0 HEAD 1 SOUR PAF 2 NAME Personal Ancestral File 2 VERS 5.2.18.0 2 CORP The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints 3 ADDR 50 East North Temple Street 4 CONT Salt Lake City, UT 84150 4 CONT USA 1 DEST PAF 1 DATE 8 May 2008 2 TIME 23:44:50 1 FILE williamad.ged 1 GEDC 2 VERS 5.5 2 FORM LINEAGE-LINKED 1 CHAR UTF-8 1 LANG English 1 SUBM @SUB1@ 0 @SUB1@ SUBM 1 NAME Darrel La Mar Wakley 1 ADDR 4986 South 2000 West 2 CONT Lot #29 2 CONT Rexburg 2 CONT ID 83440 2 CTRY USA 1 PHON 1-208-403-6989 1 EMAIL lamar@ida.net 0 @I1@ INDI 1 NAME Darrel La Mar /Wakley/ 2 SURN Wakley 2 GIVN Darrel La Mar 2 NPFX Sfc 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 11 May 1938 2 PLAC Downey, Bannock, Idaho 1 _UID 20D7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918074C 1 FAMS @F1@ 1 FAMC @F130215@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 EVEN Medical, Supply, Admin, Personnel,Commo 2 TYPE Military Service 2 DATE from 29 Apr 1958 to 11 May 1998 2 PLAC Co, Tx, Germany, Utah,wa,korea,mi,idaho 1 EVEN Medical, Supply, Admin, Personnel,Commo 2 TYPE Unknown 2 DATE from 29 Apr 1958 to 11 May 1998 2 PLAC Co, Tx, Germany, Utah,wa,korea,mi,idaho 1 EVEN Unit Admin, Supply, Commo 2 TYPE Unknown 2 DATE from 30 Apr 1967 to 1 Jun 1993 2 PLAC Utah, Idaho 1 EVEN Unit Admin, Supply, Commo 2 TYPE Government Off. 2 DATE from 30 Apr 1967 to 1 Jun 1993 2 PLAC Utah, Idaho 1 NOTE Went by name of La Mar Wakley from age 1 to 18 years 2 CONT Went by name of Darrel L. Wakley from age 19 to age 55 2 CONT Went by name of Darrel La Mar Wakley from age 55 years to Present Time 2 CONT 2 CONT Name Prefix: Sfc 2 CONT 2 CONT Downey High School Downey, ID 52-54 2 CONT Marsh Valley High School ARIMO, ID 55-56 2 CONT 2 CONT Darrel La Mar Wakley lives in Thornton (Rexburg) Idaho in 1971. Married to Barbara Jean Canha 2 CONC m. Children are Jeannie Renada, Karen Le, Teresa Ann, and Melissa. Occupation is Unit Adminis 2 CONC ter Dept of the Army, US Army Reserve Center Rexburg Idaho. Schooling Ricks-B.Y.U. Center Rex 2 CONC burg Idaho. Married December 8, 1962; sealed in Idaho Falls Temple, Idaho, July 1971. As of y 2 CONC ear 2005 he has 9 grandchildren and 5 great grandchildren. In 2000 lives at 504 Laurel Stree 2 CONC t Rexburg, ID 83440. In 2005 lives at 4986 South 2000 West Lot#29, Rexburg, Idaho 83440 -433 2 CONC 6 (208-403-6989) lamar@ida.net 2 CONT Marsh Valley High School ARIMO, ID 52-56 2 CONT Munchweiler 225th Station Hospital Munchweiler Army Hospital Germany 58 - 60 2 CONT Hq 1st Cav Div Camp Howze Korea 63-64 2 CONT 2 CONT Darrel La Mar Wakley lives in Thornton (Rexburg) Idaho in 1971. Married to Barbara Jean Canha 2 CONC m. Children are Jeannie Renada, Karen Le, Teresa Ann, and Melissa. Occupation is Unit Adminis 2 CONC ter Dept of the Army, US Army Reserve Center Rexburg Idaho. Schooling Ricks-B.Y.U. Center Rex 2 CONC burg Idaho. Married December 8, 1962; sealed in Idaho Falls Temple, Idaho, July 1971. As of y 2 CONC ear 2005 he has 9 grandchildren and 5 great grandchildren. In 2000 lives at 504 Laurel Stree 2 CONC t Rexburg, ID 83440. In 2005 lives at 4986 South 2000 West Lot#29, Rexburg, Idaho 83440 -433 2 CONC 6 (208-403-6989) lamar@ida.net 1 CHAN 2 DATE 14 Apr 2008 3 TIME 00:18:23 0 @I2@ INDI 1 NAME Barbara Jean /Canham/ 2 SURN Canham 2 GIVN Barbara Jean 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 25 Oct 1943 2 PLAC Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah USA 1 _UID 22D7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918096C 1 FAMS @F1@ 1 FAMC @F3@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 12 Apr 2008 3 TIME 17:24:56 0 @I3@ INDI 1 NAME Jeannie Renada /Wakley/ 2 SURN Wakley 2 GIVN Jeannie Renada 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 7 Aug 1963 2 PLAC Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah 1 _UID 24D7414E327ED5118AA40020780409180B8C 1 FAMS @F4@ 1 FAMC @F1@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 CHAN 2 DATE 14 Apr 2008 3 TIME 00:20:07 0 @I7@ INDI 1 NAME Daniel La Vern /Wakley/ 2 SURN Wakley 2 GIVN Daniel La Vern 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 25 Feb 1908 2 PLAC Pocatello, Bannock, Idaho 1 DEAT 2 DATE 31 Jan 1980 2 PLAC Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 3 Feb 1980 2 PLAC Downey, Bannock, Idaho 1 _UID 2CD7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918130C 1 FAMS @F130215@ 1 FAMC @F8@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Cemetery: DOWNEY,Idaho 2 CONT Remarks: SEXTON, Lot 222, Space 2 Danny WAKLEY, lot 2 CONT SEXTON, Lot 222, Space 1 2 CONT 2 CONT 2 CONT Arms: Argent on a fess sable between three eagles displayed azure as many crescents of the fi 2 CONC eld. 2 CONT Translation: A white shield with three silver crescents on a black bar between three blue eag 2 CONC les displayed. 2 CONT Coats of arms originated as motifs borne on the shields of knights in armour in order that th 2 CONC ey could be identified on the battlefield ~ These 'armorials' were formalized and recorded b 2 CONC y herald from the 13th century onwards with crests and mottos later supplementing the arms. T 2 CONC he language of heraldry is of great antiquity and it is from such ancient history that a deco 2 CONC rative representation may be portrayed. 2 CONT The WAKELY Blazon of Arms is recorded in Burke's General Armoury. 2 CONT The surname WAKELY is a locational name for "one from Wakeley" in Hertfordshire meaning "sof 2 CONC t or wet meadow". 2 CONT Early Historical Example: Roger Wakeley, 1332, Subsidy Rolls. 2 CONT David Linstead Heraldry - England 2 CONT 2 CONT INTRODUCTORY NOTES ON WAKELY HISTORY 2 CONT All the following text regarding 'The First Wakelys and Their Times: 1300-1500', the informat 2 CONC ive text, trees and maps regarding 'Wakelys off the Main Tree'/Other Wakelys'/The Wakely Area 2 CONC ' and the notes on the generations included with the individual ancestors - down to Abraham W 2 CONC akely 1733-1774 Yeoman of Burstock - is the work of Mr.J.R.Wakely of London SE27, He has mad 2 CONC e a long and serious study of the Wakelys and has lodged his work with both the Society of Ge 2 CONC nealogists in London and the Dorset County Records Office in Dorchester. it consists of Vol. 2 CONC l (1988) and Vo1.3 revisions and additions (1991) from which certain relevant portions have b 2 CONC een extracted to compile this current history, adding it to the research done by D.R.Lennar 2 CONC d for his wife Olive Kate Wakely, her siblings and paternal cousins - the descendants of th 2 CONC e line of Wakelys coming down from the above named Abraham Wakely of Burstock. 2 CONT 2 CONT THE FIRST WAKELYS AND THEIR TIMES : 1300-1500 2 CONT Hertfordshire origins 2 CONT In the British Library there is a List of the Knights who attended the Third Crusade at the e 2 CONC nd of the 12th Century under the leadership of King Richard Coeur de Lion. Among these was Si 2 CONC r Roger Wakely, the first recorded holder of the name. 2 CONT Surname studies agree the name is derived from a small Hertfordshire manor, now subsumed in t 2 CONC he Parish of Westmill which lies halfway between Stevenage and Bishops Stortford. Whether o 2 CONC r not they were descended from Sir Roger himself, it is thought the Wakelys of Dorset, Richar 2 CONC d and Roger, also came from this manor. Its history therefore is both a part of, and a beginn 2 CONC ing, for the family history that follows. Whether the Wakelys were of Saxon or Norman origins 2 CONC , it is quite possible that their marriages connected them with the original inhabitants of W 2 CONC akeley. 2 CONT The timing of the original foundation of the settlement cannot now be established. It may hav 2 CONC e been of Roman date - Roman Stane Street passes close by. There is a large tumulus which als 2 CONC o suggests some ancient human settlement and the Historian of Westmill and others hold to th 2 CONC e theory that this mound gave the seltlement its name. 2 CONT 'Wakeley' according to this interpretation is a composite word for the field (ley) of the fun 2 CONC eral feast (wake) of some local chief i.e. the tumulus was his burial mound. Another interpre 2 CONC tation says that the Old English 'waeccan' watcher- or to stay awake) and 'leah' (meadow or w 2 CONC et clearing in a woodland) describes the occupation of someone who was responsible for lookin 2 CONC g after a clearing, meadow or some other land that had possible social, religious or agricult 2 CONC ural significance. 2 CONT The fact that Wakeley still survives as a place name on modern maps is something of a miracl 2 CONC e and is only possible in a deeply traditionalist culture. The settlement seems to have bee 2 CONC n deserted in the latter middle ages. The lands that once constituted the manor are now a sin 2 CONC gle farm all that is left bearing the name Wakeley on Hertfordshire signposts. 2 CONT The best information on the lands of the manor comes from the Domesday Book - where the nam 2 CONC e is spelled Wachelei. The manor was then equally divided into three holdings of forty acres 2 CONC . This unusual division pre-dated the Norman Conquest and some historians believe it indicate 2 CONC d that the manor was split between three brothers. Whatever the precise status of the three h 2 CONC olders in the time of Edward the Confessor, they were free to sell the lands and were themsel 2 CONC ves legally free. 2 CONT They do not appear to have kept their title after the Norman Conquest:- The Saxon, Eddiva th 2 CONC e Fair, on one holding was replaced by one Ralf, who held his land from the Count of Brittany 2 CONC . Aelfward, one of Earl Harold's men, lost out to Robert, who held a third of Wachelei alon 2 CONC g with two nearby holdings from the Count of Boulogne. Edric, one of Earl Aelfgar's men, los 2 CONC t his holding to Tetbald (Theobald) who held it with three other small estates from Hardoui 2 CONC n de Scalers. 2 CONT Each holding was self-sufficient. There was enough land for one plough; meadow enough for tw 2 CONC o oxen; and wood enough for fencing on each. The condition of the land had deteriorated on Ra 2 CONC lf's portion: it had been worth twenty shillings under King Edward, and was only worth ten b 2 CONC y Domesday. Robert's land kept its pre-Conquest value of five shillings. Tetbald - whose lan 2 CONC d had dropped from a pre-Conquest value of fifteen shillings to seven - had managed to get th 2 CONC e value up to fifteen again. 2 CONT These differences may owe something to the availability of labour. There were seven cottars o 2 CONC n Tetbald's land who were doubtless made to work on restoring its value; nane are mentioned o 2 CONC n Robert's holding - maybe his Saxon predecessor Aelfward had worked it with his family, or t 2 CONC he servants had fled or been killed; on Ralf's portion there was one sokeman (essentially fre 2 CONC e) and one serf, so he like Robert, seemed to have had labour problems. 2 CONT From one or more of these. Saxon or Norman, landowner or tenant, slave or free, the Wakelys q 2 CONC uite probably descended. 