with a lack of proper rations and unsanitary conditions for several months, attributed to what would be fatal for many, especially the majority of women and children. On the way there were two deaths, a crew member and a passenger, but the worst was yet to come after arriving at their destination when, in the space of several months, almost half the passengers perished in cold, harsh, unfamiliar New England winter.


On November 9/19, 1620, after about 3 months at sea, including a month of delays in England, they spotted land, which was the Cape Cod Hook, now called Provincetown Harbor. After several days of trying to get south to their planned destination of the Colony of Virginia, strong winter seas forced them to return to the harbor at Cape Cod hook, where they anchored on November 11/21. The Mayflower Compact was signed that day.


Thomas Rogers was the eighteenth signatory to the Mayflower Compact. His son Joseph was then about seventeen years of age and could not sign the Compact.

Landing of the Pilgrims by Cornè - circa 1805.jpg


Reverend John Lathrop

9TH GREAT-GRANDFATHER

John Lathrop



http://wickedyankee.blogspot.com/2012/03/lothrop-bible-and-sturgis-library.html



My mother used to tell me stories about Reverend John Lathrop and one of the stories was about how he had the Bible memorized and he accidentally burnt a hole in his Bible with candle wax and he knew the Bible so well that he put a piece of paper in the hole and wrote word for word exactly what should have been said in that hole. I always thought that it was a far fetched tale until I saw this picture. Mom was right after all.


Excerpts take from http://larsenhistory.org/Rev_John_Lathrop_and_Mormons.html

"Truman Madsen, in his book, “Joseph Smith the Prophet” states; Brigham Young suggested Joseph was conscious of this preordained role and how the Lord had brought it about. As the latter, an interesting letter was written from Orson Pratt to his brother Parley P. Pratt in the 1850’s that says in effect: “You will recall that Joseph had a vision in which he saw that our ancestral line [meaning the Pratt brothers] and his [meaning the Smiths] had a common ancestor a few generations back.” Apparently neither Parley nor Orson was able to confirm the link. The letter remained in an attic until about 1930, but then a granddaughter took it to Archibald F. Bennett, one of the outstanding genealogists of the Church, and he did the research. He discovered that several generations back from Joseph Smith there was indeed a common ancestor named John Lathrop, and that not only was he the common ancestor of the Pratt brothers and Joseph Smith but also of other early Church leaders, including Wilford Woodruff, Oliver Cowdery, and Frederick G. Williams. In fact one estimate concludes that one-fourth of the early Church members in Americawere descended from John Lathrop. (p.107)"

"U.S. President’s
Ulysses S. Grant (and also General of the North’s efforts to end slavery)
Franklin D. Roosevelt (the President that helped defeat Hitler)
William Howard Taft
Millard Fillmore
George H.W. Bush
George W. Bush

Governors:
George Romney
Mitt Romney
Jon Huntsman, Jr
Jeb Bush
Thomas E. Dewey
Pierre Samuel DuPont
Thomas H. Kean
Sarah Palin

And here are a couple of notables—from a long list:
Former Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Homes
American Novelist, Nathaniel Hawthorne
Inventor of the Cotton Gin, Eli Whitney, Jr. (whose invention would end the need for slave labor in picking cotton)
Now you might reason that someone, like the Rev. John Lathrop, who has nearly two million direct descendents, is apt to have a handful of descendents succeed beyond the average person’s abilities.

LDS Church Presidents:
Joseph Smith, Founding President of the LDS Church and his mother Lucy Mack Smith
Wilford Woodruff, Fourth President of the LDS Church
Joseph F. Smith, Sixth President of the LDS Church
George Albert Smith, Eighth President of the LDS Church
Joseph Fielding Smith, Tenth President of the LDS Church
Harold B. Lee, Eleventh President of the LDS Church

LDS Church Apostles:
Hyrum Smith, First Presiding Patriarch of the Church, Apostle
Oliver Cowdery, Second Elder of the Church, Apostle
Frederick G. Williams, Second Councilor to Joseph Smith
Parley P. Pratt, Apostle
Orson Pratt, Apostle
Nathan Eldon Tanner, Apostle, Counselor to Presidents McKay, Joseph Fielding Smith, Lee and Kimball
Marion G. Romney, Apostle, Counselor to Pres. Lee, Kimball
Orson F. Whitney
M. Russell Ballard
Quentin L. Cook

To me there is no question that the great Christian reformer, the Rev. John Lathrop, did indeed have a purpose in this world. Great men and women are the fruit of his loins, but the Smith family, certainly to our religion, stands out for the work they accomplished through the Lord’s hand in restoring the gospel to the Earth in its fullness." End quote.
AND HIS DESCENDANTS INCLUDE ME -JULIE JOHNSON BRINKERHOFF


BOOK ABOUT REVEREND JOHN LATHROP
https://archive.org/details/genealogicalmemo00byuhunt


Friday, April 4, 2014

Thomas Sandall, Jr.

