Early Rexburg, Idaho. Tape #109

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Early Rexburg, Idaho. Tape #109"

Transcription

1 Voices from the Past Early Rexburg, Idaho By Sarah Pauline Flamm Browning May 11, 1968 Tape #109 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Jasmine Scholes January 2007 Edited by Jamie Whitehurst May 2008 Brigham Young University- Idaho

2 Harold Forbush: Through the facilities of the Historical Society, the interview that follows which had been originally placed on reel-to-reel tape is now transposed and transferred on to C90 cassette side two and being done on the 24 th of February HF: It s my privilege this afternoon here at Rexburg it being the 11 th day of May 1968, to be in the home of Sister Sarah P. Flamm Browning, who lives on 59 East 1 st South in Rexburg. Just down the street from Brown Food Store and across the street almost directly from my home which is on 68 East 1 st South here in Rexburg. And our purpose in being here today is to interview Sister Browning considering the early days of Rexburg. Now, as per custom, I m going to ask you a few questions Sister Browning to guide you through this interview. For example, would you kindly state your full name, the date and place of your birth, and then you can tell us a little bit about your father and about your mother, their dates of birth of when and where they came from. Sarah Browning: My name is Sarah Pauline Flamm Browning. And my father was Jacob Henry Flamm. He was born in Metzingen, Germany, born in He lived there until he was fourteen years old. His mother died when he was a very small child. And his father married again and when father was fourteen he came to the United States bringing his two older sisters. His father s two older sisters and his two younger half-brothers. And they settled in the East. And when father was seventeen, his father died. And he remained with his step-mother and helped her to raise and support the two younger children until they were able to take care of themselves. My mother was Matilda Anne Painter, her mother and her father were both born in England and met on the plains coming to Utah. After settling in Utah, they married and mother was born in Utah. Her name was Matilda Anne Painter. Now what? HF: Now, how was it that you were born here in Rexburg? Now I understand that you were born here in Rexburg and give me the date that you were born and how your parents happen to come up to Rexburg. SB: Father and his HF: First of all your date, when you were born and then that. SB: My birth date. I was born on February 24 th, And my father and mother were married in Utah. And father came up here, he was called to come here with T.E. Ricks as a counselor. He served as a counselor to T.E. Ricks in Utah. He had an accident and was unable to come up just at the time when T.E. Ricks came, but he came very shortly after and was totally blind when he came up here. He married my mother in Utah and the first wife had came up here to Rexburg with father and they colonized up here in Rexburg. And his first wife, Salina Boch was the first person to die after the colonization of Rexburg. She was buried in Mill Hollow, near the old mill site up on the hill. But the soil was so full of lava and sandstone that it was impossible almost to dig a grave. And after five or six people were buried there they gave that cemetery up and located the Rexburg Cemetery. And my father s first wife s body five years after her death was moved out here to the Rexburg Cemetery. 2

3 HF: That s very interesting. Now I d like to inquire, you mention that your father had had an accident before coming. What was the nature of that accident and how quickly did he get his sight back? SB: It was not for a while. Father was put in the U.O. Store at Logan to take charge of it. Do you know what the U.O. Store was? HF: No, what was the purpose of that? SB: The United Order Store. It was not a cash store; it was a church owned store. And the people exchanged produce for produce not for money. And father was in charge of the U.O. Store in Logan. And they had nothing but cotton wood, to burn to keep the store warm and the wood got so full of knots that they couldn t split it. Ao one of the men told father, he said, It s impossible to split that wood! And father said, I ll blast it for you. So he took black powder out, showed them where to make a hole between the knots in the tree trunk. And the man made the hole and father filled it with several pounds of black powder and there was no fuse so he took a string and he twisted that string. He tied the two ends together and twisted it in his hands until he got a solid twist of string there. And he took the one end of the string and dipped it in kerosene until he had it thoroughly saturated the length of the twisted string and then he put that in black powder to make a fuse. He went out to the tree where the powder was in the tree trunk and he put one end of the fuse in the tree and the other end on the ground. He stooped down and he lit the one end and just as he lit it a gust of wind came and blew the whole fuse end of the great powder hole he had in the tree and it exploded immediately before he could get up. It completely took one eye out, blinded him in the other, and broke one leg, and broke one arm. And he was taken home so he couldn t come here with T.E. Ricks but he came a short while later. He ran away and came up here when he was totally blind. And at that time the whole territory here was cotton wood and he would feel his way along but animals run into him. And he was bumped and hurt a good many times and I can t tell you just how long he was blind. But eventually he saw daylight from dark and got enough vision of that he could protect himself a little bit from any accident. HF: About how old a man was he when he arrived with his first wife? SB: He was somewhere between 45 and 50. I can t tell you. HF: Uh huh. Well, then he came up here with his first wife and how many children did they have at the time? SB: They had eight children. But they didn t all come up at that time. But later the children came up and two of father s first daughters, that was Helina Flamm Jensen and Elisa Flamm Hess, were the first two women to come into Rexburg after the colonization. HF: Well then after his first wife passed away, did he invite his second wife to come up? 3

4 SB: Immediately. Mother came up immediately and took charge of the home. She had two small children. And she took charge of them and the other six children came and lived right there in the home with mother. HF: Now your father as I understand was a polygamist. SB: That s right. HF: And while he was living in Logan he had two homes established. SB: That s right. HF: I take it. Eventually when the story was all told, your own mother was the mother of how many children? SB: Ten. HF: Ten children. SB: Ten children. HF: How many children did the first wife have? SB: Eight. HF: She had eight? SB: Yes, there was eighteen. HF: Total of eighteen children. SB: Yes. Here s something too. After father s first wife died there was raids, one after another made on Mormon people here. My father didn t marry again. But, they make these raids and they got my father and arrested him for polygamy and he served a long term of prison down in Blackfoot that was then part of the Fremont County. HF: Bingham County. SB: Bingham, yes. And they ran all the way up to Montana. But he served a long term there before they finally had a trial and found that he had only one wife. HF: That s very interesting. Now those were some pretty punishing days for the Mormon s at that time. Sister Browning, where were you actually born here in Rexburg? SB: I was born up in Rexburg just a half block east of the First Ward Church. 4

5 HF: Who lives there at the present time? SB: My mother. That was mother s home. The entire family lived there in that home. Three room logged house. HF: Who lives in this location at the present time? SB: Myrtle Beter. It s on that corner on father s original home site. HF: What type of employment did your father engage in during the remainder of his life here at Rexburg? SB: Well to begin with he got an engineer to come here and lay out the first canal so that there could be water for the farms and that people could have irrigation to raise crops. And then father went into the merchandising business. He built small store and he kept that store until the time of his death. HF: What was name of the store and where was it located? SB: Henry Flamm and Company. Well the first store was located over here between Main Street and First South. But later father built a store on Main Street and he owned three buildings there he owned a half block of property there and he had three large rooms there and different businesses in them. And then Mr. Comstock came in here and needed a place to put his bank up so he set up in the middle of father s grocery department. And it was there for some time. And then later they gave him the corner lot where the Commercial Bank is if he would build a bank there. And he built his bank there on the corner where the Commercial Bank is. HF: Where the Idaho Bank of Commerce is? SB: That s right. HF: I see. SB: He was in there until the time of father s death and that of course is not a Commercial Bank. HF: Now Sister Browning, what relationship are the present owners of the Flamm Mortuary to you? SB: They are nephews. They re the sons of a half brother, John Daniel Flamm. HF: Is he of the first wife? SB: They re grandsons of the first wife. 5

