Wednesday, December 12, 2012

Annie Hicks Free and the handcart



Sorry this does not copy as I wrote it. The items from Annie's notes are numbered. The points below the line are also numbered with each item having its own explanation. How stupid is this that it won't transfer as I wrote it?  HELP.

Annie Hicks                        by LaRae Free Kerr M ED  12/12/2012                      Item 537l in LFK file drawers
Notes from Grandma Rachel Free taken 7 Nov 1967 probably by my Mom, Myrtle Joy Wadsworth Free, because I was still on my mission on that date and rewritten by me.
1.      Annie Hicks shared handcart.
2.      Edward Martin handcart Company – Annie and Jemima Nightingale saw Brother Blake, whose feet were frozen, crawl off to die. In evening Brother Blake was missing, so Annie and Jemima went back, cutting across the trail and found him. They pulled him to where they were met by wagons.
3.      In SLC Annie had very tattered clothes. Skirt in ribbons and had black quilted horsehair [stiff and shiny] [alpaca?] petticoat, stayed in wagon on arrival till finally someone remembered her.
4.      She worked at various homes 5 am- 12 pm for 50 cents a week, such a good worker.
5.      All the men wanted to marry her, but she wouldn’t because there were too many people in the houses already.
6.      Had to knit by fire and gump, a bowl with rag through holes and lit.
7.      Finally to Brigham Young. He took her to Grandpa Free’s and former wife went to keep house for son Oliver and Annie married him. A week later a fellow who had followed her from England came to claim her – too late.
8.      She could knit really fast, very efficient. People said she was uppity. Grandpa Free always called her, “my lady.”
After just having written the chapter on the 1856 handcart and baggage trains for the revised Wadsworth history, the above notes make all kinds of sense as shown below.
1.      Everyone shared handcarts. The young single women regularly shared one handcart among five of them. They could each have a maximum of 70 pounds as I recall. But that meant there would be 350 pounds on each handcart plus their ration of foodstuffs. The wagons that accompanied the handcart companies carried more flour and food plus the tents, so they were never to have had more than that much weight per handcart.  However, it was a tough pull, and everyone was very tired.  When 35 buffalo robes were provided, the handcart pioneers jettisoned them as well as many other items to lighten the load – just before they hit the snows the robes would have saved them from.
2.      There was a Jemima Nightingale, age 21, in the Martin Handcart Company along with Jane Nightingale, age 57, and Sarah Ann Nightingale, age 31, and Joseph Nightingale, age 16. Jane Nightingale is the mother-in-law of Ann Barlow’s oldest son, Oswald, already in the SL valley.  Jane Barlow “left at Ft Bridger to recuperate, married John Long there, Mar 15, 1857.” Could this be a member of the John Verah Long family? The connections just astound me. See the Wadsworth revision. All these people were born in England, as was Annie. Would like to know more about Jemima Nightingale, but except for her name, nothing more is given about her in Allphin, Jolene S. Tell My Story, Too. Dingman Professional Printing. 8th Edition. Jul 2012.
The event of saving Brother Bleak is attributed to Maria Jackson Normington in the book Tell My Story, Too by Allphin 8th edition. p 179. But the information about Annie Hicks is so specific and correct I suspect Annie and Jemima assisted with the finding and saving of Brother Bleak, especially as I see no other way Grandma Free could have known of this event in 1967 – certainly not from any current handcart books.
