Manuscripts
Life sketch of Sariah Louisa Chamberlain Redd [microform]: 1935
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Life sketch of Lemuel Hardison Redd [microform]: after 1891
Manuscripts
Microfilm of Lemuel Hardison Redd's brief autobiography, recorded at White Pine, Nevada, sometime after 1891. Redd briefly describes his early life and journey to Utah, but mainly focuses on his life in Utah after 1850. He describes settling in Spanish Fork, where his father helped build the first saw mill (it was destroyed during the Walker War in 1853), and briefly describes his experiences during the Walker War, his marriage, his mission to Nevada, his participation in the Utah War, and helping colonize New Harmony as part of the Dixie Mission in 1862. Redd also mentions buying the John D. Lee homestead in 1870, helping establish the United Order at Harmony, and moving to San Juan County and later Mexico to avoid polygamy charges. The account also describes in some detail the various activities of Redd's children.
MSS MFilm 00379
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Life sketch of Mons Larson [microform]: 1935
Manuscripts
Microfilm of a typescript biography of Mons Larson, written by his granddaughter Violet Elaine Alt in 1935. The biography traces Larson's early life his Sweden, his conversion to Mormonism, his decision to immigrate to the United States, his sailing to New York and traveling by train to Florence, Nebraska, his overland trip to Utah, his settlement in Tooele, his decision to enter into polygamy, his colonization of Snowflake, his moves to Pima and Mexico, and his death in Arizona in 1890. It also includes a long account of a return journey from Utah to Snowflake with the Silas S. Smith company, which took a difficult route near the Green River and got stuck near Hole-in-the-Rock. It also describes Larson's wife Olivia giving birth in a blizzard during the ordeal.
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Life sketch of Simon Baker [microform]: 1952
Manuscripts
Microfilm of the typed life history of Simon Baker by Melba Dolores Hogenson. The brief autobiography traces Baker's childhood, his conversion to Mormonism, the death of his wife and his marriage to Charlotte Leavitt in 1845, his move to Utah, his trade with gold miners in 1849-1850, his various mission and colonization trips in Utah and Nevada, and many notes on his personality and personal anecdotes. The autobiography is preceded by five manuscript pages identified as "journal before 1848" (it is not clear if these pages refer to Baker).
MSS MFilm 00398 item 01
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Autobiography of Solomon Chamberlain [microform]: 1858
Manuscripts
Microfilm of a typescript of Solomon Chamberlain's brief autobiography, written in 1858. It covers his childhood in Connecticut, his living of a "very wicked life" following his father's death, his search for redemption in religion and joining of the Methodist Order around 1815, a long account of his conversion to Mormonism in 1830, his travels attempting to sell the Book of Mormon and his belief that he could convince the "Reformed Methodists" of its "truth," his move to Missouri in 1831 and departure following mob violence, his life in Nauvoo to 1847, his travels to and from Utah and Council Bluffs, his gold mining trip to Sacramento, and many references to his ill health.
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Life sketches of Lydia Ann Smith Johnson, Martha Jane Stratton Johnson, and Seth Guernsey Johnson [microform]: after 1910
Manuscripts
Microfilm of volume containing life sketches of Lydia Ann Smith Johnson (1847-1910), Martha Jane Stratton Johnson (1848-1910), and Seth Guernsey Johnson (1839-1927), written by one of Lydia and Seth's sons. The biography of Lydia begins with her birth in Worcestershire to a Mormon convert and missionary, and their immigration to Utah in about 1855. It then recounts their move to Cedar City; the death of Lydia's mother in 1856 and her subsequent difficult relationship with her father and his plural wife; a serious illness she contracted while attending school in 1860; her engagement to schoolteacher Seth Johnson on her 14th birthday, their marriage and move to Summit in 1862, and the continuing warnings that Lydia should not have children due to her frail health (she ultimately had 14 children); Seth's contraction of mountain fever in 1863; their move to Kane County until a harsh winter and murder of some neighbors by a band of Navajos in 1866 forced them to move to Toquerville; their subsequent move to Hillsdale, which was organized in 1877 with Seth as bishop and Lydia as president of the Relief Society; their move to Cannonville; and an invitation to a homecoming at Virgin City in 1909. The account ends with a note on Lydia's distribution of her property and instructions to her children before her death in 1910. The biographies of Seth and his plural wife Martha recount many of the same events. The sketch of Martha recounts her birth in Iowa, moving with her family from Nauvoo to Provo and ultimately Cedar City, and her marriage to Seth in 1865. Seth's biography includes references to his birth in Carthage, Illinois, various childhood anecdotes, notes on his teaching career, and encounters with Navajos (including those sentenced to death and apparently spared by Johnson). The volume ends with a note to "Dear Son and family" that accompanied the life sketches.
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Life sketches of John Conrad Naegle and Rosanna Zimmerman Naegle [microform]: after 1899
Manuscripts
Microfilm of typescript copies of Roanna Naegle Lunt's biographical sketches of her parents, John Conrad Naegle and Rosanna Zimmerman Naegle. The sketch of John Conrad Naegle recounts his running away from home to join the Mormons in Nauvoo; his travels with the 1846 company to Utah; his time in the Mormon Battalion; his experience at Sutter's Mill; his decision to go to San Francisco to buy new shoes before departing for Utah, which led to him becoming an extensive landowner and agriculturalist in the San Jose Valley; his 1853 trip by boat through the Isthmus of Panama to New York City and overland to Indiana; his return overland journey to Utah with his wife, parents, and younger brother (his parents and brother never joined the Mormon church); his land interests in California; attacks by Indians near Lehi; his funding of George Q. Cannon's printing of the Book of Mormon in Hawaiian in 1855; his move to Washington, Utah, to be in charge of the wine industry and cotton growing; his 1873 mission to Germany and Switzerland (his son George C. Naegle became president of the German mission in 1895); his flight to Mexico to avoid polygamy charges; and his purchase of 108,000 acres of land in Sonora in partnership with "Parson" Williams. The sketch of Rosanna Zimmerman Naegle (b.1841) describes her genealogy, including references to her grandfather Lawrence Hoke; her father George Gottlieb Zimmerman's decision to join the Mormons and move to Nauvoo in 1844; the family's overland journey to Utah with Henry Walton's company in 1851; and personal reflections of Roanna's family and character.
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