6 HF: Now, who are these men, who are we talking about? SB: There s Russell, Edwin, and Kenneth are the morticians. Jim is a great-grandson of my father s. HF: Now Sister Browning let s reminisce for a moment about some of the gentlemen, men and women that you knew while you were still a little girl here in the area in Rexburg. SB: Well, there was Sarah Barnes. Her father was an engineer and surveyed and laid out the first canal here in Rexburg and the son of Heber and his wife Mary Heber. Well Rick s wife, her name was Sandy. HF: Did you know Thomas E. Ricks. SB: Yes, I knew him well. HF: Tell us a little about him. SB: Well over at the old store, there was a big boulder that had rolled down from the hill and there was nowhere for people to go, and the man used to go there and stand around and sit around on that old rock spin urns hour after hour. And that was right in front of father s little old store. And these men practically all the men in town did T.E. Ricks Sr. used to come there every morning. I d better not tell this one. HF: Go ahead! I think whatever SB: I d better not. I ll get in trouble. HF: Well, whatever s prudent. SB: It s true but HF: He was quite an elderly gentleman then at the time you knew him? SB: T.E. Ricks Sr. was yes. T.E. Ricks Jr. was like my brother, H.J. Flamm, and they served in the bishopric many years together. HF: Well now, can you describe the old gentleman T.E. Ricks? Do you remember him in your minds eye? SB: He was very stately and he had very heavy white beard. He was attractive. He was a very marvelous and stately person. HF: Did you know some of his family? Who were some of his family members, his children? 6

7 SB: I can t remember those too well because they were older than I am. I was just seven with the second family, so I don t remember them so well. HF: Now you mention he had a pair of twins? SB: It was Brig and Heber Ricks who were twins. HF: What do you recall about them? SB: They were good hard working men just like the average other men who were here. HF: Do you remember William Rigby? SB: Yes. His daughter married my half-brother John Daniel. That s the father of Russell, Edwin, and Kenneth. HF: Sister Browning, what were conditions like in Rexburg when you were growing up as a little girl? Did you have a chance to get some education? SB: Oh yes. We had the old Academy and we had a teacher who came in, there wasn t a salary paid to them but they were taken into the homes. And they were given room and board and were housed. But they were all of them really educated people. HF: Where was the Academy located at that time? SB: North of an old city pump and south of Philip s real estate property on the canal, right on the canal. HF: What did it consist of at that time? SB: There were three log rooms that run east and west and they were built flush to the ground. And then there was other rooms that were built; a dining room that run north and south and they were built up several steps away from the ground. HF: Well now in the little Academy at the time, I would assume the first, second, or third grade possibly is taught? SB: Yeah. That s right. HF: Did they go any higher than that? SB: Well, not very much. But they went up that high and then the public school came in and the grade schools were taken away from the Academy and everything from the fourth grade up, but the kindergarten and so no up to the first grade continued there in the Academy. 7

8 HF: Did they use the Academy more or less as a center for recreation and activities? SB: Yes. They used that for activities and recreation for the 4 th of July and the 24 th and so on came the group would meet there and they would built what they called boweries and have limbs of trees to make shade and they would make benches and we d sit there and entertained until an afternoon. And then we d have horse racing and foot racing and other entertainment down at the old city park. That s where Porter Park is now. HF: At that time, of course, people would gather in from all of these outlining areas and really have a good time. SB: We just got together and we had a real get-together. HF: Would you occasionally have a speaker come up from Salt Lake? SB: No. No, it was just usual the group of people from home here. HF: Now what were the streets like as you recall them? I don t suppose there was any paving or anything of this nature, but what do you recall about the general layout of the streets and the ditches and so forth? SB: Well the streets were just mud. We had no sidewalks at all. Eventually they put little walks that ran from the courthouse down as far as the old schoolhouse, oh down to where the old high school is now. But there was no sidewalk or anything we just wade in mud! HF: All the gardens and lawns, I guess, were irrigated out of a canal and ditches. SB: They were irrigated from the little ditches from each side of the street. There was a small irrigation ditch on the side of every street running north, south, east, and west. HF: Now in learning more about Rexburg, can you recall what stores or places of business were established when you were just a little girl and what they were like? SB: There was a brick store. It was right across the street south from the courthouse and it was the Co-op and the man named John T. Smee, that s Ruth Rick s father run that. Then in the middle of the block going west towards father s store in there, there was a little harness shop. And it was ran by a man name McAllister. And then father s store came on the other corner. There weren t many more stores than that here. HF: How about livery stables? SB: There was a livery stable that sat right across the street directly west from where the Dry Drug sits now. But right across into the west, right there. HF: What was across the street going west? Were those just homes at that time? 8

9 SB: Nothing. HF: Just nothing out in there? SB: Just vacant lots and water, mud. HF: Did every family have their own cow or two? SB: Yes, they did. Most people had one or two or three cows. And they usually had some horses and they d have a few chickens, and a pig or two. HF: And where would the farms be located at that time? SB: Well the first farms were out there right north of the river on the highway, one on each side. And then a mile directly to the east there was a farm but we d go that far between the farms. HF: Do you recall when the railroad came to town? Can you tell us the happy occasion this must have brought? SB: The railroad pulled in and they picked up every child and everybody that they could pick up and would take them for a little ride on the train and then bring them back in and let them off the train. My mother s mother came up to visit, the first time she d ever been in Rexburg and she d been here a few days when she got a wire telling her that grandfather Painter was very, very ill so mother packed up, took my baby brother and myself and grandmother and we beat it down to Logan. We got there one night and grandfather died the next morning. HF: And you went on the train? SB: We went on the train. HF: Now do you recall about what year this was? SB: Well I was eight years old. It was probably about HF: Has the train of the depot been located differently than originally? Has it changed? SB: No. We ve had right down in that territory ever since. That was the only time I ever saw my grandfather was the one night when we got there and he died the next morning. HF: Well now in recalling more history of Rexburg, could you tell us about this frame building where you went to school and the way they would have to get the water and it resulted in an epidemic. You tell us a little about this. 9

