Joseph Smith Hendricks
M, #275616, b. Sep 17, 1859, d. Feb 19, 1924
Joseph Smith Hendricks|b. Sep 17, 1859\nd. Feb 19, 1924|p2757.htm#i275616|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Joseph Smith Hendricks was born on Sep 17, 1859 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. Joseph married Margaret Emma Petty, daughter of Robert Thomas Petty and Julia Ann Wright, on Mar 11, 1885 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Joseph Smith Hendricks died on Feb 19, 1924 at age 64.
Joseph and Margaret Hendricks.
Joseph worked with his father and three older brothers, railroad contracting. Later he owned land in Richmond, Ut. and farmed. He worked for ten years in the Logan flour mills, then turned again to farming at Lava Hot Springs. After the death of her husband, Margaret took up nursing in Salt Lake City, Ut. Later she moved to Los Angeles, Calif.
Joseph and Margaret Hendricks.
Joseph worked with his father and three older brothers, railroad contracting. Later he owned land in Richmond, Ut. and farmed. He worked for ten years in the Logan flour mills, then turned again to farming at Lava Hot Springs. After the death of her husband, Margaret took up nursing in Salt Lake City, Ut. Later she moved to Los Angeles, Calif.
Children of Joseph Smith Hendricks and Margaret Emma Petty
- Joseph Earl Hendricks+ b. Mar 22, 1886, d. Feb 9, 1934
- Julia Vilate Hendricks+ b. Dec 12, 1887, d. Aug, 1958
- Lenoel Petty Hendricks+ b. Dec 16, 1893, d. Jul 19, 1969
Lucy Hendricks
F, #275617, b. Apr 30, 1865, d. Jan 9, 1868
Lucy Hendricks|b. Apr 30, 1865\nd. Jan 9, 1868|p2757.htm#i275617|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Lucy Hendricks was born on Apr 30, 1865 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. Lucy Hendricks died on Jan 9, 1868 at age 2.
Talitha Hendricks
F, #275618, b. Jul 2, 1871, d. 1890
Talitha Hendricks|b. Jul 2, 1871\nd. 1890|p2757.htm#i275618|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Talitha Hendricks was born on Jul 2, 1871 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. Talitha Hendricks died in 1890.
Mary Hendricks
F, #275619, b. Jan 4, 1875, d. Jul 11, 1950
Mary Hendricks|b. Jan 4, 1875\nd. Jul 11, 1950|p2757.htm#i275619|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Mary Hendricks was born on Jan 4, 1875 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. Mary married Herschel Bullen Jr. on Apr 11, 1894 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Mary Hendricks died on Jul 11, 1950 at age 75.
She was the last child of a family of nine, of two prominent early pioneers. Her father was a Mormon Batallion member, banker and industrialist; her mother knew the Prophet Joseph Smith - heard him speak; she crossed the plains in a five months' journey, May to Sept. 1850, walking nearly one-half of the way.
She was educated in the Richmond Public Schools and Brigham Young College at Logan, Ut; was prominent in musical and church circles in Richmond, and was musical and choir accompanist for many years.
She married in the Logan Temple 11 Apr. 1894, HERSCHEL BULLEN. He was a son of Herschel and Emma (Gibbs) Bullen. He was born 13 Nov. 1870 in Richmond, Ut. She worked in the Richmond General Store during the 26 months he was on a mission to Great Britain, sending money to assist him in his missionary labors.
In 1897, with her husband, they moved to Logan where she worked in the Relief Society and taught in the Primary Association.
She was the last child of a family of nine, of two prominent early pioneers. Her father was a Mormon Batallion member, banker and industrialist; her mother knew the Prophet Joseph Smith - heard him speak; she crossed the plains in a five months' journey, May to Sept. 1850, walking nearly one-half of the way.
She was educated in the Richmond Public Schools and Brigham Young College at Logan, Ut; was prominent in musical and church circles in Richmond, and was musical and choir accompanist for many years.
She married in the Logan Temple 11 Apr. 1894, HERSCHEL BULLEN. He was a son of Herschel and Emma (Gibbs) Bullen. He was born 13 Nov. 1870 in Richmond, Ut. She worked in the Richmond General Store during the 26 months he was on a mission to Great Britain, sending money to assist him in his missionary labors.
In 1897, with her husband, they moved to Logan where she worked in the Relief Society and taught in the Primary Association.
Children of Mary Hendricks and Herschel Bullen Jr.
- Herschel Keith Bullen+ b. Jul 17, 1898, d. Dec 12, 1987
- Lavona Bullen b. Apr 1, 1902, d. Jan 14, 1903
- Helen Bullen b. Nov 29, 1903, d. May 23, 1991
- Reed Bullen+ b. Nov 19, 1906, d. Oct 11, 2005
- Thurlow Hendricks Bullen+ b. Jan 9, 1912, d. Apr 14, 1997
Alvira Lavona Hendricks
F, #275620, b. May 17, 1852, d. May 10, 1892
Alvira Lavona Hendricks|b. May 17, 1852\nd. May 10, 1892|p2757.htm#i275620|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Alvira Lavona Hendricks was born on May 17, 1852 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. Alvira married Lewis James Petty Sr., son of Robert Cowan Petty and Margaret Jefferson Wells, on Feb 8, 1870 at Old Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Alvira Lavona Hendricks died on May 10, 1892 at Oxford, Franklin County, Idaho, at age 39. Alvira was buried on May 12, 1892 at Oxford City Cemetery, Oxford, Franklin County, Idaho.
Children of Alvira Lavona Hendricks and Lewis James Petty Sr.
- Lucy Petty+ b. Mar 25, 1872, d. Mar 19, 1964
- Alvira Lavona Petty b. Sep 25, 1874, d. Nov 18, 1959
- Margaret Petty+ b. Feb 1, 1877, d. Jun 28, 1915
- Lewis James Petty Jr.+ b. Nov 3, 1879, d. Apr 8, 1967
- Elsie Mary Petty b. Sep 20, 1882, d. Jul 3, 1975
- William Dorris Petty+ b. Dec 1, 1885, d. Sep 8, 1969
- Robert Thomas Petty+ b. Jul 3, 1888, d. Aug 12, 1973
- Joseph Alma Petty b. May 10, 1892, d. May 10, 1892
James Warren Hendricks
M, #275621, b. Feb 11, 1854, d. Feb 25, 1923
James Warren Hendricks|b. Feb 11, 1854\nd. Feb 25, 1923|p2757.htm#i275621|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
James Warren Hendricks was born on Feb 11, 1854 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. James married Frances Lucy Traveller, daughter of Cornelius Traveller and Frances Hobbs, on Jan 13, 1876 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. James married Elizabeth Almira Merrill, daughter of Marriner Wood Merrill and Almira Jane Bainbridge, on Sep 5, 1887 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. James Warren Hendricks died on Feb 25, 1923 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 69. James was buried on Feb 28, 1923 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
JAMES WARREN (SAUL) HENDRICKS, son of William Dorris and Alvira Lavona (Smith) Hendricks was born 11 Feb. 1854, Salt Lake City, Utah. The family moved to Cache Valley in 1860 living in the old Fort which was later named Richmond. He attended grade school for a short time. At the early age of fourteen, he began freighting, driving twelve mules pulling one wagon; later twenty mules with two wagons. Terminals were at Ogden and Corinne, Ut. and Helena, Mont. He married 1st FRANCES LUCY TRAVELLER, 13 Jan. 1876. She was born 31 Oct. 1857 in Philadelphia, Penn., daughter of Cornelius and Francis (Hobbs) Traveller. She died 7 May 1923 at Richmond, Ut. where she was buried. He married 2nd ELIZABETH ALMIRA MERRILL, 5 Sept. 1877, daughter of Marriner Wood and Almira Jane (Bainbridge) Merrill. She was born 11 Jan. 1868 at Richmond, Ut. and died 13 May 1926 at Logan, Ut. and was buried at Richmond. They were the parents of seven children; he was the father of eleven children by his first wife. During the early years of his married life he was a railroad contractor, building roads in Colorado, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Nevada. He was civic minded, promoting many community projects and worked in the church auxiliaries. He was President of the Y.M.M.I.A. and a member of the High Council. He owned farms in Fairview, Ida., Lewiston, and Richmond, Ut. He fed cattle, run large herds of sheep and later turned to dairying. He was a director and motivating factor in establishing the People's Mercantile and Union Creamery Company, which later merged with the Merrill Creamery Company, and together with local stock subscriptions and Eastern Capital became the Utah Condensed Milk Company, which began operating in 1904. James Warren Hendricks was President of the company for about sixteen years, until it sold to Bullen and Eccles interests. As a member of the State Fair Board for a number of years, he had supervision of the Livestock and Dairy Division. He was a Charter Member of the first Black and White Committee, and helped to put on the first Black and White show held in Richmond, Ut. In June 1915 he was made a "Master Farmer" and received his diploma from Dr. John A. Widtsoe, President of the Utah Agricultural College. In his dealings with men he was honest, kind, considerate, just and fair to all. He died 25 Feb. 1923, and was buried in the Richmond Cemetery.
JAMES WARREN (SAUL) HENDRICKS, son of William Dorris and Alvira Lavona (Smith) Hendricks was born 11 Feb. 1854, Salt Lake City, Utah. The family moved to Cache Valley in 1860 living in the old Fort which was later named Richmond. He attended grade school for a short time. At the early age of fourteen, he began freighting, driving twelve mules pulling one wagon; later twenty mules with two wagons. Terminals were at Ogden and Corinne, Ut. and Helena, Mont. He married 1st FRANCES LUCY TRAVELLER, 13 Jan. 1876. She was born 31 Oct. 1857 in Philadelphia, Penn., daughter of Cornelius and Francis (Hobbs) Traveller. She died 7 May 1923 at Richmond, Ut. where she was buried. He married 2nd ELIZABETH ALMIRA MERRILL, 5 Sept. 1877, daughter of Marriner Wood and Almira Jane (Bainbridge) Merrill. She was born 11 Jan. 1868 at Richmond, Ut. and died 13 May 1926 at Logan, Ut. and was buried at Richmond. They were the parents of seven children; he was the father of eleven children by his first wife. During the early years of his married life he was a railroad contractor, building roads in Colorado, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and Nevada. He was civic minded, promoting many community projects and worked in the church auxiliaries. He was President of the Y.M.M.I.A. and a member of the High Council. He owned farms in Fairview, Ida., Lewiston, and Richmond, Ut. He fed cattle, run large herds of sheep and later turned to dairying. He was a director and motivating factor in establishing the People's Mercantile and Union Creamery Company, which later merged with the Merrill Creamery Company, and together with local stock subscriptions and Eastern Capital became the Utah Condensed Milk Company, which began operating in 1904. James Warren Hendricks was President of the company for about sixteen years, until it sold to Bullen and Eccles interests. As a member of the State Fair Board for a number of years, he had supervision of the Livestock and Dairy Division. He was a Charter Member of the first Black and White Committee, and helped to put on the first Black and White show held in Richmond, Ut. In June 1915 he was made a "Master Farmer" and received his diploma from Dr. John A. Widtsoe, President of the Utah Agricultural College. In his dealings with men he was honest, kind, considerate, just and fair to all. He died 25 Feb. 1923, and was buried in the Richmond Cemetery.
Children of James Warren Hendricks and Frances Lucy Traveller
James married Frances Lucy Traveller, daughter of Cornelius Traveller and Frances Hobbs, on Jan 13, 1876 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Emma Hendricks b. 1876, d. 1876
- (Unknown) Hendricks b. 1879, d. 1879
- Walter James Hendricks b. 1881
- Marian Hendricks+ b. Jun 27, 1883, d. Jul 29, 1972
- Edith Maud Hendricks+ b. Apr 3, 1886, d. Oct 31, 1955
- Alvira Frances Hendricks b. Oct 2, 1887, d. Oct 24, 1887
- Olive Lucy Hendricks b. Aug 23, 1888, d. Jan 31, 1928
- Franklin Hendricks b. Jun 19, 1891, d. Jun 19, 1891
- Mildred Ruby Hendricks b. Oct 29, 1892, d. Dec 23, 1915
- Mabel Lavonia Hendricks+ b. Jan 22, 1895, d. Jun 21, 1991
- Ethlyn Hendricks b. Sep 19, 1898, d. Oct 12, 1898
Children of James Warren Hendricks and Elizabeth Almira Merrill
James married Elizabeth Almira Merrill, daughter of Marriner Wood Merrill and Almira Jane Bainbridge, on Sep 5, 1887 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Marriner William Hendricks+ b. Nov 11, 1892, d. Apr 7, 1972
- Lorin Asa Hendricks+ b. Mar 11, 1894, d. Apr 20, 1977
- Lurea Hendricks+ b. May 2, 1895, d. Mar 6, 1947
- Abigail Hendricks b. Sep 30, 1896, d. Sep 19, 1940
- Ira King Hendricks+ b. Sep 2, 1900, d. Apr 19, 1970
- Gertrude Hendricks+ b. Jan 4, 1903, d. Nov 27, 1962
- Warren Merrill Hendricks+ b. Oct 28, 1904, d. Oct 28, 1939
William Smith Hendricks
M, #275622, b. Feb 6, 1857, d. Aug 3, 1923
William Smith Hendricks|b. Feb 6, 1857\nd. Aug 3, 1923|p2757.htm#i275622|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
William Smith Hendricks was born on Feb 6, 1857 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. William married Margaret Minerva Rainey, daughter of David Pinkney Rainey and Dorithy Jane Dennis, on Jan 23, 1879 at Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. William married Rhoda Louise Merrill, daughter of Marriner Wood Merrill and Sarah Ann Atkinson, on Jul 21, 1889. William Smith Hendricks died on Aug 3, 1923 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 66. William was buried at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of William Smith Hendricks and Margaret Minerva Rainey
- William Warren Hendricks+ b. Dec 9, 1879, d. Nov 27, 1918
- Amy Gertrude Hendricks+ b. Sep 4, 1881, d. Oct 1, 1942
- Hattie May Hendricks+ b. Apr 15, 1885, d. Mar 27, 1957
- Jessie Ione Hendricks+ b. May 29, 1888, d. Mar 4, 1923
- Ortensia Pearl Hendricks+ b. Mar 21, 1892, d. Jan 4, 1980
- Leland Smith Hendricks+ b. Jul 3, 1894, d. Dec 9, 1938
- Lila Fern Hendricks+ b. Feb 13, 1899, d. Jun 9, 1978
- Guy Rainey Hendricks+ b. Oct 26, 1900, d. Oct 1, 1965
Child of William Smith Hendricks and Rhoda Louise Merrill
- Marriner Willis Hendricks+ b. Sep 3, 1891, d. Dec 13, 1946
Amanda Malissa Hendricks
F, #275623, b. Jan 21, 1862, d. Nov 9, 1931
Amanda Malissa Hendricks|b. Jan 21, 1862\nd. Nov 9, 1931|p2757.htm#i275623|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Amanda Malissa Hendricks was born on Jan 21, 1862 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. Amanda married Joseph Thorn Pond on Apr 13, 1879 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. Amanda Malissa Hendricks died on Nov 9, 1931 at Thatcher, Franklin County, Idaho, at age 69. Amanda was buried on Nov 11, 1931 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah.
Amanda and Joseph Pond.
At the age of fifteen Amanda and one of her sisters were taken on the construction crew of the railroad, by their father, to do the cooking for the crew, At the age of seventeen, Amanda was married 13 Apr. 1879 at Lewiston, Ut. to JOSEPH THORN POND, son of Stillman and Abigail (Thorn) Pond. He was born 19 Sept. 1859 at Spanish Fork, Ut. and he died at Thatcher, Ida. 17 Mar. 1935. He was buried at Lewiston, Ut. She died 9 Nov. 1931 at Thatcher and was buried there. At the time of their marriage, Joseph was employed in the business of railroading, and Amanda accompanied him wherever this business took him. After several years on the railroad they returned to Lewiston where Joseph and his three brothers formed a partnership known as "Pond Brothers" and with their wives and families engaged in the business of farming for twenty years. She was a devoted and faithful member of the ward choir and active in the auxilliary organizations of the Church. In 1903 Joseph and Amanda moved to Gentile Valley and continued in the farming business there. Amanda was always a devout student of the scriptures and devoted much time to the study of them. She had a strong testimony of the truthfulness of the Gospel. In 1910 she accompanied her husband to Mexico where he went as manager of the Mexican Citrus Fruit Company. In 1916 they went to Panama where they spent a short time in connection with the Panama Sugar Company. In 1918 they returned from Panama, bought a home in Logan, Ut. and lived there for four years. They again returned to their ranch in Thatcher, Ida. where they spent the remainder of their lives. At the age of sixty eight years, Amanda developed a heart ailment and dropsical condition which greatly impaired her health, but she never complained nor gave up. She was active and ambitious until the end of her lifetime.
Amanda and Joseph Pond.
At the age of fifteen Amanda and one of her sisters were taken on the construction crew of the railroad, by their father, to do the cooking for the crew, At the age of seventeen, Amanda was married 13 Apr. 1879 at Lewiston, Ut. to JOSEPH THORN POND, son of Stillman and Abigail (Thorn) Pond. He was born 19 Sept. 1859 at Spanish Fork, Ut. and he died at Thatcher, Ida. 17 Mar. 1935. He was buried at Lewiston, Ut. She died 9 Nov. 1931 at Thatcher and was buried there. At the time of their marriage, Joseph was employed in the business of railroading, and Amanda accompanied him wherever this business took him. After several years on the railroad they returned to Lewiston where Joseph and his three brothers formed a partnership known as "Pond Brothers" and with their wives and families engaged in the business of farming for twenty years. She was a devoted and faithful member of the ward choir and active in the auxilliary organizations of the Church. In 1903 Joseph and Amanda moved to Gentile Valley and continued in the farming business there. Amanda was always a devout student of the scriptures and devoted much time to the study of them. She had a strong testimony of the truthfulness of the Gospel. In 1910 she accompanied her husband to Mexico where he went as manager of the Mexican Citrus Fruit Company. In 1916 they went to Panama where they spent a short time in connection with the Panama Sugar Company. In 1918 they returned from Panama, bought a home in Logan, Ut. and lived there for four years. They again returned to their ranch in Thatcher, Ida. where they spent the remainder of their lives. At the age of sixty eight years, Amanda developed a heart ailment and dropsical condition which greatly impaired her health, but she never complained nor gave up. She was active and ambitious until the end of her lifetime.
Children of Amanda Malissa Hendricks and Joseph Thorn Pond
Amanda married Joseph Thorn Pond on Apr 13, 1879 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah.
- Millie Amanda Pond+ b. Dec 15, 1879, d. Apr 9, 1945
- Joseph Leroy Pond+ b. Sep 16, 1881, d. Aug 19, 1967
- Lewis Austin Pond+ b. Jul 16, 1885, d. Mar 1, 1949
- William Stillman Pond b. Jan 29, 1889, d. May 28, 1889
- Otho Renold Pond b. Dec 12, 1890, d. Aug 6, 1891
- Letho Thorn Pond+ b. Jun 10, 1892, d. Apr 25, 1980
- Lucile Hendricks Pond+ b. May 4, 1896, d. Nov 29, 1970
- Lyle Brigham Pond b. May 4, 1896, d. Jul 3, 1896
- Martin Warren Pond b. Jun 22, 1899, d. Aug 23, 1907
- Achael Seth Pond b. Mar 10, 1901, d. Aug 3, 1902
- Alma Levier Pond+ b. Oct 24, 1903, d. Mar 29, 1981
Alma Hendricks
M, #275624, b. Aug 11, 1866, d. Jan 23, 1946
Alma Hendricks|b. Aug 11, 1866\nd. Jan 23, 1946|p2757.htm#i275624|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Alma Hendricks was born on Aug 11, 1866 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. Alma married Julia Vilate Petty, daughter of Robert Thomas Petty and Julia Ann Wright, on Oct 16, 1886 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Alma married Almeda Larsen, daughter of John Christian Larsen and Mary Ellen Tittensor, on Jun 26, 1907 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Alma Hendricks died on Jan 23, 1946 at Franklin, Franklin County, Idaho, at age 79. Alma was buried on Jan 26, 1946 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Alma Hendricks and Julia Vilate Petty
- Ada Vilate Hendricks+ b. Feb 27, 1888, d. Mar 30, 1975
- Thomas Alma Hendricks+ b. Nov 17, 1889, d. May 4, 1977
- Joseph Vernon Hendricks+ b. Jan 25, 1892, d. Dec 24, 1927
- Wren Petty Hendricks+ b. Nov 8, 1894, d. Apr 28, 1966
- William Fenton Hendricks+ b. Dec 17, 1897, d. May 27, 1991
- Lewis James Hendricks+ b. Jul 4, 1899, d. Oct 24, 1987
Children of Alma Hendricks and Almeda Larsen
- Phillip Warren Hendricks+ b. May 6, 1908
- Julia Vilate Hendricks+ b. Feb 9, 1910, d. Jan 13, 2000
- Artencia Hendricks+ b. May 8, 1912, d. Apr 8, 2006
- Clyde Smith Hendricks+ b. May 24, 1916
- Ella Hendricks b. Jan 27, 1920, d. Jan 27, 1920
Ortencia Hendricks
F, #275625, b. Dec 26, 1868, d. Oct 15, 1889
Ortencia Hendricks|b. Dec 26, 1868\nd. Oct 15, 1889|p2757.htm#i275625|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Alvira Lavona Smith|b. Dec 16, 1831\nd. Aug 25, 1921|p189.htm#i18828|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|William Smith||p4612.htm#i461106|Amanda M. Barnes||p4612.htm#i461107|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Ortencia Hendricks was born on Dec 26, 1868 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith. Ortencia married Charles Edward Merrill on Mar 30, 1887 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. Ortencia Hendricks died on Oct 15, 1889 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 20. Ortencia was buried at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah; from typhoid fever.
