Showing posts with label Matt's 3rd-great-grandfather. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matt's 3rd-great-grandfather. Show all posts

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Henry Allen Beal and Anna Kristine Bjerregaard


 
 

Pictures from a fantastic book on Henry Allen Beal:  
Henry Allen Beal
and
George Washington Bean
Pioneers on the Utah Frontier

Located here (and accessible from the above link if the following doesn't work):  https://dcms.lds.org/view/action/ieViewer.do?dps_pid=IE207422&dps_dvs=1361151455206~823&dps_pid=IE207422&change_lng=en



Henry A Beal and Beal Family


From an interview of a Beal descendant who was a professor at Ricks.

HF: Now Dr. Beal, in going back on the Beal name, could you kindly comment a little about your ancestry on your father’s side?
MB: My father’s family came from England in the late 1830’s and they lived for a time in Syracuse, the Syracuse, New York area. There missionaries of the L.D.S. Church found them, and they were converted and moved to Illinois. So they were at Illinois during the time of persecutions and at the time of exodus from that state.
HF: Did your father or parents have a family which they brought with them into the intermountain area then?
MB: My grandfather, Henry Allen Beal, and a brother named William, were the sons of John Beal and his wife. And they were converted to the church. My grandfather, Henry A. Beal didn’t join the church until the Florence or Omaha situation on the Missouri. He was baptized in the Missouri River when he was about twelve years of age. And subsequently, 1852 was the year when that family crossed the plains by ox team and came to Utah. Grandfather’s mother died on the way.
HF: What area of the Utah Territory did the Beal family settle?
- 2 -
MB: After being in the Salt Lake Area for a short time, they moved to a newly established settlement at Manti in what came to be Sanpete County. And so my grandfather, as a young man, became actively engaged in pioneer work. In fact, he was one of twenty-five who moved from Manti to a settlement within seven miles called Ephraim and established that settlement, building a fort block in 1854. As a young man, he at least has this distinction, he married Mary Thorpe Morris. Later he married two other wives upon the advice and consent of the brethren. And altogether there were twenty-four children. Grandfather Beal was very active in the church; he held various offices. He became a member of the stake presidency of Sanpete Stake in 1877, and held that position until 1902. The rest of his life, for ten years, he served as patriarch in that place. He was active in the development of Snow Academy, as it’s known, Snow College today. In fact, his role in reference to education in that part of Utah is quite comparable to the role of Thomas E. Ricks in reference to the establishment of Bannock Stake Academy later properly named Ricks College in his honor.
HF: Dr. Beal, the name Beal is spelled B-E-A-L, is this correct.
MB: That’s correct.
HF: And from your grandfather, descendants from him and his three wives, pretty much constitutes the Beal’s that are in the church today. Would you say or are there other sources of Beal’s?
MB: I think this is the only Beal family; this is the foundation family of Beal’s in the L.D.S. church.
HF: Now before we just temporarily leave the Beal ancestry, could you comment on any particular physical characteristic and also a mental talent or some type of a talent characteristic that has perhaps followed down through the family tree?
MB: Well, Grandfather was a very sturdy, rugged type of person. Farr Beal Isaacson is one of his grandchildren; we’re full cousins. He was a husky man as I am, and the Beal’s, the Beal men that I have known generally have been quite healthy, rugged people. That’s one characteristic. Another that Grandfather had and he developed it considerably was a forthrightness in public speaking. He was a very strong speaker of the word. And this has characterized his sons and a number of descendants. I think there have been a number of teachers in the Beal Family. Two of my uncles, two of his sons, were professors at the University of Utah, and there are quite a few Beal’s who have gone into education. I think another characteristic of grandfather Beal’s descendants has been an interest in public affairs. I don’t know of any special talent. There are some who have skills in music and various other fields, but that, I think, describes the principle characteristics.

Source:  http://abish.byui.edu/specialCollections/Manuscripts/Collections/Voices%20From%20the%20Past/Merrill%20Dee%20Beal.pdf