2nd Great Uncle

The following are transcribed newspaper accounts of the murder of my uncle Thomas Sandall, Jr.  The Sandall family had suffered through a lot of  trials and I am glad that my grandparents, Thomas and Ann, were not alive to go through this.  They had died a few months prior to this.  As you can see it was the "crime of the century."  They tried and convicted a man but the evidence was never reported against him.  I find it interesting that nothing was stolen.  The person knew where the key was to get in.  Only Thomas Sandall was killed.  The owner of the Farners' Union was involved in the case the whole time, assisting the Sheriff.  I wonder what the outcome would have been today.

The Farmer's Union, located in Layton, Utah. It was one of the earliest mercantile businesses on record in Layton. (Provided by the Layton City Heritage Museum)



The Nightwatchman at the Famers’  Union Brutally Murdered, on Tuesday Night While on Duty
Davis County Clipper   31 March 1899

     Thomas Sandall the nightwatchman at the Farmers’ Union in Layton, was killed some time during Tuesday night.  He was sleeping at the store as he had done for the past five or six years when the terrible tragedy occurred.
     He came into the store Tuesday evening to take possession for the night, before Messrs. James Ellisou and Thomas O’Brien, two of the clerks, left the store to go home for the night.  Everything was in the usual condition when they left.
     In the morning, these same two clerks, were the first to arrive at the store.  James unlocked the door, entered the room  but stopped to remove a cowbell that was hung on the inside door knob to give the alarm if an one should turn it, while Thomas passed on into the room and consequently was the first to behold the ghastly sight.
     They found his dead body lying upon the floor at right angles with his cot, his feet being about a yard from the same.  He was lying on his back, with his hands by his side and his bare feet pointing toward the ceiling, with the whole of his face about the right cheek bone shot in.  A quart or two of blood was on the floor around his head.  He had on such clothing as he, no doubt, usually slept in and the bed clothes were in about the condition that anyone would leave them on getting up in the morning.  His rubber boots stood at the side and near the head of the cot.  When they first got a glimpse of the dead man, the clerks thought he must have committed suicide but when no weapon could be seen in the room and it was noticed that the double locks on the back door were unlocked and that the piece of 2X4, which is used as a prop against the door, and a string of sleigh bells, had been removed, they could see that it was not a suicide.  Looking closer they noticed two no. 12 shot gun wads and some No. 4 shot lying upon the floor near his head, then they concluded that he had been killed by a burglar or burglars.
     The affair is terribly shrouded in mystery.  The position of the body with respect to the bed makes it difficult to imagine what position he was in when he was killed and it is also difficult to imagine how any one could have entered the store as the doors and windows were all securely fastened.  It is also hard to understand why the store was entered as nothing was carried off except Mr. Sandall’s revolver.  The till, however, had been visited but there was not money in it.
     It is very difficult to imagine how a person could have entered the store for, as had been stated the doors were all well fastened.  It would have been possible for a person to have raised an iron grate to a cellar window into which coal is shoveled, and to get into the room by first passing into the cellar, but this is hardly probable as a blot, which holds the grating that would have had to be removed, was in place as usual in the morning when it was examined.
     It is barely possible, either, that any one could have entered the store during the day and have concealed himself.
     As to who committed the crime the evidence rather points to local than to trancient parties.  The fact that a shot gun was used; that only one very familiar with the building and surroundings would have known about the grating to the cellar window; and the particular location under the granary where they keys to the front door were thrown, is weighty evidence that it was some one local.  The keys , referred to, were found in a sort of a small pit bellow and at the back of the granary, and strangers would not have been very likely to have thrown them in that identical spot.  An empty shot gun cartridge shell was also found under the granary but there was nothing significant about that.
     Sheriffs Abott and Howell, the latter of Salt Lake county, spent nearly all day Wednesday in Layton, searched the Gipsy camps near James Bennett’s and inspected everything very carefully but did not find any clues to work on, at least nothing was made public.
     A coroner’s jury consisting of Henry Ellis, Elijah Ellison and Samuel Norman, was empaneled by Justice A. B. Cook.
     As soon as the jury had taken the evidence that could be gleaned from an examination of the body, it was removed to his home.
     The funeral services will be held at the family residence today at 1 o’clock.
     The deceased was born in England May 1 1845; subsequently moved to South Africa where he spent fourteen years of his life; arriving in Utah in 1860.  In 1866 he went to the Missouri river after emigrants and brought back with him ten rolls of wire that was used on the first telegraph line constructed to connect Omaha with Salt Lake City.
     Mr. Sandall was a quiet, inoffensive man and was well respected by everybody.
     He leaves a wife and seven children to mourn his loss.
     A five hundred dollar reward has been offered for the arrest and conviction of the guilty party or parties.
______________________________________________________