Her early education was obtained at the Mountain Home School district at High Creek. Later she spent one year at the Brigham Young College at Logan. During the school year of 1883-1884 she attended the church school at Provo, Utah. Carl G. Maesar was principal of the school at that time. During the school years of 1885-1887 she attended the private school of Miss Ida Cook in Richmond, Utah.
Ortencia, always called "Tennie", was a proud girl and loved to dress well. She had the very wonderful talent of being a natural musician. She would sit down to the organ and play any tune that she had heard before. She had a beautiful voice and always sang in the choir.
On 30 Mar. 1887 she married CHARLES EDWARD MERRILL, who was a son of Apostle Marriner W. Merrill and Almira Jane Bainbridge. He was born 9 Feb. 1886 in Richmond, Ut.
In the Spring of 1889 the family moved to a place east of Springville, Ut. The Rio Grande Railroad was being built from Thistle to Price, Ut. and Charlie had charge of the commissary for all the men working on the road. The water was bad, they didn't have preventative medicine as we have today, and Tennie contracted typhoid fever and passed away 15 Oct. 1889 at Richmond, Utah, and was buried there.
Her early education was obtained at the Mountain Home School district at High Creek. Later she spent one year at the Brigham Young College at Logan. During the school year of 1883-1884 she attended the church school at Provo, Utah. Carl G. Maesar was principal of the school at that time. During the school years of 1885-1887 she attended the private school of Miss Ida Cook in Richmond, Utah.
Ortencia, always called "Tennie", was a proud girl and loved to dress well. She had the very wonderful talent of being a natural musician. She would sit down to the organ and play any tune that she had heard before. She had a beautiful voice and always sang in the choir.
On 30 Mar. 1887 she married CHARLES EDWARD MERRILL, who was a son of Apostle Marriner W. Merrill and Almira Jane Bainbridge. He was born 9 Feb. 1886 in Richmond, Ut.
In the Spring of 1889 the family moved to a place east of Springville, Ut. The Rio Grande Railroad was being built from Thistle to Price, Ut. and Charlie had charge of the commissary for all the men working on the road. The water was bad, they didn't have preventative medicine as we have today, and Tennie contracted typhoid fever and passed away 15 Oct. 1889 at Richmond, Utah, and was buried there.
Child of Ortencia Hendricks and Charles Edward Merrill
- Dr. Charles Leo Merrill MD+ b. Jan 13, 1888, d. May 25, 1945
Alfred Dorris Hendricks
M, #275627, b. Nov 22, 1869, d. May 26, 1929
Alfred Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 22, 1869\nd. May 26, 1929|p2757.htm#i275627|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Alfred Dorris Hendricks was born on Nov 22, 1869 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Alfred married Annie Jorgensen, daughter of Jorgen Jorgensen and Annie Madsen, on Jul 21, 1892 at Mexico. Alfred Dorris Hendricks died on May 26, 1929 at Ogden, Weber County, Utah, at age 59. Alfred was buried on May 30, 1929 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
He was educated in the public schools and at Brigham Young University, from which institution he graduated in Business with the highest honors in the school. When he was 10 years old he assisted in the building of the Narrow Gauge Railroad by dropping spikes from Franklin, Ida. to Butte, Mont. When he was 13 years old, he returned to Richmond, driving his own team from the Canadian border. When he was 17 he drove his team to Old Mexico. Before he was 18 years old he had driven a team of horses from the Canadian border to the Mexican town of Chihuahua, where he assisted his father as a range rider, then returned to Utah for his schooling. He returned to Mexico and married a school teacher from Utah (living in Mexico with her family), ANNIE JORGENSEN of Colonia Diaz, on 21 July 1892. This was an event rather unusual, as follows: They were married by their Bishop of the Latterday Saints Church. Also they had to be married by the Mexican laws; first they were married by the Justice of the Peace, then lived together for ten days, when if they still wanted each other they were to be married again. When they returned to Utah they were married in the Temple. Annie Jorgensen was born 25 Apr. 1873 in Scipio, Ut. a daughter of Jorgen and Annie (Madsen) Jorgensen. Alfred and Annie returned to Utah in 1896 and he accepted a call to the Samoan Mission, returning in 1899. He did much pioneering in the Samoan Islands, cutting trees by hand, to build their first meeting places. He converted some of the Tribal Chiefs to the Gospel. He was a constant and devoted worker in the Church.
He was educated in the public schools and at Brigham Young University, from which institution he graduated in Business with the highest honors in the school. When he was 10 years old he assisted in the building of the Narrow Gauge Railroad by dropping spikes from Franklin, Ida. to Butte, Mont. When he was 13 years old, he returned to Richmond, driving his own team from the Canadian border. When he was 17 he drove his team to Old Mexico. Before he was 18 years old he had driven a team of horses from the Canadian border to the Mexican town of Chihuahua, where he assisted his father as a range rider, then returned to Utah for his schooling. He returned to Mexico and married a school teacher from Utah (living in Mexico with her family), ANNIE JORGENSEN of Colonia Diaz, on 21 July 1892. This was an event rather unusual, as follows: They were married by their Bishop of the Latterday Saints Church. Also they had to be married by the Mexican laws; first they were married by the Justice of the Peace, then lived together for ten days, when if they still wanted each other they were to be married again. When they returned to Utah they were married in the Temple. Annie Jorgensen was born 25 Apr. 1873 in Scipio, Ut. a daughter of Jorgen and Annie (Madsen) Jorgensen. Alfred and Annie returned to Utah in 1896 and he accepted a call to the Samoan Mission, returning in 1899. He did much pioneering in the Samoan Islands, cutting trees by hand, to build their first meeting places. He converted some of the Tribal Chiefs to the Gospel. He was a constant and devoted worker in the Church.
Children of Alfred Dorris Hendricks and Annie Jorgensen
Alfred married Annie Jorgensen, daughter of Jorgen Jorgensen and Annie Madsen, on Jul 21, 1892 at Mexico.
- Alfred Dorris Hendricks+ b. May 6, 1893, d. Apr 23, 1968
- Nora Hendricks+ b. Nov 4, 1895, d. Apr 22, 1982
- Edna Hendricks+ b. Jul 8, 1900, d. Nov 9, 1990
- Rayman Andrew Hendricks+ b. Dec 2, 1902, d. Sep 29, 1971
- Thelma Hendricks b. Sep 13, 1907, d. Mar 5, 1912
- Gerald Kenneth Hendricks+ b. Jul 26, 1910, d. Jan 31, 1992
- Asa Jorgen Hendricks b. Apr 10, 1915, d. Mar 17, 2004
John William Hendricks
M, #275628, b. Nov 21, 1874, d. Nov 19, 1964
John William Hendricks|b. Nov 21, 1874\nd. Nov 19, 1964|p2757.htm#i275628|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
John William Hendricks was born on Nov 21, 1874 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. John married Amanda Nada Mattson, daughter of Mattis Mattson, on Jun 27, 1899 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. John married Annie May Hadley, daughter of Richard Hadley and Lucy Celestia Quigley, on Jan 20, 1904 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. John William Hendricks died on Nov 19, 1964 at Kennewick, Benton County, Washington, at age 89. John was buried on Nov 24, 1964 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
When John William was 14 years old his father moved Almira and her family to Diaz, Old Mexico. John had started his education in Richmond and attended some school while in Old Mexico when not helping on his father's cattle ranch. At the age of 21, John returned with his family to Richmond and continued his education at the Agricultural College in Logan. He married AMANDA NADA MATTSON in the Logan Temple 27 June 1899. The following spring, after finishing school at the College, he went to Star Valley, Wyo., where he bought a small farm. Because of poor health, Amanda did not go to Wyoming with her husband. She died 20 Sept. 1900, giving birth to John's first child, Nada. John had returned to Utah by that time, and spent the next two years working with his father on a railroad crew and running his father's ranch at Swan Lake, Ida. On 20 Jan. 1904 John married 2nd ANNIE MAY HADLEY in the Logan Temple. The next few years were spent farming and railroading with his brother, Orval E. Hendricks, in the Swan Lake area. In 1909, John was called to go on a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, leaving Annie with three small children. When he returned to Swan Lake he held various church positions in the Ward and Stake in the M. I. A.and was also in the Bishopric in Swan Lake and later in Cove, Ut. They also lived in Cornish and in Lewiston, Ut. In 1940, after some of his children had married and moved to Washington, John decided to move there also. He rented a farm in Pasco for one year and then in the spring of 1942 moved to Sunnyside, Wash., and bought a small farm. The branch of the church in Sunnyside was very small when John and his family moved there and they did much to strengthen it.
When John William was 14 years old his father moved Almira and her family to Diaz, Old Mexico. John had started his education in Richmond and attended some school while in Old Mexico when not helping on his father's cattle ranch. At the age of 21, John returned with his family to Richmond and continued his education at the Agricultural College in Logan. He married AMANDA NADA MATTSON in the Logan Temple 27 June 1899. The following spring, after finishing school at the College, he went to Star Valley, Wyo., where he bought a small farm. Because of poor health, Amanda did not go to Wyoming with her husband. She died 20 Sept. 1900, giving birth to John's first child, Nada. John had returned to Utah by that time, and spent the next two years working with his father on a railroad crew and running his father's ranch at Swan Lake, Ida. On 20 Jan. 1904 John married 2nd ANNIE MAY HADLEY in the Logan Temple. The next few years were spent farming and railroading with his brother, Orval E. Hendricks, in the Swan Lake area. In 1909, John was called to go on a mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, leaving Annie with three small children. When he returned to Swan Lake he held various church positions in the Ward and Stake in the M. I. A.and was also in the Bishopric in Swan Lake and later in Cove, Ut. They also lived in Cornish and in Lewiston, Ut. In 1940, after some of his children had married and moved to Washington, John decided to move there also. He rented a farm in Pasco for one year and then in the spring of 1942 moved to Sunnyside, Wash., and bought a small farm. The branch of the church in Sunnyside was very small when John and his family moved there and they did much to strengthen it.
Child of John William Hendricks and Amanda Nada Mattson
John married Amanda Nada Mattson, daughter of Mattis Mattson, on Jun 27, 1899 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Amanda Nada Hendricks b. Sep 20, 1900
Children of John William Hendricks and Annie May Hadley
John married Annie May Hadley, daughter of Richard Hadley and Lucy Celestia Quigley, on Jan 20, 1904 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Zeno Hadley Hendricks+ b. Mar 5, 1905, d. Sep 24, 1992
- John Elmer Hendricks+ b. Jul 12, 1907, d. Nov 1, 1996
- Lucy Almira Hendricks+ b. Apr 5, 1909, d. Jul 7, 2001
- Wesley Dewain Hendricks+ b. Aug 9, 1912, d. Jun 27, 1999
- Rose Hendricks+ b. Jan 2, 1915, d. Dec 9, 1998
- Cecil Edwin Hendricks+ b. Mar 21, 1917, d. Dec 9, 1989
- Leona Hendricks+ b. Nov 10, 1921, d. May 5, 2007
- William Edgar Hendricks b. Aug 11, 1924, d. Aug 12, 1924
Wesley Abraham Hendricks
M, #275629, b. Oct 30, 1876, d. Jul 30, 1878
Wesley Abraham Hendricks|b. Oct 30, 1876\nd. Jul 30, 1878|p2757.htm#i275629|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Wesley Abraham Hendricks was born on Oct 30, 1876 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Wesley Abraham Hendricks died on Jul 30, 1878 at age 1.
Orval Edwin Hendricks
M, #275630, b. May 26, 1880, d. Dec 26, 1953
Orval Edwin Hendricks|b. May 26, 1880\nd. Dec 26, 1953|p2757.htm#i275630|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Orval Edwin Hendricks was born on May 26, 1880 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Orval married Ella Nora Guard, daughter of John Guard and Elizabeth Flint, on Sep 13, 1905 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Orval married Elsie Weiderman Brown on Apr 21, 1942 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho. Orval Edwin Hendricks died on Dec 26, 1953 at age 73.
Child of Orval Edwin Hendricks and Ella Nora Guard
- Erma Hendricks+ b. Sep 27, 1906, d. Oct 7, 1996
Franklin Davenport Hendricks
M, #275631, b. Aug 5, 1882, d. Mar 2, 1958
Franklin Davenport Hendricks|b. Aug 5, 1882\nd. Mar 2, 1958|p2757.htm#i275631|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Franklin Davenport Hendricks was born on Aug 5, 1882 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Franklin married (Unknown) (Unknown). Franklin married Vilate Walker, daughter of Joseph Harrison Walker and Drusilla Dorris Van Noy, on Sep 27, 1905 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Franklin Davenport Hendricks died on Mar 2, 1958 at age 75. Franklin was buried at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
His early school years he spent in Richmond, later attending the Agricultural College in Logan, Ut. He was a great lover of sports, and while in college played on the football team. By his first marriage a son, Steven, was born to him, who died in infancy. He later married VILATE WALKER (#979) in the Logan Temple 27 Sept. 1905. She was born 17 Feb. 1888 in Preston, Ida., a daughter of Joseph Harrison and Drusilla Dorris (VanNoy) Walker. This couple went to work on the railroad, helping build the first narrow gauge track from Ogden to Butte, Mont. An interesting incident happened; while breaking camp because of a flood, he had to cross the Missoula River. They just got on the bridge when the water rose so high the team had to swim. His wife held the baby above her head to keep her from getting wet. They could just see the horses heads once in a while. When they left the railroad they settled in Oxford. They left the homestead in the fall of 1913 and moved to Preston where they lived until 1920. While in Preston he owned and operated the Isis Theater, also a candy kitchen and ice plant. He moved to Swan Lake on the farm for a brief time, then back to Preston. In 1940 they moved to Ogden and he worked at the Naval Supply Depot as a guard during the second World War. She worked at the same place as a supervisor in the packing department.
His early school years he spent in Richmond, later attending the Agricultural College in Logan, Ut. He was a great lover of sports, and while in college played on the football team. By his first marriage a son, Steven, was born to him, who died in infancy. He later married VILATE WALKER (#979) in the Logan Temple 27 Sept. 1905. She was born 17 Feb. 1888 in Preston, Ida., a daughter of Joseph Harrison and Drusilla Dorris (VanNoy) Walker. This couple went to work on the railroad, helping build the first narrow gauge track from Ogden to Butte, Mont. An interesting incident happened; while breaking camp because of a flood, he had to cross the Missoula River. They just got on the bridge when the water rose so high the team had to swim. His wife held the baby above her head to keep her from getting wet. They could just see the horses heads once in a while. When they left the railroad they settled in Oxford. They left the homestead in the fall of 1913 and moved to Preston where they lived until 1920. While in Preston he owned and operated the Isis Theater, also a candy kitchen and ice plant. He moved to Swan Lake on the farm for a brief time, then back to Preston. In 1940 they moved to Ogden and he worked at the Naval Supply Depot as a guard during the second World War. She worked at the same place as a supervisor in the packing department.
Child of Franklin Davenport Hendricks and (Unknown) (Unknown)
Franklin married (Unknown) (Unknown).
Children of Franklin Davenport Hendricks and Vilate Walker
Franklin married Vilate Walker, daughter of Joseph Harrison Walker and Drusilla Dorris Van Noy, on Sep 27, 1905 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Lelia Pauline Hendricks+ b. Aug 28, 1906, d. Oct 7, 1981
- Beatrice Lillian Hendricks+ b. Nov 23, 1908
- Eva Hendricks b. Aug 14, 1910
- Almira Hendricks b. Oct 9, 1910
- Franklin Davenport Hendricks b. Feb 14, 1916, d. Jul 7, 1984
- Afton Hendricks b. Apr 8, 1918, d. May 3, 1987
- Carma Hendricks b. May 18, 1919
- Kenneth Malcolm Hendricks b. Sep 4, 1921, d. Feb, 1985
- Glen Lincoln Hendricks b. Feb 13, 1925, d. Mar 27, 2009
- Farrell Dean Hendricks b. Sep 19, 1927
- Claudia Hendricks b. Oct 3, 1929, d. Feb, 1985
- Inez Hendricks b. Dec 7, 1933, d. Dec 10, 1934
Nora Hendricks
F, #275632, b. Sep 28, 1885, d. May 10, 1891
Nora Hendricks|b. Sep 28, 1885\nd. May 10, 1891|p2757.htm#i275632|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Nora Hendricks was born on Sep 28, 1885 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Nora Hendricks died on May 10, 1891 at age 5.
Almira Esmerilda Hendricks
F, #275633, b. Oct 28, 1866, d. Apr 26, 1907
Almira Esmerilda Hendricks|b. Oct 28, 1866\nd. Apr 26, 1907|p2757.htm#i275633|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Almira Esmerilda Hendricks was born on Oct 28, 1866 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Almira married Alma Merrill, son of Mariner Wood Merrill and Sarah Ann Atkinson, on Mar 19, 1885 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. Almira Esmerilda Hendricks died on Apr 26, 1907 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 40. Almira was buried on Apr 29, 1907 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Her girlhood days were spent in Richmond. Being the oldest of fifteen children, naturally she shared considerably in the responsibilities of the home. She had an average education for those days. At eighteen years of age she married ALMA MERRILL, 19 Mar. 1885 in the Logan Temple. He was a son of Marriner Wood and Sarah Ann (Atkinson) Merrill and was born 9 Nov. 1861 in Richmond, Ut. He died 17 Jan. 1936 in Richmond where he was buried. Rilda, as she was commonly known, was the epitome of all that is good and noble. Being a mother of eleven children - four sons and seven daughters - meant a life of love and sacrifice, but she always found time to lend a helping hand to the sick and needy. She was an ardent Church member and Relief Society worker. To know her was to love her, because of her genuine goodness, kind and gentle nature, sympathetic understanding and sterling character. Because of these attributes and her belief that polygamy was a righteous principle, she gave her consent for her husband to take a second wife just sixteen months after her marriage, and went with them to the temple and witnessed their marriage. This wife was her sister, Rebecca, one of the Hendricks triplets. The two sisters reared their families together, serving each other and sacrificing for each other. Rilda died 26 Apr. 1907 at the age of forty, with her eleventh child.
Her girlhood days were spent in Richmond. Being the oldest of fifteen children, naturally she shared considerably in the responsibilities of the home. She had an average education for those days. At eighteen years of age she married ALMA MERRILL, 19 Mar. 1885 in the Logan Temple. He was a son of Marriner Wood and Sarah Ann (Atkinson) Merrill and was born 9 Nov. 1861 in Richmond, Ut. He died 17 Jan. 1936 in Richmond where he was buried. Rilda, as she was commonly known, was the epitome of all that is good and noble. Being a mother of eleven children - four sons and seven daughters - meant a life of love and sacrifice, but she always found time to lend a helping hand to the sick and needy. She was an ardent Church member and Relief Society worker. To know her was to love her, because of her genuine goodness, kind and gentle nature, sympathetic understanding and sterling character. Because of these attributes and her belief that polygamy was a righteous principle, she gave her consent for her husband to take a second wife just sixteen months after her marriage, and went with them to the temple and witnessed their marriage. This wife was her sister, Rebecca, one of the Hendricks triplets. The two sisters reared their families together, serving each other and sacrificing for each other. Rilda died 26 Apr. 1907 at the age of forty, with her eleventh child.
Children of Almira Esmerilda Hendricks and Alma Merrill
- Alma Lowell Merrill+ b. Jan 24, 1886, d. Feb 20, 1961
- Wesley Hendricks Merrill b. Apr 5, 1887, d. Dec 23, 1908
- Rhoda Mildred Merrill b. Oct 18, 1888, d. Dec 8, 1972
- Nathan Dorris Merrill+ b. Sep 26, 1891, d. Dec 27, 1972
- Annie Esmerilda Merrill b. Nov 26, 1893, d. Nov, 1982
- Ruby Leora Merrill+ b. Feb 12, 1897, d. Apr 13, 1933
- Eliza Ezelka Merrill b. Nov 9, 1899, d. Nov 10, 1899
- Venna Merrill+ b. Apr 8, 1901, d. Aug 31, 1997
- Atha Merrill b. May 29, 1903, d. May 29, 1903
- Denzil Reed Merrill b. Aug 16, 1905, d. Nov 16, 1923
- Juanitte Merrill b. Mar 29, 1907, d. Mar 29, 1907
Catherine Hendricks
F, #275635, b. Jan 30, 1868, d. Jun 16, 1916
Catherine Hendricks|b. Jan 30, 1868\nd. Jun 16, 1916|p2757.htm#i275635|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Catherine Hendricks was born on Jan 30, 1868 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. Catherine married William Nelson Tippetts, son of John Austin Tippetts and Rebecca Eliza Hendricks, on Jan 30, 1868 at Hopner, Washington. Catherine Hendricks was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Catherine married William Nelson Tippetts, son of John Austin Tippetts and Rebecca Eliza Hendricks, on Jul 30, 1886 at Hepner, Morrow County, Oregon. Catherine Hendricks died on Jun 16, 1916 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 48. Catherine was buried at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Catherine Hendricks and William Nelson Tippetts
- Ivy Almira Tippetts+ b. Oct 10, 1889, d. Oct 31, 1964
- Myrtle Alvira Tippetts+ b. Mar 4, 1891, d. Aug 14, 1939
- Nora Hendricks Tippetts+ b. Oct 14, 1892, d. Dec 26, 1981
- Vivian Eliza Tippetts+ b. Apr 1, 1894, d. Jan 12, 1981
- William Lafayette Tippetts+ b. Nov 17, 1896, d. Dec 8, 1962
- Clara Tippetts+ b. Jul 13, 1898, d. Sep 5, 1984
- Esmerilda Tippetts+ b. Jun 26, 1900, d. Mar 28, 1931
- Austin Dorris Tippetts+ b. Apr 19, 1902, d. Mar 10, 1984
- Truman Davinport Tippetts+ b. Oct 29, 1906, d. Jun 3, 1963
Ellen Elmira Hendricks
F, #275636, b. Jan 30, 1868, d. Jul 7, 1924
Ellen Elmira Hendricks|b. Jan 30, 1868\nd. Jul 7, 1924|p2757.htm#i275636|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Ellen Elmira Hendricks was born on Jan 30, 1868 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Ellen married Simeon Huff Walton, son of Arthur Walton and Rebecca Huff, on Dec 24, 1889 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. Ellen Elmira Hendricks died on Jul 7, 1924 at Rodgerson, Twin Falls County, Idaho, at age 56. Ellen was buried on Jul 10, 1924 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
She and Simeon Huff Walton removed to at Murtaugh, Twin Falls County, Idaho, in 1913.