A Story about Henry Beal

It was a Sunday morning in the summer of 1875. Though it was still early in the morning, heat already crept on the little settlement of Ephraim. A neat little family, scrubbed glowing pink, emerged from a door of a small adobe home. An anxious mother herded her brood.
“Now son, don’t get your shirt dirty,” cautioned mother as a youngster bent over a curious kitten. “That goes for you, too, Bishop Dorius,” she called to her husband. He looked up from the weed he had just pulled and smiled at her.
Bishop Dorius dusted his large, capable hands on his homespun trousers, and then proudly led his family down the walk. He turned toward the old stone chapel where he met with his fellow worshipers every Sabbath morn. The good people of Ephraim gathered toward the church. Many an anxious mother fretted over her spouse and offspring. After only one block, would they still be clean?
The great, staunch figure of Henry Allen Beal led the flock. He was a mighty leader of the Church and town. He was a big man with a big voice, which he could, and quite often did, turn up to terrific volume. He was a favorite speaker at church meetings and never minced words in his sermons.
Mrs. Dorius shooed out her last little son and was just closing the white picket gate when she noticed a pair of boots dangling over the edge of the hammock in the garden. She cleared her throat and marched right over. Underneath a huge straw hat lay the hired man. She snatched the hat away and, with hands on hips, she tapped her foot in the dust. The shaggy haired young man blinked in the sun, and grinned sheepishly, at Mrs. Dorius.
“Jens, are you not going to meeting?” she demanded.
“No,” replied the young man calmly.
“Why for?” she inquired, becoming angry. She gripped his oversized ear. “Why for you lay here when you should be to Church?”
“Vel,” drawled the hired man in his heavy Danish accent. “I heard Henry Beal vill preach today an’ I ken hear him yust as good from here as if I vas to meeting.’”

SOUND FORTH THE WORD Lora Nielson Ephraim, Utah Honorable Mention

Source: http://sanpete.com/downloads/saga/Saga_of_the_Sanpitch_1.pdf

Henry Allen Beal

 
 

Birth: Apr. 30, 1835
Syracuse
Onondaga County
New York, USA
Death: Feb. 21, 1911
Ephraim
Sanpete County
Utah, USA

Mormon Pioneer Overland Travel, 1847–1868

Beal, Henry

Birth Date: 30 Apr. 1835
Death Date: 21 Feb. 1911
Gender: Male
Age: 15 at time of crossing

Company: Warren Foote Company (1850)
Departure: 17 June 1850
Arrival: 17-18, 26 September 1850

Company Information:
About 540 individuals and 104 wagons were in the company when it began its journey from the outfitting post at Kanesville, Iowa (present day Council Bluffs).

Family that traveled with him:

Beal, Ann Deacon (53) Mother
Beal, John (13) Brother
Beal, John (48) Father
Beal, William (16) Brother

Son of John Beal & Ann Deacon.

OBITUARY: The Manti Messenger, Friday 24 February 1911:
LAST CALL OF HENRY BEAL
Well Known Ephraim Man Called Last Tuesday.
Funeral Today
Henry Beal one of the best known pioneers of the county, closed a long, busy useful career on this earth Tuesday morning at his home in Ephraim. He was 76 years old the last 57 of which he spent in Sanpete.
He was born in New York where his parents joined the Mormon Church, emigrating to Nauvoo and on to Utah in 1850. He lived in Manti from 1850 till 1854 when he moved to Ephraim where he has since lived and has exerted an influence in the upbuilding of that city having served in nearly every public office the city could give him.
He has also been a very energetic worker in the Church and was one of the most active in the building of the Snow Academy, of which he was president when he died.
The funeral will be held at 2 o'clock at the Snow Academy this afternoon.



Family links:
Parents:
John Beal (1800 - 1896)

Spouses:
Mary Thorpe Beal (1827 - 1905)*
Mary Ann Thompson Beal (1850 - 1924)*

Children:
George A Beal (1859 - 1936)*
Henry Thomas Beal (1861 - 1917)*
David Nelson Beal (1864 - 1946)*
Mary Jemima Beal Isaacson (1866 - 1930)*
Emma Rosabell Beal Waite (1868 - 1926)*
Anna Marie Beal Thompson (1875 - 1947)*
Mary Matilda Beal Olsen (1878 - 1939)*
Ellen Christine Beal Harden (1881 - 1948)*
Martha Beal Hansen (1888 - 1953)*

*Calculated relationship
Burial:
Ephraim Park Cemetery
Ephraim
Sanpete County
Utah, USA

Maintained by: Loose Moose
Originally Created by: VaunaMri
Record added: Apr 12, 2009
Find A Grave Memorial# 35797926

Source: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=35797926

Monday, January 21, 2013

Eleanor Turner and Charles William Willden

 
 
 
THE HISTORY OF CHARLES AND
ELEANOR TURNER WILLDEN

{My Great-Great-grand Parents}
By Shirley Willden Olsen
Charles William Willden was born to Jeremiah and Betty Reville Willden on July 27, 1806 in Anston, Yorkshire, England. Charles married Elenor Turner on January 21, 1833 in Laughton, Yorkshire, England. Eleanor was born to Thomas and Ann Whitman Turner on April 9, 1810 in Laughton, Yorkshire, England.