10 SB: Well the old school building it was eight rooms, four up and four down. And it was heated with a big stove in each room and during the summer months no water was ever taken from the well, it was just left. But when school started in the fall, they would pump it until they would pump out a rusty corroded water, pump it into a bucket and everyone would get a dipper and everyone drank out of the same dipper and we had a typhoid fever epidemic a pretty bad one. There was some families where children died there was other where they got well. Some families there d be two or three had it, some of them only one. But it was pretty severe epidemic of typhoid fever from the water in the old well. HF: About what year was this Sister Browning? SB: About HF: Now did you have the facilities and doctors or trained nurses in the area? SB: No. We had no doctors and we had no nurses. A year or two later we had a doctor. But my younger sister and I both had typhoid at the same time from it. HF: Do you recall when the first doctor came in? SB: No, I don t. HF: What doctor do you remember as a child? SB: Well, there was a doctor here, his name was Woodburn. But I don t really remember him because I was a small child. And then Dr. Hyde came. And Dr. Hyde was here for a number of years. He was the only doctor we had for a number of years. HF: And you recall him don t you? SB: Yes. HF: And what other doctors do you remember later on that you personally remember? SB: Well Doctor Armsby came here later; he was doctor who removed my father s one eye! And he located in a business place in town and he settled in a building on Main Street, down near the school. And they were here for several years and then they moved away. HF: Were there any trained nurses? SB: No. No nurses. Everybody went and helped everybody else. HF: Do you recall an outstanding lady who acted as a midwife in the birth of children in the area? 10

11 SB: Yes there was a Mrs. Waltz and a Mrs. Nelson. Both of those women were midwives and we knew them. HF: Well now Sister Browning, after you had gotten your education what did you do? Go out and work on your own in the area? SB: Well to begin with, I went to school when I got to the eighth grade in the Ricks and then I went to Salt Lake City and went to the LDS College one year. And after that I didn t do very much because I wasn t very well. I was just home mainly then and worked in the store with father. HF: Now as a teenager, going back in the times when you were say, fifteen to twenty years old when you were a teenager, what activities did you engaged in? What was your father doing during these years? SB: He was about in everything there was to be in. I wasn t too old then and we didn t do a great deal, only go out in groups and the like. But father was the first chairman of the first village board and he was the first mayor of Rexburg. HF: Do you recall some of the other men that served with him? SB: No I don t then, but Raymond McIntire, his father, was one of the mayors and a brother-in-law, John L. Jacobs, served as a mayor. HF: Well now Sister Browning, at the time of the First World War opened in 1917, you d been a young woman at this time, how did your family feel about serving in the service? Some of your ancestors and in-laws, and so forth might have been in the service tell us what reaction you have. SB: The early reaction we had was out of loyalty. We felt that it was a duty of every citizen to do what was right. If there was anything asked of us we did it and my brother Harold, they declared war, and he enlisted the very day they declared war and served entirely through the war. He was in the Navy. He came home disabled and he spent the greatest part of twenty-five years in hospitals as a result of it. We never felt any bitterness or anything about it, we felt that it was right and proper and should be. And we never felt that there was anything unfair in him going and we didn t feel that he was any braver or stronger than any other man who enlisted and went. And then in going back, father had his two brothers here. And the older one of the two had served through the Civil War. He was also a Navy man and was on the battleship Lancaster. And he came home and he never married and lived alone and was with us. And he is buried right by my father out here in the Rexburg Cemetery. His name was Charles Fredrick Flamm. But he is a veteran of the Civil War. HF: That s really interesting. Well now at the time of the war was there quite a lot of parading going on and a lot of enthusiasm here in Rexburg? 11

12 SB: Every time there was a boy who enlisted, every time that a boy came home on leave, everyone did everything they could to show honor and respect to them. There was no disrespect whatever in regard to any of the boys. HF: Well that s really wonderful to know this spirit about the honoring one s country by serving one s country. In your youth I presume the church was quite active in the community and also on missionary labor. What would be your comment on some of these things Sister Browning? SB: Well, frankly the only entertainment and the only activity we had was church. Everybody respected and did what they could for everyone else. In so far as missions, I had one brother, my brother Peter who filled a mission in the Southern States. And I had three brothers, my brother John Daniel, my brother George, and my brother Herbert who all filled missions in Germany. Raymond McIntire died of meningitis while he was in Germany and was a companion of my brother George. And my brother George brought his body home for burial. Then I had a sister Hannah who filled a mission back in Denver as a young woman. And later when my one sister had grown, married family, he and her husband went back to Washington and Oregon and filled missions back there, full term missions not short ones, but full term missions back in Washington and Oregon. HF: In the growing up of the Church in Rexburg, I assume first of all, you had but one church and where was this located and tell me something about the structure of the building and so one? SB: Well we had our 1 st Ward Church for many years and that s all we had then. The 2 nd Ward was built. And that was built down here where the 2 nd Ward Church now stands, but it has been taken down and the new, better church put up. And the 1 st Ward Church, we went to that for many years over here where we went to the Academy on the old canal. And then they got together and decided that we needed a better church so they bought the property up here and build the first 1 st Ward church where it stands now. And that s what we had for many years, but all the entertainment and recreation, practically everything we had was church. HF: Under that type of environment, church influence, undoubtedly there was very little skullduggery or juvenile delinquency going on. How did they manage? Did they have a curfew or anything like this in Rexburg? SB: They had the great big old bell on top of the old wooden school house and when nine o clock came that bell was rung and you d hear it a full mile away. And we had a cop named Joe Morrison, he had the bluest blue eyes they were piercing, he never herd anything on earth but when that curfew rang he got on his pony and he started herding kids! And he d take those kids home and he d fine them a dollar for taking them home. And they d be there and they d run sometimes and he d make them run all the way home and they d ran all the way. But when that curfew run, everyone else run too! We really 12

13 got for home! There was no night hawking; there was no nothing. Nine o clock and everyone was home. HF: Well now do you recall when the courthouse down here that we have today, was constructed? SB: Yeah, but I can t remember a lot. I remember when it was built. HF: What was in its place before it was constructed? SB: Well to being with it was a dwelling site there and there was people living in their homes and the property was bought from and the courthouse was constructed. HF: Do you recall any local industry in the area? Now we mentioned this Mill Hollow, what type of a mill was this? SB: It was a [inaudible] mill and it was where everybody took their grain. Sometimes they stored it, sometimes they had it made into bread. And among other things, they employed considerable help there and at one time father had two men working for him. I won t say who they were, but one of them came to him and asked him if he might borrow a team and sleigh it was in the winter. And father loaned him the team and sleigh and he was to be back for work in the morning. So he took the team and the sleigh and he came back in the morning End of Recording 13

Voices from the Past. Johnson s Settlement. By James Albert Johnson And Ethel Sarah Porter Johnson. June 9, Tape #10

Voices from the Past. Johnson s Settlement. By James Albert Johnson And Ethel Sarah Porter Johnson. June 9, Tape #10 Voices from the Past Johnson s Settlement By James Albert Johnson And Ethel Sarah Porter Johnson June 9, 1968 Tape #10 Oral interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Theophilus E. Tandoh September

More information

A Flamm Family History and the Flamm Funeral Home. Tape #52b

A Flamm Family History and the Flamm Funeral Home. Tape #52b Voices from the Past A Flamm Family History and the Flamm Funeral Home Interviewee: Russell Flamm February 7, 1970 Tape #52b Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Wendy Crofts Edited