She spent her early childhood with her triplet sisters in Richmond, Ut. She married SIMEON HUFF WALTON 24 Dec. 1889 in Richmond, Ut. He was born 1 Oct. 1867 in Richmond, Ut., son of Arthur and Rebecca (Huff) Walton. Soon after their marriage they moved to Montana where they homesteaded and started a cattle ranch. In 1913 they moved to Murtaugh, Ida. where they bought a farm. She was an active member and held several positions in her church, among them, a counselor of the Relief Society. She was a practical nurse and spent many days and nights among the sick.
She and Simeon Huff Walton removed to at Murtaugh, Twin Falls County, Idaho, in 1913.
She spent her early childhood with her triplet sisters in Richmond, Ut. She married SIMEON HUFF WALTON 24 Dec. 1889 in Richmond, Ut. He was born 1 Oct. 1867 in Richmond, Ut., son of Arthur and Rebecca (Huff) Walton. Soon after their marriage they moved to Montana where they homesteaded and started a cattle ranch. In 1913 they moved to Murtaugh, Ida. where they bought a farm. She was an active member and held several positions in her church, among them, a counselor of the Relief Society. She was a practical nurse and spent many days and nights among the sick.
Children of Ellen Elmira Hendricks and Simeon Huff Walton
Ellen married Simeon Huff Walton, son of Arthur Walton and Rebecca Huff, on Dec 24, 1889 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
- Almira Rebecca Walton+ b. Sep 3, 1890, d. Apr 1, 1926
- Simeon Huff Walton Jr. b. Aug 24, 1892, d. Mar 1, 1962
- Hazel Pauline Walton+ b. Oct 25, 1893, d. Jun 6, 1975
- Ellen Lavon Walton+ b. Mar 1, 1895, d. Jul 21, 1957
- Alta Hendrick Walton b. Aug 8, 1896, d. Dec 19, 1900
- Nettie Claudine Walton+ b. Apr 23, 1898, d. Dec 27, 1975
- Dora Eliza Walton b. Nov 11, 1899, d. Nov 14, 1899
- Meda Agatha Walton b. Apr 3, 1901, d. Aug 25, 1963
- William Wesley Walton+ b. Jul 5, 1904, d. Aug 29, 1939
- Otto Abraham Walton+ b. Feb 1, 1907, d. Aug 15, 1956
- Leo Wilford Walton+ b. Jun 25, 1908, d. Sep 1, 1965
- LeRoy Edwin Walton+ b. Jul 24, 1910, d. Apr 13, 1988
Martha Ann Hendricks
F, #275637, b. Mar 8, 1872, d. Aug 26, 1956
Martha Ann Hendricks|b. Mar 8, 1872\nd. Aug 26, 1956|p2757.htm#i275637|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Martha Ann Hendricks was born on Mar 8, 1872 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Martha married Byron Ellwood Johnson, son of William D. Johnson and Jane Brown, on Jan 23, 1891 at Colonia Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico. Martha married Charles Parker Aylworth, son of Henry Aylworth and Jane Walker, on Dec 24, 1909 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah; four children. Martha Ann Hendricks died on Aug 26, 1956 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, at age 84. Martha was buried on Aug 30, 1956 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Martha spent a happy childhood among her numerous relatives in Richmond. When she was sixteen she left school and went to Mexico with her mother and eight other children. They were met in Deming by her father. She learned to love the Saints and the locality - spending many happy days in the little town of Diaz. Just two years after arriving in Mexico she married 23 June 1891 BYRON ELWOOD JOHNSON at Colonia Diaz, Mexico. He was born 13 Jan. 1863 in Salt Lake City, Ut. son of William D. and Jane undnaleder" (Brown) Johnson. After six months they returned to Utah with Martha's mother. They endured many hardships of pioneer life. It seems they were constantly moving to be wherever they could find employment. They returned to Mexico after a few years in Utah. She buried her first little daughter, just 3 1/2 years old, in Mexico. They later returned to Utah, but after a few years her husband went to visit his parents in Mexico and while there he died 16 Apr. 1904 in Colonia Diaz, where he was buried. She was left alone with three little children. She went to work at whatever odd jobs she could find to make a living. While cooking in a railroad camp for her brother, she met CHARLES PARKER AYLWORTH, son of Henry and Emma Jane (Walker) Aylworth. They were married 24 Dec. 1909 in Richmond, Utah where later their four children were born.
Happy times were mixed with troubles and sorrows; making a living was a constant problem and with it came moves from house to house - never staying long in one place. She lost another baby - 7 weeks old - another older girl who was burned so badly she died - then her husband was killed with a blast in a mine. Her boys served in the Armed Services and one of them lost his life. All of these trials began to tell on her and her health failed rapidly - even her eyesight failed. She spent her last years in Salt Lake with her son, Lowell. She was active in Church auxilliaries and was especially devoted to genealogy work. She loved the association of her family and spent much time in their company.
Martha spent a happy childhood among her numerous relatives in Richmond. When she was sixteen she left school and went to Mexico with her mother and eight other children. They were met in Deming by her father. She learned to love the Saints and the locality - spending many happy days in the little town of Diaz. Just two years after arriving in Mexico she married 23 June 1891 BYRON ELWOOD JOHNSON at Colonia Diaz, Mexico. He was born 13 Jan. 1863 in Salt Lake City, Ut. son of William D. and Jane undnaleder" (Brown) Johnson. After six months they returned to Utah with Martha's mother. They endured many hardships of pioneer life. It seems they were constantly moving to be wherever they could find employment. They returned to Mexico after a few years in Utah. She buried her first little daughter, just 3 1/2 years old, in Mexico. They later returned to Utah, but after a few years her husband went to visit his parents in Mexico and while there he died 16 Apr. 1904 in Colonia Diaz, where he was buried. She was left alone with three little children. She went to work at whatever odd jobs she could find to make a living. While cooking in a railroad camp for her brother, she met CHARLES PARKER AYLWORTH, son of Henry and Emma Jane (Walker) Aylworth. They were married 24 Dec. 1909 in Richmond, Utah where later their four children were born.
Happy times were mixed with troubles and sorrows; making a living was a constant problem and with it came moves from house to house - never staying long in one place. She lost another baby - 7 weeks old - another older girl who was burned so badly she died - then her husband was killed with a blast in a mine. Her boys served in the Armed Services and one of them lost his life. All of these trials began to tell on her and her health failed rapidly - even her eyesight failed. She spent her last years in Salt Lake with her son, Lowell. She was active in Church auxilliaries and was especially devoted to genealogy work. She loved the association of her family and spent much time in their company.
Children of Martha Ann Hendricks and Byron Ellwood Johnson
Martha married Byron Ellwood Johnson, son of William D. Johnson and Jane Brown, on Jan 23, 1891 at Colonia Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico.
- Edith Martha Johnson b. Dec 18, 1892, d. Oct 28, 1896
- Byron Wesley Johnson+ b. Sep 14, 1895, d. Mar 18, 1988
- William Derby Johnson+ b. Aug 12, 1897, d. Jan 15, 1992
- Jane Lucile Johnson b. Jan 4, 1901, d. Mar 8, 1919
Children of Martha Ann Hendricks and Charles Parker Aylworth
Martha married Charles Parker Aylworth, son of Henry Aylworth and Jane Walker, on Dec 24, 1909 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah; four children.
- Charles Franklin Aylworth+ b. Feb 20, 1910, d. Feb 11, 1943 or Feb 11, 1945
- Gedaline Aylworth b. Feb 23, 1912, d. Apr 14, 1912
- Arthur Andrew Aylworth+ b. Dec 25, 1913, d. Oct 10, 1984
- Lowell Parker Aylworth+ b. Aug 20, 1915, d. Aug 15, 1991
Parry Pauline Hendricks
F, #275640, b. May 15, 1887, d. Sep 26, 1949
Parry Pauline Hendricks|b. May 15, 1887\nd. Sep 26, 1949|p2757.htm#i275640|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Almira Davenport|b. Mar 11, 1847\nd. Jan 16, 1928|p189.htm#i18829|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|James Davenport||p3272.htm#i327111|Almira Phelps||p3272.htm#i327112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Parry Pauline Hendricks was born on May 15, 1887 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Almira Davenport. Parry married Chauncey Willard Thomas, son of Martin Washburn Thomas and Eliiza Emma Adams, on Nov 23, 1910 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Parry Pauline Hendricks died on Sep 26, 1949 at Winder, Franklin County, Idaho, at age 62; in an automobile accident. Parry was buried on Sep 29, 1949 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
She had infantile paralysis as an infant and lost the use of one eye for the rest of her life. She was raised in Richmond, Ut. except for a few years stay in Old Mexico. She attended elementary and high school at Richmond, attended one year at the Brigham Young College in Logan, Ut; worked in the bank, Sego milk plant, and telephone company in Richmond.
She married her girlhood sweetheart, CHAUNCEY WILLARD THOMAS, 23 Nov. 1910 in the Logan Temple. He was born 16 Nov. 1885 in Richmond, Ut., son of Martin Washburn and Eliza Emma (Adams) Thomas. They moved to Swan Lake, Ida. where they operated the Thomas Merc. Co., in partnership with two of her husband's brothers, Samuel F. and William M. Thomas. After her husbands death and some changes in partnership they sold out to Pauline in 1945. Pauline, with the help of her oldest son, Martel, operated the business until her death in 1949.
She worked in all Ward activities, sang duets a great deal and loved to entertain all groups.
She had infantile paralysis as an infant and lost the use of one eye for the rest of her life. She was raised in Richmond, Ut. except for a few years stay in Old Mexico. She attended elementary and high school at Richmond, attended one year at the Brigham Young College in Logan, Ut; worked in the bank, Sego milk plant, and telephone company in Richmond.
She married her girlhood sweetheart, CHAUNCEY WILLARD THOMAS, 23 Nov. 1910 in the Logan Temple. He was born 16 Nov. 1885 in Richmond, Ut., son of Martin Washburn and Eliza Emma (Adams) Thomas. They moved to Swan Lake, Ida. where they operated the Thomas Merc. Co., in partnership with two of her husband's brothers, Samuel F. and William M. Thomas. After her husbands death and some changes in partnership they sold out to Pauline in 1945. Pauline, with the help of her oldest son, Martel, operated the business until her death in 1949.
She worked in all Ward activities, sang duets a great deal and loved to entertain all groups.
Children of Parry Pauline Hendricks and Chauncey Willard Thomas
Parry married Chauncey Willard Thomas, son of Martin Washburn Thomas and Eliiza Emma Adams, on Nov 23, 1910 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Belva Thomas b. Oct 5, 1911
- Christabell Thomas b. Dec 25, 1912, d. Jan 24, 1914
- Yetive Thomas b. Sep 14, 1915
- Parry Thomas b. May 11, 1916, d. May 11, 1916
- Martel Willard Thomas b. Sep 10, 1917, d. Oct 17, 1984
- Quentin Hendricks Thomas b. Nov 17, 1919
- Enid Thomas b. Nov 14, 1921, d. Jun 4, 1988
- Dorris Lynn Thomas b. Aug 30, 1924
- Frell Navor Thomas b. Apr 8, 1928, d. Feb 18, 1946
Albert Roy Hendricks
M, #275641, b. Jul 4, 1892, d. Jun 9, 1900
Albert Roy Hendricks|b. Jul 4, 1892\nd. Jun 9, 1900|p2757.htm#i275641|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Kjerstin Olofsson|b. Jul 29, 1862\nd. Oct 18, 1923|p189.htm#i18830|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|Olof P. Olson||p4612.htm#i461111|Kjerstn Larrson||p4612.htm#i461112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Albert Roy Hendricks was born on Jul 4, 1892 at Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Kjerstin Olofsson. Albert Roy Hendricks died on Jun 9, 1900 at age 7.
Erick Edwin Hendricks
M, #275642, b. Sep 26, 1894, d. Sep 14, 1978
Erick Edwin Hendricks|b. Sep 26, 1894\nd. Sep 14, 1978|p2757.htm#i275642|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Kjerstin Olofsson|b. Jul 29, 1862\nd. Oct 18, 1923|p189.htm#i18830|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|Olof P. Olson||p4612.htm#i461111|Kjerstn Larrson||p4612.htm#i461112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Erick Edwin Hendricks was born on Sep 26, 1894 at Colonia Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Kjerstin Olofsson. Erick married Rosella Olson, daughter of Hans C. Olson and Annette Peterson, on Jul 19, 1914 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Erick Edwin Hendricks died on Sep 14, 1978 at age 83.
He came with his parents to Utah in 1896. He was educated in the Richmond and Lewiston District schools and then attended Brigham Young College at Logan, Ut. He was a member of the debating and track teams of the college during the 1914-15 school year.
On 19 July 1914 he married ROZELLA OLSEN in the Logan Temple. Erick engaged in farming and livestock feeding. He has been active in church and civic affairs. He has served as a member of the Benson Stake Sunday School Superintendency, served a short term mission in the Western States and was a member of the Benson Stake High Council for 19 years. He served for six years as a City Councilman for Lewiston City, as president of the Cache County Farm Bureau and was a member of the Utah State Farm Bureau executive committee for 4 years. He was appointed a member of the State Fair Board under Gov. Blood for 2 terms; served as President of the Cache County Fair board and Chairman of the Cache County Agricultural Adjustment Administration for a number of years, and in 1942 was elected a member of the board of directors of the Cache Valley National Farm Loan Association.
He came with his parents to Utah in 1896. He was educated in the Richmond and Lewiston District schools and then attended Brigham Young College at Logan, Ut. He was a member of the debating and track teams of the college during the 1914-15 school year.
On 19 July 1914 he married ROZELLA OLSEN in the Logan Temple. Erick engaged in farming and livestock feeding. He has been active in church and civic affairs. He has served as a member of the Benson Stake Sunday School Superintendency, served a short term mission in the Western States and was a member of the Benson Stake High Council for 19 years. He served for six years as a City Councilman for Lewiston City, as president of the Cache County Farm Bureau and was a member of the Utah State Farm Bureau executive committee for 4 years. He was appointed a member of the State Fair Board under Gov. Blood for 2 terms; served as President of the Cache County Fair board and Chairman of the Cache County Agricultural Adjustment Administration for a number of years, and in 1942 was elected a member of the board of directors of the Cache Valley National Farm Loan Association.
Child of Erick Edwin Hendricks and Rosella Olson
- Wilma Hendricks b. Dec 25, 1916
Nellie Christiana Hendricks
F, #275643, b. Jan 5, 1898, d. Nov 5, 1993
Nellie Christiana Hendricks|b. Jan 5, 1898\nd. Nov 5, 1993|p2757.htm#i275643|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Kjerstin Olofsson|b. Jul 29, 1862\nd. Oct 18, 1923|p189.htm#i18830|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|Olof P. Olson||p4612.htm#i461111|Kjerstn Larrson||p4612.htm#i461112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Nellie Christiana Hendricks was born on Jan 5, 1898 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Kjerstin Olofsson. Nellie married John LaVere Dahle, son of Garret Dahle and Marion Izett, on Dec 22, 1919 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho. Nellie Christiana Hendricks died on Nov 5, 1993 at age 95. Nellie was buried at Clarkston City Cemetery, Clarkston, Cache County, Utah.
She spent her early life and attended grade school at Lewiston. She lived on a farm with her mother, sister and brothers and had a very happy childhood. She moved with her family in 1917 to Logan, Ut. where she attended Brigham Young College and graduated from that school a year later. She then attended the U.S.A.C. for one year.
On 3 Nov. 1922 she married RALPH RHOADS CHANNELL in Salt Lake City, Ut. During her married life she has resided in Smithfield, Logan, in Brigham City, Ut. She has always possessed a strong testimony of the Gospel of the LDS Church and has worked in many organizations of the church, including Primary, Sunday School and Relief Society, and has spent many hours doing temple work.
She was also known as Nellie Christens Hendricks.
She spent her early life and attended grade school at Lewiston. She lived on a farm with her mother, sister and brothers and had a very happy childhood. She moved with her family in 1917 to Logan, Ut. where she attended Brigham Young College and graduated from that school a year later. She then attended the U.S.A.C. for one year.
On 3 Nov. 1922 she married RALPH RHOADS CHANNELL in Salt Lake City, Ut. During her married life she has resided in Smithfield, Logan, in Brigham City, Ut. She has always possessed a strong testimony of the Gospel of the LDS Church and has worked in many organizations of the church, including Primary, Sunday School and Relief Society, and has spent many hours doing temple work.
She was also known as Nellie Christens Hendricks.
Children of Nellie Christiana Hendricks and John LaVere Dahle
Nellie married John LaVere Dahle, son of Garret Dahle and Marion Izett, on Dec 22, 1919 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho.
- Gay Dahle b. Jul 9, 1921
- Clair LaVere Dahle b. Jul 10, 1924, d. Feb 1, 1925
- Norwood H. Dahle b. Dec 14, 1925, d. Mar 29, 1943
- Rodney Sterl Dahle b. Feb 21, 1928
- Willard Val Dahle b. Oct 6, 1929
Willard Hendricks
M, #275644, b. Jul 12, 1888, d. Jan 22, 1952
Willard Hendricks|b. Jul 12, 1888\nd. Jan 22, 1952|p2757.htm#i275644|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Kjerstin Olofsson|b. Jul 29, 1862\nd. Oct 18, 1923|p189.htm#i18830|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|Olof P. Olson||p4612.htm#i461111|Kjerstn Larrson||p4612.htm#i461112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Willard Hendricks was born on Jul 12, 1888 at Diaz, Sonora, Mexico. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Kjerstin Olofsson. Willard married Lena Bell Allred, daughter of George Riley Allred and Mary Isadora Layne, on Dec 18, 1907 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Willard Hendricks died on Jan 22, 1952 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah, at age 63. Willard was buried on Jan 25, 1952 at Lewiston City Cemetery, Lewiston, Cache County, Utah.
He immigrated in 1896.
Willard's years parallel that of David, his brother, as related in his history which follows.
The family came to Utah when he was eight years of age and made their home in the southeast part of Lewiston. He graduated from the elementary school at Richmond, and being the eldest son, he had the responsibility of chores and the farm as he grew up. He attended the Brigham Young College in Logan three years.
On 18 Dec. 1907 Willard married LENA BELL ALLRED in the Logan Temple. On 22 July 1908 he left for a two year mission to Sweden. On his return they settled on the farm owned by William Dorris Hendricks and his wife Eleanor. After a few years he took up cattle buying, bought a home in town where they were active in church and ward affairs, he in the Sunday School and Seventies Group, and she in the Relief Society, Primary and M.I.A. Willard was active in civic affairs and served as City Councilman and was very instrumental in getting the water piped from High Creek into Lewiston.
He immigrated in 1896.
Willard's years parallel that of David, his brother, as related in his history which follows.
The family came to Utah when he was eight years of age and made their home in the southeast part of Lewiston. He graduated from the elementary school at Richmond, and being the eldest son, he had the responsibility of chores and the farm as he grew up. He attended the Brigham Young College in Logan three years.
On 18 Dec. 1907 Willard married LENA BELL ALLRED in the Logan Temple. On 22 July 1908 he left for a two year mission to Sweden. On his return they settled on the farm owned by William Dorris Hendricks and his wife Eleanor. After a few years he took up cattle buying, bought a home in town where they were active in church and ward affairs, he in the Sunday School and Seventies Group, and she in the Relief Society, Primary and M.I.A. Willard was active in civic affairs and served as City Councilman and was very instrumental in getting the water piped from High Creek into Lewiston.
Children of Willard Hendricks and Lena Bell Allred
Willard married Lena Bell Allred, daughter of George Riley Allred and Mary Isadora Layne, on Dec 18, 1907 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Larna Hendricks b. Apr 9, 1912, d. Feb 12, 1991
- Carma Hendricks b. Apr 9, 1912, d. Dec 28, 1989
- Alice Hendricks b. Aug 24, 1914
- Al Dean Hendricks b. Apr 27, 1918, d. Feb 7, 1980
- Aldean Hendricks b. Apr 27, 1918, d. Feb, 1980
- Leona Hendricks b. Mar 7, 1920, d. Mar 2, 1969
- Gwyneth Elaine Hendricks b. Apr 26, 1925
David Olof Hendricks
M, #275645, b. Feb 17, 1890, d. May 19, 1971
David Olof Hendricks|b. Feb 17, 1890\nd. May 19, 1971|p2757.htm#i275645|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Kjerstin Olofsson|b. Jul 29, 1862\nd. Oct 18, 1923|p189.htm#i18830|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|Olof P. Olson||p4612.htm#i461111|Kjerstn Larrson||p4612.htm#i461112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
David Olof Hendricks was born on Feb 17, 1890 at Diaz, Chihuahua, Mexico. He was the son of William Dorris Hendricks and Kjerstin Olofsson. David married Lettie Jane Baird, daughter of Robert Baird and Emma Jane Taylor, on May 29, 1912 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. David Olof Hendricks died on May 19, 1971 at age 81.