Charles and Eleanor Willden lived in Laughton, Yorkshire, England where Ellott and Eleanor were born. In 1836 they moved to Sheffield, Yorkshire, England where two year old Eleanor died and five other children were born, Charles Turner, John, (my great-grandfather), Feargus O'Connor, Ann and Maria.

Charles worked as a laborer and also in the steel mills where he discovered a way to refine steel. He was active in politics at the time of Ireland's fight for freedom. On August 27, 1839 Charles joined the LDS Church, four years later Eleanor joined the Church.

On October 25, 1849 Charles Willden and his family left Sheffield bound for Liverpool where they were to sail by ship for America. Charles and his family slept on the docks five days before boarding the ship. On November 10, 1849 the Ship "Zetland" sailed. They landed in New Orleans two months to the day from the day they left their home in England, December 24, 1849, with only one farthing (about half a cent) and a few hundred lb. of oatmeal which they sold for one cent a pound. Which was a little help toward paying for their passage up the river to St. Louis, Missouri. (When) Charles went to pay for their passage up the river they did not have enough money. Charles and his sons carried wood and odd jobs in order to earn the fare. A week later on December 29, 1849 they left New Orleans on the steamboat "Ben West" and arrived at St. Louis January 11, 1850. During the journey Maria Willden age 2 died January 4, 1850 and was buried at "Council Bain", Arkansas.

They stayed three months in St. Louis where, no doubt Charles and his older sons worked to get funds to continue their Journey to Utah. The Willdens left St. Louis April 12, 1850 on the steamer, "Correy", and arrived in Council Bluffs, Iowa, a new settlement, May 4, 1850. Charles bought a farm from a man named Solomon Walker, a farm consisting of 50 to 60 acres and two houses for the sum of $20, as Walker was going west. It left the family with $2 to buy necessities but they were able and willing to work. The family worked the farm for two years, planting corn and wheat. Most of the work was done by hand as they had no team or machinery. Feargus and Ann went to school for about 6 weeks while the family lived in Council Bluffs. Mary Ellen Elizabeth was born there on November 5, 1850.

In the spring of 1852, the Willden family along with others gathered wagon timber to have a wagon made. They left their homestead and some corn in the cribs for Utah, on June 2, 1852. While traveling, the weaker members of the family rode in the wagon while the others walked. They walked over half the way. The driving of the animals, gathering of firewood, taking care of the oxen, and carrying water was the job of Feargus and John. Charles Jr. drove the wagon and helped his father. Ann helped her mother with her little sister and other chores. During the trip one time Charles went hunting with the other men, he didn't return with them. The train couldn't wait for him. That night a lantern was hung on a tall tree and guns were fired in intervals at about 3 in the morning an answer shot was heard. Charles had found the train. Charles Jr. was lost for 4 days. He had gone to help another family that had taken the wrong road. On one day ann was in the wagon when John asked her to drive the sheep, while she was getting out of the wagon on the wrong side the oxen kicked her under the wagon, a wheel struck her back, she was badly hurt. While passing through Echo Canyon the children found it to be a very wonderful place, for the great rocks and high cliffs were the first we had ever seen. They shouted and there came back the mysterious voices echoing from the rocky cliffs.

They arrived in Salt Lake City, Utah on September 13, 1852 and stayed there for four weeks. Charles was dealing with Lorenzo D. Young, a farmer, but as soon as he heard the name Willden he told Charles his brother Brigham Young wished to speak to him. Charles went to Brigham Young, who wanted them to go to Cedar City, known as Coal Creek, to work in his trade as a steel refiner.

The Willden family left for Cedar City in the late fall, en route they camped one night at Cove Creek and as Charles looked over the valley he remarked what a lovely place it would be to settle. They arrived on Friday October 29, 1852 in Cedar City. They took with them a herd of cattle and ten sheep. It was a hard winter for them they lived in the wagon box and camped under the stars until they could build a dugout where the family slept, ate and cooked in one room. There was little food and they existed on bread, roots, and grass roots until spring of 1853. "After the second harvest" they built a grist mill. Everybody helped to build the mill before the cold weather came.

On December 15, 1853 Louise Willden was born. Shortly after her birth Eleanor was taken very ill. Ann at the age of 8 took over her mothers duties.