2 CONT The mid-fourteenth century gives the next picture of Wakeley/Wakelegh, perhaps forty or so ye 2 CONC ars after the Wakely ancestor had gone to Dorset. The Lay Subsidy Roll (tax return) for 134 2 CONC 1 shows that Wakeley had much of its land unploughed. Probably this resulted from the success 2 CONC ion of murrains that had killed off livestock over the preceding years and the accompanying s 2 CONC courge of severe droughts. For a small settlement like Wakeley, these twin disasters were th 2 CONC e beginning of the end: one hundred years later it had completely disappeared. However, advan 2 CONC ced archaelogical techniques allow us to place it and to a certain extent we can describe i 2 CONC t and its situation. 2 CONT Wakeley seems to have been a small street village. The evidence for this is the house platfor 2 CONC ms that can clearly be seen along the south side of the route of the old track from Cherry Gr 2 CONC een in neighbouring Westmill. This is now a sunken way running through a field past one pon 2 CONC d to another. The second pond must have been near the village centre as the mound which is al 2 CONC l that remains of the church is beside it. As Hertfordshire was rich in timber, no stone foun 2 CONC dations survive, and nothing can therefore be said about the layout of the houses, nor is the 2 CONC re any clue as to where the three lords lived. 2 CONT Wakeley began as a small place and evidently remained so until its final disappearance as a s 2 CONC ettlement. From the Domesday evidence the land was good - meadowland was rare and valuable i 2 CONC n Hertfordshire. It fetched a price in the fourteenth century six times that of ordinary arab 2 CONC le land. Someone who left before the murrains and droughts of the mid-fourteenth century an 2 CONC d who had profited from the prosperity of the thirteenth century might have 'done all right'. 2 CONT This judgement seems to fit with the three presumed fourteenth century emigrants to Dorset fr 2 CONC om the manor or village of Wakely:- Richard, the prosperous resident of Hawkchurch in West Do 2 CONC rset; his contemporary Roger of More Crichel in East Dorset - both having left well before th 2 CONC e troubles of the fourth decade of the fourteenth century and, the third, John, perhaps one g 2 CONC eneration their junior, a rich London merchant who died in the third quarter of the century. 2 CONT Given the size of Wakeley, and inheritance of manorial rights is known, it is probably correc 2 CONC t to see these three presumed emigrants as either descendants of the one remaining Saxon free 2 CONC man of the manor, or of a younger son of one of the lords who, like manorial officials ofte 2 CONC n did, made a good thing out of managing the lord's business. The Wakelys were probably, ther 2 CONC efore, in Hertfordshire more or less exactly what they were to emerge as in Dorset - Yeomen. 2 CONT The first Wakelys of Dorset 2 CONT Hawkchurch, the village where Richard de Wakelegh' was established, an 2 CONC d More Chrichel, where his contemporary Roger lived, were at opposite ends of Dorset count 2 CONC y - Hawkchurch an the Devon border, More Chrichel near the border with Hampshire. 2 CONT Richard and Roger were both christian names introduced by the Normans, but that is not to sa 2 CONC y the two were necessarily of Norman origin. Most of their neighbours (or at least those ric 2 CONC h enough to pay taxes) also had Norman names. It is possible that Richard and/or Roger were t 2 CONC he descendants of the crusading knight of a century before - but no more probable than a simi 2 CONC larly conjectural descent from King Richard Coeur de Lion of another Dorsetman - he was calle 2 CONC d Thomas Querdelyon! 2 CONT We are not concerned with Roger from More Chrichel, however. There is no evidence to sugges 2 CONC t he founded any surviving line, either in Dorset or elsewhere. It is quite probable that i 2 CONC f he had a family it was wiped out by the Black Death which entered England by a Dorset por 2 CONC t in the mid-fourteenth century. 2 CONT It was in West Dorset that the Wakely newcomers put down roots; Richard of Hawkchurch was alm 2 CONC ost certainly the 'paterfamilias' of all Dorset Wakelys, and can surely be recorded as the fo 2 CONC refather of the later Wakelys of Hawkchurch, who were settled not only in the same parish bu 2 CONC t in the same tithing of the parish where Richard lived. 2 CONT Fourteenth century neighbours 2 CONT The lords of the manors of Hawkchurch and Vynlegh were abbots from the parishes of Chardstoc 2 CONC k and Thorncombe - this would be significant later for the Wakely family. The main lords wer 2 CONC e also clerical, Chardstock was held by the Bishop of Salisbury, most of Thorncombe was contr 2 CONC olled by the Abbot of Forde. Only Holditch manor or lordship in Thorncombe was known to hav 2 CONC e lay lords in medieval times. Local society therefore would more than likely be dominated b 2 CONC y manorial officials and richer farmers, both having similar origins, with the officials ver 2 CONC y likely to become rich farmers given the opportunities inherent in their jobs. 2 CONT Subsidy rolls do not show which taxpayers were also manorial officials, some undoubtedly woul 2 CONC d have been, but the names on the rolls do give us some idea of the origins and occupations o 2 CONC f those featured. Some like Richard de Wakelegh' were newcomers: Dennis de Elleworth; Humphre 2 CONC y de Brammesleigh; Roger de Haukmore; Richard de Colemore; Ralph de Borcombe; Thomas and Henr 2 CONC y de Cochesete and Alica Toteriches. Others presumably lived in particular surroundings; Joh 2 CONC n atte Moure from marshy ground to the south; Humphrey atte Doune on hilly land to the nort 2 CONC h east; Robert atte Watsre from the banks of the Axe in the valley; Thomas atte Wode reclaimi 2 CONC ng land from the scattered woodlands. One, Thomas atte Brouk,stands out significantly - by th 2 CONC e fifteenth century the Brook family were lords of Holditch in Thorncombe, and at the end o 2 CONC f the sixteenth had acquired the manor of Hawkchurch. 2 CONT Other names showed physical characteristics. Mr. Bairde (superior beard), le Fransch (Foreig 2 CONC n extraction), le Fissher and le Marlere (occupatianal) the first being self-explanatary, th 2 CONC e second from marl a mixture of clay sail and carbonate of Lime which is found at various dep 2 CONC ths below the soil and was highly valued as a fertiliser. Marling a field was a major investm 2 CONC ent yielding rich dividends. 2 CONT Only three personal names which appeared in the 1327 and 1332 subsidy rolls re-appear 200 yea 2 CONC rs later for the tithing of Phillyholme in the 1525 subsidy roll. Wakely, Colmer (de Colemore 2 CONC ) and Davy: probably from the rich Edith Davis of 1327. There were forty names in the 1525 su 2 CONC bsidy return (almost exactly the number in 1527) and the lack of continuity suggests that som 2 CONC e of the original names had become occupational. There were Tailors, Webbers, Clerks and Turn 2 CONC ers in the 1525 roll and other changes may have resulted because the poor of 1327 had becom 2 CONC e the rich of 1525 and vice versa. In other cases, lack of continuity was brought about by th 2 CONC e families concerned about becoming extinct in the male line. 2 CONT For the Wakelys the opportunities included the possibility of marriage with local heiresses 2 CONC . Such names as Humphrey de Brammesleigh may have disappeared, their genes however may have s 2 CONC urvived in the Wakelys. 2 CONT Fourteenth century life 2 CONT The century opened just as an expanding population was reaching the point where opportunitie 2 CONC s for expanding food production were being exhausted. During previous decades new lands wer 2 CONC e cultivated by clearing woodland, reclaiming marshland and wasteland. However, without natur 2 CONC al fertility much of this new land was soon exhausted. As arable farming expanded it preclude 2 CONC d a parallel expansion of livestock farming with its essential by-product - manure. Crops o 2 CONC n marginal land rapidly dropped. To add to this inevitable decline, a series of appalling har 2 CONC vests in the second decade of the fourteenth century was followed in the third decade by a ru 2 CONC n of epidemics that decimated the cattle and sheep population. 2 CONT Twenty years later, midway in the century, the human population suffered a direct blow - th 2 CONC e Black Death, a plague unprecedented in its ferocity and the speed at which it spread. It ha 2 CONC d entered England via the Dorset ports in 1348; within weeks it was eating into the neighbour 2 CONC ing counties of Devon and Somerset; by the end of the year it had reached London. 2 CONT This was the first of three outbreaks and it affected mainly the adult population. The second 2 CONC , thirteen years later, was given the special name 'murtalite des enfants' - children being p 2 CONC articularly affected as they had not built up resistance in the previous epidemic. The thir 2 CONC d main wave of Black Death occurred in 1369 and by the end of the century it was suggested th 2 CONC at two thirds of the population had died. 2 CONT The decline in the working agricultural population reinforced other pressures leading to th 2 CONC e freeing of the market in land. Those persons who had survived the Black Death had more oppo 2 CONC rtunity for securing more land, of better quality. The economic privileges of the main landow 2 CONC ners grew less, the Peasants' Revolt of 1381 (though rapidly defused) won its main immediat 2 CONC e objective, the removal of the very unpopular poll tax and the landlord class were unable t 2 CONC o enforce laws imposed to control wages. 2 CONT Efficient farmers (the Wakely's included) grew prosperous, building up their holdings. Stil 2 CONC l occupying the same place in the social hierarchy below vallets, esquiers, chivalers and sei 2 CONC gneurs - they nevertheless began to become employers and achieved greater social standing. 2 CONT The Hundred Years war, starting like the Black Death halfway through the century also helped 2 CONC . Absent knights, made hungry for cash due to wartime taxation willingly leased their lands a 2 CONC nd relaxed feudal abligations. Conscrjpted soldiers and sailors, who never returned, left the 2 CONC ir lands available for those who stayed at home. 2 CONT Richard de Wakelegh' and his immediate (unnamed) descendants, working h 2 CONC ard. investing prudently, and begetting healthy heirs, would have been typical of those who s 2 CONC eized the opportunities of the age so outweighing the hazards. Reasonably it can be assumed t 2 CONC hat the next century (even with its great lack of local history records) saw the continuatio 2 CONC n of the Wakely occupation in the prosperous tithing of Phillyholme. 