For seven years William Dorris Hendricks divided his time between his two families in Utah and the two in Mexico, spending a month or more at a time with each one. He was in Mexico a good share of the time because of being in the cattle business there with a man named Gruell. Christine's family lived in an adobe house with a dirt floor and a dirt roof. Myra's family lived in the next house in the same block in a frame house. When Myra's family moved to Utah Christine's family moved into their house. They had a fireplace and always burned wood, which was lighted with a flintrock or file, matches being very uncommon. At night they always covered up the bright coals with ashes, and the next morning would uncover them and blow them and the flames would start up.
They moved to Utah when Dave was nearly six years old. William Dorris Hendricks had a prosperous business when they were in Mexico. Christine's family moved to Lewiston and the farm of 130 acres was their home. They lived and were educated under very humble circumstances. They milked five or six cows to begin with, which were increased to about 10 or 12. The four boys went to school in Richmond; they rode a horse 4 miles or drove a buggy and horse, part of the time hauling the milk to the Union Creamery which stood between Richmond and Lewiston. Dave finished his education in Logan at Brigham Young College. After graduation, he began teaching school in the Lewiston Second Ward, which was called the Wheeler School. He was the Principal and taught the four upper grades, being 21 years of age at that time. After teaching a few years in Lewiston, Ut. and Oxford, Ida. he quit teaching and went to farming.
After teaching school the first year, he married LETTIE JANE BAIRD in the Logan Temple, 29 May 1912. She was born 7 Sept. 1893 in Lewiston, Ut., daughter of Robert and Emma Jane (Taylor) Baird. He worked in various organizations of the L.D.S. church; also was a Bishop and Counselor in the Stake Presidency.
For seven years William Dorris Hendricks divided his time between his two families in Utah and the two in Mexico, spending a month or more at a time with each one. He was in Mexico a good share of the time because of being in the cattle business there with a man named Gruell. Christine's family lived in an adobe house with a dirt floor and a dirt roof. Myra's family lived in the next house in the same block in a frame house. When Myra's family moved to Utah Christine's family moved into their house. They had a fireplace and always burned wood, which was lighted with a flintrock or file, matches being very uncommon. At night they always covered up the bright coals with ashes, and the next morning would uncover them and blow them and the flames would start up.
They moved to Utah when Dave was nearly six years old. William Dorris Hendricks had a prosperous business when they were in Mexico. Christine's family moved to Lewiston and the farm of 130 acres was their home. They lived and were educated under very humble circumstances. They milked five or six cows to begin with, which were increased to about 10 or 12. The four boys went to school in Richmond; they rode a horse 4 miles or drove a buggy and horse, part of the time hauling the milk to the Union Creamery which stood between Richmond and Lewiston. Dave finished his education in Logan at Brigham Young College. After graduation, he began teaching school in the Lewiston Second Ward, which was called the Wheeler School. He was the Principal and taught the four upper grades, being 21 years of age at that time. After teaching a few years in Lewiston, Ut. and Oxford, Ida. he quit teaching and went to farming.
After teaching school the first year, he married LETTIE JANE BAIRD in the Logan Temple, 29 May 1912. She was born 7 Sept. 1893 in Lewiston, Ut., daughter of Robert and Emma Jane (Taylor) Baird. He worked in various organizations of the L.D.S. church; also was a Bishop and Counselor in the Stake Presidency.
Children of David Olof Hendricks and Lettie Jane Baird
- David Russell Hendricks b. Dec 24, 1912
- Gayle Hendricks b. Sep 2, 1914, d. Apr 1, 1940
- Boyd H. Hendricks b. Feb 24, 1917, d. Feb 6, 1935
- Verl Baird Hendricks b. Aug 4, 1924
- Tad Dee Hendricks b. May 7, 1929
Annie Fern Hendricks
F, #275646, b. Feb 19, 1900, d. Jan 20, 1992
Annie Fern Hendricks|b. Feb 19, 1900\nd. Jan 20, 1992|p2757.htm#i275646|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Kjerstin Olofsson|b. Jul 29, 1862\nd. Oct 18, 1923|p189.htm#i18830|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|Olof P. Olson||p4612.htm#i461111|Kjerstn Larrson||p4612.htm#i461112|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Annie Fern Hendricks was born on Feb 19, 1900 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Kjerstin Olofsson. Annie married Ralph Rhoads Channell, son of John W. Channell and Lenora Rhoads, on Nov 3, 1922 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Annie married (Unknown) (Unknown). Annie Fern Hendricks died on Jan 20, 1992 at age 91. Annie was buried at Brigham City Cemetery, Brigham City, Box Elder County, Utah.
She spent her early life and attended grade school at Lewiston. She lived on a farm with her mother, sister and brothers and had a very happy childhood. She moved with her family in 1917 to Logan, Ut. where she attended Brigham Young College and graduated from that school a year later. She then attended the U.S.A.C. for one year.
On 3 Nov. 1922 she married RALPH RHOADS CHANNELL in Salt Lake City, Ut. During her married life she has resided in Smithfield, Logan, in Brigham City, Ut. She has always possessed a strong testimony of the Gospel of the LDS Church and has worked in many organizations of the church, including Primary, Sunday School and Relief Society, and has spent many hours doing temple work.
She spent her early life and attended grade school at Lewiston. She lived on a farm with her mother, sister and brothers and had a very happy childhood. She moved with her family in 1917 to Logan, Ut. where she attended Brigham Young College and graduated from that school a year later. She then attended the U.S.A.C. for one year.
On 3 Nov. 1922 she married RALPH RHOADS CHANNELL in Salt Lake City, Ut. During her married life she has resided in Smithfield, Logan, in Brigham City, Ut. She has always possessed a strong testimony of the Gospel of the LDS Church and has worked in many organizations of the church, including Primary, Sunday School and Relief Society, and has spent many hours doing temple work.
Children of Annie Fern Hendricks and Ralph Rhoads Channell
Annie married Ralph Rhoads Channell, son of John W. Channell and Lenora Rhoads, on Nov 3, 1922 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah.
- Valene Channell b. Dec 20, 1923
- Ralph Reed Channell b. May 5, 1929
- Nellie Channell b. Sep 13, 1935, d. Sep 14, 1935
Eleanor Mae Hendricks
F, #275647, b. Aug 4, 1899
Eleanor Mae Hendricks|b. Aug 4, 1899|p2757.htm#i275647|William Dorris Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Eleanor Ann Maybin|b. Feb 17, 1871\nd. Jan 22, 1958|p189.htm#i18831|James Hendricks|b. Jun 23, 1808\nd. Jul 8, 1870|p7.htm#i677|Drusilla Dorris|b. Feb 8, 1810\nd. May 20, 1881|p7.htm#i696|Patrick Maybin||p4612.htm#i461108|Martha Crawford||p4612.htm#i461109|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Eleanor Mae Hendricks was born on Aug 4, 1899 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Eleanor Ann Maybin. Eleanor married Louis Ballard Cardon, son of Louis Cardon and Rebecca Ballard, on Sep 8, 1920 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
Her father and mother had been married in Mexico. They returned to Salt Lake City where they rented a small cottage in the 17th Ward. After a few days, William went to Richmond and his wife went to work for a year. He returned for her and they moved to Logan where Eleanor Mae was born.
There were several places of residence during Eleanor's childhood, but she attended the Brigham Young College in Logan, Ut. There she met LOUIS BALLARD CARDON.
He filled a Mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints in the Pacific Northwest.
They were married in the Logan Temple, 8 Sept. 1920 and a year or two later moved to Salt Lake City and there raised their family.
L. B. Cardon was the owner of Cardon Abstract Company and was helped considerably during the years by Eleanor working in the office with him from time to time.
After her husband died, she sold the business and went to work in the County Recorder's Office in Salt Lake City. Her fine friends continued to stand by her and have been a great help since her husband's passing.
Her father and mother had been married in Mexico. They returned to Salt Lake City where they rented a small cottage in the 17th Ward. After a few days, William went to Richmond and his wife went to work for a year. He returned for her and they moved to Logan where Eleanor Mae was born.
There were several places of residence during Eleanor's childhood, but she attended the Brigham Young College in Logan, Ut. There she met LOUIS BALLARD CARDON.
He filled a Mission for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints in the Pacific Northwest.
They were married in the Logan Temple, 8 Sept. 1920 and a year or two later moved to Salt Lake City and there raised their family.
L. B. Cardon was the owner of Cardon Abstract Company and was helped considerably during the years by Eleanor working in the office with him from time to time.
After her husband died, she sold the business and went to work in the County Recorder's Office in Salt Lake City. Her fine friends continued to stand by her and have been a great help since her husband's passing.
Children of Eleanor Mae Hendricks and Louis Ballard Cardon
- Louis Ballard Cardon b. Nov 29, 1922
- Gloria Cardon b. Dec 25, 1925
- Carol Jean Cardon b. Oct 15, 1929
Samuel Allen Hendricks
M, #275648, b. Dec 22, 1848, d. Jun 26, 1900
Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|Samuel Hendricks|b. Apr 18, 1791\nd. Apr 18, 1856|p7.htm#i668|Rebecca Dorris|b. Feb 22, 1793\nd. Dec 18, 1835|p7.htm#i682|Benjamin Lewis||p4613.htm#i461217|Elizabeth Reed||p4613.htm#i461216|
Relationship=6th cousin 2 times removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=7th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Samuel Allen Hendricks was born on Dec 22, 1848 at Red River, Claiborne Parish, Louisiana. He was the son of Allen Hendricks and Elizabeth Reed. Samuel married Eliza Abigail Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Nov 13, 1871 at Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Samuel married Caroline Isaacson, daughter of Niels Isaacson, on Feb 28, 1895 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. Samuel Allen Hendricks died on Jun 26, 1900 at Santiago, Papasquiaro, Durango, Mexico, at age 51. Samuel was buried at Santiago, Papasquiaro, Durango, Mexico.
In the spring of 1850 his parents together with an uncle, Josiah Hendricks, (who was then a bachelor) fitted up a wagon outfit and started for the gold fields of California. The family at that time consisted of Allen, his wife, Elizabeth, and the four children, Eliza Rebecca, age 8, William, age 6, John Nelson, age 4, and Samuel Allen, age 1 1/2 years.
As they journeyed on across the plains many obstacles were encountered and some of the people became sick and died. As they came to North Platte, Neb. the mother, Elizabeth, died with cholera 12 June 1850 and when they arrived at Sweet Water, Wyoming, the father, Allen, died 12 July 1850. This left the four small children with Josiah Hendricks who brought them to Ut. and placed them with relatives who had previously come to Ut. Samuel Allen lived with Neriah and Rebecca (Hendricks) Lewis and when he was eight years old Rebecca died. He still lived with Neriah Lewis after her death. When his cousin William H. Lewis married he lived with them. During this period the Utah Pioneers went through very perilous times and most of the people were poor, having very little of this world's goods, and the Lewis' were no exception. Allen was assigned the task of herding sheep from early spring till late fall. His sister told the story of him during this period. She said that for some time they hadn't seen each other. She saw a bare-footed, scantily clad, dirty little boy herding sheep and when she got closer to him found it was her brother.
He never had a suit of clothes in his youth and received very little schooling, but took advantage of every opportunity to learn. He stayed with the Lewis family until he was sixteen and then went out for himself. He received employment from a company that was hauling freight into Butte, Mont. He worked during the summer and stayed with the William Dorris Hendricks family and others in the winter and as soon as he could, purchased an outfit of his own and freighted from Corinne, Utah to Butte, Mont. Samuel Allen changed from freighting to railroading and shortly formed partnership with Herschel Bullen to do railroad building. This was some time near 1875-1880. They were successful in this venture and were soon able to build homes and purchase farms in Lewiston and Richmond. His home in Richmond was completed in 1883. He continued in the contracting business until his death which occurred on 26 June 1900 at Santiago, Durango, Mexico of heart trouble, and like his brother John, had to be buried immediately in Mexico according to the Mexican laws.
In the spring of 1850 his parents together with an uncle, Josiah Hendricks, (who was then a bachelor) fitted up a wagon outfit and started for the gold fields of California. The family at that time consisted of Allen, his wife, Elizabeth, and the four children, Eliza Rebecca, age 8, William, age 6, John Nelson, age 4, and Samuel Allen, age 1 1/2 years.
As they journeyed on across the plains many obstacles were encountered and some of the people became sick and died. As they came to North Platte, Neb. the mother, Elizabeth, died with cholera 12 June 1850 and when they arrived at Sweet Water, Wyoming, the father, Allen, died 12 July 1850. This left the four small children with Josiah Hendricks who brought them to Ut. and placed them with relatives who had previously come to Ut. Samuel Allen lived with Neriah and Rebecca (Hendricks) Lewis and when he was eight years old Rebecca died. He still lived with Neriah Lewis after her death. When his cousin William H. Lewis married he lived with them. During this period the Utah Pioneers went through very perilous times and most of the people were poor, having very little of this world's goods, and the Lewis' were no exception. Allen was assigned the task of herding sheep from early spring till late fall. His sister told the story of him during this period. She said that for some time they hadn't seen each other. She saw a bare-footed, scantily clad, dirty little boy herding sheep and when she got closer to him found it was her brother.
He never had a suit of clothes in his youth and received very little schooling, but took advantage of every opportunity to learn. He stayed with the Lewis family until he was sixteen and then went out for himself. He received employment from a company that was hauling freight into Butte, Mont. He worked during the summer and stayed with the William Dorris Hendricks family and others in the winter and as soon as he could, purchased an outfit of his own and freighted from Corinne, Utah to Butte, Mont. Samuel Allen changed from freighting to railroading and shortly formed partnership with Herschel Bullen to do railroad building. This was some time near 1875-1880. They were successful in this venture and were soon able to build homes and purchase farms in Lewiston and Richmond. His home in Richmond was completed in 1883. He continued in the contracting business until his death which occurred on 26 June 1900 at Santiago, Durango, Mexico of heart trouble, and like his brother John, had to be buried immediately in Mexico according to the Mexican laws.
Children of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks
Samuel married Eliza Abigail Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Nov 13, 1871 at Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah.
- Samuel Walstein Hendricks+ b. Aug 7, 1872, d. Sep 21, 1940
- Cora Jane Hendricks+ b. Mar 25, 1874, d. Dec 4, 1951
- Mary Elizabeth Hendricks+ b. Jan 23, 1876, d. Apr 11, 1956
- Henry Hendricks b. Oct 5, 1878, d. Aug 29, 1903
- Emily Hendricks b. Oct 5, 1878, d. Sep 26, 1879
- Lottie Eugene Hendricks+ b. Nov 18, 1880, d. Jun 17, 1921
- Lafayette Hendricks+ b. Sep 12, 1883, d. Feb 14, 1968
- Guy Hendricks b. Nov 6, 1885, d. Nov 11, 1886
- Ralph Hendricks b. Oct 25, 1887, d. Feb 24, 1913
- William Randolph Hendricks b. Sep 23, 1892, d. Jun 19, 1895
Child of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Caroline Isaacson
Samuel married Caroline Isaacson, daughter of Niels Isaacson, on Feb 28, 1895 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
- Van Allen Hendricks b. Mar 4, 1896, d. Oct 5, 1897
Samuel Walstein Hendricks
M, #275649, b. Aug 7, 1872, d. Sep 21, 1940
Samuel Walstein Hendricks|b. Aug 7, 1872\nd. Sep 21, 1940|p2757.htm#i275649|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Samuel Walstein Hendricks was born on Aug 7, 1872 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Samuel married Esther Jane Hyer, daughter of Christian Hyer and Rosina Shepherd, on Dec 28, 1892 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Samuel Walstein Hendricks died on Sep 21, 1940 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 68. Samuel was buried on Sep 24, 1940 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Samuel Walstein Hendricks and Esther Jane Hyer
Samuel married Esther Jane Hyer, daughter of Christian Hyer and Rosina Shepherd, on Dec 28, 1892 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Walstein Hyer Hendricks+ b. Oct 10, 1893, d. Jul 3, 1969
- Iris Hendricks+ b. Feb 15, 1895, d. Mar 17, 1976
- Bryan Hyer Hendricks+ b. Oct 12, 1896, d. Aug 5, 1950
- Samuel Allen Hendricks Sr.+ b. Aug 25, 1901, d. Jun 26, 1981
- Russel Hyer Hendricks b. Oct 19, 1904, d. Apr 10, 1979
- Virgina Hendricks b. Jan 16, 1909, d. May 4, 1980
Henry Hendricks
M, #275650, b. Oct 5, 1878, d. Aug 29, 1903
Henry Hendricks|b. Oct 5, 1878\nd. Aug 29, 1903|p2757.htm#i275650|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Henry Hendricks was born on Oct 5, 1878 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Henry Hendricks died on Aug 29, 1903 at age 24.
Emily Hendricks
F, #275651, b. Oct 5, 1878, d. Sep 26, 1879
Emily Hendricks|b. Oct 5, 1878\nd. Sep 26, 1879|p2757.htm#i275651|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Emily Hendricks was born on Oct 5, 1878 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Emily Hendricks died on Sep 26, 1879.
Lottie Eugene Hendricks
F, #275652, b. Nov 18, 1880, d. Jun 17, 1921
Lottie Eugene Hendricks|b. Nov 18, 1880\nd. Jun 17, 1921|p2757.htm#i275652|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Lottie Eugene Hendricks was born on Nov 18, 1880 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Lottie married James Valentine Simpson, son of James Simpson and Sarah Fowers, on Jun 8, 1907 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. Lottie Eugene Hendricks died on Jun 17, 1921 at Brigham City, Box Elder County, Utah, at age 40. Lottie was buried at Hooper Cemetery, Hooper, Weber County, Utah.
Children of Lottie Eugene Hendricks and James Valentine Simpson
Lottie married James Valentine Simpson, son of James Simpson and Sarah Fowers, on Jun 8, 1907 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
- James Arthur Simpson b. Aug 18, 1909
- Elva May Simpson b. Jul 17, 1911
- Sarah Ruth Simpson b. Feb 21, 1913
- Louie Edith Simpson b. Oct 31, 1915
Guy Hendricks
M, #275653, b. Nov 6, 1885, d. Nov 11, 1886
Guy Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1885\nd. Nov 11, 1886|p2757.htm#i275653|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Guy Hendricks was born on Nov 6, 1885 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Guy Hendricks died on Nov 11, 1886 at age 1.
Ralph Hendricks
M, #275654, b. Oct 25, 1887, d. Feb 24, 1913
Ralph Hendricks|b. Oct 25, 1887\nd. Feb 24, 1913|p2757.htm#i275654|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Ralph Hendricks was born on Oct 25, 1887 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Ralph Hendricks died on Feb 24, 1913 at age 25; not married.
William Randolph Hendricks
M, #275655, b. Sep 23, 1892, d. Jun 19, 1895
William Randolph Hendricks|b. Sep 23, 1892\nd. Jun 19, 1895|p2757.htm#i275655|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
William Randolph Hendricks was born on Sep 23, 1892 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. William Randolph Hendricks died on Jun 19, 1895 at age 2.
Van Allen Hendricks
M, #275656, b. Mar 4, 1896, d. Oct 5, 1897
Van Allen Hendricks|b. Mar 4, 1896\nd. Oct 5, 1897|p2757.htm#i275656|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Caroline Isaacson|d. May 13, 1899|p3256.htm#i325507|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|Niels Isaacson||p4616.htm#i461518||||
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Van Allen Hendricks was born on Mar 4, 1896 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Caroline Isaacson. Van Allen Hendricks died on Oct 5, 1897 at age 1.
Cora Jane Hendricks
F, #275657, b. Mar 25, 1874, d. Dec 4, 1951
Cora Jane Hendricks|b. Mar 25, 1874\nd. Dec 4, 1951|p2757.htm#i275657|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Cora Jane Hendricks was born on Mar 25, 1874 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Cora married Joseph Webb, son of Simon Webb and Elizabeth Rowsell, on Feb 13, 1895 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Cora Jane Hendricks died on Dec 4, 1951 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 77. Cora was buried on Dec 7, 1951 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Cora Jane Hendricks and Joseph Webb
- Joseph Renaul Webb b. Nov 12, 1895, d. Jan 21, 1899
- Alta Eliza Webb b. Jun 21, 1899
- Samuel Milton Webb b. Nov 1, 1902
- Verda Elizabeth Webb b. Mar 21, 1905
- Delmar Hendricks Webb b. Jan 16, 1908, d. Aug 2, 1980
- Guelda Norene Webb b. Jun 8, 1911
Mary Elizabeth Hendricks
F, #275658, b. Jan 23, 1876, d. Apr 11, 1956
Mary Elizabeth Hendricks|b. Jan 23, 1876\nd. Apr 11, 1956|p2757.htm#i275658|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Mary Elizabeth Hendricks was born on Jan 23, 1876 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Mary married John Dinnan Speirs, son of John Speirs and Annie Dinnan, on Jul 16, 1902 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Mary Elizabeth Hendricks died on Apr 11, 1956 at Tooele, Tooele County, Utah, at age 80. Mary was buried on Apr 14, 1956 at Tooele, Tooele County, Utah.