Brother Bleak, age 26 in 1856, kept a trail diary as well as other records which can be found online in the Mormon Pioneer Overland Trail database. Knowing that Annie Hicks knew him should make reading his diary interesting and useful to Annie’s biography. [Is he the Brother Bleak of southern Utah? Yes, he is the James Godson Bleak who settled in St George. Allphin p180.]
3.      As the ragged, hungry, handcart and baggage train pioneers entered Salt Lake City in Dec 1856, people lined the streets to welcome them and to be assigned to take them home and care for them. The people in Salt Lake City had literally taken the clothes off their backs and thrown them into the rescue wagons. So if all of Annie’s clothes were her own, they would have been in tatters. If she were wearing some of the clothes donated by Salt Lake City citizens, they could have been ill-fitting. It’s entirely possible that she did not have the strength to get out of the wagon unassisted. In addition, the pioneers were so crowded into the wagons, that some of the rescuers were afraid they would suffocate.
4.      Fifty cents a week was a huge sum at the time. The Utah pioneers were so poor themselves, that when the 1856 pioneers first looked over the valley they saw only snow-covered hovels. This was the Great Salt Lake?  This was their salvation? Their dream?  By 1856, the Utah citizens had suffered drought and several terribly destructive cricket infestations. They had very little coinage and dealt in barter. And yes, the seagulls did rescue them but not until substantial losses had occurred. In other words, it was out of extreme poverty and with no place to get more supplies that the Utah Saints gave their all to save the handcart and baggage train Saints.  This included healing them, feeding and housing them, teaching them how to live in the desert and providing jobs for them.
5.      That many wanted to marry Annie is almost certainly true. It is another eternal gift the Utah Saints gave the “handcart” girls.  After saving them, nursing them to health, teaching them to live in the unhospitable environment of Utah, many of the rescuers, their neighbors and friends took handcart girls as their second or third, etc. wives. Thus the first wives essentially “cared” for the handcart girls for eternity. How grateful I am that Betsy Strait Free, Absalom Pennington’s wife, was willing to welcome Annie Hicks as her husband’s new wife.  After polygamy was abolished, Betsy Strait did live with her son and care for him. From time to time, Absalom P Free would visit her, sitting on the porch in their rocking [?] chairs. After all, APF was forty years older than Annie, and our Grandpa, Wen, was born when he was 75.  So with all those little kids around, he probably needed a few moments of peace.
6.      Other sources indicate Annie made her living in England by knitting socks.
7.      See item 5 above.  The story of her sweetheart has several twists.  The one I’ve heard most often is that he was a member of the Martin handcart company and died on the way. I see no way to verify this.
8.      Annie Hicks Free was aware she was a Wenlock on her mother’s side and seemed to believe she was connected to gentry at the least if not nobililty, even though her family lived in extreme poverty. Her father and mother both died in the Romford poor house. See this story in one of my newspaper articles in the book It’s All Relatives Columns. However, Frank Smith and other professional researchers not only could not find any connection to any upper crust Wenlocks, they had a very difficult time making any headway on the Wenlock line. With all the additional data available online, it might be possible to do so now.
So, as Uncle James Wadsworth’s family in the Hunt Baggage Company was fulfilling it’s assignment to stay behind the handcart companies and help them, Annie was doing what she could to help others within the Martin Handcart Company, including helping to save Brother Bleak’s life.