More information

Early School Teaching. Tape #23

Early School Teaching. Tape #23 Voices from the Past Early School Teaching Interviewee: Andrew Anderson Nelson January 15, 1971 Tape #23 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Louis Clements September 2002 Edited

More information

You live in a very beautiful home, first of all. We ll talk about that in a minute. But can I have

You live in a very beautiful home, first of all. We ll talk about that in a minute. But can I have 1 Elray Nixon (Spencer Family) INTERVIEW WITH: Elray Nixon INTERVIEWER: Marsha Holland INTERVIEW NUMBER: DATE OF INTERVIEW: February 18, 2011 PLACE OF INTERVIEW: Escalante, Utah SUBJECT OF INTERVIEW: TRANSCRIBER:

More information

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Caroline Pierce Burke. March 25, Box 1 Folder 18. Oral Interview conducted by Robert Read

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Caroline Pierce Burke. March 25, Box 1 Folder 18. Oral Interview conducted by Robert Read Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Caroline Pierce Burke - The Great Depression Years in Southeastern Idaho By Caroline Pierce Burke March 25, 1976 Box 1 Folder 18 Oral Interview conducted by Robert

More information

Life History of Ivy Price: Experiences in North Salem. Tape #90

Life History of Ivy Price: Experiences in North Salem. Tape #90 Voices from the Past Life History of Ivy Price: Experiences in North Salem Interviewee: Ivy Price November 12, 1983 Tape #90 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Jasmine Scholes November

More information

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Elizabeth Spori Stowell. December 11, Box 2 Folder 41. Oral Interview conducted by Sharee Smith

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Elizabeth Spori Stowell. December 11, Box 2 Folder 41. Oral Interview conducted by Sharee Smith Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Elizabeth Spori Stowell-Experiences of World War I By Elizabeth Spori Stowell December 11, 1973 Box 2 Folder 41 Oral Interview conducted by Sharee Smith Transcribed

More information

Rulon Ricks-Experiences of the Depresssion. Box 2 Folder 31

Rulon Ricks-Experiences of the Depresssion. Box 2 Folder 31 Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Rulon Ricks-Experiences of the Depresssion By Rulon Ricks November 23, 1975 Box 2 Folder 31 Oral Interview conducted by Suzanne H. Ricks Transcribed by Sarah

More information

JOHN D. JONES Father of Charles E. Jones

JOHN D. JONES Father of Charles E. Jones JOHN D. JONES Father of Charles E. Jones John D. Jones was a most successful farmer and fruit growers of Utah County. His residence has been in Provo, Utah, most of the time since 1851. He was born in

More information

Hazel Pearson- Life during the Depression. Box 2 Folder 21

Hazel Pearson- Life during the Depression. Box 2 Folder 21 Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Hazel Pearson- Life during the Depression By Hazel Pearson November 29, 1975 Box 2 Folder 21 Oral Interview conducted by Sandra Williams Transcribed by Sarah

More information

HOWARD ELMER GIBSON

HOWARD ELMER GIBSON HOWARD ELMER GIBSON 1883-1956 Howard Elmer Gibson was born 27 May 1883, at Hyde Park, Cache County, Utah, the 4 th child of William Moroni Gibson and Harriet Woolf. According to the history, For Heaven

More information

Lowell Luke - The Depression. Box 2 Folder 13

Lowell Luke - The Depression. Box 2 Folder 13 Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Lowell Luke - The Depression By Lowell Luke December 9, 1974 Box 2 Folder 13 Oral Interview conducted by Darell Palmer Woolley Transcribed by Victor Ukorebi February

More information

Utah Power and Light Company. Tape #82

Utah Power and Light Company. Tape #82 Voices from the Past Utah Power and Light Company Interviewee: Alma Klinger and William Fowler January, 31 1981 Tape #82 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Jessica Smith May 2009

More information

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Freda Ann Clark. March 21, Box 1 Folder 13. Oral Interview conducted by Paul Bodily

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Freda Ann Clark. March 21, Box 1 Folder 13. Oral Interview conducted by Paul Bodily Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Freda Ann Clark Bodily-Experiences of the Depression By Freda Ann Clark March 21, 1975 Box 1 Folder 13 Oral Interview conducted by Paul Bodily Transcribed by

More information

Transportation of Goods from Market Lake to Rexburg from 1883 to Tape #69

Transportation of Goods from Market Lake to Rexburg from 1883 to Tape #69 Voices from the Past Transportation of Goods from Market Lake to Rexburg from 1883 to 1899 Interviewee: George Alton Anderson March 12, 1983 Tape #69 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed

More information

History of JAMES WILLIAM BOOTH (This text of this history was written in part by Marie

History of JAMES WILLIAM BOOTH (This text of this history was written in part by Marie History of JAMES WILLIAM BOOTH (This text of this history was written in part by Marie Booth, Wife of Fred Booth) James William Booth was born in St. George, Utah to James and Elizabeth Tye Booth. His

More information

Life Histories of Nephi and Lorna Christensen. Tape #128

Life Histories of Nephi and Lorna Christensen. Tape #128 Voices from the Past Life Histories of Nephi and Lorna Christensen Interviewees: Nephi and Lorna Christensen February 28, 1970 Tape #128 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Sarah

More information

A life sketch of Margaret Harley Randall

A life sketch of Margaret Harley Randall A life sketch of Margaret Harley Randall 1823 1919 (Wife of Alfred Randall) Margaret Harley, daughter of Benjamin and Elizabeth Harley, was born January 13, 1823 in Chester County, Pennsylvania. Her mother

More information

Mary Ann Owens Crosby 1 by John Silas Crosby

Mary Ann Owens Crosby 1 by John Silas Crosby 1 Mary Ann Owens Crosby 1 by John Silas Crosby Mary Ann Owens was born in Panguitch November 9, 1884. Her parents were William Thomas Owens and Margaret Jones. As a small girl she spent a large part of

More information

194 Elizabeth R. H oltgreive

194 Elizabeth R. H oltgreive RECOLLECTIONS OF PIONEER DAYS To the pioneers I am known as Betty Shepard. I was born October 26th, 1840, in Jefferson County, Iowa, at a place called Brush Creek, about fifteen miles from Rome. My father,

More information

Rose Koops - Beaver Dick s Daughter. Tape #12

Rose Koops - Beaver Dick s Daughter. Tape #12 Voices of the Past Rose Koops - Beaver Dick s Daughter By Rose Koops August 4, 1970 Tape #12 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Devon Robb November 2004 Brigham Young University

More information

Voices from the Past. Interviewee: George S. and Mildred Tanner. September 19 th, Tape #50b. Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush

Voices from the Past. Interviewee: George S. and Mildred Tanner. September 19 th, Tape #50b. Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Voices from the Past The Institute of Religion program at the University of Idaho in Moscow, ID Interviewee: George S. and Mildred Tanner September 19 th, 1970 Tape #50b Oral Interview conducted by Harold

More information

Eric Walz History 300 Collection. April 23, Box 5 Folder 2. A research paper written by Meagan Ellgen