She was also known as Mae Hendricks.
She was also known as Mae Hendricks.
Children of Mary Elizabeth Hendricks and John Dinnan Speirs
Mary married John Dinnan Speirs, son of John Speirs and Annie Dinnan, on Jul 16, 1902 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Rowena Speirs b. May 3, 1903
- Melba Speirs b. Jun 10, 1904
- George Hendricks Speirs b. May 2, 1908
- John Dinnan Speirs Jr. b. Sep 24, 1911, d. Jul 18, 1937
- Allan Carlyle Speirs b. Oct 13, 1915
Lafayette Hendricks
M, #275659, b. Sep 12, 1883, d. Feb 14, 1968
Lafayette Hendricks|b. Sep 12, 1883\nd. Feb 14, 1968|p2757.htm#i275659|Samuel Allen Hendricks|b. Dec 22, 1848\nd. Jun 26, 1900|p2757.htm#i275648|Eliza Abigail Hendricks|b. Jan 7, 1856\nd. Oct 12, 1893|p191.htm#i19074|Allen Hendricks|b. Jun 12, 1819\nd. Jul 12, 1850|p190.htm#i18952|Elizabeth Reed|b. Apr 22, 1824\nd. Jun 12, 1850|p3255.htm#i325500|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Lafayette Hendricks was born on Sep 12, 1883 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Samuel Allen Hendricks and Eliza Abigail Hendricks. Lafayette married Elizabeth Elena Webb, daughter of Eli Webb and Elena Ashment, on Sep 18, 1907 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Lafayette married Agnes Leonora Hanson, daughter of Olof Hanson and Matilda Goldkuhl, on Dec 23, 1957 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. Lafayette Hendricks died on Feb 14, 1968 at Boise, Ada County, Idaho, at age 84. Lafayette was buried on Feb 17, 1968 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Lafayette Hendricks and Elizabeth Elena Webb
Lafayette married Elizabeth Elena Webb, daughter of Eli Webb and Elena Ashment, on Sep 18, 1907 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Gladys Irene Hendricks b. Jun 22, 1908
- Alton Webb Hendricks b. Jun 27, 1910
- Beth Elena Hendricks b. Apr 23, 1912, d. Dec 15, 1991
- Grace Mardene Hendricks b. Jun 9, 1916
- Evan LaVan Hendricks b. Mar 17, 1918
Charles Edward Merrill
M, #275660, b. Feb 9, 1866, d. Feb 17, 1931
Charles Edward Merrill was born on Feb 9, 1866 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. Charles married Ortencia Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Alvira Lavona Smith, on Mar 30, 1887 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. Charles married Chloe Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Mar 4, 1891 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Charles Edward Merrill died on Feb 17, 1931 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 65. Charles was buried on Feb 21, 1931 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Child of Charles Edward Merrill and Ortencia Hendricks
- Dr. Charles Leo Merrill MD+ b. Jan 13, 1888, d. May 25, 1945
Children of Charles Edward Merrill and Chloe Hendricks
- Guy Edward Merrill+ b. Jul 14, 1892, d. Nov 25, 1961
- Dr. Don Clayton Merrill b. May 16, 1895, d. Feb 5, 1968
- Ortencia Hendricks Merrill+ b. Feb 4, 1898, d. Mar 5, 1969
- LaVille Hendricks Merrill+ b. Mar 15, 1901, d. May 17, 1966
- Owen Hendricks Merrill b. Aug 6, 1903, d. Sep 13, 1904
- Ardella Hendricks Merrill+ b. Jan 16, 1910, d. Mar 24, 1997
Guy Edward Merrill
M, #275661, b. Jul 14, 1892, d. Nov 25, 1961
Guy Edward Merrill|b. Jul 14, 1892\nd. Nov 25, 1961|p2757.htm#i275661|Charles Edward Merrill|b. Feb 9, 1866\nd. Feb 17, 1931|p2757.htm#i275660|Chloe Hendricks|b. May 7, 1873\nd. May 7, 1950|p191.htm#i19080|||||||William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Guy Edward Merrill was born on Jul 14, 1892 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Charles Edward Merrill and Chloe Hendricks. Guy married Maud Mary Clark, daughter of Frederic Clark and Martha Elizabeth Clark, on Oct 4, 1916 at Salt Lake Temple, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Guy Edward Merrill died on Nov 25, 1961 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 69. Guy was buried at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Guy Edward Merrill and Maud Mary Clark
- Afton Clark Merrill b. Mar 26, 1918
- Guy Edward Merrill b. Sep 21, 1921
- Ruey Clark Merrill b. Oct 13, 1925
Dr. Don Clayton Merrill
M, #275662, b. May 16, 1895, d. Feb 5, 1968
Dr. Don Clayton Merrill|b. May 16, 1895\nd. Feb 5, 1968|p2757.htm#i275662|Charles Edward Merrill|b. Feb 9, 1866\nd. Feb 17, 1931|p2757.htm#i275660|Chloe Hendricks|b. May 7, 1873\nd. May 7, 1950|p191.htm#i19080|||||||William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Dr. Don Clayton Merrill was born on May 16, 1895 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Charles Edward Merrill and Chloe Hendricks. Don married Barbara Laverne Larsen, daughter of John Christian Larsen and Mary Ellen Tittensor, on Sep 17, 1919 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Dr. Don Clayton Merrill died on Feb 5, 1968 at age 72.
Ortencia Hendricks Merrill
F, #275663, b. Feb 4, 1898, d. Mar 5, 1969
Ortencia Hendricks Merrill|b. Feb 4, 1898\nd. Mar 5, 1969|p2757.htm#i275663|Charles Edward Merrill|b. Feb 9, 1866\nd. Feb 17, 1931|p2757.htm#i275660|Chloe Hendricks|b. May 7, 1873\nd. May 7, 1950|p191.htm#i19080|||||||William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Ortencia Hendricks Merrill was born on Feb 4, 1898 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Charles Edward Merrill and Chloe Hendricks. Ortencia married Charles Horald Monson, son of Charles Andrew Monson and Eliza Emma Thomas, on Jun 1, 1922 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Ortencia Hendricks Merrill died on Mar 5, 1969 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, at age 71. Ortencia was buried on Mar 8, 1969 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Ortencia Hendricks Merrill and Charles Horald Monson
- Tennie Monson b. Mar 5, 1923, d. Mar 5, 1923
- Charles Horald Monson Jr. b. May 13, 1924
- Ruth Donna Monson b. Oct 25, 1930
- Earl Merrill Monson b. Jul 26, 1932
LaVille Hendricks Merrill
M, #275664, b. Mar 15, 1901, d. May 17, 1966
LaVille Hendricks Merrill|b. Mar 15, 1901\nd. May 17, 1966|p2757.htm#i275664|Charles Edward Merrill|b. Feb 9, 1866\nd. Feb 17, 1931|p2757.htm#i275660|Chloe Hendricks|b. May 7, 1873\nd. May 7, 1950|p191.htm#i19080|||||||William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
LaVille Hendricks Merrill was born on Mar 15, 1901 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Charles Edward Merrill and Chloe Hendricks. LaVille married Leah Rae Skidmore, daughter of Alonzo Skidmore and Miranda Monson, on Sep 28, 1923 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. LaVille married Kathryn Kesler Dart, daughter of Joe Hyrum Davis and Margaret E. Kesler, on Jun 1, 1946 at Oakland, Alameda County, California. LaVille Hendricks Merrill died on May 17, 1966 at Hiawatha, Carbon County, Utah, at age 65.
Children of LaVille Hendricks Merrill and Leah Rae Skidmore
- Duane LaVille Merrill b. Mar 22, 1924
- Owen Skidmore Merrill b. Jan 17, 1926
Children of LaVille Hendricks Merrill and Kathryn Kesler Dart
- John Quinn Merrill b. Sep 13, 1948, d. Sep 14, 1948
- Kayla Margaret Merrill b. Jun 23, 1950
- Chloe Dee Merrill b. Jan 15, 1956
Owen Hendricks Merrill
M, #275665, b. Aug 6, 1903, d. Sep 13, 1904
Owen Hendricks Merrill|b. Aug 6, 1903\nd. Sep 13, 1904|p2757.htm#i275665|Charles Edward Merrill|b. Feb 9, 1866\nd. Feb 17, 1931|p2757.htm#i275660|Chloe Hendricks|b. May 7, 1873\nd. May 7, 1950|p191.htm#i19080|||||||William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Owen Hendricks Merrill was born on Aug 6, 1903 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Charles Edward Merrill and Chloe Hendricks. Owen Hendricks Merrill died on Sep 13, 1904 at age 1.
Ardella Hendricks Merrill
F, #275666, b. Jan 16, 1910, d. Mar 24, 1997
Ardella Hendricks Merrill|b. Jan 16, 1910\nd. Mar 24, 1997|p2757.htm#i275666|Charles Edward Merrill|b. Feb 9, 1866\nd. Feb 17, 1931|p2757.htm#i275660|Chloe Hendricks|b. May 7, 1873\nd. May 7, 1950|p191.htm#i19080|||||||William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Ardella Hendricks Merrill was born on Jan 16, 1910 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Charles Edward Merrill and Chloe Hendricks. Ardella married Delbert Waddoups Smedley, son of Angus Smedley and Margretta Elizabeth Waddoups, on Aug 20, 1935 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Ardella Hendricks Merrill died on Mar 24, 1997 at age 87.
Children of Ardella Hendricks Merrill and Delbert Waddoups Smedley
- Cheryl Merrill Smedley b. Jul 2, 1937, d. Oct 12, 1950
- LeLou Jane Smedley b. Feb 6, 1941
- Craig Merrill Smedley b. May 16, 1944
- Roger Merrill Smedley b. Oct 31, 1948
- Julie Merilyn Smedley b. Aug 31, 1951
Antrim Byrd Harrison
M, #275667, b. Apr 10, 1842, d. Sep 1, 1893
Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|||||||||||||
Antrim Byrd Harrison was born on Apr 10, 1842 at Huntington Mills, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. He was the son of Jesse Harrison and Phebe Tubbs. Antrim married Mary Jane Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Feb 8, 1870 at Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Antrim Byrd Harrison died on Sep 1, 1893 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah, at age 51. Antrim was buried on Sep 3, 1893 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks
- William Jessie Harrison+ b. Nov 10, 1870, d. Jan 12, 1961
- Antrim Byrd Harrison+ b. Jun 6, 1873, d. Dec 17, 1951
- Mary Viola Harrison b. Sep 5, 1877, d. Sep 9, 1878
- Ida Jane Harrison b. Sep 15, 1879, d. Jan 5, 1907
- Elsie Alvira Harrison+ b. Sep 21, 1882, d. Apr 24, 1945
- Herbert Henry Harrison+ b. Jul 16, 1885, d. Aug 23, 1935
- Milo Andrus Harrison+ b. Feb 6, 1888, d. Feb 1, 1959
- Pheobe Irene Harrison+ b. Nov 14, 1890, d. Aug 7, 1968
William Jessie Harrison
M, #275668, b. Nov 10, 1870, d. Jan 12, 1961
William Jessie Harrison|b. Nov 10, 1870\nd. Jan 12, 1961|p2757.htm#i275668|Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Mary Jane Hendricks|b. Aug 19, 1852\nd. Jul 18, 1931|p191.htm#i19072|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
William Jessie Harrison was born on Nov 10, 1870 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks. William married Chloe Eugene Rainey, daughter of David Pinkney Rainey and Dorothy Jane Dennis, on Jun 17, 1896 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. William Jessie Harrison died on Jan 12, 1961 at Provo, Utah County, Utah, at age 90. William was buried on Jan 16, 1961 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of William Jessie Harrison and Chloe Eugene Rainey
William married Chloe Eugene Rainey, daughter of David Pinkney Rainey and Dorothy Jane Dennis, on Jun 17, 1896 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Ruby Harrison b. Dec 24, 1899, d. Nov 14, 1918
- Viola Harrison+ b. Dec 19, 1900, d. Jan 4, 1990
- Phyllis Harrison b. Nov 7, 1902, d. May 28, 1910
- Eugene Harrison b. Dec 21, 1903
- William Jesse Harrison b. Jul 12, 1905, d. Oct 6, 1905
- Dorothy Harrison b. Jul 31, 1906, d. Oct 22, 1986
- David Boyd Harrison b. Jul 30, 1908, d. Jun 2, 1955
- Mary Harrison+ b. Sep 28, 1909, d. Aug 31, 1964
- Leah Harrison b. Oct 4, 1911, d. Jan 17, 1973
- Max Rainey Harrison+ b. Oct 1, 1916, d. Feb 19, 1990
- Zenda Harrison b. Jul 10, 1922
Antrim Byrd Harrison
M, #275669, b. Jun 6, 1873, d. Dec 17, 1951
Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Jun 6, 1873\nd. Dec 17, 1951|p2757.htm#i275669|Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Mary Jane Hendricks|b. Aug 19, 1852\nd. Jul 18, 1931|p191.htm#i19072|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Antrim Byrd Harrison was born on Jun 6, 1873 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks. Antrim married Pearl Bullen, daughter of Herschel Bullen and Mary Josephine Whittle, on Apr 26, 1896 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Antrim Byrd Harrison died on Dec 17, 1951 at Logan, Cache County, Utah, at age 78. Antrim was buried at Logan City Cemetery, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
Antrim was an active member of the L. D. S. Church, having served as Ward Clerk in Logan, Ut. for many years; was an active temple worker, and a Sunday School teacher. He successfully engaged in railroad construction, milling, grocery, and real estate businesses.
Antrim was an active member of the L. D. S. Church, having served as Ward Clerk in Logan, Ut. for many years; was an active temple worker, and a Sunday School teacher. He successfully engaged in railroad construction, milling, grocery, and real estate businesses.
Children of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Pearl Bullen
- Alton Byrd Harrison b. May 6, 1899, d. Dec 13, 1974
- Dr. Lee Bullen Harrison b. Mar 13, 1902, d. Jul 12, 1990
- Blaine Antrim Harrison b. Apr 10, 1905, d. Jan 24, 1968
- Richard Asa Harrison b. Mar 17, 1908, d. Nov 25, 1979
- Robert Bullen Harrison b. Jan 8, 1915, d. Jan 11, 1985
Mary Viola Harrison
F, #275670, b. Sep 5, 1877, d. Sep 9, 1878
Mary Viola Harrison|b. Sep 5, 1877\nd. Sep 9, 1878|p2757.htm#i275670|Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Mary Jane Hendricks|b. Aug 19, 1852\nd. Jul 18, 1931|p191.htm#i19072|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Mary Viola Harrison was born on Sep 5, 1877 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks. Mary Viola Harrison died on Sep 9, 1878 at age 1.
Ida Jane Harrison
F, #275671, b. Sep 15, 1879, d. Jan 5, 1907
Ida Jane Harrison|b. Sep 15, 1879\nd. Jan 5, 1907|p2757.htm#i275671|Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Mary Jane Hendricks|b. Aug 19, 1852\nd. Jul 18, 1931|p191.htm#i19072|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Ida Jane Harrison was born on Sep 15, 1879 at Beaver Canyon, Utah. She was the daughter of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks. Ida Jane Harrison died on Jan 5, 1907 at age 27. She and James Halley Stocks were married by proxy on Feb 25, 1914 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
Elsie Alvira Harrison
F, #275672, b. Sep 21, 1882, d. Apr 24, 1945
Elsie Alvira Harrison|b. Sep 21, 1882\nd. Apr 24, 1945|p2757.htm#i275672|Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Mary Jane Hendricks|b. Aug 19, 1852\nd. Jul 18, 1931|p191.htm#i19072|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Elsie Alvira Harrison was born on Sep 21, 1882 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks. Elsie married Martin Henry Harris on Jan 20, 1909. Elsie Alvira Harrison died on Apr 24, 1945 at Alameda, Alameda County, California, at age 62.
Children of Elsie Alvira Harrison and Martin Henry Harris
- Albert Harrison Harris b. Jan 2, 1907, d. Jul 2, 1908
- Martin Jesse Harris b. May 4, 1910, d. Oct 15, 1929
- Walter Harrison Harris b. Mar 8, 1912, d. Apr 8, 1912
- Lorenzo Charles Harris b. Oct 25, 1913
- Ida May Harris b. Oct 25, 1913
- Virginia Harrison Harris b. Sep 13, 1918, d. Sep 21, 1921
- Keith Wesley Harris+ b. Sep 12, 1922, d. Apr 25, 1998
- Mary Jane Harris b. Apr 14, 1926, d. Aug 5, 1973
Herbert Henry Harrison
M, #275673, b. Jul 16, 1885, d. Aug 23, 1935
Herbert Henry Harrison|b. Jul 16, 1885\nd. Aug 23, 1935|p2757.htm#i275673|Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Mary Jane Hendricks|b. Aug 19, 1852\nd. Jul 18, 1931|p191.htm#i19072|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Herbert Henry Harrison was born on Jul 16, 1885 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks. Herbert married Rachel Blair, daughter of Albert Edward Blair and Sarah Rachel Stocks, on Nov 15, 1905 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. Herbert Henry Harrison died on Aug 23, 1935 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah, at age 50. Herbert was buried on Aug 26, 1935 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Herbert Henry Harrison and Rachel Blair
Herbert married Rachel Blair, daughter of Albert Edward Blair and Sarah Rachel Stocks, on Nov 15, 1905 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Herbert Blair Harrison b. Aug 25, 1906, d. Jul 26, 1990
- Sylvia Harrison b. Jan 7, 1909
- Wayne Antrim Harrison b. Jan 10, 1911
- Glenn Dale Harrison+ b. Nov 25, 1912, d. Aug, 1990
- William Moine Harrison b. Nov 10, 1914, d. Feb 1, 1991
- Darwin Henry Harrison b. Nov 27, 1916, d. Jan 12, 1917
Milo Andrus Harrison
M, #275674, b. Feb 6, 1888, d. Feb 1, 1959
Milo Andrus Harrison|b. Feb 6, 1888\nd. Feb 1, 1959|p2757.htm#i275674|Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Mary Jane Hendricks|b. Aug 19, 1852\nd. Jul 18, 1931|p191.htm#i19072|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Milo Andrus Harrison was born on Feb 6, 1888 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks. Milo married Emma Olsen, daughter of Erilk Olsen and Betty Peterson, on Aug 27, 1924 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Milo married Mildred Tripp, daughter of William Robert Tripp and Annie Elizabeth Bowman, on Jun 21, 1933 at Logan, Cache County, Utah; no issue. Milo Andrus Harrison died on Feb 1, 1959 at age 70. Milo was buried at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Child of Milo Andrus Harrison and Emma Olsen
- Walter Harrison b. Nov 24, 1925, d. Nov 24, 1925
Pheobe Irene Harrison
F, #275675, b. Nov 14, 1890, d. Aug 7, 1968
Pheobe Irene Harrison|b. Nov 14, 1890\nd. Aug 7, 1968|p2757.htm#i275675|Antrim Byrd Harrison|b. Apr 10, 1842\nd. Sep 1, 1893|p2757.htm#i275667|Mary Jane Hendricks|b. Aug 19, 1852\nd. Jul 18, 1931|p191.htm#i19072|Jesse Harrison||p3277.htm#i327601|Phebe Tubbs||p3277.htm#i327602|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Pheobe Irene Harrison was born on Nov 14, 1890 at Oxford, Franklin County, Idaho. She was the daughter of Antrim Byrd Harrison and Mary Jane Hendricks. Pheobe married Roy Leland Dahle, son of John Hansen Dahle and Jonetta Berntine Ingmann, on Feb 11, 1914 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. Pheobe Irene Harrison died on Aug 7, 1968 at Sacramento, Sacramento County, California, at age 77. Pheobe was buried on Aug 12, 1968 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
She was also known as Phebe Irene Harrison.
She was also known as Phebe Irene Harrison.
Children of Pheobe Irene Harrison and Roy Leland Dahle
Pheobe married Roy Leland Dahle, son of John Hansen Dahle and Jonetta Berntine Ingmann, on Feb 11, 1914 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
- Phoebe Irene Dahle b. Apr 27, 1914, d. Mar 24, 1945
- Phyllis Dahle b. Nov 5, 1917, d. Oct 11, 1983
- Roy Leland Dahle Jr. b. Oct 12, 1920
- Delbert Harrison Dahle b. Mar 14, 1922, d. Oct 26, 1922
- Joan Dahle b. Mar 16, 1925, d. Aug 5, 1925
- Reed Harrison Dahle b. Apr 23, 1927
Ira King Hillman
M, #275676, b. Mar 22, 1852, d. Aug 30, 1944
Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Ira King Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary Priannah Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|||||||||||||
Ira King Hillman was born on Mar 22, 1852 at South Cottonwood, Salt Lake Couty, Utah. He was the son of Ira King Hillman and Mary Priannah Petty. Ira married Drusilla Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Dec 1, 1869 at Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Ira married Drusilla Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Dec 20, 1870 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. Ira married Esther Waldron on Mar 29, 1929. Ira King Hillman died on Aug 30, 1944 at at home, North Logan, Cache County, Utah, at age 92. Ira was buried at Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Franklin County, Idaho.
In the census on Jun 10, 1880 Ira King Hillman was named King Hillman.
A history of the life of Ira King Hillman II “Uncle King” compiled by his granddaughter, Edna T. Egan, and presented to me on a visit to Richmond, Utah, in early 1991.