2 CONT A lost century 2 CONT In the fifteenth century the surname Wakely makes a near-complete disappearance from record 2 CONC s and maps. The exceptions are all in London where John Wakeley or Wakele, vintner, citizen 2 CONC , alderman and sheriff of London died about 1407 (will proved). He was probably the son of Jo 2 CONC hn of 'All Hallows the Great' in the City (his will proved thirty years earlier). A third Joh 2 CONC n, son of John the sheriff, died in 1409, his estate managed by Ferdinando Wakely. Their will 2 CONC s, now preserved in the London Guildhall give no clues to their origins or location of proper 2 CONC ties. The first John may have been a young man from Dorset making his way in trade while hi 2 CONC s elder brother stayed at home building up his farming and wool interests, or he might, lik 2 CONC e Richard, have been a migrant from Hertfordshire. 2 CONT The fifteenth century left one only with historic generalisations. It can rightly be describe 2 CONC d as one of the greatest creative periods for English architecture and music but was singular 2 CONC ly poor in chronicles and informative records. The great series of monastic chronicles whic 2 CONC h shed so much light on the earlier centuries were replaced in the 1400's by crude and credul 2 CONC ous popular histories. In local terms, where manorial records do not survive (unhappily the n 2 CONC orm rather than the exception) one can only check the dry details of property transactions re 2 CONC corded in the agreements known as 'feet of fines' and the equally boring details of propertie 2 CONC s in which the King had an interest. These were recorded in the 'inquisitiones post mortem 2 CONC ' - inquests after the death of tenants-in-chief who were protecting the properly interest o 2 CONC f the crown. Both these sources would be silent in terms of Wakelys as they were almost certa 2 CONC inly tenants of monasteries or were holding lands from intermediate lords. 2 CONT Now we come to the beginning of the sixteenth century when for the family historian things st 2 CONC art to get easier. Parish records of baptisms, marriages and burials, records of wills, monum 2 CONC ental inscriptions and publications of local directories etc, were all becoming available. Th 2 CONC e introduction of census records in the beginning of the 19th century was an invaluable aid i 2 CONC n guiding the searcher back to counties and parishes and bringing to light members of familie 2 CONC s unknown previously. On each of the individual sheets regarding ancestors in the following W 2 CONC akely history, as much other information regarding the relevant generations has been include 2 CONC d but it must be stressed - nothing can be guaranteed! 2 CONT WAKELYS OFF THE MAIN TREE 2 CONT It is impossible to tell what branches spread from the main Wakely bole in northwest Dorset d 2 CONC uring the genealogical 'black hole' that covers the latter part of the fourteenth century an 2 CONC d the whole of the fifteenth. It has been speculated that the merchant Wakelys of London migh 2 CONC t have been newcomers from Dorset seeking to make their fortunes and reasonably we can assum 2 CONC e that these London Wakelys were ancestors of the Wakelys found in Kent in the seventeenth ce 2 CONC ntury registers. 2 CONT However, from the beginning of the sixteenth century, it is possible to start making educate 2 CONC d guesses of relationships with contemporary Wakelys and by the end of that century to connec 2 CONC t several other Wakely families with same certainty. 2 CONT The trees that follow cover: 2 CONT The Wakelys of Whitchurch Canonicorum (the elder line) and branches at Chideock, Bridport an 2 CONC d Swanage. 2 CONT The Wakelys of Hartland and Morwenstow (north west Devon on the northern border of Cornwall). 2 CONT The Wakelys of Honiton in eastern Devon. 2 CONT The Wakelys of Whitchurch Canonicorum 2 CONT The Wakelys of Whitchurch separate into two branches; those retaining a connection with Whitc 2 CONC hurch and its neighbour Chideock; those moving east first to Bridport, then to Swanage on th 2 CONC e Isle of Purbeck. Many wills, backed up by very full parish registers and other evidence ena 2 CONC bles one to eliminate them completely from the direct ancestry of this history. 2 CONT New names of Walter and Osmund appear but it is noticeable that the old Wakely family names o 2 CONC f Thomas, John and William still keep their end up. 2 CONT Like the Hawkchurch Wakelys, the family on the Whitchurch side, in time, covered quite a soci 2 CONC al range. Some owned large estates, trying to prove their right to bear arms. Some, althoug 2 CONC h remaining Yeomen, were given the courtesy title of gentleman; others married into gentry fa 2 CONC milies. Some became coastal traders, blacksmiths; one from the rich side became an apothecary 2 CONC . 2 CONT Even though some of the landed side acquired properties very close to their remote cousins i 2 CONC n Stoke Abbot, they did not live on them and can be clearly differentiated from the Stoke Abb 2 CONC ot branch 2 CONT The Wakelys of Hartland and Morwenstow 2 CONT This branch of the Wakelys of Hawkchurch separates from the main tree about 1600, starting wi 2 CONC th Sylvester Rockett alias Wakely. 'Rockett" comes from a transliteration in Chard parish reg 2 CONC ister where often 'o's in writing of the period narrow to a point where they look like 'Cs. 2 CONT Sylvester's descendant's names make it practically certain he was the son of William Wakely a 2 CONC lias Rockett of Whitestaunton (will proved 1624). The tree shows that Sylvester was still liv 2 CONC ing in his home area when he married. The fact that his marriage took place in Chard is a fur 2 CONC ther indication that Robert Rockett alias Wakely (of Chard at death) in the main tree, was th 2 CONC e father of both Hawkchurch and Whitestaunton branches. 2 CONT The move to Hartland, at the furthest end of Devon from Dorset, connects with the theory tha 2 CONC t the Rocketts had strong trading interests. In the times of Sylvester, Hartland was more imp 2 CONC ortant as a trading town than neighbouring Bideford. Difficult to credit now because the qua 2 CONC y which history reports as bustling with ships has long since been washed away by the fierc 2 CONC e seas swirling below Hartland's steep cliffs. A twentieth century guidebook describes it a 2 CONC s 'the most sparsely populated farming area of the West Country, a great cul-de-sac of an 18, 2 CONC 000 acre parish'. 2 CONT Morwenstow, now in Cornwall, was where Sylvester's grandson settled. It has been described a 2 CONC s 'the lonely farthest north of England's farthest south'. Like Hartland it was obviously ric 2 CONC h at one time - its Norman church is beautifully decorated, and the local manor house of Tona 2 CONC combe, surviving now as much as it did in Sylvester's day, shows that the local lords were pr 2 CONC osperous. 2 CONT The tree does not give all the details of the considerable race of Wakelys founded by Sylvest 2 CONC er but it does show enough to be able to eliminate the branch from the direct ancestry of th 2 CONC e Stoke Abbot line. Usefully, it is a typical bit of evidence to show the devotion to traditi 2 CONC onal names in a family - Sylvester and his father William are repeated often and it is likel 2 CONC y that Peter was the name of Sylvester's father-in-law. 2 CONT A much larger version of the Morwenstow branch of Wakelys is lodged in the Library of the Soc 2 CONC iety of Genealogists in London. 2 CONT The Wakelys of Honiton 2 CONT It is not clear why a branch of the Wakely family developed in Honiton. The fact is that thre 2 CONC e of the recorded Wakelys in the parish preserved the Rockett name. This makes it fairly cert 2 CONC ain that Honiton Wakelys are descended from the Wakelys of Hawkchurch. 2 CONT William and John were the names used by the Honiton Wakelys, suggesting strongly that, like t 2 CONC he Wakelys of Hartland and Morwenstow, they derived from William of Whitestaunton, and in thi 2 CONC s case, from his son John the miller of Phillyholme. As negative evidence there is the fact t 2 CONC hat no other trace of John's descendants can be found. 2 CONT Geographically the move was not a great one. Honiton is approximately twelve miles from Hawkc 2 CONC hurch - two miles from neighbouring Axminster, and then ten more miles by what is now and wa 2 CONC s then in the seventeenth century an important main road to Exeter and beyond to Plymouth. 2 CONT Therefore there may have been a trading reason for the move. Another hypothesis is possible h 2 CONC owever. Wakelys had established themselves in Thornecombe by the seventeenth century. The pro 2 CONC prietor of the ancient Abbey of Ford was the most important landowner there and since the las 2 CONC t Abbot founded almshouses at Honiton it may indicate there was an estate connection on whic 2 CONC h the Wakelys built. 2 CONT OTHER WAKELYS 2 CONT West Country 2 CONT Three short lived Wakely branches, not covered in the main tree, whose bases were in the reac 2 CONC h of the original Hawkchurch home are ... 2 CONT (a) Isle Brewers, north of Chard. For a brief period in the seventeenth century references ar 2 CONC e found in the name of William. These may wall be another offshoot of the William of Whitesta 2 CONC unton branch. 2 CONT (b) Dartmouth in Devon. Another seventeenth 'sighting' not necessarily connected with the fam 2 CONC ily in this history. The only evidence for that is the use of the name Edward across two gene 2 CONC rations - a secondary name of the Hawkchurch Wakelys. Perhaps more significant is the sharin 2 CONC g of the unusual girl's christian name 'Wllmot' with the Honiton branch. In any event, the Wa 2 CONC kelys did not establish at Dartmouth for very long, two generations saw their time out there 2 CONC . Interestingly however the wheel turned a full circle when Reuben William Wakely born in Sou 2 CONC thsea married Emma Jane Elliott on Sunday 29th January 1882 at Dittisham near Dartmouth. Reub 2 CONC en was the paternal great uncle of the recipients of this history and was a seaman based on H 2 CONC MS Brittania at Dartmouth College. 2 CONT (c) Exeter. Partly on the use of names it is guessed that they may have derived from the Wake 2 CONC lys of Bideford. Also both towns were important trading centres in the eighteenth century whe 2 CONC n mention of Exeter Wakelys are concentrated and Bideford ones decline. Wills from the Exete 2 CONC r branch might have given some clue but unfortunately these were destroyed in the 1939-1945 w 2 CONC ar. 2 CONT Elsewhere in England 2 CONT The Wakelys of London of the fourteenth and fifteenth may have been of Dorset origin. The onl 2 CONC y evidence is from the Dorset visitations which show a family of London merchants marrying th 2 CONC e heiress of one John Wakely and almost immediately afterwards setting themselves up among th 2 CONC e gentry of Dorset. 