In the spring of 1853 an additional 100 families were sent to Cedar City the people decided to build a much larger and better fort, which was to be 100 rods square. The work on the 10 feet high walls and 3 feet thick was very slow. When the Walker Indian War broke out, work on the fort was pushed. In the spring of 1854, every one moved into the new Fort Cedar which was a mile northwest of Cedar City. In 1856, the town was laid out in blocks and lots, the men drew lots. Charles Sr. drew lot 7, block 39. Charles Jr. and Ellott drew lots 3 and 4 in block 22, these two lots totaled 9-3/8 acres. Charles Sr. built a four room house and in each room was a fireplace. In the back yard was an adobe granary, with a cellar underneath. Charles planted two apple trees south of the house. Ellott sold his lot to Charles Jr., where he built his home. In 1856 the Indians took so many of the settlers cattle that the losses were very heavy. After these losses the authorities in Salt Lake sent men down to gather up the cattle left by the Indians. They were taken to Antelope Island in the Great Salt Lake for safety. This was to be voluntary but some of the men sent from Salt Lake forced the settlers to send their cattle north. Charles Willden's losses were $190 worth of Cattle.

By 1859 the iron works had become a failure thus the Willden family moved to the badlands or sinks southeast of Beaver, then called lower Beaver. They arrived there Sunday, March 4, 1859. Here Charles Willden and his sons Ellott, Charles, John and Feargus each took up 20 acres of land. Many times Charles had thought of making a home on Cove Creek and as their land in Beaver proved to be poor, Charles bought 160 acres of land there.

In 1860 on July 19th Charles and his family moved to Cove Creek, where they buita adoby house on the south bank and enclosed it with a corral and cedar post stockade. The posts were 8 to 10 feet high and placed so close together that they formed a solid wall. This stockade was called "Fort Willden", in the vicinity of "Old Cove Fort" which still stands today. "In march 1861 the family moved in to the fort. During this time weary travelers would receive food, rest, and protection from the indians. Seven years later Charles and his sons and son inlaw, helped laying the rock fort which stands on the site known as "Cove Fort". On april 24, 1861 Ann Willden Johnson's first child, Hanna Jane Johnson, was the first child born there. In 1862 John married Margaret McEwen of Beaver, and brought her to live at Fort Willden.

Indian depredations were becoming more prevalent the serious by 1865. The Willden moved back to Beaver, where they made there home again. On March 19, 1864 Charles Willden took another wife, Sarah Smith, later she divorced Charles and remarried.

At this time Charles still claimed the land at Fort Willden.

In 1867 Brigham Young asked Ira N. Hinckley to head the building of a rock fort on the land at Cove Creek, Charles and his sons worked hard and diligently on the rock fort, living in their old home while doing so. Eleanor cooked for the men working on the fort. From a search through the records Charles Willden was never paid for this land. The last remains of Willdens Fort were leveled of in 1948 or 49 by the Kessler family, who owned the land and fort since 1904. Information From Ellott Willden showes the location of Fort Willden to be some 500 feet east and 300 feet north of the southeast corner of the present of Cove Fort. At this time a cottonwood tree still marked the site.

In 1869 Charles Willden was called on a mission for the Church back to his native land, England.

At one time, according to the Indogents Records of Beaver County, Charles Willden kept a poor man for the county "quote from the County Court Minutes Register A. Page24 By order of the court and the choice of Charles Willden, that he agrees to wash and mend the clothes, lodge and board mr. Fisher for 6 months at the rate of one dollar and twelve and a half cents per week." Page 65. "Charles Willden, Sr., bill for stationary for the county amounting to $1.50 was presented and the court ordered a warrent be issued in favor of that amount. Also Charles Willden's bill for boarding Joseph Fisher 7-4/7 weeks at $1.12 1/2 per week amounting to 3- 45/60 bushels of wheat."

On the 22nd day of August, 1883, Charles and his son Feargus were hauling hay. Eleanor at the house upon hearing a commotion looked out and saw the team and wagon coming from the field toward the house as fast as the team could go. Eleanor told Louisa to run down the lane and open the gate. They soon learned that while Charles and Feargus had been loading the wagon in the field that Charles han had a stroke, causing him to fall from the top of the load. He was dead when they reached the house so he had apparently died instantly. he must have been active until the time of his death at the age of 77 years. He was laid to rest in the Mountain View Cemetery in Beaver.
OBITUARY OF ELEANOR TURNER WILLDEN
Willden--
At beaver, Utah, 30 April 1893, Eleanor Turner Willden, wife of the late Charles Willden. Deceased joined the LDs Church in Sheffield, England, in the year 1843, emigrated in 1849, has lived in Utah nearly 40 years. She leaves 4 sons and 2 daughters living, 52 grand-children and 66 Great-grandchildren. She lived and died faithful.
 
Sources:
http://www.handfamily.org/02360004.htm  (The warning about Mormons here quite amuses me.  :) )
 
There is much more to be had on Eleanor and Charles Willden, but only so much time to be spent on this.  More to come later.