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Our 20th and 21st century veterans



Wadsworth and Family Veterans as of 2012 for 20th and 21st centuries
Free, David                         Utah Air National Guard
Gunnarsson, Roy              Swedish Rangers, served above the North Pole, trained as sniper and in reconnaissance
Kerr, Walter                       California National Guard and US Army Reserve 1962-1965            
Klomp, Jeremiah               Lt Colonel in Air Force 2012
Lee, Eric                              Marines
Mills, Michael                    Utah National Guard: 2002 Winter Olympic Games, 2004 June-2005 November Iraq, 2011 June-December Iraq.
O’Connor, Edward           Corporal Army World War II
Smith, Nicholas                 Viet Nam
VanderBeek, David           1998-2001 Idaho Army National Guard Private First Class 13-B Artillery
Wadsworth, Bruce           Korea Army
Wadsworth, John             in Berlin when wall went up
Wadsworth, Roy               killed at Battle of the Bulge in World War II Sgt Co E 394th Reg 99th Battalion 9th Army
Westover, Steve               Captain Army. Medical Service Corps 15 years Reserve,10 years Active Duty.
Wheeler, Jimmy World War I

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Relationships in the "Child-Stealing" case of Little James Wadsworth



Descendants of George Allen Wadsworth are related to many of the main characters involved in the kidnapping of Little James Wadsworth as shown below. In addition, these descendants are related to John and Charles Pulsipher since their sister, Eliza Jane Pulsipher, married Thomas Sirls Terry, and three of their daughters, Eliza Jane Terry, Sarah Mariah Terry and Josephine Rebecca Terry, married sons of George Allen Wadsworth and Elizabeth Broadbent Wadsworth. Both John and Charles were part of the Nauvoo Legion during the Utah War. These great grand uncles, John, Charles and William Pulsipher,  were also rescuers of the beleaguered 1856 handcart Saints including Annie Hicks [Free] and Uncle James Wadsworth’s family  of the Hunt Company.  Some descendants are also the great grand nieces and nephews of Brigham Young via his wife Emeline Free and of Daniel H Wells via Louisa and Hannah Free. Therefore they  are related to William Goodall Young, the Captain of George A Wadsworth’s wagon train, to Phineas Young and to Brigham Young’s sister [albeit only by marriage], Nancy Kent, who was also in the William G Young wagon train. There are more members in each family than shown below as revealed in the genealogy section of GAW.  Those with * belonged to the early Pilley, England Branch of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. ~ Mary Cotton’s death is the only entry for her in the early Pilley Branch Records. @ means the people were members of the Church but not members of the Pilley Branch in Yorkshire, England. And, as you can see, our relationship to Judge Eckels is by marriage only. Still it is intriguing to find ourselves on all sides of this most interesting historical event.

                                                                                                                                                                                    Thomas Hutchinson b 1744 md
                                                                                                                                                                                    Hannah Beal b 1742 of Hooton Pagnell
                                                                                                                                                                __________________I______________________________                              
                                                                                                                                                                I                                                                                                                       I
                                                                                                                                                                James Hutchinson b 1781 md         -brother and sister-                  Ann Hutchinson b 1774 md
                                                                                                                                                                Mary Waddington* b 1787 of Ardsley                                            Thomas Wilkinson b 1774
                    ________________________________________________________I_____________________                                                                                             I
                    I                                       I                                       I                                 I                                I                                          I                                                                                          I
Edward Hutchinson* 1830 md    Charlotte* 1813 md    George* 1828 md    William* 1823 md     Thomas@ 1818 md    Elizabeth Hutchinson* 1808 md    -1st cousins-               Hannah Wilkinson b 1800 md
Elizabeth Storer@ 1840                 Thomas Cotton            Hannah Tate             Ruth*                           Rachel@ Poulter       “UNCLE” JAMES WADSWORTH*     -brothers-       William Wadsworth b 1799
I                                                           I________________________________________________________________                                                                                         I                                                                                                                       I                                                           I                                                 I                                 I                                                                                                I
I                                                           Elizabeth Cotton@ 1841 md         Sarahann Cotton* 1835     Mary Cotton~ 1845                                                                            GEORGE ALLEN WADSWORTH* b 1827 md
I                                                           William Secrest Eckels son of                                                                                                                                                                        1st Alice Allen b 1817
I                                                           Judge Delana Eckels of Indiana                                                                                                                                                                                          I
I                                                           I                                                                                                                                                                                                                           “LITTLE” JAMES WADSWORTH b 1848
I                                                           I                                                                                                                                                                                                                           of Panaca, Nevada
I                                                           I                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              
I                                                           I                                                                                                                                                                                                                           2nd  Elizabeth Broadbent b 1832
I                                                           I                                                                                                                                                                                                                           I
I                                                           I                                                                                                                                                                                                                           I
Larry M Hutchinson                         Robert Eckels                                                        -modern-day researchers-                                                                                              H LaRae Free V/B Kerr



Chart showing relationships among Hutchinsons, Wadsworths and Eckels.
Copyright 2012 LaRae Free Kerr