2 CONT Possibly the London Wakelys were the founders of another county line in Kent. They emerge i 2 CONC n the seventeenth century, achieving 'county' status by the end of the eighteenth century an 2 CONC d probably the ancestors of the Wakelys of Rainham. These achieved distinction in this centur 2 CONC y in the medical world and became baronets. 2 CONT The main alternative to London and Dorset would have been Shropshire. Wakely references in Sh 2 CONC ropshire do not survive as early as those for Dorset but a Wakely family of substance was the 2 CONC re from the sixteenth century. They were found in Early Chancery Proceedings covering the yea 2 CONC rs 1500-1515. Like the Dorset Wakelys they started prosperous and stayed long. The Shropshir 2 CONC e Wakelys might have derived from those of the Dorset borders as wool. trade routes connecte 2 CONC d the two counties. Or again, they might have been descended from another emigrant from the W 2 CONC akeley manor in Hertfordshire. What is certain is that any connection with the Dorset Wakely 2 CONC s is very distant indeed. 2 CONT Gloucestershire also had a branch but further research shows it lasted only through the seven 2 CONC teenth century. The main christian name used there was Leonard. One of the most likely conclu 2 CONC sions is that a commercial family based in the great trading centre of Bristol had used whate 2 CONC ver profits it had earned to purchase property in the Gloucestershire wool country. Equally i 2 CONC t might have been an offshoot of the Wakelys to the north in Shropshire. Once more, no plausi 2 CONC ble connection can be made with the Wakelys of Dorset. 2 CONT Finally it is clear from information from the descendants of the Wakely of the Isle of Wigh 2 CONC t that their line stemmed from Whitchurch. 2 CONT The Wakelys of Ireland 2 CONT For the Wakelys of Ireland a plausible connection can be established that their genealogica 2 CONC l history starts in Devon; the names of Devon/Dorset Wakelys were used; and that the founde 2 CONC r of the Irish Wakelys appears on their pages of history just as he disappears from the recor 2 CONC ds of Hawkchurch. 2 CONT It is very likely that the founder of this line was John Wakely the son of Thomas, Lord Wakel 2 CONC y of Wakely Hall, Devon. This line perhaps more than any other has direct ancestry to Richar 2 CONC d de Wakeleg' recorded in the subsidy rolls of 1327 and 1332. The contemporaries of John live 2 CONC d in Hawkchurch (at that time in Dorset, but now in Devon) and were in the process of acquiri 2 CONC ng lands at Thorncombe (then in Devon, now in Dorset). Just when he left they were in Colyto 2 CONC n so the point of origin may be significant. Although the actual location of Wakely Hall is n 2 CONC ot known it is thought very likely to be found in the parish of Hawkchurch. 2 CONT The fact that John was a merchant as well as a soldier also plausibly explains why he moved f 2 CONC rom the busy wool trading area an the Dorset/Devon borders to the new opportunities being ope 2 CONC ned up in Ireland. 2 CONT John was granted lands in Navan in 1547 and as mentioned above the Irish Wakelys were extreme 2 CONC ly faithful to the names John and Thomas in the first nine generations the Wakelys of Navan a 2 CONC nd then of the Ballyburly estate counted four Johns and five Thomases among the nine eldest s 2 CONC ons who inherited. 2 CONT The Library of the Society of Genealogists has a second Wakely History lodged with them whic 2 CONC h contains a very interesting collection of facts and records of letters etc. a few of whic 2 CONC h have been extracted below. 2 CONT 1. John Wakely is described by an inscription upon a monument in the Parish Church of Ballybu 2 CONC rley as the 'captain of 100 horse and 100 foot in the beginning of Queen Elizabeth's reign'. 2 CONT 2. John Wakely's Arms are sculptured in stone over the doorway of the Parish Church of Ballyb 2 CONC urley and described in heraldic terms as; 2 CONT 'Gu, a chevron between three crosslets. arg. on a chief of the last a stags head caboshed o 2 CONC f the first'. 2 CONT The interesting connection with the Dorset Wakelys is the fact that a stag was the emblem o 2 CONC n the seal of John Rockett alias Wakely of Holditch. 2 CONT 3. Entry in the Calender of the patent and close rolls of Chancery in Ireland, signed at Kilm 2 CONC ainham Dec 15 1550 details his large holdings; 2 CONT 'Letter of Lord Deputy and Council directing John Wakely to have a lease for 21 years of th 2 CONC e lands of Ballybyrle, the Eskermore, Ballycollgen, Richardston, Ballynlea, Ballybaken, Bally 2 CONC woren, the Rathe, Dromkit, and Ballygowen, Beallacorre, Ballenoren, the Neweton, Clennemeane 2 CONC , Colker, Klronarne, the Loaghe, Klonerell, Kyloshell, Kloremore and Kylloyne in the county o 2 CONC f O'Ffalley and to have a survey thereof made before sealing of the lease'. 2 CONT 4. According to an Old Pedigree John Wakely married Ann the 2nd daughter of Sir Oliver Plunke 2 CONC tt probably between 1547 and 1557; 2 CONT 'John Wakely of Navan, and Oliver Nugent had a patent of lands in Meath and dated 20th June 1 2 CONC 547. Ditto in louth and Meath, Fiant for lease 19th Sept. 1550. Ditto for lands in Kings Co 2 CONC , including Ballyburly, Faint 15th Feb 1550 John Wakely married Ann second daughter of Sir Ol 2 CONC iver Plunkett. Knt.' 2 CONT It is believed this marriage resulted in 4 sons. John died circa 1571. 2 CONT The family pedigree is recorded in 19th cent. editions of Burke's Landed Gentry of Ireland. N 2 CONC o attempt is made to cover it in this history. 2 CONT THE WAKELY AREA 2 CONT The Wakelys are first found in Dorset in the tithing of Phillyholme, the southern half of th 2 CONC e parish of Hawkchurch. The first known inherited lands were in that tithing and for five hun 2 CONC dred and fifty years direct Wakely ancestors lived and worked within five miles of this earl 2 CONC y base. Until the mid-eighteenth century their brides came from within the same tightly draw 2 CONC n radius. 2 CONT These lands are mentioned throughout the trees and individual sheets of the ancestors in thi 2 CONC s history. 2 CONT It is suggested that the first known Wakely lands at Chackridge may well have been the land 2 CONC s Richard de Wakleg' came to at the beginning of the fourteenth century. 2 CONT Chackridge - the original Wakely base? 2 CONT Wakelys possessed the Chackridge lands by the end of the 16th century and were labelled as he 2 CONC redilaments. They were not freehold - by this time the tenure was by leasehold. Probably th 2 CONC e Wakelys, Like many yeomen of the 16th century, converted a copyhold estate in Chackridge (i 2 CONC .e. one held by custom of the manor, and subject to the jurisdiction of a manor court) to a l 2 CONC easehold one - specifying like 17th century leases that no suit of court would be owed. 2 CONT Chackridge itself was once an independent lordship - in early documents, it is the 'Lordshi 2 CONC p of" Chekeridge' - there are later references to it as 'a freehold estate and reputed manor' 2 CONC . 2 CONT The original Wakely interest in it is unknown but what is known is that John Rockett alias Wa 2 CONC kely's will (1620) makes a point of entailing the Chackridge lands on his grandchildren, whil 2 CONC e making no provision for later lands. That these lands were Wakelys may be inferred from a r 2 CONC un of seventeenth century deeds dealing with the lands - John's son Thomas is careful in thes 2 CONC e deeds to sign himself Wakely alias Rockett while in other land deads he signs as Rockett al 2 CONC ias Wakely. The seal he uses on these deeds - featuring a trippant stag - is distinct from th 2 CONC e Rockett seal on the same documents - featuring a coat of arms with three swords. These ar 2 CONC e evidence that the lands in question were Wakely not Rockett inheritances. 2 CONT The lands which are on high land south of Hawkchurch village comprised some one hundred and f 2 CONC orty acres - roughly the area of the two farms of Chackridge that survive today. They becam 2 CONC e two farms in the Wakely's days, John and Thomas the two oldest grandsons of John Rocket ali 2 CONC as Wakely having one each. As one property they were probably the whole of Chackridge lordshi 2 CONC p. 2 CONT Richard de Wakeleg's standing as one of the top subsidy payers in the parish of Hawkchurch i 2 CONC n 1327 shows that the lands may well have been the source of his wealth. For this reason hi 2 CONC s descendants stayed put for the succeeding three centuries. 2 CONT Today, their softly rolling, well-drained fields are still unspoiled and command panoramic vi 2 CONC ews over the Axe Valley into Devon - one can understand the Wakely unwillingness to move. 2 CONT The tithing of Phillyholme was in the southern half of Hawkchurch Parish. 2 CONT Wakelys possessed lands in Chackridge and certainly owned West Lears and Herridges Farms an 2 CONC d parts of Hewood. 2 CONT They appear to have had property (? inherited from Wolmington family) in Tytherleigh and it w 2 CONC as here in 1700 that Isaac Wakely from Stoke Abbott died after being attacked at Hawkchurch b 2 CONC y a man from that parish and was buried at Chardstock. 2 CONT Job, William and Moses Wakely farmed at Weycroft in the early 1800s. They were ancestors of t 2 CONC he line of Wakelys down to Mr.J.R.Wakely of London SE27. 2 CONT Axminster and Marshwood were the first known Rockett centres - being conveniently placed on t 2 CONC he main roads inland from Lyme Regis. 2 CONT After a, period in the Hawkchurch/Thorncombe area the Wakelys moved to Stoke Abbott and farme 2 CONC d in Mosterton. 2 CONT Abraham Wakely Yeoman of Burstock was lessee of Stockham Estate and Laverstoke Farm and it wa 2 CONC s here that our Thomas Wakely was born and became joint beneficiary wi 2 CONC th his mother Catherine. It appears he also took over the farm of his cousin Abraham at Moste 2 CONC rton some time after 1773. 2 CONT The site of the old Church graveyard of the Chapel of Ease of Mosterton can still be seen fro 2 CONC m the road up from Mosterton to South Perrott - now overgrown and abandoned but with one of t 2 CONC he firs planted by Mr John Wakely (a grandson) to surround the small burying ground still sta 2 CONC nding. These were planted after the old church was taken down in 1832. 