Ira King Hillman was born 22 March 1852 at Little Cottonwood, just South of Salt Lake City, Utah, about three or four miles. His parents were Ira King and Mary Pryannah Petty Hillman. The family moved to Fort Harriman, Utah. They heard Johnson’s Army was coming so they then moved to Spanish Fork. Johnson’s Army camped at Camp Floyd for a year or two and then moved on. The Hillmans then moved back to their home at Fort Harriman.
King was 13 years old when his father died. His father had two wives and eleven children, they had a home and a few acres of land. His mother sold the home for $1,000, and gave $500 to the second wife, and moved to Richmond, Utah, where her mother and two brothers “Lew” and “Tom” Petty were living. They lived in Richmond for a time, and his mother married Russell Homer. Mr. Homer, his mother, and her six children moved to Three Mile Creek, now known as Perry, Utah.
King didn’t get along well with his stepfather, so he left home. He bought a pony, looped a rope over his nose, and rode bareback to Richmond to live with his grandmother, Margaret Jefferson Petty, and Uncle Lew and Uncle Tom. King loved his Uncle Lew as he took great interest in the young man. Uncle Lew encouraged him to attend school in Richmond. At this school, he met his “sweetheart” Drusilla Hendricks. Promises were exchanged, “someday we will marry” when both were teenagers.
At fourteen years of age, he made his first trip to Virginia City, Montana, driving a team of horses named Duke and Charley, on a common wagon with a cover. The outfit was owned by his ‘someday’ father in law, W. D. Hendricks. He had a load of flour from the Burr Mill at High Creek, North of Richmond, which was owned by W. D. Hendricks. His uncle Lew had a four mule team with one wagon. Fred Turner from Hyde Park drove a four mule team on one wagon for William Hyde of Hyde Park. Billy Hendricks drove a four mule team on a wagon for Tom Ricks. All carried flour from High Creek Mill. They were told flour was selling for $100 for a 100 pound sack. When they arrived in Virginia City, it was selling for $45.00 a sack.
Not an unusual thing to happen to freighters speculating on the sale of flour in those days.
They sold for the $45.00 and returned home.
The freighters would leave Richmond in the early spring of the year and start for Montana. They would make their first camp at “Gooseberry” ranch, (which he and Drusilla would purchase in later years) at Swan Lake, Idaho. As they drove through Gooseberry Creek they got stuck, so they had to unload all the flour, pull up, then load up again, no bridges in those days. The trip took all summer. They met Indians, peaceful ones, on the way. King was left in camp to get breakfast while the men went to hunt for the mules and horses. He said he had breakfast ready, and was waiting for the men to return when an Indian rode up. King stepped back, he was a little afraid, the Indian wanted to know where the men were. King took the cloth off of the breakfast he had prepared—the Indian ate and told him that the horses and mules were down by the river in the brush. King never told where the men were or why they were gone.
They went to Alder Gulch close to Helena, then one of the richest of gold mines. There were hundreds of Chinese workers at the Gulch. The white men would give up on a mining claim and leave it. The Chinese would take it over—they would wash the gold out of the sand. The Chinese were careful, had patience and would glean gold that the white men had left. They send the gold back to China.
Only Frenchmen lived along the Snake River. They mingled with the Indians, married Indian women and lived in tents. Later they moved to Montana and acquired large cattle ranches. The government educated their children because they were part Indian. A town west of Missoula was called “French Town.”
Another time King was left alone in camp to watch the wagons and other belongings. An Indian rode up on his horse; he had a club and tried to hit King. But King was too quick; he ran and climbed into the wagon. The Indian left. The next day the Indian was asked where his buffalo robe was, he said “I lost it, was heap drunk.” His name was Sid-Miko-Kim.
The freighters returned home in the Fall of 1866. They would load at Corrine, Utah, with freight when the railroad ended there. The freight was taken to Montana to sell. If there was no sale, they would go down the Missouri River to Fort Benton, pick up freight there and take it to Corinne, to be shipped other places. King said, “I freighted everything from flour, sugar, gold dust, to dead men; that may sound funny, but in Helena here were a lot of placer mines. Water was used to force the gold out of dirt and sand. Fine gold was caught in burlap, coarser gold in screens. The mines were worked almost entirely by Chinamen. When the Chinamen died, they usually were buried on the side of a hill in Helena, until such time that the relatives could come up with the money to pay the freight. The bodies were then dug up and shipped to Corrine by a freighter. Then Fred Tate and Goldsburn would take them and ship them to China for final burial. These bodies were decayed and came out of the graves in pieces, mostly bones, and smelled horrible. But we got paid pretty good for hauling them. For some reason, superstition or a desire to be buried in their homeland, the Chinese bones and remains were shipped back to China, and sometimes gold was smuggled in the barrels with the Chinese corpse.
Freighting was hard, tiresome work, and they had many trying times. The Indians were sometimes peaceful, sometimes downright hateful, and were always taking horses, mules, wanting food, and sometimes on the war path. The roads were rough and full of chuck holes, weather conditions were bad at times. There would be three or more freighters go together, never one alone.
King went to work for his uncle, Will Lewis, at Lewiston, Utah. Uncle Will was the husband of his mother’s sister. He sent King with a four mule team, one wagon to Corrine to load freight to take to Helena, Montana. Oskar Stewart was driving a four mule team and one wagon with King. They got into Montana and camped. That night Indians stole the mules. Oskar stayed in Montana to try and find the mules. King bought a pony with some of the money he had, which wasn’t much. A rope looped over the pony’s nose, he started to ride home to Lewiston. King was just fifteen years old. He only ate one meal a day; he had to be careful with his money. The weigh stations, or pay stations, as they were sometimes called were fifty miles apart, and the only place where food was available. It was a long, lonesome ride, the little pony was his only companion.
He met a man at Blackfoot, Idaho, driving a team on a camp wagon. The man invited King to travel and camp with him and his children. The children were all sick with black small pox. The mother had been buried the day before because of the black small pox. King helped the man with the children, helped get them supper, and was thus exposed to the black small pox.
The next morning the man and the children went their way, King went on to Lewiston. He told his Uncle Will about the mules and Uncle Will was extremely angry. King had worked for Uncle Will, and saved his money, and paid Uncle Will for the mules from the money he had earned. Later, when freighting, King found one of the mules, it was in a freight team. He got an officer and identified the mule and got it back.
King wanted to see his mother and family. They were living in Gentile Valley; he started for there from Lewiston on a horse that would buck when a person got on him. As King traveled along he became really ill. His head ached, his head was hot, his stomach was upset. He saw some water, got off the horse by the edge of the road and bathed his head with cool water. He laid on the ground, very, very ill. He had a long rope on the horse, and thought he should get up and go on, then he’d think about that horse bucking and would lay back down. As he lay there, he heard a wagon coming down the road. It was his mother and Mr. Homer, on their way to Richmond. They were shocked to see King lying at the edge of the road so ill. They got him in the wagon and took him to their home. The next morning, King was all broken out with small pox. The parents put him in a wagon and took him to Richmond. King was put in a covered wagon, known as a sheep wagon and taken up Nebo southeast of Richmond. At that time people were afraid of black small pox, and with good reason. The city of Richmond funished the wagon (1867). A young man named Edwin Smith volunteered to take care of King. Someone would take food and medicine almost up to the camp. Edwin would go out and get the supplies and take them into camp. King said, “I was so broke out, so thick, you couldn’t put the head of a pin between the pox. When I got better, I peeled all the skin off from my head to my toes.” He often remarked that he had fifteen years added to his life because he had lost so much rotted flesh—new flesh had grown in. When he got well, he worked and paid the city of Richmond his debt to them.
He was always good to Edwin Smith. Later years when King and his family lived on Gooseberry Ranch, and Edwin lived in Oxford, Idaho, and was Postmaster there, King saw that he had a good cow every spring, and performed other appreciative deeds.
The smallpox over, the debt paid to the town of Richmond, he worked and got a mule team and wagon to freight. A twelve mule team was driven with a “jerk” line. The driver rode the nigh wheel mule, it’s name was Monty. Two wagons were hitched together. The mules all pulled from a long chain to which a stretcher was fastened. Four mules to a team in lead of the wheel mule were known as “pointers”. They were trained to step over the chain and pull in order to keep the wagons in line when going around a curve.
Each freighter took special pride in his lead mule. If the lead mule was strong, and willing to work then the other mules would, too. If a the leader was slow, then the other were slow. He had a lead mule named Bonny.
In December of 1870 he married his blue-eyed sweetheart; Drusilla Hendricks, in Richmond, Utah. Drusilla lived in Richmond, King went on the road freighting. Along about 1879 King and Drusilla and the three children moved to Lewiston. They homesteaded eighty acres of land. His brother in law, Bird Harrison, told King if he would pay the cost of filing and other expenses, he could take over the land. King did, and he went freighting. Drusilla and the children lived on the land, and as the years went by, he tired of freighting. He thought he would like a cattle ranch, so he decided to sell the Lewiston property. They bought the Gooseberry Ranch from his sister Mary Thornton and her husband, Will Thornton, and moved to the ranch in March of 1883. At this time he had a twelve mule team and three wagons. He freighted for himself and other people.
As some freighters were returning from Salmon City, coming by “Robber’s Roost” a freighter called out, “King, watch for silver dollars.” He began picking them up from the road and putting them in the jockey box. They had several hundred dollars in the box when they arrived home. They decided that some freighter had a hole in his jockey box. A jockey box was a box about 2 feet x 1 foot, located at the front of the wagon, where the freighters carried their money and other valuables. At Eagle Rock (present day Idaho Falls) they paid the toll to cross the bridge over the Snake River, with a silver dollar they had found.
He freighted for just two years after moving to the ranch. He then sold his freighting outfit to two of his brother in laws, William Underwood and Milo Hendricks.
He then took a contract to build the railroad grade in Pocatello where the round house and train station were built. The workers lived in tents. Ira, King’s oldest son helped the cook and was a water boy for the men. This was about 1886. The railroad came, and that was the death of freighting.
He decided to borrow money and go into the cattle business. He got up early and drove to Richmond and stayed the night. The next morning he went on to Logan to the bank, then the Thatcher Brothers Bank. Moses Thatcher was the bank president. King told Mr. Thatcher that he would like to borrow some money, and that he wanted to go into the cattle business. Thatcher told him he didn’t think that was a good thing to do. King was angry, and said, “Moses Thatcher, I didn’t come here for your advice, I came to borrow money,” and turned and walked out intending to go somewhere else to ask for a loan. As he walked down the street, he met Uncle Saul Hendricks, a bank director. “Good morning, King, what brings you to Logan?”, Uncle Saul asked. He answered, “I came to borrow money to go into the cattle business, and that Moses Thatcher turned me down.” Uncle Saul said, “Oh, come with me.” They went back to the bank, and Uncle Saul told Moses Thatcher to let King have all the money he wanted, and he would be responsible from that time on. King got the loan, and became one of the larger stockholders in that bank, as well as serving for many years as a director.
He raised cattle, bought and sold, as the cattle business increased, more land was needed. He bought the Garner Ranch, the Jim Boyle Ranch, the Dudley Ranch, and the John Harris Ranch. Altogether about 1,400 acres, it became known as The South Ranch. More land was needed to raise feed, a 320 acre dry farm was purchased from Glen Taylor, located north of Gooseberry Ranch on West Mountain bench. He raised registered Herefords, then called “white face” cattle.
He was a great teamster, drove many horses and mule teams. He mowed all the hay on the ranch with a horse drawn mowing machine. The hay was hauled on hay racks, pitched on and off by men with pitch forks. Then onto the stacks. They also had bullrakes that pushed the hay up to the stack which were horse drawn. The hay was lifted on and off the stack using a derrick and a jackson fork.
The cattle were fed hay in the winter in the fields. The hay was pitched on the hayracks, sometimes Pearl, a daughter, drove the horses with the other fellow, usually her father, King, pitching off hay. The cattle would follow the wagon. In the spring of the year the cattle were turned out on the mountain, where King had a grazing right on the Reserve. Then in the fall the cattle were rounded up by the older boys. Cattle were lost on the mountain from poison larkspur and poison parsnips. Patches of bad weeds were fenced off, still some cattle died.
The grain crops and hay seed were broadcast, King walked and cast the seed by hand. Later he bought a gadget that he hung around his neck with a strap, and turned a handle to scatter the seed. The grain was cut with a binder and the grain tied in bundles, then shocked and stacked. The threshing machines went from farm to farm, and threshing took all fall.
In the fall of 1898, the Brossards and King Hillman shipped a load of cattle to Omaha, Nebraska. King was a County Commissioner in Bannock County, was trustee of the Swan Lake School. King, Dick Hadley and Joe Kay were trustees when the Red Brick School at the end of the lane was built. That building was also used as a meeting house.
The Fourth of July was always celebrated in Oxford. It was a big day. New suits, new dresses, horse racing, foot races and other fun things. King like to take out “Roundy” hitched to a one-seat, two wheel cart, and enter the trotting race. He would sit up straight, and drive to win.
King was a good financier. When he bought anything, he bought the best for the money invested. Never did he buy anything second hand, he was fond of saying “Why buy the other fellows trouble?” He had his own saddle horse, bridle chaps, etc. He rode in many parades. Each boy had a saddle horse, saddle, etc. Pearl had her pony “Midget” and a side saddle. She would ride with her father and helped him drive cattle to the South Ranch.
King would hitch up the team with the sleigh bells and Drusilla would put hot rocks in quilts in the bottom of the sleigh. All were nice and warm as they drove to Church.
In 1918-1919 he took his purebred Herefords to the Ogden Stock Show; he received many (first place) blue ribbons.
He pastured the Herefords on the South Ranch, the cattle contracted anthrax, many died each day. The germ came up from the ground when it was wet. They vaccinated, burnt dead carcasses, sprayed the ground with so many things, yet cattle still died.
He sold his ranch stock, about 900 head to his son Will, about 1926-1927, and went out of the cattle business.
In 1912, King went to Promontory to settle, or help settle a company estate. He was an expert in counting the value of cattle and horses. The job completed, they gave him two mules, he drove them on the mowing machine for years. He was also given a saddle horse and land.
In 1913, he bought his first automobile, a Pierce Arrow, high wheels, lights on the fenders, running boards. It took most of the room in the garage. He paid $7500, for it, a lot of money then. He owned four Pierce Arrows, a custom built Hudson, and a Ford requested for his second wife. King had a hard time learning to drive a car, but he was a good driver. He drove until he was past ninety.
He was a good donator, donated to many churches, charities, etc. A good tithe payer. Donated towards the Red Brick Meeting House. Lewis Petty was Bishop. The Swan Lake Ward gave King and Drusilla a party and gave each a gold band ring. They were the oldest couple and had been members of the Ward the longest.
Drusilla passed away 25 August, 1925. King married Ester Waldon in 1928. He bought a home on fourth North in Logan, where he lived until his death in 1944. His funeral was held at Swan Lake, with burial at Oxford, Idaho, cemetery, beside his “sweetheart” of 55 years.
He hated quilting frames. He told what he had heard when he was a little boy playing under the quilt when the ladies were quilting, for which he got a whipping. He never liked the smell of soap cooking, so soap was made while he was away.
I am a granddaughter, and have written this from notes of Pearl’s, a daughter, and of my mother, and a history written by Mable Quayle, a daughter, and some incidents I remember. I have used Grandfather and Grandmother’s names as King and Drusilla, so as not to confuse you, the reader.
Signed, Edna T. Egan.
In the census on Jun 10, 1880 Ira King Hillman was named King Hillman.
A history of the life of Ira King Hillman II “Uncle King” compiled by his granddaughter, Edna T. Egan, and presented to me on a visit to Richmond, Utah, in early 1991.
Ira King Hillman was born 22 March 1852 at Little Cottonwood, just South of Salt Lake City, Utah, about three or four miles. His parents were Ira King and Mary Pryannah Petty Hillman. The family moved to Fort Harriman, Utah. They heard Johnson’s Army was coming so they then moved to Spanish Fork. Johnson’s Army camped at Camp Floyd for a year or two and then moved on. The Hillmans then moved back to their home at Fort Harriman.
King was 13 years old when his father died. His father had two wives and eleven children, they had a home and a few acres of land. His mother sold the home for $1,000, and gave $500 to the second wife, and moved to Richmond, Utah, where her mother and two brothers “Lew” and “Tom” Petty were living. They lived in Richmond for a time, and his mother married Russell Homer. Mr. Homer, his mother, and her six children moved to Three Mile Creek, now known as Perry, Utah.
King didn’t get along well with his stepfather, so he left home. He bought a pony, looped a rope over his nose, and rode bareback to Richmond to live with his grandmother, Margaret Jefferson Petty, and Uncle Lew and Uncle Tom. King loved his Uncle Lew as he took great interest in the young man. Uncle Lew encouraged him to attend school in Richmond. At this school, he met his “sweetheart” Drusilla Hendricks. Promises were exchanged, “someday we will marry” when both were teenagers.
At fourteen years of age, he made his first trip to Virginia City, Montana, driving a team of horses named Duke and Charley, on a common wagon with a cover. The outfit was owned by his ‘someday’ father in law, W. D. Hendricks. He had a load of flour from the Burr Mill at High Creek, North of Richmond, which was owned by W. D. Hendricks. His uncle Lew had a four mule team with one wagon. Fred Turner from Hyde Park drove a four mule team on one wagon for William Hyde of Hyde Park. Billy Hendricks drove a four mule team on a wagon for Tom Ricks. All carried flour from High Creek Mill. They were told flour was selling for $100 for a 100 pound sack. When they arrived in Virginia City, it was selling for $45.00 a sack.
Not an unusual thing to happen to freighters speculating on the sale of flour in those days.
They sold for the $45.00 and returned home.
The freighters would leave Richmond in the early spring of the year and start for Montana. They would make their first camp at “Gooseberry” ranch, (which he and Drusilla would purchase in later years) at Swan Lake, Idaho. As they drove through Gooseberry Creek they got stuck, so they had to unload all the flour, pull up, then load up again, no bridges in those days. The trip took all summer. They met Indians, peaceful ones, on the way. King was left in camp to get breakfast while the men went to hunt for the mules and horses. He said he had breakfast ready, and was waiting for the men to return when an Indian rode up. King stepped back, he was a little afraid, the Indian wanted to know where the men were. King took the cloth off of the breakfast he had prepared—the Indian ate and told him that the horses and mules were down by the river in the brush. King never told where the men were or why they were gone.
They went to Alder Gulch close to Helena, then one of the richest of gold mines. There were hundreds of Chinese workers at the Gulch. The white men would give up on a mining claim and leave it. The Chinese would take it over—they would wash the gold out of the sand. The Chinese were careful, had patience and would glean gold that the white men had left. They send the gold back to China.
Only Frenchmen lived along the Snake River. They mingled with the Indians, married Indian women and lived in tents. Later they moved to Montana and acquired large cattle ranches. The government educated their children because they were part Indian. A town west of Missoula was called “French Town.”
Another time King was left alone in camp to watch the wagons and other belongings. An Indian rode up on his horse; he had a club and tried to hit King. But King was too quick; he ran and climbed into the wagon. The Indian left. The next day the Indian was asked where his buffalo robe was, he said “I lost it, was heap drunk.” His name was Sid-Miko-Kim.
The freighters returned home in the Fall of 1866. They would load at Corrine, Utah, with freight when the railroad ended there. The freight was taken to Montana to sell. If there was no sale, they would go down the Missouri River to Fort Benton, pick up freight there and take it to Corinne, to be shipped other places. King said, “I freighted everything from flour, sugar, gold dust, to dead men; that may sound funny, but in Helena here were a lot of placer mines. Water was used to force the gold out of dirt and sand. Fine gold was caught in burlap, coarser gold in screens. The mines were worked almost entirely by Chinamen. When the Chinamen died, they usually were buried on the side of a hill in Helena, until such time that the relatives could come up with the money to pay the freight. The bodies were then dug up and shipped to Corrine by a freighter. Then Fred Tate and Goldsburn would take them and ship them to China for final burial. These bodies were decayed and came out of the graves in pieces, mostly bones, and smelled horrible. But we got paid pretty good for hauling them. For some reason, superstition or a desire to be buried in their homeland, the Chinese bones and remains were shipped back to China, and sometimes gold was smuggled in the barrels with the Chinese corpse.
Freighting was hard, tiresome work, and they had many trying times. The Indians were sometimes peaceful, sometimes downright hateful, and were always taking horses, mules, wanting food, and sometimes on the war path. The roads were rough and full of chuck holes, weather conditions were bad at times. There would be three or more freighters go together, never one alone.
King went to work for his uncle, Will Lewis, at Lewiston, Utah. Uncle Will was the husband of his mother’s sister. He sent King with a four mule team, one wagon to Corrine to load freight to take to Helena, Montana. Oskar Stewart was driving a four mule team and one wagon with King. They got into Montana and camped. That night Indians stole the mules. Oskar stayed in Montana to try and find the mules. King bought a pony with some of the money he had, which wasn’t much. A rope looped over the pony’s nose, he started to ride home to Lewiston. King was just fifteen years old. He only ate one meal a day; he had to be careful with his money. The weigh stations, or pay stations, as they were sometimes called were fifty miles apart, and the only place where food was available. It was a long, lonesome ride, the little pony was his only companion.
He met a man at Blackfoot, Idaho, driving a team on a camp wagon. The man invited King to travel and camp with him and his children. The children were all sick with black small pox. The mother had been buried the day before because of the black small pox. King helped the man with the children, helped get them supper, and was thus exposed to the black small pox.