Eric Walz History 300 Collection. April 23, Box 5 Folder 2. A research paper written by Meagan Ellgen Eric Walz History 300 Collection How did religion affect the origins of BYU-Idaho? April 23, 2004 Box 5 Folder 2 A research paper written by Meagan Ellgen Transcript copied by Victor Ukorebi September,

More information

The Archibald Family History and Pioneer Stories. Tape #56

The Archibald Family History and Pioneer Stories. Tape #56 Voices from the Past The Archibald Family History and Pioneer Stories Interviewee: David Watson Archibald January 22, 1970 Tape #56 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Brittney Law

More information

Justin Abraham Knapp

Justin Abraham Knapp A life sketch of Justin Abraham Knapp 1857 1918 Justin Abraham Knapp was born at Farmington, Davis County, Utah on August 4, 1857. His father, Albert, was a descendant of William Knapp who came to America

More information

Development of Agriculture on the Rexburg Bench. Tape #97

Development of Agriculture on the Rexburg Bench. Tape #97 Voices from the Past Development of Agriculture on the Rexburg Bench Interviewee: Frank R. Webster December 10, 1983 Tape #97 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Jasmine Scholes

More information

Living In Territorial Utah: culture, business, transportation, and mining. Timeline. Schools in Utah Territory

Living In Territorial Utah: culture, business, transportation, and mining. Timeline. Schools in Utah Territory Slide 1 Living In Territorial Utah: culture, business, transportation, and mining Chapter 8 Slide 2 Timeline 1850 The University of Deseret (U of U) opens. Utah s first newspaper, the Deseret News, is

More information

I: And today is November 23, Can you tell me Ray how long you were in the orphanage?

I: And today is November 23, Can you tell me Ray how long you were in the orphanage? Interview with Raymond Henry Lakenen November 23, 1987 Interviewer (I): Okay could you tell me your full name please? Raymond Henry Lakenen (RHL): Raymond H. Lakenen. I: Okay what is your middle name?

More information

Uncorrected Transcript of. Interviews. with. LOME ALLEN and SADIE LYON Undated. and. (W#*ed. by James Eddie McCoy, Jr. Transcribed by Wesley S.

Uncorrected Transcript of. Interviews. with. LOME ALLEN and SADIE LYON Undated. and. (W#*ed. by James Eddie McCoy, Jr. Transcribed by Wesley S. Uncorrected Transcript of Interviews with LOME ALLEN and SADIE LYON Undated and (W#*ed. by James Eddie McCoy, Jr. Transcribed by Wesley S. White The Southern Oral History Program The University of North

More information

Manwaring Family History Poem

Manwaring Family History Poem Manwaring Family History Poem By Beth Manwaring Schick (Presented at a Manwaring reunion, 1960.) Have you ever wondered, And I'm sure we all do- Where the name Manwaring came from? Just listen, and I'll

More information

Florence C. Shizuka Koura Tape 1 of 1

Florence C. Shizuka Koura Tape 1 of 1 Your name is Flo? And is that your full name or is that a nickname? Well, my parents did not give it to me. Oh they didn t? No, I chose it myself. Oh you did? When you very young or..? I think I was in

More information

ANNA REGULA FURRER. (wife of Jean/John Cardon, born 1824)

ANNA REGULA FURRER. (wife of Jean/John Cardon, born 1824) ANNA REGULA FURRER (wife of Jean/John Cardon, born 1824) Regula Furrer was born 15 March 1826 in Pfaffikon, Zurich Canton, Switzerland to Regula Hess and Hans Rudolf Furrer. In the many hand written histories

More information

VOICES FROM THE PAST HISTORY OF MUD LAKE. By Mildred Stayley & Joe Hartwell. June 2, Tape # 26. Oral Tape by Harold Forbush

VOICES FROM THE PAST HISTORY OF MUD LAKE. By Mildred Stayley & Joe Hartwell. June 2, Tape # 26. Oral Tape by Harold Forbush VOICES FROM THE PAST HISTORY OF MUD LAKE By Mildred Stayley & Joe Hartwell June 2, 1982 Tape # 26 Oral Tape by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Louis Clements September 2002 Upper Snake River Valley Historical

More information

Major Indian White Conflicts U T A H H I S T O R Y C H A P T E R 7

Major Indian White Conflicts U T A H H I S T O R Y C H A P T E R 7 Major Indian White Conflicts U T A H H I S T O R Y C H A P T E R 7 Native Americans vs. Mormons: Conflicts happened over a period of time. They were sometimes violent, but were usually resolved peacefully.

More information

Lester Belnap-Experiences of WWI. Box 1 Folder 11

Lester Belnap-Experiences of WWI. Box 1 Folder 11 Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Lester Belnap-Experiences of WWI By Lester Belnap December 7, 1973 Box 1 Folder 11 Oral Interview conducted by Steven Yamada Transcribed by Kurt Hunsaker December

More information

JOHN SCHWENDIMAN SWITZERLAND TO UPPER SNAKE RIVER VALLEY. Tape #174

JOHN SCHWENDIMAN SWITZERLAND TO UPPER SNAKE RIVER VALLEY. Tape #174 VOICES FROM THE PAST JOHN SCHWENDIMAN SWITZERLAND TO UPPER SNAKE RIVER VALLEY By John Schwendiman February 23, 1970 Tape #174 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Louis Clements April

More information

History of the John Henderson and Agnes Johnston Kirby Family. Tape #121

History of the John Henderson and Agnes Johnston Kirby Family. Tape #121 Voices from the Past History of the John Henderson and Agnes Johnston Kirby Family Interviewee: James J. Kirby May 3, 1970 Tape #121 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Tia Aucoin

More information

Rex Bennion Life during the Teton Flood. Box 5 Folder 17

Rex Bennion Life during the Teton Flood. Box 5 Folder 17 1 The Teton Dam Disaster Collection Rex Bennion Life during the Teton Flood By Rex Bennion June 22, 1977 Box 5 Folder 17 Oral Interview conducted by Mary Ann Beck Transcript copied by Sarah McCorristin

More information

Life History of Judge Samuel Swanner. Tape #126

Life History of Judge Samuel Swanner. Tape #126 Voices from the Past Life History of Judge Samuel Swanner Interviewee: Sterling Swanner July 11, 1978 Tape #126 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Amanda Hoffmann November 2009

More information

Reading and Sermon. May 15, Rev. Dr. Richard Speck. Reading. Pay It Forward

Reading and Sermon. May 15, Rev. Dr. Richard Speck. Reading. Pay It Forward Reading and Sermon Reading Pay It Forward It was a dark night in the dead of winter in Sussex County. A recent snow and cold temperatures made the body shiver, especially when the heater in your truck

More information

"Itty Bitty Mormon City"

Itty Bitty Mormon City "Itty Bitty Mormon City" It s time to think small; really small. Your goal is to find the items pictured on the attached two pages. These items represent nearly unrecognizable bits and pieces of buildings,

More information

(29) Brooke Smith Was a Builder

(29) Brooke Smith Was a Builder Continuation of; THE PROMISED LAND A HISTORY OF BROWN COUNTY, TEXAS by James C. White (29) Brooke Smith Was a Builder BROOKE SMITH came to Brownwood February 8, 1876, at the age of 23. He died here in

More information

Madison County Idaho Assessor. Tape #3

Madison County Idaho Assessor. Tape #3 Voices from the Past Madison County Idaho Assessor Interviewee: Benjamin E. Summers March 6, 1982 Tape #3 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Luke Kirkham July 2003 Edited by: Ali

More information

Uh huh, I see. What was it like living in Granby as a child? Was it very different from living in other Vermont communities?