2 CONT 2 CONT Cemetery: DOWNEY,Idaho 2 CONT Remarks: SEXTON, Lot 222, Space 2 Danny WAKLEY, lot 2 CONT SEXTON, Lot 222, Space 1 1 CHAN 2 DATE 14 Apr 2008 3 TIME 00:18:13 0 @I8@ INDI 1 NAME Mary Edna /Evans/ 2 SURN Evans 2 GIVN Mary Edna 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 2 May 1911 2 PLAC Malad, Oneida, Idaho 1 DEAT 2 DATE 28 Nov 1977 2 PLAC Hyrum, Cache, Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 28 Nov 1977 2 PLAC Downey, Bannock, Idaho 1 _UID 81B58C62CEEDCE4283D9870B754289C8E55E 1 FAMS @F130215@ 1 FAMC @F9@ 1 NOTE Cemetery: DOWNEY,Idaho 2 CONT Remarks: SEXTON, Lot 222, Space 2 Danny WAKLEY, lot 2 CONT SEXTON, Lot 222, Space 1 2 CONT 2 CONT Cemetery: DOWNEY,Idaho 2 CONT Remarks: SEXTON, Lot 222, Space 2 Danny WAKLEY, lot 2 CONT SEXTON, Lot 222, Space 1 1 CHAN 2 DATE 28 Apr 2008 3 TIME 11:38:58 0 @I12@ INDI 1 NAME Arthur Daniel /Wakley/ 2 SURN Wakley 2 GIVN Arthur Daniel 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 21 Dec 1885 2 PLAC Woodland, Downey, Bannock, Idaho 1 DEAT 2 DATE 30 Mar 1938 2 PLAC Pocatello, Bannock, Idaho 1 BURI 2 DATE 2 Apr 1938 2 PLAC Downey, Bannock, Idaho 1 AFN 1L47-ZM 1 _UID 36D7414E327ED5118AA40020780409181DAC 1 FAMS @F8@ 1 FAMC @F13@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1L47-ZM 2 CONT ID: 120986 2 CONT Name of Deceased: WAKLEY, ARTHUR DANIEL 2 CONT Year: 1938 2 CONT Certificate Number: 108465 2 CONT County of Death: Bannock 2 CONT City: POCATELLO 2 CONT Date of Death: 03/30/1938 2 CONT Date of Birth: 12/21/1885 2 CONT Last Name: WAKLEY First Name: Arthur Daniel Age: Gender: M Cemetery: DOWNEY,Idaho Birth Date 2 CONC : 21 DEC 1885 Birth Place: Woodland,Bannock,Idaho Date Died: 30 MAR 1938 Death Place: Father 2 CONC : John Nelson WAKLEY Mother: Elena Valeria HEMENWAY Spouse: Bertha Olive THORNTON, 8 Dec 190 2 CONC 3 Sources: ANCESTRAL FILE SEXTON, Lot 133, Space 3 Remarks: 2 CONT Last Name: Wakley 2 CONT First Name: Arthur Daniel 2 CONT Age: 2 CONT Gender: M 2 CONT Cemetery: 2 CONT Birth Date: 2 CONT Birth Place: 2 CONT Date Died: 30 MAR 1938 2 CONT Death Place: Pocatello Hosp.,ID 2 CONT Father: 2 CONT Mother: 2 CONT Spouse: 2 CONT Sources: Publ. 7 april p3 2 CONT Remarks: Spotted Fever 2 CONT 2 CONT Groom Last Name: WAKLEY 2 CONT Groom First Name: Arthur D. 2 CONT Groom Residence: 2 CONT Bride Last Name: THORNTON 2 CONT Bride First Name: Bertha O. 2 CONT Bride Residence: 2 CONT Place: Malad 2 CONT Date: 9 Dec 1903 2 CONT County of Record: Oneida 2 CONT State: Idaho 2 CONT Volume: 1 2 CONT Page: 135 2 CONT Marriage ID: 49663 2 CONT Comment: 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 1L47-ZM 2 CONT ID: 120986 2 CONT Name of Deceased: WAKLEY, ARTHUR DANIEL 2 CONT Year: 1938 2 CONT Certificate Number: 108465 2 CONT County of Death: Bannock 2 CONT City: POCATELLO 2 CONT Date of Death: 03/30/1938 2 CONT Date of Birth: 12/21/1885 2 CONT Last Name: WAKLEY First Name: Arthur Daniel Age: Gender: M Cemetery: DOWNEY,Idaho Birth Date 2 CONC : 21 DEC 1885 Birth Place: Woodland,Bannock,Idaho Date Died: 30 MAR 1938 Death Place: Father 2 CONC : John Nelson WAKLEY Mother: Elena Valeria HEMENWAY Spouse: Bertha Olive THORNTON, 8 Dec 190 2 CONC 3 Sources: ANCESTRAL FILE SEXTON, Lot 133, Space 3 Remarks: 2 CONT Last Name: Wakley 2 CONT First Name: Arthur Daniel 2 CONT Age: 2 CONT Gender: M 2 CONT Cemetery: 2 CONT Birth Date: 2 CONT Birth Place: 2 CONT Date Died: 30 MAR 1938 2 CONT Death Place: Pocatello Hosp.,ID 2 CONT Father: 2 CONT Mother: 2 CONT Spouse: 2 CONT Sources: Publ. 7 april p3 2 CONT Remarks: Spotted Fever 2 CONT 2 CONT Groom Last Name: WAKLEY 2 CONT Groom First Name: Arthur D. 2 CONT Groom Residence: 2 CONT Bride Last Name: THORNTON 2 CONT Bride First Name: Bertha O. 2 CONT Bride Residence: 2 CONT Place: Malad 2 CONT Date: 9 Dec 1903 2 CONT County of Record: Oneida 2 CONT State: Idaho 2 CONT Volume: 1 2 CONT Page: 135 2 CONT Marriage ID: 49663 2 CONT Comment: 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5479@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 SOUR @S5481@ 1 SOUR @S5482@ 1 SOUR 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_SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\arthurdanielwakley.jpg 2 TITL Arthur Daniel 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _CLIP 3 _UNITS INCHES 3 _TOP 1 3 _BOTTOM 0 3 _LEFT 10 3 _RIGHT 7 2 _SSHOW Y 0 @I17@ INDI 1 NAME John /Canham/ 2 SURN Canham 2 GIVN John 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT 1811 2 PLAC Blyford, Suffolk, England 1 _UID 40D7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918274C 1 FAMS @F21@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Apr 2007 3 TIME 10:50:57 0 @I34@ INDI 1 NAME Mary Abby /Terry/ 2 SURN Terry 2 GIVN Mary Abby 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 12 Jul 1840 2 PLAC (Crooked Creek), Van Buren County, Iowa, USA 1 DEAT 2 DATE 5 Dec 1917 2 PLAC Pleasant Grove, Utah, Utah, USA 1 BURI 2 PLAC Pleasant Grove, Utah, Utah, USA 1 AFN 1FVS-F5 1 _UID 62D7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918496C 1 FAMS @F36@ 1 FAMC @F40@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1FVS-F5 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S4@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5485@ 1 SOUR @S5479@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 5 Apr 2007 3 TIME 20:05:50 0 @I48@ INDI 1 NAME William Martindale /Frampton/ 2 SURN Frampton 2 GIVN William Martindale 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 20 Sep 1831 2 PLAC Scioto County, Ohio 1 DEAT 2 DATE 23 May 1906 2 PLAC Pleasant Grove, Utah, Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 27 May 1906 2 PLAC Pleasant Grove, Utah, Utah 1 AFN 1FVS-D0 1 _UID 7ED7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918652C 1 FAMS @F36@ 1 FAMC @F14@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1FVS-D0 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S4@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5485@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 7 Apr 2007 3 TIME 11:30:30 0 @I49@ INDI 1 NAME Ann /Wilson/ 2 SURN Wilson 2 GIVN Ann 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 2 Sep 1838 2 PLAC Brinsley Greasely, Nottingham, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 19 Mar 1909 2 PLAC Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE Mar 1909 2 PLAC (Draper Cemetery), Draper, Salt Lake County, Utah 1 AFN 1KF1-BD 1 _UID 80D7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918674C 1 FAMS @F52@ 1 FAMC @F60@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1KF1-BD 2 CONT 2 CONT Parents: Joseph Wilson & Emma Ann Webb 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 18:46:31 0 @I59@ INDI 1 NAME Lucinda /Kent/ 2 SURN Kent 2 GIVN Lucinda 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 11 Aug 1785 2 PLAC Dorset, Bnnngtn, Vermont 1 DEAT 2 DATE 20 Jul 1869 2 PLAC Burlington, Fltn, Ohio 1 BURI 2 DATE Jul 1869 2 PLAC Burlington, Lawrence, Ohio 1 AFN 19BW-7L 1 _UID 94D7414E327ED5118AA40020780409187B8C 1 FAMS @F45@ 1 FAMC @F73@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 19BW-7L 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5479@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 7 Apr 2007 3 TIME 13:14:48 0 @I61@ INDI 1 NAME Robert /Walker-Stokes-Stocks/ 2 SURN Walker-Stokes-Stocks 2 GIVN Robert 2 _AKA Stocks 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 17 Mar 1835 2 PLAC Bolsover, Derbyshire, England 1 CHR 2 DATE 31 Mar 1837 2 PLAC Bolsover, Derbyshire, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 17 Aug 1872 2 PLAC Draper, Salt Lake Co., Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 17 Aug 1872 2 PLAC (Draper Cemetery), Draper, Salt Lake County, Utah 1 AFN 1KF1-97 1 _UID 98D7414E327ED5118AA40020780409187FCC 1 FAMS @F52@ 1 FAMC @F76@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1KF1-97 2 CONT 2 CONT Birth: Born before Fanny's marr. to Jeremiah Stokes 2 CONT 2 CONT Burial: Draper Cemetery 2 CONT 2 CONT Sources: 2 CONT 1. Family Records from Winona S. Erickson 2 CONT 2. IGI 2 CONT 3. Cemetery Records 2 CONT 2 CONT The following was compiled and written in 1961 by Lydia Lila Walker Park and, at Lydia's requ 2 CONC est, is to be used only for family records. Lydia was the daughter of Stephen Webb Walker, s 2 CONC on of Robert Walker (Stokes). 2 CONT 2 CONT "The history of my paternal grandfather, Robert Walker (Stokes) has been very sketchy, and th 2 CONC e circumstances surrounding his birth and paternity has been somewhat of a mystery these man 2 CONC y years. Much time and money has been spent in trying to find our genealogy on our grandfath 2 CONC er's side, to no avail. If anyone has known - and who would be more apt to know than his mot 2 CONC her - she, and they, have kept it a closely guarded secret. About the only thing we can be s 2 CONC ure of is, that he was born and that he was the father of seven sons. 2 CONT 2 CONT It was my father who, most reluctantly, first apprised me of the fact that their was a "skele 2 CONC ton in the closet". Dad was visiting in my home one Sunday afternoon soon after Mother's dea 2 CONC th, when I inquired of him as to the correctness of some genealogy I had been working on 2 CONC . I told him the name "Robert Walker" appeared as his father's, his father's father as wel 2 CONC l as his mother's father's name and wondered if it was an error someone had made or if it wa 2 CONC s a strange coincidence. I had known, previous to this, as I suppose most of us had known, t 2 CONC hat "Stokes" fitted in some way, but had thought that Dad's grandmother had been a widow wit 2 CONC h one son when she married a widdower with several children, that her son's legal name was "W 2 CONC alker" and he assumed the name of "Stokes" after their marriage, later on taking back his ow 2 CONC n name. Just how I thought that, I don't know - my own interpretation on it. Any any rate w 2 CONC hen I questioned Dad about it, his expression immediately became solemn (I'll never forget it 2 CONC ) and I knew I had touched on a sore spot. He didn't say anything and kiddingly I asked wha 2 CONC t the matter was, and was there a family skeleton. He still didn't want to talk, but I tol 2 CONC d him there was nothing for him to be ashamed of and that his silence probably would tell mor 2 CONC e than if he "confessed". Little by little I "dragged" what little I could from him. He tol 2 CONC d me that his father was born out of wedlock, that his "sire" was of British nobility and cla 2 CONC imed to know the name of the father but said he would never reveal it, that, "it will go wit 2 CONC h me to the grave". He said Robert's mother Fanny, was a young, beautiful girl "ignorant i 2 CONC n the ways of the world". She was employed as a maid in one of the royal houses when she "be 2 CONC came involved with the son of her master". Coax as I would, that was as much as I could ge 2 CONC t from him. I told him I thought we had a right to know what our real name was, but he sai 2 CONC d it would do no good. He said that Fanny married a Jeremiah Stokes who raised Robert as hi 2 CONC s own son. 2 CONT 2 CONT The following brief, but interesting history was obtained mostly from the histories sumitte 2 CONC d by two of my cousins, Naomi Walker Brady Ellis (daughter of Robert Sylvester Walker) and Cl 2 CONC eona Walker Hedenstrom (daughter of Charles William Walker) and are on file in the Daughter 2 CONC s of Utah Pioneers Memorial Building in Salt Lake City. Naomi states that her information wa 2 CONC s obtained from her father and his two aunts, half-sisters to Robert and our Great-aunts, Fan 2 CONC ny Stokes and Tamar Stokes McGuire, who lived in Draper near Uncle Rob's family. Naomi als 2 CONC o states that Cleona sold her hone and used the money from this sale on extensive research i 2 CONC n an effort to obtain information as to the paternity of our grandfather, but was unsuccessfu 2 CONC l. 2 CONT 2 CONT This history of my grandfather I am most happy to have as it is the most information we hav 2 CONC e had of him and I can not understand why some of the facts have been kept such a secret an 2 CONC d have not become family stories. Perhaps some of the family have known these facts all alon 2 CONC g, but I think I am correct in assuming that as far as our particular branch of the family i 2 CONC s concerned (Stephen's family) we are all ignorant of most of these facts. It is understanda 2 CONC ble that the family of Robert would want to keep the circumstances of his birth a secret, bu 2 CONC t I can see no reason for keeping the rest of it hushed up. As for me, I am rather proud o 2 CONC f the record my grandfather made. He must have been a stalwart, honest man for Brigham Youn 2 CONC g to have favored him as he apparently did. 2 CONT 2 CONT I came upon the histories quite unexpectedly one day when I was on duty in the D.U.P. Memoria 2 CONC l building. The various D.U.P. camps in the city have their members act as guides, salesladi 2 CONC es, receptionsists, typists, etc. It is interesting work and I go whenever I can. On this d 2 CONC ay, while eating my lunch, I got out the file on Robert to see what I could learn and the fol 2 CONC lowing is what I have pieced together from the histories submitted by our two cousins. I wa 2 CONC s almost spellbound by what I read, brief as it was, mostly, I guess, because I was so surpri 2 CONC sed at finding such a wealth of information that I did not dream existed. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert was born in Balsovar or Bolsovar, Nottingham, England, March 17, 1835 to Fanny Walker 2 CONC , a daughter of Robert and Elizabeth Walker. Fanny was born March 15, 1819 in Balsovar and w 2 CONC as seven years old when her father died in 1826. She had just turned 16 when her son was bor 2 CONC n. In 1836 (the month and day is not given) at age 17, Fanny was married to Jeremiah Stokes 2 CONC , himself just 17 years of age. Robert grew up as Stokes, but somewhere along the line, eith 2 CONC er Robert's mother or his wife got made at the Stokes family and took the name of Walker. I 2 CONC f either the name "Stokes" or "Walker" was ever legalized we don't know, but legal or not, Wa 2 CONC lker is the name by which we have been known. 2 CONT 2 CONT In his early youth, Robert was employed as a stable boy for the royal family. There he worke 2 CONC d with blooded horses and he learned to care well for them and love them. He also learned th 2 CONC e masonry trade and he and his stepfather made adobe bricks. Robert and Jeremiah did some re 2 CONC pair work on the King's castle and were given a small tract of land for pay. It meant much t 2 CONC o own land in those days and Robert and Jeremiah built a small home where the family lived un 2 CONC til leaving for America 2 CONT 2 CONT The family embraced the gospel in England and Robert was baptized into the Church of Jesus Ch 2 CONC rist of Latter-Day-Saints in February, 1850 at the age of 15. He left England with his paren 2 CONC ts and five brothers and sisters, Thomas, Elizabeth, Tamar, Jeremiah and Fanny, on May 22, 18 2 CONC 56 on the ship "Horizon". His ticket was #145. On June 30, 1856 the steamer "Huron" towed t 2 CONC he "Horizon" to Constitution Wharf, Boston, Massachusetts. The captain of the ship was a Sca 2 CONC ndinavian by the name of Reed, and upon leaving the ship the captain complimented the group o 2 CONC n their good behavior, saying the company was the best he had ever brought across the sea an 2 CONC d that "hereafter his ship would carry only Mormons". 2 CONT 2 CONT Because of the lack of funds to bring them to Zion, the family had to remain in Boston wher 2 CONC e Robert and his stepfather did whatever they could to earn a living and same enough to get t 2 CONC hem to Utah. Robert also was anxious to have his sweetheart, Ann Wilson, who had to remain b 2 CONC ehind in England, join him. Robert was a strong, husky, well-built young man and traveled so 2 CONC me with a circus as a strong man. He also earned extra money as a pugilist, thereby earnin 2 CONC g the necessary means to send for Ann two years after Robert had arrived in America. They we 2 CONC re married upon her arrival in Boston, on May 9, 1858. They took out their endowments in th 2 CONC e Endowment House, February 22, 1862. Their first child, Franklin Lorenzo, was born in Bosto 2 CONC n. 2 CONT 2 CONT Fanny and Jeremiah Stokes also had a son born to them in Boston, Alvin Sylvester who died i 2 CONC n infancy and was buried in Boston. The Stokes had one more child born to them, after arrivi 2 CONC ng in Utah, Sarah Ann, making ten children born to Fanny, seven of whom lived to maturity. 2 CONT 2 CONT In connection with the marriage of Ann and Robert, we obtained some interesting information t 2 CONC his fall. Mildred wrote to the town clerk in Boston and inquired as to whether there was a r 2 CONC ecord of the marriage of Ann Wilson and [e]ither Robert Walker or Robert Stokes, in May of 18 2 CONC 58. This was done to satisfy our curiosity as to whether Robert's name was Stokes or Walke 2 CONC r at the time of his marriage, as well as for "the record". They replied, giving this inform 2 CONC ation: an "intention of marriage" was filed on May 8, 1858 by a Robert Walker Stokes of Eas 2 CONC t Boston, age 23 years, occupation, peddler, born in England, a son of Jeremiah and Elizabet 2 CONC h Stokes and was his first marriage - and Ann Wilson, East Boston, age 20, born England, daug 2 CONC hter of (blank), her first marriage. The applicant was a Samuel Dame, whom we feel must hav 2 CONC e been the license clerk. There is no record of the marriage, but the histories both give th 2 CONC e date of marriage as May 9, 1858. So we know that Robert was going by the name of Stokes a 2 CONC t the time he was married. 2 CONT 2 CONT Each family was advised to have $100 cash before setting out for Zion, as well as wagons, o 2 CONC x teams and household articles. After three years in Boston the Stokes family still didn't h 2 CONC ave the necessary cash and then, at last, the chance came for Robert to earn the sum. Ther 2 CONC e was a certain pugilist who had never been whipped and $100 was being offered to the perso 2 CONC n who could whip him. Robert was urged to take the man on and finally decided to do it. H 2 CONC e whipped the pugilist, collected the $100 and the family left for Utah. (This incident wa 2 CONC s related at the funeral of Fanny Walker Stokes in Draper.) They had two wagons, three ox te 2 CONC ams and a few of the most needed pieces of furniture and household equipment. They left Bost 2 CONC on in June, 1859 in the James Brown Company, and arrived in Utah in September of that year 2 CONC . The family settled in the community of Little Willow, later re-named Draper where they liv 2 CONC ed for a time. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert was called by President Brigham Young to go to Paradise, Utah to help in colonizing so 2 CONC me of the towns in that part of the state. (Paradise is in Cache Valley, a few miles south-e 2 CONC ast of Logan.) The family lived in Paradise three years. They returned to Draper upon learn 2 CONC ing that Jeremiah was will and needed Robert. (The years they lived in Paradise was not give 2 CONC n in either history.) 2 CONT 2 CONT The family was very poor and it was a struggle to keep a roof over their heads. However, the 2 CONC y managed to acquire a small farm where Robert built his family a dougout. He later on buil 2 CONC t a home of adobes that he and Jeremiah made. It was located in the northeast section of Dra 2 CONC per, east of the meetinghouse. When the home was torn down, Robert's and jeremiah's name an 2 CONC d initials were found on the bricks. Robert worked at farming, sheep-herding and anything h 2 CONC e could do to earn a living for his family. He loved horses and was good at handling them an 2 CONC d it is ironic that it was a horse that caused his death. 2 CONT 2 CONT In 1868, Robert went back east for emigrants, being assigned by President Young "the duty o 2 CONC f piloting the last contingent of pioneers across the plains, just before the inauguration o 2 CONC f transcontinental train service in 1869". Upon returning to Utah he went to work for the Ki 2 CONC mball and Lawrence Stage Co., later called the Overland Limited Stage Co., and still later o 2 CONC n taken over by Wells-Fargo. He was driving a stage for Wells-Fargo at the time of the accid 2 CONC ent which caused his death. He had been away from home on a "run" with the stage and had sto 2 CONC pped at his home in Draper to visit with his wife and see his two week old son (Doyle) befor 2 CONC e continuing on to the Point of the Mountain where he was to meet another stage. He took hi 2 CONC s eldest son, Franklin who was 13 years old, with him. Upon reaching the Point, the stage h 2 CONC e was to meet had not yet arrived so he unhitched his horses. One was a vicious stallion tha 2 CONC t he had had to discipline that morning. The horse, upon being made free, kicked Robert, rup 2 CONC turing a blood vessel. The young son, Frank, ran for help to a "Doc" Dunyon who went back wi 2 CONC th him but Robert was dead when they arrived. The site of this accident is known as the Port 2 CONC er Rockwell Station. Whenever we made a trip with Dad past the Point, he always had us sto 2 CONC p and he would point out to us the approximate place his father was killed. That is one of t 2 CONC he very few things, if not the only one, I can remember his telling of his father. Dad was f 2 CONC our years old at the time. Robert was killed on August 17, 1872 at the age of 37, making An 2 CONC n a widow at the age of 34 with a family of six sons to care for. One son, her sixth, die 2 CONC d a short time before his father. Ann's oldest son was 13 at the time, the youngest, Doyle 2 CONC , was 2 weeks. 2 CONT 2 CONT The young widow Ann, was a small delicate woman and raised her six remaining sons to manhood 2 CONC . Our father was her fifth son and survived his brothers. Just what she did to earn a livin 2 CONC g for them I guess we'll never know. I don't recall ever hearing that she did sewing, teachi 2 CONC ng, nursing or was a mid-wife, or do any of the other occupations of that day. She must hav 2 CONC e [had] a hard life with few comforts. In about a six week period she buried a two year ol 2 CONC d son, gave birth to another and buried her husband. Just what hers or Robert's contributio 2 CONC n as far as church work is concerned is not known. I would say that of the six boys, Dad wa 2 CONC s probably the most religious, or at least, church-minded. He, Uncle [blank] and Uncle Joh 2 CONC n were the only ones to go on missions, the others being more or less back-sliders. 