The next morning the man and the children went their way, King went on to Lewiston. He told his Uncle Will about the mules and Uncle Will was extremely angry. King had worked for Uncle Will, and saved his money, and paid Uncle Will for the mules from the money he had earned. Later, when freighting, King found one of the mules, it was in a freight team. He got an officer and identified the mule and got it back.
King wanted to see his mother and family. They were living in Gentile Valley; he started for there from Lewiston on a horse that would buck when a person got on him. As King traveled along he became really ill. His head ached, his head was hot, his stomach was upset. He saw some water, got off the horse by the edge of the road and bathed his head with cool water. He laid on the ground, very, very ill. He had a long rope on the horse, and thought he should get up and go on, then he’d think about that horse bucking and would lay back down. As he lay there, he heard a wagon coming down the road. It was his mother and Mr. Homer, on their way to Richmond. They were shocked to see King lying at the edge of the road so ill. They got him in the wagon and took him to their home. The next morning, King was all broken out with small pox. The parents put him in a wagon and took him to Richmond. King was put in a covered wagon, known as a sheep wagon and taken up Nebo southeast of Richmond. At that time people were afraid of black small pox, and with good reason. The city of Richmond funished the wagon (1867). A young man named Edwin Smith volunteered to take care of King. Someone would take food and medicine almost up to the camp. Edwin would go out and get the supplies and take them into camp. King said, “I was so broke out, so thick, you couldn’t put the head of a pin between the pox. When I got better, I peeled all the skin off from my head to my toes.” He often remarked that he had fifteen years added to his life because he had lost so much rotted flesh—new flesh had grown in. When he got well, he worked and paid the city of Richmond his debt to them.
He was always good to Edwin Smith. Later years when King and his family lived on Gooseberry Ranch, and Edwin lived in Oxford, Idaho, and was Postmaster there, King saw that he had a good cow every spring, and performed other appreciative deeds.
The smallpox over, the debt paid to the town of Richmond, he worked and got a mule team and wagon to freight. A twelve mule team was driven with a “jerk” line. The driver rode the nigh wheel mule, it’s name was Monty. Two wagons were hitched together. The mules all pulled from a long chain to which a stretcher was fastened. Four mules to a team in lead of the wheel mule were known as “pointers”. They were trained to step over the chain and pull in order to keep the wagons in line when going around a curve.
Each freighter took special pride in his lead mule. If the lead mule was strong, and willing to work then the other mules would, too. If a the leader was slow, then the other were slow. He had a lead mule named Bonny.
In December of 1870 he married his blue-eyed sweetheart; Drusilla Hendricks, in Richmond, Utah. Drusilla lived in Richmond, King went on the road freighting. Along about 1879 King and Drusilla and the three children moved to Lewiston. They homesteaded eighty acres of land. His brother in law, Bird Harrison, told King if he would pay the cost of filing and other expenses, he could take over the land. King did, and he went freighting. Drusilla and the children lived on the land, and as the years went by, he tired of freighting. He thought he would like a cattle ranch, so he decided to sell the Lewiston property. They bought the Gooseberry Ranch from his sister Mary Thornton and her husband, Will Thornton, and moved to the ranch in March of 1883. At this time he had a twelve mule team and three wagons. He freighted for himself and other people.
As some freighters were returning from Salmon City, coming by “Robber’s Roost” a freighter called out, “King, watch for silver dollars.” He began picking them up from the road and putting them in the jockey box. They had several hundred dollars in the box when they arrived home. They decided that some freighter had a hole in his jockey box. A jockey box was a box about 2 feet x 1 foot, located at the front of the wagon, where the freighters carried their money and other valuables. At Eagle Rock (present day Idaho Falls) they paid the toll to cross the bridge over the Snake River, with a silver dollar they had found.
He freighted for just two years after moving to the ranch. He then sold his freighting outfit to two of his brother in laws, William Underwood and Milo Hendricks.
He then took a contract to build the railroad grade in Pocatello where the round house and train station were built. The workers lived in tents. Ira, King’s oldest son helped the cook and was a water boy for the men. This was about 1886. The railroad came, and that was the death of freighting.
He decided to borrow money and go into the cattle business. He got up early and drove to Richmond and stayed the night. The next morning he went on to Logan to the bank, then the Thatcher Brothers Bank. Moses Thatcher was the bank president. King told Mr. Thatcher that he would like to borrow some money, and that he wanted to go into the cattle business. Thatcher told him he didn’t think that was a good thing to do. King was angry, and said, “Moses Thatcher, I didn’t come here for your advice, I came to borrow money,” and turned and walked out intending to go somewhere else to ask for a loan. As he walked down the street, he met Uncle Saul Hendricks, a bank director. “Good morning, King, what brings you to Logan?”, Uncle Saul asked. He answered, “I came to borrow money to go into the cattle business, and that Moses Thatcher turned me down.” Uncle Saul said, “Oh, come with me.” They went back to the bank, and Uncle Saul told Moses Thatcher to let King have all the money he wanted, and he would be responsible from that time on. King got the loan, and became one of the larger stockholders in that bank, as well as serving for many years as a director.
He raised cattle, bought and sold, as the cattle business increased, more land was needed. He bought the Garner Ranch, the Jim Boyle Ranch, the Dudley Ranch, and the John Harris Ranch. Altogether about 1,400 acres, it became known as The South Ranch. More land was needed to raise feed, a 320 acre dry farm was purchased from Glen Taylor, located north of Gooseberry Ranch on West Mountain bench. He raised registered Herefords, then called “white face” cattle.
He was a great teamster, drove many horses and mule teams. He mowed all the hay on the ranch with a horse drawn mowing machine. The hay was hauled on hay racks, pitched on and off by men with pitch forks. Then onto the stacks. They also had bullrakes that pushed the hay up to the stack which were horse drawn. The hay was lifted on and off the stack using a derrick and a jackson fork.
The cattle were fed hay in the winter in the fields. The hay was pitched on the hayracks, sometimes Pearl, a daughter, drove the horses with the other fellow, usually her father, King, pitching off hay. The cattle would follow the wagon. In the spring of the year the cattle were turned out on the mountain, where King had a grazing right on the Reserve. Then in the fall the cattle were rounded up by the older boys. Cattle were lost on the mountain from poison larkspur and poison parsnips. Patches of bad weeds were fenced off, still some cattle died.
The grain crops and hay seed were broadcast, King walked and cast the seed by hand. Later he bought a gadget that he hung around his neck with a strap, and turned a handle to scatter the seed. The grain was cut with a binder and the grain tied in bundles, then shocked and stacked. The threshing machines went from farm to farm, and threshing took all fall.
In the fall of 1898, the Brossards and King Hillman shipped a load of cattle to Omaha, Nebraska. King was a County Commissioner in Bannock County, was trustee of the Swan Lake School. King, Dick Hadley and Joe Kay were trustees when the Red Brick School at the end of the lane was built. That building was also used as a meeting house.
The Fourth of July was always celebrated in Oxford. It was a big day. New suits, new dresses, horse racing, foot races and other fun things. King like to take out “Roundy” hitched to a one-seat, two wheel cart, and enter the trotting race. He would sit up straight, and drive to win.
King was a good financier. When he bought anything, he bought the best for the money invested. Never did he buy anything second hand, he was fond of saying “Why buy the other fellows trouble?” He had his own saddle horse, bridle chaps, etc. He rode in many parades. Each boy had a saddle horse, saddle, etc. Pearl had her pony “Midget” and a side saddle. She would ride with her father and helped him drive cattle to the South Ranch.
King would hitch up the team with the sleigh bells and Drusilla would put hot rocks in quilts in the bottom of the sleigh. All were nice and warm as they drove to Church.
In 1918-1919 he took his purebred Herefords to the Ogden Stock Show; he received many (first place) blue ribbons.
He pastured the Herefords on the South Ranch, the cattle contracted anthrax, many died each day. The germ came up from the ground when it was wet. They vaccinated, burnt dead carcasses, sprayed the ground with so many things, yet cattle still died.
He sold his ranch stock, about 900 head to his son Will, about 1926-1927, and went out of the cattle business.
In 1912, King went to Promontory to settle, or help settle a company estate. He was an expert in counting the value of cattle and horses. The job completed, they gave him two mules, he drove them on the mowing machine for years. He was also given a saddle horse and land.
In 1913, he bought his first automobile, a Pierce Arrow, high wheels, lights on the fenders, running boards. It took most of the room in the garage. He paid $7500, for it, a lot of money then. He owned four Pierce Arrows, a custom built Hudson, and a Ford requested for his second wife. King had a hard time learning to drive a car, but he was a good driver. He drove until he was past ninety.
He was a good donator, donated to many churches, charities, etc. A good tithe payer. Donated towards the Red Brick Meeting House. Lewis Petty was Bishop. The Swan Lake Ward gave King and Drusilla a party and gave each a gold band ring. They were the oldest couple and had been members of the Ward the longest.
Drusilla passed away 25 August, 1925. King married Ester Waldon in 1928. He bought a home on fourth North in Logan, where he lived until his death in 1944. His funeral was held at Swan Lake, with burial at Oxford, Idaho, cemetery, beside his “sweetheart” of 55 years.
He hated quilting frames. He told what he had heard when he was a little boy playing under the quilt when the ladies were quilting, for which he got a whipping. He never liked the smell of soap cooking, so soap was made while he was away.
I am a granddaughter, and have written this from notes of Pearl’s, a daughter, and of my mother, and a history written by Mable Quayle, a daughter, and some incidents I remember. I have used Grandfather and Grandmother’s names as King and Drusilla, so as not to confuse you, the reader.
Signed, Edna T. Egan.
Children of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks
Ira married Drusilla Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Dec 1, 1869 at Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Ira married Drusilla Hendricks, daughter of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Dec 20, 1870 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Ira King Hillman Jr.+ b. Apr 18, 1871, d. Aug 23, 1965
- William Henry Hillman+ b. Oct 30, 1872, d. Aug 31, 1942
- Drusilla Hillman b. Jun 20, 1875, d. Mar 27, 1892
- Nellie Hillman b. Feb 10, 1879, d. Sep 5, 1879
- Mary Viola Hillman b. Jul 5, 1881, d. Jul 30, 1881
- Robert Cowan Hillman+ b. Oct 24, 1882, d. Dec 27, 1962
- Pearl Hillman+ b. Feb 1, 1886
- James Warren Hillman+ b. Nov 3, 1888, d. Feb 18, 1973
- Ivy Lavon Hillman+ b. Jul 21, 1892, d. Jan 6, 1961
- Addie Mabel Hillman+ b. Nov 10, 1896, d. Jan 17, 1985
Ira King Hillman Jr.
M, #275677, b. Apr 18, 1871, d. Aug 23, 1965
Ira King Hillman Jr.|b. Apr 18, 1871\nd. Aug 23, 1965|p2757.htm#i275677|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Ira King Hillman Jr. was born on Apr 18, 1871 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. Ira married Ruby Fay Cutler, daughter of Parley Cutler and Mary Francis Dobb, on Sep 28, 1898 at Garden Creek, Bannock County, Idaho. Ira King Hillman Jr. died on Aug 23, 1965 at Swan Lake Valley, Bonneville County, Idaho, at age 94. Ira was buried at Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Franklin County, Idaho.
Children of Ira King Hillman Jr. and Ruby Fay Cutler
Ira married Ruby Fay Cutler, daughter of Parley Cutler and Mary Francis Dobb, on Sep 28, 1898 at Garden Creek, Bannock County, Idaho.
- Mary Edna Hillman b. Jul 12, 1899
- Nellie Lucille Hillman b. Jun 20, 1901, d. Dec 21, 1901
- LeRoy Hillman b. Jul 8, 1903, d. Jul 14, 1903
- Theodore Hillman b. Feb 17, 1905
- Frank Weldon Hillman b. Oct 16, 1908
- Ira King Hillman b. May 3, 1911
- Drusilla Hillman b. Jun 10, 1913
- Carper Paul Hillman b. Sep 5, 1915
- Gladys Norean Hillman b. Mar 27, 1918
William Henry Hillman
M, #275678, b. Oct 30, 1872, d. Aug 31, 1942
William Henry Hillman|b. Oct 30, 1872\nd. Aug 31, 1942|p2757.htm#i275678|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
William Henry Hillman was born on Oct 30, 1872 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. William married Dicey Ann Wakley, daughter of George Nelson Wakley and Lucy Ann Bloxham, on Dec 26, 1900 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho. William Henry Hillman died on Aug 31, 1942 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho, at age 69.
Children of William Henry Hillman and Dicey Ann Wakley
William married Dicey Ann Wakley, daughter of George Nelson Wakley and Lucy Ann Bloxham, on Dec 26, 1900 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho.
- King George Hillman b. Oct 17, 1901, d. Feb, 1968
- Robert Cowan Hillman b. Jul 12, 1903
- Lucy Hillman b. Aug 7, 1905
Drusilla Hillman
F, #275679, b. Jun 20, 1875, d. Mar 27, 1892
Drusilla Hillman|b. Jun 20, 1875\nd. Mar 27, 1892|p2757.htm#i275679|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Drusilla Hillman was born on Jun 20, 1875 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. Drusilla Hillman died on Mar 27, 1892 at age 16. Drusilla was buried at Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Franklin County, Idaho.
Nellie Hillman
F, #275680, b. Feb 10, 1879, d. Sep 5, 1879
Nellie Hillman|b. Feb 10, 1879\nd. Sep 5, 1879|p2757.htm#i275680|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Nellie Hillman was born on Feb 10, 1879 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. Nellie Hillman died on Sep 5, 1879.
Mary Viola Hillman
F, #275681, b. Jul 5, 1881, d. Jul 30, 1881
Mary Viola Hillman|b. Jul 5, 1881\nd. Jul 30, 1881|p2757.htm#i275681|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Mary Viola Hillman was born on Jul 5, 1881 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. Mary Viola Hillman died on Jul 30, 1881.
Robert Cowan Hillman
M, #275682, b. Oct 24, 1882, d. Dec 27, 1962
Robert Cowan Hillman|b. Oct 24, 1882\nd. Dec 27, 1962|p2757.htm#i275682|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Robert Cowan Hillman was born on Oct 24, 1882 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. Robert married Mary Edith Rudolph, daughter of Perry Oliver Rudolph and Bina Victor Glasglow, on Jan 1, 1906. Robert Cowan Hillman died on Dec 27, 1962 at Downey, Bannock County, Idaho, at age 80. Robert was buried at Oxford Cemetery, Oxford, Franklin County, Idaho.
Children of Robert Cowan Hillman and Mary Edith Rudolph
Robert married Mary Edith Rudolph, daughter of Perry Oliver Rudolph and Bina Victor Glasglow, on Jan 1, 1906.
- Ruth Hillman b. Aug 22, 1906
- Fred Rudolph Hillman b. Oct 18, 1908
Pearl Hillman
F, #275683, b. Feb 1, 1886
Pearl Hillman|b. Feb 1, 1886|p2757.htm#i275683|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Pearl Hillman was born on Feb 1, 1886 at Swan Lake, Bannock County, Idaho. She was the daughter of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. Pearl married Alvin Preston Thomas, son of Martin Washburn Thomas and Eliza Emma Adams, on Dec 16, 1908 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Pearl Hillman and Alvin Preston Thomas were divorced. Pearl married John Bernard Albert Nordick, son of Casper Nordick and Eva Linck, on Sep 19, 1929 at Logan, Cache County, Utah; no issue.
Children of Pearl Hillman and Alvin Preston Thomas
- Edna Emma Thomas b. Aug 1, 1909
- Howard Venlear Thomas b. Apr 1, 1911, d. Mar 5, 1927
- Russell Hillman Thomas b. Feb 24, 1913
- Fred Austin Thomas b. Jan 14, 1919, d. Dec 26, 2004
James Warren Hillman
M, #275684, b. Nov 3, 1888, d. Feb 18, 1973
James Warren Hillman|b. Nov 3, 1888\nd. Feb 18, 1973|p2757.htm#i275684|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
James Warren Hillman was born on Nov 3, 1888 at Oxford, Bannock County, Idaho. He was the son of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. James married Lillian Edna Henderson, daughter of Martin Henry Henderson and Elizabeth Needem Bake, on May 19, 1909 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho. James Warren Hillman died on Feb 18, 1973 at Ogden, Weber County, Utah, at age 84.
Children of James Warren Hillman and Lillian Edna Henderson
James married Lillian Edna Henderson, daughter of Martin Henry Henderson and Elizabeth Needem Bake, on May 19, 1909 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho.
- Burr T. Hillman b. Nov 14, 1910
- Beldon Jerome Hillman b. Apr 11, 1913, d. Aug 27, 1934
- Geneva Hillman b. Aug 5, 1916
- Reece T. Hillman b. Dec 5, 1919
- Jack Dean Hillman b. Feb 25, 1922, d. Dec 5, 1992
Ivy Lavon Hillman
F, #275685, b. Jul 21, 1892, d. Jan 6, 1961
Ivy Lavon Hillman|b. Jul 21, 1892\nd. Jan 6, 1961|p2757.htm#i275685|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Ivy Lavon Hillman was born on Jul 21, 1892 at Swan Lake, Bannock County, Idaho. She was the daughter of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. Ivy married Aaron W. Gustaveson, son of Gustaf William Gustaveson, on Nov 23, 1910 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho. Ivy married Myron Ernest Gailey, son of Earnest Gailey and Drucilla Beesley. Ivy married Edward Sutherland. Ivy Lavon Hillman died on Jan 6, 1961 at age 68. Ivy was buried on Jan 10, 1961 at Salinas, Monterey County, California.
In the census on Jan 10, 1920 Ivy Lavon Hillman was named Lavinia Hillman.
In the census on Jan 10, 1920 Ivy Lavon Hillman was named Lavinia Hillman.
Children of Ivy Lavon Hillman and Aaron W. Gustaveson
Ivy married Aaron W. Gustaveson, son of Gustaf William Gustaveson, on Nov 23, 1910 at Pocatello, Bannock County, Idaho.
- Darsey Clifford Gustaveson b. Oct 2, 1911
- Anna Mabel Gustaveson b. Jul 11, 1913
- Edith Rosella Gustaveson b. Jul 17, 1915
Children of Ivy Lavon Hillman and Myron Ernest Gailey
- LeRoy Hillman Gailey b. Dec 15, 1919
- Beth Gailey b. Feb 25, 1923
Addie Mabel Hillman
F, #275686, b. Nov 10, 1896, d. Jan 17, 1985
Addie Mabel Hillman|b. Nov 10, 1896\nd. Jan 17, 1985|p2757.htm#i275686|Ira King Hillman|b. Mar 22, 1852\nd. Aug 30, 1944|p2757.htm#i275676|Drusilla Hendricks|b. Jun 25, 1854\nd. Aug 26, 1925|p191.htm#i19073|Ira K. Hillman||p4618.htm#i461740|Mary P. Petty||p4618.htm#i461741|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Addie Mabel Hillman was born on Nov 10, 1896 at Swan Lake, Bannock County, Idaho. She was the daughter of Ira King Hillman and Drusilla Hendricks. Addie married Joseph Larson Quayle, son of James Quayle and Betty Eulalia Larson, on Sep 1, 1918 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. Addie Mabel Hillman died on Jan 17, 1985 at age 88.
Children of Addie Mabel Hillman and Joseph Larson Quayle
- Joseph Robert Quayle b. May 25, 1919
- Douglas Hillman Quayle b. Aug 22, 1920
- Betty Jean Quayle b. Mar 22, 1922
- Janet Katherine Quayle b. Nov 11, 1923
- Mabel Naomi Quayle b. Feb 17, 1926
- Calvin King Quayle b. Jul 22, 1927
- Donald Ramsey Quayle b. Jul 26, 1930
- Paddy Ramona Quayle b. Jun 12, 1932 or Jun 12, 1933
- Carol Shirley Quayle b. Jan 17, 1937
Mary Rebecca Stoddard
F, #275687, b. May 1, 1862, d. Sep 23, 1930
Mary Rebecca Stoddard|b. May 1, 1862\nd. Sep 23, 1930|p2757.htm#i275687|Charles Henry Stoddard||p4612.htm#i461102|Anna Telford||p4612.htm#i461103|||||||||||||
Mary Rebecca Stoddard was born on May 1, 1862 at Bountiful, Davis County, Utah. She was the daughter of Charles Henry Stoddard and Anna Telford. Mary married Brigham Andrus Hendricks, son of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Jan 13, 1881 at Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah; by Daniel H. Wells. Mary Rebecca Stoddard died on Sep 23, 1930 at Logan, Cache County, Utah, at age 68. Mary was buried on Sep 28, 1930 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Mary Rebecca Stoddard and Brigham Andrus Hendricks
- George Brigham Hendricks+ b. Nov 25, 1881, d. Feb 3, 1921
- Mary Lalene Hendricks+ b. Aug 24, 1885, d. Jul 26, 1972
- Odessa LaPreal Hendricks+ b. Jun 3, 1889, d. Jun 2, 1954
- Nellie Hendricks+ b. Oct 22, 1890, d. Sep 30, 1960
- Brigham Victor Hendricks+ b. Jun 30, 1895, d. Oct 27, 1968
- Charles Durrell Hendricks+ b. Nov 17, 1899, d. Jan 3, 1957
George Brigham Hendricks
M, #275688, b. Nov 25, 1881, d. Feb 3, 1921
George Brigham Hendricks|b. Nov 25, 1881\nd. Feb 3, 1921|p2757.htm#i275688|Brigham Andrus Hendricks|b. Nov 27, 1857\nd. Jul 16, 1925|p191.htm#i19042|Mary Rebecca Stoddard|b. May 1, 1862\nd. Sep 23, 1930|p2757.htm#i275687|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Charles H. Stoddard||p4612.htm#i461102|Anna Telford||p4612.htm#i461103|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
George Brigham Hendricks was born on Nov 25, 1881 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah; 1920 census says Idaho. He was the son of Brigham Andrus Hendricks and Mary Rebecca Stoddard. George married Caroline Armeda McAlister, daughter of John Archibald McAlister and Clarissa Caroline Snow, on Jun 5, 1912 at Salt Lake Temple, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. George Brigham Hendricks died on Feb 3, 1921 at L.D.S. Hospital, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, at age 39.