Uh huh, I see. What was it like living in Granby as a child? Was it very different from living in other Vermont communities? August 7, 1987 Mary Kasamatsu Interviewer This is the 7th of August. This is an interview for Green Mountain Chronicles ~nd I'm in Lunenberg with Mr. Rodney Noble. And this; ~ a way...;~. work ing into

More information

Ralph Cameron speaking to Scottsdale Community College for Keepers of Treasures 1

Ralph Cameron speaking to Scottsdale Community College for Keepers of Treasures 1 College for Keepers of Treasures 1 Tape 5 Side A Female: Educators and elders and for everybody. Please everybody stand. (Female Sings) Thank You. Ralph Cameron: Hi Everyone. Crowd: Hi. Ralph Cameron:

More information

Episode 31 Legacy EARLY SALT LAKE CITY

Episode 31 Legacy EARLY SALT LAKE CITY Episode 31 Legacy EARLY SALT LAKE CITY [BEGIN MUSIC] NATHAN WRIGHT: One of the most remarkable aspects of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints is its unique history. Throughout the world great

More information

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Artell Chapman. Spring Box 1 Folder 23. Oral Interview conducted by Larry Ostler

Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project. By Artell Chapman. Spring Box 1 Folder 23. Oral Interview conducted by Larry Ostler Crowder, Dr. David L. Oral History Project Artell Chapman-Experiences at the Ricks College Library By Artell Chapman Spring 1984 Box 1 Folder 23 Oral Interview conducted by Larry Ostler Transcribed by

More information

Flora Adams Wall Life During WWII. Box 6 Folder 28

Flora Adams Wall Life During WWII. Box 6 Folder 28 Eric Walz History 300 Collection Flora Adams Wall Life During WWII By Flora Campbell Gain Adams Wall October 10, 2004 Box 6 Folder 28 Oral Interview conducted by Tiffany Call Transcript copied by Devon

More information

Eric Walz History 300 Collection. By Sean Braniff. December 15, Box 7 Folder 2. A research paper by Sean Braniff

Eric Walz History 300 Collection. By Sean Braniff. December 15, Box 7 Folder 2. A research paper by Sean Braniff Eric Walz History 300 Collection What affect did Thomas E. Ricks have on the settlement of the Upper Snake River Valley? By Sean Braniff December 15, 2004 Box 7 Folder 2 A research paper by Sean Braniff

More information

Dr. David L. Crowder Oral History Project. By Luseba Widdison Petersen. March 24, Box 2 Folder 23. Oral Interview conducted by Rick Smith

Dr. David L. Crowder Oral History Project. By Luseba Widdison Petersen. March 24, Box 2 Folder 23. Oral Interview conducted by Rick Smith Dr. David L. Crowder Oral History Project Luseba W. Petersen Experiences of the Depression By Luseba Widdison Petersen March 24, 1976 Box 2 Folder 23 Oral Interview conducted by Rick Smith Transcribed

More information

Register of the Harold Forbush Oral Interview Transcriptions

Register of the Harold Forbush Oral Interview Transcriptions Register of the Harold Forbush Oral Interview Transcriptions MSSI 50 Brigham Young University-Idaho Special Collections Brigham Young University-Idaho 2003 Contact Information Brigham Young University-Idaho

More information

Utah Settlement and Mining

Utah Settlement and Mining Utah Settlement and Mining Pioneers Enter the Valley July 24, 1847 2 Mormon Holiday Pioneer Day July 24 This is when Brigham Young entered the valley. !! Famous words: THIS IS THE PLACE This is the right

More information

Carol E. Hines Interviewed by: Rusty Salmon January at Moab, Utah

Carol E. Hines Interviewed by: Rusty Salmon January at Moab, Utah Carol E. Hines Interviewed by: Rusty Salmon January- 2002 at Moab, Utah Carol: Well, I was born here in Moab, Utah, and my dad was out on the forest with his Forest Service work and they just told him

More information

HENRY S LAKE AREA

HENRY S LAKE AREA VOICES FROM THE PAST HENRY S LAKE AREA 1910-35 By William Bailey Rayburn and Bertie Ruth Perry Rayburn March 21, 1970 Tape # 8 Oral Tape by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Louis Clements October 2002 Upper

More information

MARGARET ANN GRIFFITHS HISTORY

MARGARET ANN GRIFFITHS HISTORY MARGARET ANN GRIFFITHS HISTORY By Edith Afton Gines Hartman (descendant of Henry Clegg and Margaret Ann Griffiths Clegg) edited from sources generally available through Henry Clegg descendants and from

More information

JW: Well, there was four of us, my father and mother and my brother and I.

JW: Well, there was four of us, my father and mother and my brother and I. 1 Interview with Julia Westman (b.1915) Newberry Michigan May 10, 1983 1 tape, side A Jackie Erikson (JE): This is an interview with Julia Westman of Newberry. Interviewer is Jackie Erikson. What is your

More information

Life History of the Wilding Family. Tape #127

Life History of the Wilding Family. Tape #127 Voices from the Past Life History of the Wilding Family Interviewees: John Henry, Dollie, and David DeWayne Wilding and Leulla Wilding Park February 27, 1980 Tape #127 Oral Interview conducted by Harold

More information

Joseph Hyrum Smith Life in Clark. Tape # 50

Joseph Hyrum Smith Life in Clark. Tape # 50 Voices from the Past Joseph Hyrum Smith Life in Clark By Joseph Hyrum Smith September 2, 1970 Tape # 50 Oral interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Devon Robb October 2004 Brigham Young University

More information

Ellis Island Park Service Oral History Excerpt Ida P. 13 August 1996 edited by Fern Greenberg Blood

Ellis Island Park Service Oral History Excerpt Ida P. 13 August 1996 edited by Fern Greenberg Blood Ellis Island Park Service Oral History Excerpt Ida P. 13 August 1996 edited by Fern Greenberg Blood My name in Russia was Osna Chaya Goldart. My father came here [to America] in 1913, before the First

More information

Hibbard, Idaho Community. Tape #54

Hibbard, Idaho Community. Tape #54 Voices from the Past Hibbard, Idaho Community Interviewees: Dewey and May Parker October 13, 1979 Tape #54 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Wendy Crofts November 2006 Edited by:

More information

Eliza Chapman Gadd 3 Stories HISTORY OF ELIZA CHAPMAN GADD

Eliza Chapman Gadd 3 Stories HISTORY OF ELIZA CHAPMAN GADD Eliza Chapman Gadd 3 Stories By her granddaughter Mable Gadd Kirk HISTORY OF ELIZA CHAPMAN GADD My grandmother, Eliza Chapman Gadd, was born March 13, 1815, at Croyden, Cambridgeshire, England, the daughter

More information

Chapter 8: Living in Territorial Utah. (Culture, Business, Transportation, and Mining)

Chapter 8: Living in Territorial Utah. (Culture, Business, Transportation, and Mining) Chapter 8: Living in Territorial Utah (Culture, Business, Transportation, and Mining) Introduction When a new community was founded the first people slept in or under their wagons until a more permanent

More information

Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies

Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies Chapters 10 & 11 Utah Studies Chapter 10-The Territory Prospers The Railroad Changes Utah Trains were important for moving raw materials from mines to manufacturing centers. They also carried raw material

More information

Texas City / World War II Oral History Project. Audited Transcript

Texas City / World War II Oral History Project. Audited Transcript Interviewee: Troy Uzzell Interviewer: Vivi Hoang Date of Interview: March 21, 2012 Texas City / World War II Oral History Project Audited Transcript Place of Interview: Moore Memorial Public Library, 1701

More information

Brief History of Williams Bay By Frank M. Van Epps

Brief History of Williams Bay By Frank M. Van Epps Brief History of Williams Bay By Frank M. Van Epps The first man to recognize the site of our present village of Williams Bay as a good place for a home site for himself and others was named Cole, who

More information

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum

United States Holocaust Memorial Museum United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Interview with: Goldie Gendelmen October 8, 1997 RG-50.106*0074 PREFACE The following interview is part of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum's collection

More information

CHAPTER 1 Tomorrow s champion

CHAPTER 1 Tomorrow s champion CHAPTER 1 Tomorrow s champion Muhammad Ali was born on 17th January, 1942, and his parents named him Cassius Clay Jr. He had one younger brother, named Rudolph. Their mother, Odessa Clay, worked hard to

More information

EMERY COUNTY PIONEER SETTLERS OF THE 19TH CENTURY

EMERY COUNTY PIONEER SETTLERS OF THE 19TH CENTURY EMERY COUNTY PIONEER SETTLERS OF THE 19TH CENTURY William Burgess, Jr. William Burgess Jr., like his father was a Utah pioneer of 1848 in the Brigham Young Company, under the direction of that intrepid

More information

Poole s Island Settlement. Tape # 159 A&B

Poole s Island Settlement. Tape # 159 A&B Voices from the Past Poole s Island Settlement Interviewee: John Tanner Pool and J. Rulon Poole June 25, 1970 Tape # 159 A&B Oral Tape by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Louis Clements January 2003 Edited

More information

Joel Hills Johnson wrote:

Joel Hills Johnson wrote: WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19TH Started early and traveled about 8 miles and camped for the night without water five miles from Little Sandy. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20TH Started about sunrise without breakfast

More information

MeGATfcHT, KHOI D. IMT&RVIIW 8581 MnM 1J4

MeGATfcHT, KHOI D. IMT&RVIIW 8581 MnM 1J4 MeGATfcHT, KHOI D. IMT&RVIIW 8581 MnM 1J4 % MDGAUGBY, KNOX D. - qjre.otw. 8681, Form A-(S-140) BIOGRAPHY FORM WORKS PROGRESS ADMINISTRATION Indian-Pioneer History Project for Oklahoma Field Worker's name

More information

Blair K. Siepert Life during the Flood. Box 4 Folder 32

Blair K. Siepert Life during the Flood. Box 4 Folder 32 Eric Walz History 300 Collection Blair K. Siepert Life during the Flood By Blair K. Siepert March 2, 2004 Box 4 Folder 32 Oral Interview conducted by Jessica Wilkinson Transcript copied by Luke Kirkham

More information

BR: D4. What pattern can you see in the landscape in Utah that is from the early Mormon Colonizing days? Explain:

BR: D4. What pattern can you see in the landscape in Utah that is from the early Mormon Colonizing days? Explain: BR: D4 What pattern can you see in the landscape in Utah that is from the early Mormon Colonizing days? Explain: Utah Studies Settling the Great Basin Ch. 7.2 Mormon / Latter-Day Saint Towns Gathering

More information

Fanny Cropper Powell Camp Heritage Hall 4365 South 4000 West, Deseret, Utah 84624

Fanny Cropper Powell Camp Heritage Hall 4365 South 4000 West, Deseret, Utah 84624 Fanny Cropper Powell Camp Heritage Hall 4365 South 4000 West, Deseret, Utah 84624 Stove The stove is out of John and Musetta Western home that was next door to our Heritage Hall. They were married in 1892,

More information

Included Names: Andrew and Lucy Lucetta Brown McCombs, Ellen (Nellie) Gray

Included Names: Andrew and Lucy Lucetta Brown McCombs, Ellen (Nellie) Gray STAR VALLEY HISTORICAL SOCIETY HISTORICAL BOOKS INVENTORY DETAILS 1. Overview Title: History ofandrew Carlos McCombs Author: Ellen McCombs Van Leuven Subject: Personal History Publisher: Publishing Date:

More information

A life sketch of Uriah Ury Welch Wilkins

A life sketch of Uriah Ury Welch Wilkins A life sketch of Uriah Ury Welch Wilkins 1842 1891 Uriah Welch was born May 5, 1842 at Pilsdon, Dorsetshire, England. Uriah was the youngest child of Job and Charlotte Rawlins Welch. The Welch family included

More information

The Mormon Trail: In search of the promised land

The Mormon Trail: In search of the promised land Name Period US History 8 Mr. Tripodi The Mormon Trail: In search of the promised land Directions: 1. Read the paragraph. 2. Present the paragraph a different way. Make meaning out of what you are reading

More information

He was a Hero to Family and Friends. Tape #153

He was a Hero to Family and Friends. Tape #153 Voices from the Past He was a Hero to Family and Friends By John Rolland Clark July 1, 1970 Tape #153 Oral Interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Joel Miyasaki August 2003 Brigham Young University-

More information

BEET SUGAR FACTORY SUGAR CITY

BEET SUGAR FACTORY SUGAR CITY VOICES FROM THE PAST BEET SUGAR FACTORY SUGAR CITY By Ira A. Stanton Howard May 14, 1968 Tape # 18 Oral Tape by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Louis Clements January 2003 Upper Snake River Valley Historical

More information

Key Words: Oldham, England, cotton mill, Afton, Wyoming, High Council

Key Words: Oldham, England, cotton mill, Afton, Wyoming, High Council STAR VALLEY HISTORICAL SOCIETY HISTORICAL BOOKS INVENTORY DETAILS 1. Overview Title: John Nield Author: John Nield Subject: Personal History Publisher: Publishing Date: Number of Pages: 5 ID#: 370 Location:

More information

ABIGAIL SPRAGUE BRADFORD

ABIGAIL SPRAGUE BRADFORD 154 LIFE OF ARCHIBALD GARDNER ABIGAIL SPRAGUE BRADFORD Abigail Sprague Bradford Gardner came of good old English stock. Her forefather, William Sprague, came from England in.the ship "Abigail" in 1628

More information

THE LAST SLAVE HAL AMES

THE LAST SLAVE HAL AMES THE LAST SLAVE HAL AMES The War was over and life on the plantation had changed. The troops from the northern army were everywhere. They told the owners that their slaves were now free. They told them

More information

Max Brown Life during the Teton Flood. Box 5 Folder 26

Max Brown Life during the Teton Flood. Box 5 Folder 26 The Teton Dam Disaster Collection Max Brown Life during the Teton Flood By Max Brown July 8, 1977 Box 5 Folder 26 Oral Interview conducted by Richard Stallings Transcript copied by Sarah McCorristin May

More information

SETTLEMENTS TRANSPORTATION & MINING. Chapter 9 Utah Studies

SETTLEMENTS TRANSPORTATION & MINING. Chapter 9 Utah Studies SETTLEMENTS TRANSPORTATION & MINING Chapter 9 Utah Studies HUNTSVILLE-1860 Seven families led by Jefferson Hunt established Huntsville in 1860. They found Shoshone living in the Ogden Valley and paid a

More information

Impact of the Great Depression on Sugar City, Idaho. Tape #30

Impact of the Great Depression on Sugar City, Idaho. Tape #30 Voices from the Past Impact of the Great Depression on Sugar City, Idaho Interviewees: Cleo and Norma Browning August 7, 1982 Tape #30 Oral Interview conducted by: Harold Forbush Transcribed by Jamie Wright

More information

How did the Transcontinental Railroad Change Utah s Economy?

How did the Transcontinental Railroad Change Utah s Economy? How did the Transcontinental Railroad Change Utah s Economy? GRADE 4 How did the Transcontinental Railroad Change Utah s Economy? By Rebecca Kirkman Summary Students will read about how the railroad changed

More information

Anna Eliza Lemmon Knapp

Anna Eliza Lemmon Knapp A life sketch of Anna Eliza Lemmon Knapp 1860 1931 Anna Eliza Lemmon was born, November 18, 1860. She was the first girl born in Smithfield, Cache County, Utah. Eliza s parents, Willis Lemmon and Anna

More information

Utah Valley Orchards

Utah Valley Orchards Utah Valley Orchards Interviewee: Viola Smith (VS), Mrs. Bud Smith, 583 East 4525 North, Provo, Utah 84604 Interviewer: Randy Astle (RA) Interview Location: 583 East 4525 North, Provo, Utah 84604 Date:

More information

The History of Poquonock: A Paper Recorded by. Carrie Marshall Kendrick ( ) on February 28, 1962

The History of Poquonock: A Paper Recorded by. Carrie Marshall Kendrick ( ) on February 28, 1962 The History of Poquonock: A Paper Recorded by Carrie Marshall Kendrick (1883-1963) on February 28, 1962 INTERVIEWEE: Carrie Kendrick INTERVIEWER: n/a PLACE: unknown DATE: February 28, 1962 TRANSCRIBER:

More information

Abraham Lincoln. By: Walker Minix. Mrs. Bingham s 2 nd Grade

Abraham Lincoln. By: Walker Minix. Mrs. Bingham s 2 nd Grade Abraham Lincoln By: Walker Minix Mrs. Bingham s 2 nd Grade Table of Contents Chapter 1 Young Abe Page 1 Chapter 2 Rise To Greatness Page 2 Chapter 3 President Lincoln Page 3 Chapter 4 The Assassination

More information

Father of a Prophet. Andrew Kimball. Edward L. Kimball with research by Spencer W. Kimball. BYU Studies Provo, Utah

Father of a Prophet. Andrew Kimball. Edward L. Kimball with research by Spencer W. Kimball. BYU Studies Provo, Utah Father of a Prophet Andrew Kimball Edward L. Kimball with research by Spencer W. Kimball BYU Studies Provo, Utah This volume is part of the BYU Studies series Biographies in Latter-day Saint History Other

More information

Joseph, Part 2 of 2: From Egypt to the Promised Land

Joseph, Part 2 of 2: From Egypt to the Promised Land 1 Joseph, Part 2 of 2: From Egypt to the Promised Land by Joelee Chamberlain Another time I was telling you about Joseph, the son of Jacob, wasn' t I? But the Bible tells us so much about Joseph that I

More information

Wife of Anson Call

Wife of Anson Call A life sketch of Ann Mariah Bowen Call 1834 1924 Wife of Anson Call Ann Mariah Bowen Call was born January 3, 1834, in Bethany, Gennesse County, New York. In her early childhood she, with her parents,

More information

BLIND OF EASTERN IDAHO

BLIND OF EASTERN IDAHO Voices from the Past BLIND OF EASTERN IDAHO By Alma B. Larson September 1962 Tape #5 Oral interview conducted by Harold Forbush Transcribed by Louis Clements Upper Snake River Valley Historical Society

More information

JOHN G. JONES By Martha Jamimah Jones

JOHN G. JONES By Martha Jamimah Jones JOHN G. JONES By Martha Jamimah Jones John G. Jones, About 40 Years Old stories of which he often told us children. My father, John G. Jones, was born November 27, 1830, in the beautiful city of Llanely,

More information

Alright. Today is January twenty-third, 2015 and I m Douglas

Alright. Today is January twenty-third, 2015 and I m Douglas Interviewee: Kevin Fondel 4700.2464 Tape 4400 Interviewer: Douglas Mungin Session I Transcriber: Laura Spikerman January 23, 2015 Auditor: Anne Wheeler Editor: Chelsea Arseneault [Begin Tape 4400. Begin

More information

History of Mud Lake. Tape #26

History of Mud Lake. Tape #26 Voices from the Past History of Mud Lake Interviewees: Mildred Jackson Staley & Joe Hartwell June 2, 1982 Tape #26 Oral Tape by Harold Forbush Transcribed by: Louis Clements September 2002 Edited by: Hysen

More information

Transcontinental Railroad

Transcontinental Railroad Name 1 Transcontinental Railroad Long Term Questions How have our leaders impacted the growth of the United States? (4.2.2) How did explorers and pioneers impact the growth of the United States? (4.2.1)

More information

Garth Victor Hall Life During the Teton Flood. Box 6 Folder 29

Garth Victor Hall Life During the Teton Flood. Box 6 Folder 29 The Teton Dam Disaster Collection Garth Victor Hall Life During the Teton Flood By Garth Victor Hall August 21, 1977 Box 6 Folder 29 Oral Interview conducted by Ramon Widdison Transcript copied by Timothy

More information

Ramus/Macedonia (Illinois) Markers Dedicated

Ramus/Macedonia (Illinois) Markers Dedicated 143 Ramus/Macedonia (Illinois) Markers Dedicated William G. Hartley & Alexander L. Baugh In ceremonies on Saturday, 21 May 2000, more than fifty descendants of Ute and Sarah Gant Perkins, along with friends

More information