Thomas Sandall’s Funeral
Davis County Clipper      7 April 1899

     Funeral services over the remains of Thomas Sandall, who was murdered in the Farmers’ Union store on Tuesday night of last week, were held at the family residence in Layton on Friday at 1 p.m.  Deceased did not belong to any church, but it was the desire of the family that services should be held and that Mr. E.P. Ellison should take charge.  The speakers were Elders John R. Barnes, Alex Dawson, J.W. Thonrley, W.N. Nalder and E.P. Ellison.  The speakers spoke principally concerning the many good qualities that the deceased possessed.  The attendance was exceedingly large, the house would not begin to accommodate all who were present.  One hundred and fourteen vehicles followed the remains to their final resting place in the Kaysville cemetery; this is, without a doubt, the longest funeral procession ever witnessed in Davis county.  The remains could be viewed by all who wished to see them.  The face presented a frightful spectacle when he was first found, but the doctors put the loose pieces back in their places and put in a few stitches that gave the face its natural appearance.
     Sometime prior to the murder, William Sandall, a son of the deceased, had a dream in which he saw his father murdered and saw the parties who committed the deed.  This made such an impression upon his mind that he spent the greater portion of the next day trying to persuade his father to give up the job of nightwatchman, but did not succeed.  The parties he saw in his dream are somewhat prominent local people and he cannot believe that his dream is correct in this particular.
     Mr. Ellison and the officers have all been searching diligently for further evidence to locate the guilty party or parties but very little progress has been made.  Two Ogden men name William Morgan and William Morris, respectively, were arrested on Friday on suspicion but nothing could be proved against them so they were turned loose again.  The man whom we mentioned trying to buy shot gun cartridges at Stewart’s store last week, afterwards bought a box of Mr. Samuel Layton at the Kaysville Co-op.  The description given by the clerks of the man who called for the cartridges tallied exactly.  Mr. Layton also noticed that the man had a companion and that the two rode in an old buggy drawn by a span of ponies.  The clerks agree that neither  Morgan or Morris is the man who bought the cartridges but Morgan admitted that the rig he rode to Salt Lake in was like the one that Mr. Layton saw In front of the Co-op.
     A shot gun was stolen from James Hamlin’s sheep wagon near Riverdale about the time the murder was committed.  The gun took No. 12 cartridges, the same as those bought in Kaysville by the strangers.

     The night of the murder, Henry Williams, of Syracuse, on returning from a lecture in Kaysville, saw two persons standing near a fence a little west of the Farmers’ Union but it was too dark for him to get much of view of them.  This is about all that has come to light thus far.

Thomas Sandall, Sr.



I was amazed at the stories my mother used to tell me about my South African grandfather and his life among the monkeys and savages.Thomas grew up in a little town in Oxfordshire called Kidlington.  On the census records he is always listed as a  gardener and not as an agricultural worker like the rest.  What this means I do not know but this occupation could have been the reason the English government asked him to go to South Africa.  In Kidlington, his grandmother was a Hanwell and the Hanwell's were well- to-do-people and ran the bakery.The history I included was among my mother's possessions and I do not know who wrote it.  The full Story can be found at link


Thomas Sr. was called by the English Government to go to South Africa. His mission was to teach the colonists how to care for their gardens and how to farm. Arriving in South Africa, they settled in the Town of Uitenhage. There he continued the work he loved best, gardening. The vegetables not needed by the family were sold to the natives. The climate was warm and the soil was rich so the two crops of vegetables would be raised in one year. They found wild grapes, the vines up and over trees fifty and a hundred feet high. There were wild figs, myrtle, apples and wild plums. They lived well by hard work. They had to be on the lookout at all times for the Coffers, these were what the natives were called. Some were friendly and some were savage. Thomas Sr. had to set traps for the monkeys because they destroyed their vegetables, especially the pumpkins.