George was buried at Logan City Cemetery, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
GEORGE B. HENDRlCKS, A. M.
George B. Hendricks, professor of economics in the Utah Agricultural College, was born in Lewiston, Utah, November 25, 1881, a son of Brigham A. and Mary Rebecca (Stoddard) Hendricks. The father was born in Salt Lake in 1858 and is a son of William D. Hendricks and a grandson of James Hendricks, who came to Utah with the Mormon Battalion of 1847, William D. Hendricks enlisted in the battalion and returned to Salt Lake in the fall of that year, where both he and his father followed farming.
George B. Hendricks acquired his early education in the graded schools of Lewiston and was graduated from the Brigham Young high school with the class of 1901. He afterward entered the collegiate department of the Brigham Young College and in 1903 won the Bachelor of Arts degree. He afterward spent three years in the Graduate School of Harvard, where he won his Master of Arts degree in 1908. He was also for one quarter a student in the University of Chicago Law School and he has since devoted his life to the profession of teaching. For three years he was a member of the faculty of the Brigham Young College and was then called to the faculty of the Utah Agricultural College, in which he is now professor of economics. He was at the head of the department of finance and banking until 1917, when he was made the head of the School of Commerce and Business Administration. ln 1918 he spent about eight months with the Federal Lank Bank at Berkeley, acting as appraiser of lands for the Federal Farm Loan Board at Washington, D. C. He is at present one of the directors of the Thatcher Brothers Banking Company of Logan, Utah.
ln 1912 Professor Hendricks was married to Miss Caroline Armeda McAUster, a daughter of John A. and Clarissa (Snow) McAlister. They have become parents of two children, George B., Jr., and Harold Gordon. Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and he is a member of the Fortieth Quorum of Seventies. He was in training camp at the Presidio, San Francisco California, from July 18, 1918, until the 16th of September following, when he was commissioned second lieutenant of infantry in the United States army, remaining in camp as personnel adjutant until December 30, 1918. He then resumed his duties at the Utah Agricultural College and is regarded as one of the able young educators of the state. Studying thoroughly and broadly along his chosen line, he has become a most efficient professor of economics, readily solving many intricate problems of this character.
Utah since statehood: historical and biographical By Noble Warrum, Charles W. Morse, W. Brown Ewing page 226.
GEORGE B. HENDRlCKS, A. M.
George B. Hendricks, professor of economics in the Utah Agricultural College, was born in Lewiston, Utah, November 25, 1881, a son of Brigham A. and Mary Rebecca (Stoddard) Hendricks. The father was born in Salt Lake in 1858 and is a son of William D. Hendricks and a grandson of James Hendricks, who came to Utah with the Mormon Battalion of 1847, William D. Hendricks enlisted in the battalion and returned to Salt Lake in the fall of that year, where both he and his father followed farming.
George B. Hendricks acquired his early education in the graded schools of Lewiston and was graduated from the Brigham Young high school with the class of 1901. He afterward entered the collegiate department of the Brigham Young College and in 1903 won the Bachelor of Arts degree. He afterward spent three years in the Graduate School of Harvard, where he won his Master of Arts degree in 1908. He was also for one quarter a student in the University of Chicago Law School and he has since devoted his life to the profession of teaching. For three years he was a member of the faculty of the Brigham Young College and was then called to the faculty of the Utah Agricultural College, in which he is now professor of economics. He was at the head of the department of finance and banking until 1917, when he was made the head of the School of Commerce and Business Administration. ln 1918 he spent about eight months with the Federal Lank Bank at Berkeley, acting as appraiser of lands for the Federal Farm Loan Board at Washington, D. C. He is at present one of the directors of the Thatcher Brothers Banking Company of Logan, Utah.
ln 1912 Professor Hendricks was married to Miss Caroline Armeda McAUster, a daughter of John A. and Clarissa (Snow) McAlister. They have become parents of two children, George B., Jr., and Harold Gordon. Mr. and Mrs. Hendricks are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and he is a member of the Fortieth Quorum of Seventies. He was in training camp at the Presidio, San Francisco California, from July 18, 1918, until the 16th of September following, when he was commissioned second lieutenant of infantry in the United States army, remaining in camp as personnel adjutant until December 30, 1918. He then resumed his duties at the Utah Agricultural College and is regarded as one of the able young educators of the state. Studying thoroughly and broadly along his chosen line, he has become a most efficient professor of economics, readily solving many intricate problems of this character.
Utah since statehood: historical and biographical By Noble Warrum, Charles W. Morse, W. Brown Ewing page 226.
Children of George Brigham Hendricks and Caroline Armeda McAlister
George married Caroline Armeda McAlister, daughter of John Archibald McAlister and Clarissa Caroline Snow, on Jun 5, 1912 at Salt Lake Temple, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah.
- George Brigham Hendricks Jr, b. Jan 24, 1914, d. Dec 30, 1992
- Harold Gordon Hendricks b. Sep 6, 1916, d. Sep 12, 1943
Mary Lalene Hendricks
F, #275689, b. Aug 24, 1885, d. Jul 26, 1972
Mary Lalene Hendricks|b. Aug 24, 1885\nd. Jul 26, 1972|p2757.htm#i275689|Brigham Andrus Hendricks|b. Nov 27, 1857\nd. Jul 16, 1925|p191.htm#i19042|Mary Rebecca Stoddard|b. May 1, 1862\nd. Sep 23, 1930|p2757.htm#i275687|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Charles H. Stoddard||p4612.htm#i461102|Anna Telford||p4612.htm#i461103|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Mary Lalene Hendricks was born on Aug 24, 1885 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Brigham Andrus Hendricks and Mary Rebecca Stoddard. Mary married Charles Henry Hart, son of James H. Hart and Sabina Sheib, on Jun 23, 1915 at Salt Lake Temple, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Mary Lalene Hendricks died on Jul 26, 1972 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, at age 86. Mary was buried on Jul 29, 1972 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah.
Child of Mary Lalene Hendricks and Charles Henry Hart
Mary married Charles Henry Hart, son of James H. Hart and Sabina Sheib, on Jun 23, 1915 at Salt Lake Temple, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah.
- Mary Lalene Hart b. Nov 19, 1923
Odessa LaPreal Hendricks
F, #275690, b. Jun 3, 1889, d. Jun 2, 1954
Odessa LaPreal Hendricks|b. Jun 3, 1889\nd. Jun 2, 1954|p2757.htm#i275690|Brigham Andrus Hendricks|b. Nov 27, 1857\nd. Jul 16, 1925|p191.htm#i19042|Mary Rebecca Stoddard|b. May 1, 1862\nd. Sep 23, 1930|p2757.htm#i275687|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Charles H. Stoddard||p4612.htm#i461102|Anna Telford||p4612.htm#i461103|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Odessa LaPreal Hendricks was born on Jun 3, 1889 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Brigham Andrus Hendricks and Mary Rebecca Stoddard. Odessa married Robert Webster Boman, son of John William Boman and Fannie Elizabeth Brower, on Sep 19, 1917 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Odessa LaPreal Hendricks died on Jun 2, 1954 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah, at age 64.
She was also known as Odessie Lapreal Hendricks.
She was also known as Odessie Lapreal Hendricks.
Children of Odessa LaPreal Hendricks and Robert Webster Boman
Odessa married Robert Webster Boman, son of John William Boman and Fannie Elizabeth Brower, on Sep 19, 1917 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Wendell Hendricks Boman b. Sep 16, 1919
- (Unknown) Boman b. Feb 23, 1922, d. Feb 23, 1922
- LaPreal Boman b. Feb 26, 1923
- Dean W. Boman b. May 31, 1926
- Helen Boman b. Jun 20, 1931
- Eloise Boman b. Jun 20, 1931
Nellie Hendricks
F, #275691, b. Oct 22, 1890, d. Sep 30, 1960
Nellie Hendricks|b. Oct 22, 1890\nd. Sep 30, 1960|p2757.htm#i275691|Brigham Andrus Hendricks|b. Nov 27, 1857\nd. Jul 16, 1925|p191.htm#i19042|Mary Rebecca Stoddard|b. May 1, 1862\nd. Sep 23, 1930|p2757.htm#i275687|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Charles H. Stoddard||p4612.htm#i461102|Anna Telford||p4612.htm#i461103|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Nellie Hendricks was born on Oct 22, 1890 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of Brigham Andrus Hendricks and Mary Rebecca Stoddard. Nellie married Ralph Bernhisel, son of John Milton Bernhisel and Henrietta Harris, on Sep 13, 1911 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Nellie Hendricks died on Sep 30, 1960 at Reno, Washoe County, Nevada, at age 69. Nellie was buried at Lewiston City Cemetery, Lewiston, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Nellie Hendricks and Ralph Bernhisel
Nellie married Ralph Bernhisel, son of John Milton Bernhisel and Henrietta Harris, on Sep 13, 1911 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Barch B. Bernhisel b. Dec 11, 1912
- Mary Bernhisel b. Jan 13, 1914
- (Unknown) Bernhisel b. Sep 4, 1915, d. Sep 4, 1915
- Philip Hendricks Bernhisel b. Feb 3, 1917
- Francis Bernhisel b. Sep 21, 1918
- Margaret Bernhisel b. Jul 20, 1920
- Jo Ann Bernhisel b. Nov 12, 1922
Brigham Victor Hendricks
M, #275692, b. Jun 30, 1895, d. Oct 27, 1968
Brigham Victor Hendricks|b. Jun 30, 1895\nd. Oct 27, 1968|p2757.htm#i275692|Brigham Andrus Hendricks|b. Nov 27, 1857\nd. Jul 16, 1925|p191.htm#i19042|Mary Rebecca Stoddard|b. May 1, 1862\nd. Sep 23, 1930|p2757.htm#i275687|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Charles H. Stoddard||p4612.htm#i461102|Anna Telford||p4612.htm#i461103|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Brigham Victor Hendricks was born on Jun 30, 1895 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Brigham Andrus Hendricks and Mary Rebecca Stoddard. Brigham married Leona Ensign Smith, daughter of Isaac Smith and Camilla Harriet Ensign, on Oct 18, 1917 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Brigham married Gladys Dewitt Palmer. Brigham Victor Hendricks died on Oct 27, 1968 his last known address was at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah, according to the Social Security Death Index.
He was also known as Victor B. Hendricks.
In the census on Apr 26, 1930 Brigham Victor Hendricks was named B. Victor Hendricks.
He was also known as Victor B. Hendricks.
Children of Brigham Victor Hendricks and Leona Ensign Smith
Brigham married Leona Ensign Smith, daughter of Isaac Smith and Camilla Harriet Ensign, on Oct 18, 1917 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah.
- Lois Hendricks b. Jul 18, 1918
- Gerald Victor Hendricks b. Jan 19, 1920
- Sidney Reid Hendricks b. Jun 22, 1925
Charles Durrell Hendricks
M, #275693, b. Nov 17, 1899, d. Jan 3, 1957
Charles Durrell Hendricks|b. Nov 17, 1899\nd. Jan 3, 1957|p2757.htm#i275693|Brigham Andrus Hendricks|b. Nov 27, 1857\nd. Jul 16, 1925|p191.htm#i19042|Mary Rebecca Stoddard|b. May 1, 1862\nd. Sep 23, 1930|p2757.htm#i275687|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Charles H. Stoddard||p4612.htm#i461102|Anna Telford||p4612.htm#i461103|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Charles Durrell Hendricks was born on Nov 17, 1899 at Lewiston, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of Brigham Andrus Hendricks and Mary Rebecca Stoddard. Charles married Louise McAlister, daughter of Lorenzo Snow McAlister and Sarah Jollinger, on Mar 1, 1918 at Farmington, Davis County, Utah. Charles Durrell Hendricks died on Jan 3, 1957 at Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, at age 57; while serving in the Army audit section.
Children of Charles Durrell Hendricks and Louise McAlister
- Mary Louise Hendricks b. Dec 24, 1918
- Charles Durrell Hendricks Jr. b. Dec 5, 1926
Emily Elizabeth Traveller
F, #275694, b. Nov 28, 1862, d. May 6, 1954
Emily Elizabeth Traveller|b. Nov 28, 1862\nd. May 6, 1954|p2757.htm#i275694|Cornelius Traveller||p4618.htm#i461745|Frances Hobbs||p4618.htm#i461746|||||||||||||
Emily Elizabeth Traveller was born on Nov 28, 1862 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. She was the daughter of Cornelius Traveller and Frances Hobbs. Emily married William Henry Hendricks, son of William Dorris Hendricks and Mary Jane Andrus, on Dec 11, 1879 at Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah. Emily Elizabeth Traveller died on May 6, 1954 at Logan, Cache County, Utah, at age 91. Emily was buried on May 10, 1954 at Richmond City Cemetery, Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of Emily Elizabeth Traveller and William Henry Hendricks
- Frances Hendricks b. Nov 19, 1881, d. Aug 5, 1904
- William Dorris Hendricks+ b. May 9, 1884, d. Apr 21, 1916
- Walter Cornelius Hendricks b. Mar 21, 1886, d. Oct 12, 1903
- Emily Elizabeth Hendricks+ b. Mar 8, 1888, d. Jun 11, 1966
- Henry Glen Hendricks b. Apr 22, 1890, d. Dec 5, 1890
- Hazel Hendricks+ b. Sep 11, 1891, d. Sep 7, 1932
- Elmer Traveller Hendricks b. Dec 19, 1893, d. Feb 1, 1912
- Florence Hendricks+ b. Dec 16, 1895, d. May 3, 1978
- Mary Jane Hendricks b. Mar 7, 1898, d. Oct 5, 1904
- Denzil Hendricks b. May 5, 1900, d. Apr 17, 1904
- Leaniel Orville Hendricks b. Apr 5, 1902, d. Mar 3, 1915
- Reuben Lisle Hendricks+ b. Jun 17, 1904, d. Dec 23, 1947
Frances Hendricks
F, #275695, b. Nov 19, 1881, d. Aug 5, 1904
Frances Hendricks|b. Nov 19, 1881\nd. Aug 5, 1904|p2757.htm#i275695|William Henry Hendricks|b. Nov 12, 1860\nd. Nov 19, 1916|p191.htm#i19075|Emily Elizabeth Traveller|b. Nov 28, 1862\nd. May 6, 1954|p2757.htm#i275694|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Cornelius Traveller||p4618.htm#i461745|Frances Hobbs||p4618.htm#i461746|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Frances Hendricks was born on Nov 19, 1881 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Henry Hendricks and Emily Elizabeth Traveller. Frances Hendricks died on Aug 5, 1904 at age 22.
William Dorris Hendricks
M, #275696, b. May 9, 1884, d. Apr 21, 1916
William Dorris Hendricks|b. May 9, 1884\nd. Apr 21, 1916|p2757.htm#i275696|William Henry Hendricks|b. Nov 12, 1860\nd. Nov 19, 1916|p191.htm#i19075|Emily Elizabeth Traveller|b. Nov 28, 1862\nd. May 6, 1954|p2757.htm#i275694|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Cornelius Traveller||p4618.htm#i461745|Frances Hobbs||p4618.htm#i461746|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
William Dorris Hendricks was born on May 9, 1884 at Cove, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Henry Hendricks and Emily Elizabeth Traveller. William married Emily Elizabeth Traveller Hendricks. William married Edna Sarah Montrose on Sep 21, 1910 at Logan, Cache County, Utah. William Dorris Hendricks died on Apr 21, 1916 at Preston, Franklin County, Idaho, at age 31. William was buried at Richmond, Cache County, Utah.
Children of William Dorris Hendricks and Edna Sarah Montrose
William married Edna Sarah Montrose on Sep 21, 1910 at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- William Doyle Hendricks b. May 11, 1911
- Edna Leone Hendricks b. Feb 15, 1913
- Glen Montrose Hendricks b. Sep 15, 1915
Walter Cornelius Hendricks
M, #275697, b. Mar 21, 1886, d. Oct 12, 1903
Walter Cornelius Hendricks|b. Mar 21, 1886\nd. Oct 12, 1903|p2757.htm#i275697|William Henry Hendricks|b. Nov 12, 1860\nd. Nov 19, 1916|p191.htm#i19075|Emily Elizabeth Traveller|b. Nov 28, 1862\nd. May 6, 1954|p2757.htm#i275694|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Cornelius Traveller||p4618.htm#i461745|Frances Hobbs||p4618.htm#i461746|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Walter Cornelius Hendricks was born on Mar 21, 1886 at Cove, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Henry Hendricks and Emily Elizabeth Traveller. Walter Cornelius Hendricks died on Oct 12, 1903 at age 17.
Emily Elizabeth Hendricks
F, #275698, b. Mar 8, 1888, d. Jun 11, 1966
Emily Elizabeth Hendricks|b. Mar 8, 1888\nd. Jun 11, 1966|p2757.htm#i275698|William Henry Hendricks|b. Nov 12, 1860\nd. Nov 19, 1916|p191.htm#i19075|Emily Elizabeth Traveller|b. Nov 28, 1862\nd. May 6, 1954|p2757.htm#i275694|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Cornelius Traveller||p4618.htm#i461745|Frances Hobbs||p4618.htm#i461746|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Emily Elizabeth Hendricks was born on Mar 8, 1888 at Coveville, Cache County, Utah. She was born on Mar 8, 1888 at Cove, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Henry Hendricks and Emily Elizabeth Traveller. Emily married Nils Peder Anderson, son of Ole Anderson and Jeanette Olsen, on May 8, 1912 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Emily Elizabeth Hendricks died on Jun 11, 1966 at Logan, Cache County, Utah, at age 78. Emily was buried at Logan, Cache County, Utah.
In the census on Apr 30, 1910 Emily Elizabeth Hendricks was named Emma Hendricks.
In the census on Apr 30, 1910 Emily Elizabeth Hendricks was named Emma Hendricks.
Children of Emily Elizabeth Hendricks and Nils Peder Anderson
Emily married Nils Peder Anderson, son of Ole Anderson and Jeanette Olsen, on May 8, 1912 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah.
- Wendell Bryan Anderson b. Feb 7, 1913
- Marjorie Hendricks Anderson b. Jan 28, 1916
- Lorraine Iola Anderson b. May 3, 1919
- Desmond Launfal Anderson b. May 23, 1923
- Keith Hendricks Anderson b. Jun 24, 1926, d. Jul 5, 1996
Henry Glen Hendricks
M, #275699, b. Apr 22, 1890, d. Dec 5, 1890
Henry Glen Hendricks|b. Apr 22, 1890\nd. Dec 5, 1890|p2757.htm#i275699|William Henry Hendricks|b. Nov 12, 1860\nd. Nov 19, 1916|p191.htm#i19075|Emily Elizabeth Traveller|b. Nov 28, 1862\nd. May 6, 1954|p2757.htm#i275694|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Cornelius Traveller||p4618.htm#i461745|Frances Hobbs||p4618.htm#i461746|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-grandson of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Henry Glen Hendricks was born on Apr 22, 1890 at Richmond, Cache County, Utah. He was the son of William Henry Hendricks and Emily Elizabeth Traveller. Henry Glen Hendricks died on Dec 5, 1890.
Hazel Hendricks
F, #275700, b. Sep 11, 1891, d. Sep 7, 1932
Hazel Hendricks|b. Sep 11, 1891\nd. Sep 7, 1932|p2757.htm#i275700|William Henry Hendricks|b. Nov 12, 1860\nd. Nov 19, 1916|p191.htm#i19075|Emily Elizabeth Traveller|b. Nov 28, 1862\nd. May 6, 1954|p2757.htm#i275694|William D. Hendricks|b. Nov 6, 1829\nd. May 6, 1909|p187.htm#i18697|Mary J. Andrus|b. Nov 15, 1833\nd. Mar 15, 1914|p189.htm#i18827|Cornelius Traveller||p4618.htm#i461745|Frances Hobbs||p4618.htm#i461746|
Relationship=7th cousin 1 time removed of David Kipp Conover Jr.
Relationship=8th great-granddaughter of Wolphert Gerretse Van Kouwenhoven.
Hazel Hendricks was born on Sep 11, 1891 at Cove, Cache County, Utah. She was the daughter of William Henry Hendricks and Emily Elizabeth Traveller. Hazel married Alexander Morgan Nelson on May 15, 1912 at Logan Temple, Logan, Cache County, Utah. Hazel Hendricks died on Sep 7, 1932 at age 40.
Children of Hazel Hendricks and Alexander Morgan Nelson
- Naomi Nelson b. Nov 10, 1913, d. Oct 21, 1927
- Elmer Alexander Nelson b. Apr 21, 1915
- Mark Hendricks Nelson b. Nov 27, 1916
- Hazel Ardell Nelson b. Nov 5, 1919
- Winston Hendricks Nelson b. Oct 8, 1921
- William Donald Nelson b. Jan 4, 1924
- Robert Mogan Nelson b. Nov 18, 1927
- Max Harlan Nelson b. Oct 21, 1930
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