Larry Anderson - Families and Individuals

Notes


John Ferrington MANWILL

Not a kind man...beat his children....Sarah Rosina had to get on her knees and beg before he would quit beating his children...
 Veteran of the Blackhawk War


Sarah Rosina SAVAGE

   Was sealed to 2nd husband.


Rosina "Dolly" MANWILL

Dolly lived to be only 15 and then she died of heart dropsy.  She was sick a long time.


Henry F SAVAGE

made his living as a weaver..Henry and Sarah were baptized 2 June 1844 in Eng.  He and Sarah and their family sailed from Liverpool, Eng. 12 Mar 1854 on the ship "John M. Wood".  They arrived at New Orleans 2 May 1854.  In SLC 28 Oct. 1854.  In that year of the move they went to Payson, where they resided the rest of their life.


Sarah POWER

Was a weaver and at the age of 15 she wove a piece of velvet that was used as a carpet, at the crowning of Queen Victoria..


Jay Nolan TAYLOR

Bapt. by John Thorton, Bingham Co. Confirmed by Harrison Ison Sept. 2 1944Bapt. by John Thorton, Bingham Co. Confirmed by Harrison Ison Sept. 2 1944

Bapt. by John Thorton, Bingham Co. Confirmed by Harrison Ison Sept. 2 1944


Susannah DUNNAGAN

Also listed as Susan Anna Dunnagan


Nellie NORTON

Probably second wife of Minor Marsh, Sr and mother of William Vernon
Marsh.


Sally MARSH

Was living with her brother Pleasant in the 1850 census


Charles Franklin RANDALL

C F Randall came to Utah in 1848.  He carried the mail for the US Government for 12 years and carried the first proclamation from the President of the US from Fort Bridger to Gov. Cummings at SLC, riding 110 miles at night on horseback.  He was assistant in charge of the survey for every settlement from SLC to St. George. He took part in the fight at Battle Creek in the Black Hawk War, and in company with Elihu Warren drove the first team on the old Indian trail through North Ogden Canyon into Ogden Valley.  He constructed the first brick building in Weber County.  He was known to say that during all the 12 years that he was in the employ of the US Gov., he never slept in a house.  When he come across the plains in 1848, he brought a load of sugar for Gilmore and Salisbury of SLC.  He died in the same house that he built 40 years earlier....the first brick structure in Weber Co.
 Became a Pone Express Rider in 1860


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