            The Thomas Sandall family lived in South Africa about twelve years and while there five more children were born, they were Joseph, William, Annie ,Lucy and Hyrum. In 1858 the Sandalls and their friends were visited by two Elders from the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, by the names of John Stock and John Wesley. The families were converted and were baptized into the Church. They had a strong desire to come to Zion. On March 22, 1860 in a company with about 70 of their friends, they left South Africa. The friends included: the Wiggills, Talbots, Greens, Bodilys, and Dawsons. The Sandalls got a chance to come to the United States with Robert Bodily and family. Thomas sold all of his belongings and boarded with his family, the ship "Alacrity" sailing from Port Elizabeth around to Cape Town, then over to the Isle of Helena.


            They were months on the water before they landed in Boston Harbor. While in Boston Harbor, their children took sick with the measles and their baby Hyrum died on the 9th of July 1860 at the tender age of eleven months. They left Boston and came west to Florence, Nebraska and remained there a short time. They started for Utah, with four hundred other saints, in the company of Captain William Budge. Their trip across the plains with ox team and covered wagon was the same as other pioneers. They had many hardships to endure with sickness, experiences with Indians, and had very little food. Their daughter Lucy took sick and died at the age of 3 years old. They couldn't stop long enough to dig a grave deep enough to hardly cover with dirt, and they knew the wolves would have her out in a few hours. She was buried in Mr. Bodily's bass violin case for a coffin. Her parents were heartbroken at the loss of their daughter and under such horrible circumstances. This made two children buried since leaving South Africa. They were grateful to Brother Bodily for the violin case, otherwise she would have been wrapped in a blanket, or something of that nature. They arrived in Salt Lake in 1861 and settled in what was then called Kays Creek in Davis County.

Sunday, February 2, 2014

Richard Bourne - Missionary to the Indians

Missionary to the Indians


My 8th Great- Grandfather 
 6th Great-Grandfather to Jacob Hamblin

Richard Bourne and Jacob Hamblin have parallel lives. Both were called to bring peace to an area the Indians controlled to allow settlers and Indians live in peace. Both were highly regarded by the Indians. One of the interesting parts in where Richard Bourne called down the powers of heaven to stop the sacraficing of Indians and lightening came and split the rock in two. The youtube covers this.





Richard Bourne's missonary work among the Mashpee Indians is discussed at length in Otis's Genealogical Notes of Barnstable Families (1888), pp. 104-111.


Books on Richard Bourne


Full text of "History of Richard Bourne and some of his descendants"



Full text of "Richard Bourne, missionary to the Mashpee Indians"





Saturday, February 1, 2014

Hannah Emerson Dustin - Heroine - First women statue in US




         First woman honored in the United States            with a statue
8th Great-Grandmother on my Hamblin line


Hannah Duston, by Stearns


I have to admire this grandmother.  She exemplifies the adage - "Don't mess with the mother."  She had just given birth when an Indian raid came and they kidnapped her, her baby, and her nurse.  Now this area had been having trouble with Indian raids and kidnappings.  While taking Hannah to the place they planned on holding her the Indians killed her baby because it was slowing them down.  I cannot imagine how horrifying and heartbreaking that would be.  Hannah kept her head and figured a way to escape.  There were other hostages being held too.  She killed and scalped the Indians and took their scalps as proof of what she had done.  Not only did she make it back to her village but it took a woman to stop the Indian raids and kidnapping.  Maybe she is the reason I come from a long line of strong women.



The following are taken from:
http://voices.yahoo.com/17-interesting-facts-indian-captive-escapee-12171756.html

 Henry David Thoreau immortalized Hannah Dustin in his written works. In 1870 a statue of the courageous Hannah Dustin was positioned in the town square. There is also a statue of her in New Hampshire where Hannah and the captives killed the raiders and escaped with the scalps. Hannah's harrowing experience sparked the imagination of her fellow frontier colonists, just as it has endured and appealed to the people of today. Hannah Dustin Memorial statue was the first statue erected in NH using public funds. This occurred long after her death, in 1874.

 John Greenleaf Whittier wrote of Hannah in his Legends of New England in 1831.

 Cotton Mather penned Magnalia Christa Americana, in which Mather shared his respect for Hannah as a fabulous female. He knew Hannah and spoke with her about the frightening incident himself. His version included moral questions which do not take away from the horror, but does speak of using the situation, perhaps, for his own means.

Sources:
http://www.heritage-history.com/www/heritage.php?Dir=characters&FileName=dustin.php
http://wprokasy.myweb.uga.edu/Emerson2.htm
http://voices.yahoo.com/the-story-hannah-dustin-joan-arc-lizzie-bordon-116091.html?cat=37
http://www.hawthorneinsalem.org/Literature/NativeAmericans&Blacks/HannahDuston/MMD2169.html
http://www.nhstateparks.org/explore/state-parks/hannah-duston-memorial-state-historic-site.aspx
http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/hannah-dustim-statue-boscawen-nh