2 CONT 2 CONT What the relationship between she and her mother-in-law Fanny, was is something else I gues 2 CONC s we'll never know, but there must have been "feelings" between them, at least in their late 2 CONC r years. I have in my possession, letters written by grandmother to Dad while he was on hi 2 CONC s mission to England from 1900 to 1902, and letters from Dad to her, and no mention is made o 2 CONC f Fanny or othes in the Stokes family by either one, altho[ugh] they lived near one another i 2 CONC n Draper. (These letters were handed to me by Hazel, to whom Dad was married at the time o 2 CONC f his death, the morning he died. She handed me a box and said "here, you take this" - I ha 2 CONC d no idea what was in it, but there are letters from Dad to some of his brothers, newspaper c 2 CONC lippings, letters and papers in connection with his mission, etc.) Fanny Walker Stokes was b 2 CONC lind the last 20 years of her life and died in Draper in 1906 at the age of 87 years. I didn 2 CONC 't know until just the last year or so that she was living after I was born - it had always b 2 CONC een my impression that she died before 1900, because I can't recall ever seeing her or hearin 2 CONC g anything at all about her. I was only six when she died, but I can remember my Varley gran 2 CONC dparents distinctly before they died, their deaths and funeral and they both died within a fe 2 CONC w years of Fanny. So, something must have happened between the two families, probably afte 2 CONC r Jeremiah's death, July 1, 1875. It wasn't until after I was married that I ever met my tw 2 CONC o Great-aunts, Tamar and Fanny. We took Dad out to Draper to visit with them a few times 2 CONC . I have an old fashioned yellow rose bush in the yard now that Aunt Tamar gave me one tim 2 CONC e when we went to visit her. They both seemed so happy to have us come out and it is perplex 2 CONC ing as to why Dad was so reluctant to have us know them. They were funny little old ladies b 2 CONC ut I enjoyed visiting with them in their pioneer homes. 2 CONT 2 CONT Before closing, I would like to add a few lines about my grandmother Ann as I remember her 2 CONC . She had come to live with our family some time before her death and It would be my guess t 2 CONC hat this period was the easiest and most comfortable of her life, at least her married life 2 CONC . I don't know how long she lived with us. The "parlor" in our home was turned over to he 2 CONC r and, since she was ill most of the time, probably all of the time she was there and had t 2 CONC o remain in bed, it was my job to keep her room tidied up, take her her meals and keep her "s 2 CONC lop jar" emptied and clean, since at that time there was no plumbing in the house. Sometime 2 CONC s Aunt Ett Walker, who was the wife of Ann's youngest son Doyle, would have my cousin Glady 2 CONC s come over to help with grandmother, and perhaps others did too, but I can't remember - it s 2 CONC eems as tho[ugh] that was my job, exclusively. I remember her as a rather severe person, wit 2 CONC h white hair parted in the middle and drawn severely back into a bun. She had small, pierci 2 CONC ng black eyes and I remember that I was always afraid of her and was glad when I could leav 2 CONC e her room. I can't remember any of us being close to her. She seemed to be a demanding wom 2 CONC an and wanting a lot of attention and I can remember her scolding me at times for somethin 2 CONC g I either did or didn't do, and it is my impression that I did not like her. I can remembe 2 CONC r going to see her at her home in Draper a few times before she came to live with us. I don' 2 CONC t remember going or coming, or how we got there but I do remember visiting her in Draper. Sh 2 CONC e died in the "parlor" of our home, March 19, 1909 at the age of 71, her funeral and burial b 2 CONC eing in Draper. 2 CONT 2 CONT Naomi states that Aunt Tamar always praised her brother Robert, saying he was "good, kind an 2 CONC d loving, and the best brother a girl could ever have." I was pleased to read this as it ha 2 CONC d been my impression Dad's father was somewhat of a scoundrel - probably because he wasn't ev 2 CONC er talked about much in our home. Of course, we must remember that Dad was only four at th 2 CONC e time his father died, so he wouldn't remember much about him, but surely his mother would k 2 CONC eep the father's memory fresh in the minds of her children. 2 CONT 2 CONT And so ends the story. Who knows - could be we are related to Queen Elizabeth!!" 2 CONT 2 CONT --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 CONC --------------------- 2 CONT --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 CONC --------------------- 2 CONT 2 CONT The following was typed from the handwritten notes of Ethelyn Arnold Walker, Robert Walker (S 2 CONC tokes)'s granddaughter. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert Walker was the first born to Fanny Walker. Fanny later married Jeremiah Stokes. Robe 2 CONC rt was a mason by trade, and for repaving the King's castle he and his stepfather were give 2 CONC n a small tract of land. On this land they built a small dugout. It meant much to own lan 2 CONC d in those days. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert Walker came to America with his mother and stepfather, from Balsover, Derbyshire Count 2 CONC y, England at the age of 18 years, ticket no. 145. They left Liverpool England May 22, 185 2 CONC 6 with a company of 856 souls aboard the packet ship, Horizon. Mr. Reed, the Captain, was Sc 2 CONC andinavian. Most of the company were Mormans. They were poor, but faithful, and were especi 2 CONC ally _____ for this company to be brought out under the auspices of the "Perpetual Emigratin 2 CONC g Fund Company." On the day after embarking, the vessel left the Bramby mooring deck and ca 2 CONC st anchor in the River of Mercy. The ship obtained her clearance the day after. On Sunday 2 CONC , May 25, the steam tug Great Conquest took Captain Reed, F.D. Richards, C.E. Wheelock, Thoma 2 CONC s Williams and others to the Ship, and the emigrants bade a-adieu to Old England. 2 CONT 2 CONT The tug then towed the ship to about twenty miles out to sea. During this time two marriage 2 CONC s were celebrated. the next day, many of the passengers became ill and did not feel like eat 2 CONC ing. Rations issued to the emigrants included salt pork, salt beef, sea biscuits, flour, mus 2 CONC tard, rice, oatmeal, peas, sugar, salt and water. 2 CONT 2 CONT Of the 856 passengers, 635 were Emigrating Fund emigrants, 212 ordinary and 7 were cabin pass 2 CONC engers, all were Mormons under the Superintendency of Edward Martin assisted by Jessie Marvi 2 CONC n and George P. Vaughn. 2 CONT 2 CONT On the 28th, most of the sick passengers had revived. Songs were heard, and there was dancin 2 CONC g on deck to the music of a violin and tambourine and another marriage took place. 2 CONT 2 CONT On the 29th, the pilot went off in a fishing boat near Cork, taking letters from the Ship, h 2 CONC e charged 6 ____ for each letter. The captain was courteous, kind, taking much interest in t 2 CONC he welfare of the passengers. The first mate was a tall Yankee, a good seaman, but a harsh r 2 CONC uler of men. The second mate was an Englishman, was pleasant, and a good natured old salt, a 2 CONC nd a good seaman. 2 CONT 2 CONT The Captain praised the passengers for their good Order. He said he had been with them fo 2 CONC r 8 days and had not heard a single oath. He contrasted them to the Irish emigrants generall 2 CONC y saying that the latter would quarrel and fight over their cooking and to obtain order amon 2 CONC g them they would turn the hose on them while the men were at the pumps. 2 CONT 2 CONT The women were generally employed much of the time on board, making tents and wagon covers fo 2 CONC r the overland part of the journey. At least the western part of it. On June 19, Captain Re 2 CONC ed traded with a fishing vessel some mails for some codfish off the Newfoundland Coast. On J 2 CONC une 25th the sea was as smooth as a lake. On June 28th Cape Cod was seen and in the evenin 2 CONC g the Ship cast anchor in the Boston Harbor. On going up the river or channel, were were kep 2 CONC t below to make room on deck for the sailors Work. It was a painful deprivation to the passe 2 CONC nger to be shut out from the first delightful sight of the land after having been so long a 2 CONC t sea. 2 CONT 2 CONT On Sunday, June 29th, the passengers passed the doctor. A meeting was held on the desk and i 2 CONC n response three cheers were given for the Captain. He complimented them on their good behav 2 CONC ior and said the company was the best he had ever brought across the sea. "We will marry non 2 CONC e but Mormons." And he would say "He will carry none but Mormons." On June 30th, the steame 2 CONC r Honor towed the Horizon to the Constitution wharf. They were about forty eight hours to mo 2 CONC ve their baggage and leave the Vessel. Cost of steamship ticket was on the Horizon was 31 En 2 CONC glish pounds. Grandfather's family paid 25 pounds at the start of the journey and balance pa 2 CONC id to the Perpetual Emigrating Fund. Robert and family arrived in Boston in 1856, but as the 2 CONC ir funds were exhausted they had to stay in Boston for three years. 2 CONT 2 CONT During this time Robert sent for Ann Wilson. When she arrived from England they were marrie 2 CONC d May 9, 1858. In June 1859 they left Boston and arrived in Salt Lake City, Utah in Septembe 2 CONC r 1859. The family had two wagons and three ox teams. Robert had one ox team. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert was an acrobatic performer and an all around athlete and had done pugilist performanc 2 CONC e in England. This sort of work earned extra money for him in Boston, and they left for th 2 CONC e family across the plains. They needed another $100. this was the sum demanded by the US G 2 CONC overnment over what was considered the bare necessities to start on the overland trip. 2 CONT 2 CONT At this time, there was a fighter in Boston who had never been whipped. He offered $100 to a 2 CONC nyone who would and could whip him. Robert did challenge and fight and whip this fighter. B 2 CONC y this means the necessary amount of money was acquired and the little band of pioneers start 2 CONC ed across the plains. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert was a small built man and had worked with a circus in England. While in Boston he wor 2 CONC ked for the circus there and the circus management offered him a permanent place among thei 2 CONC r performers if he would stay. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert and Ann settled in the town of Draper, south of Salt Lake City. Their home was the fi 2 CONC rst of the old Fort and was situated on the north most corner. Their home was built of adobe 2 CONC s made by grandfather and his sons. Robert and his Stepfather, Jeremiah Stokes, made many o 2 CONC f the adobes with which to build the Church and School building. These adobes had the initia 2 CONC ls of Robert and his stepfather on the underside. Also, a fort wall was built to keep out th 2 CONC e Indians. This Fort was also a means of protection among all the new settlers in most part 2 CONC s of Western United States during the early days of its settlement. 2 CONT 2 CONT However, let it be known here, that there was only one Indian scare in Draper. Known then a 2 CONC s Little Willow and that was when some playful young warriors who were out for some fun of th 2 CONC eir own. this took place at the home of Robert and his stepfather. Robert was one of the gu 2 CONC ards who helped watch for approaching danger. 2 CONT 2 CONT In 1868 President Brigham Young of the L.D.S. Church, sent Robert back to pilot the last Cont 2 CONC ingent of Pioneers across the Plains. Just before inauguration of the transcontinental trai 2 CONC n service. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert was a mason by trade. Also, while in England, he was a stableman taking care of the h 2 CONC orses used by the Royal Family. these were blooded horses so he was small able to care for t 2 CONC his sort of work. 2 CONT 2 CONT Robert was working for the Overland Stage Company when he was kicked by one of the horses. H 2 CONC is eldest son, Franklin, then 12 years of age, was with him at the time. The accident happen 2 CONC ed at the point of the mountain where Utah and Salt Lake County joins. The animal which kick 2 CONC ed him was a stallion credited with a vicious temper. Frank ran for help some distance away 2 CONC . When they returned Robert was dead. He had received a ruptured blood vessel from the kic 2 CONC k and died of internal hemorrhage. My father Samuel Doyle was just 16 days old when Grandfat 2 CONC her died. 2 CONT 2 CONT His wife, Ann, continued to live on in the old home in Draper until a few years before her de 2 CONC ath at the home of her son Stephen in Salt Lake City. There she died in 1909, and was burie 2 CONC d beside her husband in Draper, Utah. 2 CONT 2 CONT This history was taken from the story of the Horizon, and 5th Handcart Company under Captai 2 CONC n Edward Martin in Church history office in Salt Lake City, Utah. 2 CONT 2 CONT When the ship Horizon left England 30 May 1856 a part of my destiny came with it. Presiden 2 CONC t Edward Martin was a passenger. Inked on the Ship's Logue was the above information. 2 CONT 2 CONT Information concerning my Grandfather Robert Walker. Information taken from Emigration Boo 2 CONC k No. 1045 page 29 of May 25, 1856. Ship Horizon listed on Page 29. Ship Logue book, Englis 2 CONC h mission book, 1856-1859. 2 CONT 2 CONT Jeremiah Stokes, age 39, laborer 2 CONT Fanny Walker, age 39, wife 2 CONT Robert Walker, age 18, minor 2 CONT Alvin Sylvester Stokes, born Boston, April 1856, died May 4, 1856 2 CONT Thomas, age 13, child 2 CONT Elizabeth, age 10, child 2 CONT Tamor, age 7, child 2 CONT Jeremiah, age 4, child 2 CONT Fanny, age 2, child 2 CONT 2 CONT it is also interesting to note that F.D. Richards, who was one to bid farewell to those on th 2 CONC e Ship Horizon, was a brother of my Great Grandmother. He was on a mission at that time. M 2 CONC y Great Grandmother was Maria Welthy Dewey Richards Wilcox. 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S4610@ 2 NOTE Walker Family Records. - records of Stephen W Walker, Mildred W McRae and Church library reco 3 CONC rds - information from story by Lydia Lila Walker Park 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 18:45:38 0 @I70@ INDI 1 NAME Reuben /Farnsworth/ 2 SURN Farnsworth 2 GIVN Reuben 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1 Apr 1787 2 PLAC Harvard, Worcester, Massachusetts 1 DEAT 2 DATE 30 Dec 1847 2 PLAC Plymouth, Marshall, Indiana 1 BURI 2 DATE 1847 2 PLAC Plymouth, Indiana 1 AFN 19BW-6F 1 _UID AAD7414E327ED5118AA400207804091891EC 1 FAMS @F45@ 1 FAMC @F93@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 19BW-6F 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5479@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Apr 2007 3 TIME 20:16:23 0 @I73@ INDI 1 NAME Mary Ann /West/ 2 SURN West 2 GIVN Mary Ann 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 2 Dec 1803 2 PLAC Great Yarmouth, Nrflk, Engl. 1 CHR 2 DATE 5 Dec 1803 2 PLAC Great Yarmouth, Nrflk, Engl. 1 DEAT 2 DATE 27 Mar 1850 2 PLAC Great Yarmouth, Nrflk, Engl. 1 AFN 1MW8-R6 1 _UID B0D7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918974C 1 FAMS @F95@ 1 FAMC @F96@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1MW8-R6 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 5 Apr 2007 3 TIME 22:23:08 0 @I99@ INDI 1 NAME Stephen Lynn /Williams/ 2 SURN Williams 2 GIVN Stephen Lynn 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 17 Apr 1961 2 PLAC Provo, Utah, Utah 1 _UID E4D7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918CB8C 1 FAMS @F4@ 1 FAMC @F126@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 CHAN 2 DATE 14 Apr 2008 3 TIME 18:04:58 0 @I103@ INDI 1 NAME Amy Dawn /Williams/ 2 SURN Williams 2 GIVN Amy Dawn 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 24 May 1979 2 PLAC Idaho Falls, Bonneville, Idaho 1 _UID ECD7414E327ED5118AA4002078040918D30C 1 FAMC @F4@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 CHAN 2 DATE 14 Apr 2008 3 TIME 17:59:38 0 @I114@ INDI 1 NAME Elizabeth "Betty" /Walker/ 2 SURN Walker 2 GIVN Elizabeth "Betty" 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1790 2 PLAC Bolsover, Derbyshire, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1855 2 PLAC Bolsover, Derbyshire, England 1 AFN BD0D-6T 1 _UID 02D8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918EA7B 1 FAMS @F71088@ 1 FAMC @F137@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: BD0D-6T 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 5 Apr 2007 3 TIME 21:35:37 0 @I132@ INDI 1 NAME William /Fitches/ 2 SURN Fitches 2 GIVN William 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 5 Mar 1850 2 PLAC Higham, Suffolk, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 7 Jan 1888 2 PLAC Middlestone Moor, Durham, England 1 AFN 19J8-2Q 1 _UID 26D8414E327ED5118AA40020780409180EBB 1 FAMS @F150@ 1 FAMC @F151@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 19J8-2Q 2 CONT 2 CONT !I have found two AFN: numbers 19J8-2Q and C7QF-M6 for this person. 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Apr 2007 3 TIME 20:27:41 0 @I134@ INDI 1 NAME Frances Francis /Wiseman/ 2 SURN Wiseman 2 GIVN Frances Francis 2 _MARNM Frances Wiseman Fitches 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 19 Mar 1852 2 PLAC Higham, Suffolk, England 1 CHR 2 DATE 2 May 1852 2 PLAC Gazeley, Suffolk, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 13 Jun 1932 2 PLAC Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA 1 BURI 2 DATE 16 Jun 1932 2 PLAC Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah 1 AFN 2W09-TG 1 REFN 2WO9-TG 1 _UID 2AD8414E327ED5118AA400207804091812FB 1 FAMS @F150@ 1 FAMC @F153@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 2W09-TG 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 8 Apr 2007 3 TIME 14:40:03 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE Documents and Settings\Owner\Desktop\genealogy pictures\Wiseman Frances_001.jpg 2 TITL 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM Y 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 0 @I138@ INDI 1 NAME Mary Ann /Canham/ 2 SURN Canham 2 GIVN Mary Ann 2 _MARNM Mary Ann Canham Terrell 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 18 Jan 1838 2 PLAC Wenhaston, Suffolk Co., England 1 CHR 2 DATE 18 Feb 1838 2 PLAC Wenhaston Parish, Suffolk, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 29 Apr 1890 2 PLAC Spennymoor, Durham, England 1 AFN B7N7-6V 1 _UID 32D8414E327ED5118AA40020780409181A7B 1 FAMS @F158@ 1 FAMC @F21@ 1 BIRT 2 DATE 26 Jan 1848 2 PLAC Lowestoff, Suffolk, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 29 Apr 1889 2 PLAC England 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: B7N7-6V 2 CONT 2 CONT !MARYANN HAD HER FIRST CHILD OUT OF WEDLOCK, HIS NAME WAS FREDRICK WALTER 2 CONT CANHAM. 2 CONT THE STORY IS THAT HER FUTURE HUSBAND WAS A FISHERMAN AND WAS LOST AT SEA, HE DID 2 CONT NOT KNOW THERE WAS A CHILD ON THE WAY. 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Apr 2007 3 TIME 10:51:15 0 @I143@ INDI 1 NAME Sarah /Balls/ 2 SURN Balls 2 GIVN Sarah 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT 1816 2 PLAC Laxfield, Suffolk, England 1 _UID 3CD8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918241B 1 FAMS @F165@ 1 FAMC @F166@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 CHAN 2 DATE 8 Apr 2007 3 TIME 14:25:44 0 @I144@ INDI 1 NAME John /Tyrrell-Tyrell/ 2 SURN Tyrrell-Tyrell 2 GIVN John 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT 1797 2 PLAC England 1 _UID 3ED8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918263B 1 FAMS @F168@ 1 FAMC @F169@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 8 Apr 2007 3 TIME 14:29:38 0 @I189@ INDI 1 NAME Jeremiah /Stokes-Stocks/ 2 SURN Stokes-Stocks 2 GIVN Jeremiah 2 _AKA Jeremiah Stocks 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 9 Nov 1819 2 PLAC Bolsover, Derbyshire, England 1 CHR 2 DATE 20 Apr 1821 2 PLAC Bolsover, Derby, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1 Jul 1875 2 PLAC Draper, Salt Lake Co., Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 5 Jul 1875 2 PLAC Draper Cemetery, Draper, Salt Lake, Utah 1 AFN 1M7Z-5W 1 _UID 98D8414E327ED5118AA400207804091880DB 1 FAMS @F76@ 1 FAMC @F219@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1M7Z-5W 2 CONT 2 CONT Occupation: Mason and Chimney Sweep 2 CONT 2 CONT American names: Stocks - Dwellers in or near a monastery or other holy place 2 CONT 2 CONT 1851 England Census Record about Jeremiah Stokes 2 CONT Name: Jeremiah Stokes 2 CONT Age: 32 2 CONT Estimated birth year: abt 1819 2 CONT Relation: Head 2 CONT Household: View other family members 2 CONT Gender: Male 2 CONT Where born: Bolsover, Derbyshire, England 2 CONT Civil parish: Bolsover 2 CONT County/Island: Derbyshire 2 CONT Country: England 2 CONT Source information: HO107/2148 2 CONT Registration district: Chesterfield 2 CONT Sub-registration district: Bolsover 2 CONT ED, institution, or vessel: 3b 2 CONT Folio: 63 2 CONT Page: 16 2 CONT Household schedule number: 63 2 CONT GSU Number: 87781 2 CONT 2 CONT Jeremiah's family Bible in poss of his grandson, Wayne Stokes, in Texas 2 CONT 2 CONT Draper Cemetery: "Stokes, Jeremiah, b. 1853, d. 1912, Father, Shared Headstone with A-146-1 ( 2 CONC Josephine O. Stokes), A-146-2 (Emma Stokes), A-146-3 (Carline Stokes), A-146-4 (Arthur Stokes 2 CONC ), A-146-6 (Richard Stokes), A-146-7 (Baby Stokes) & A-146-8 (Rapheal Stokes), CR indicate va 2 CONC riant spelling "Jeramiah Stokes", bur. A-146-5" 2 CONT 2 CONT MORMON IMMIGRATION INDEX - VOYAGES 2 CONT Ship: Horizon 2 CONT Date of Departure: 25 May 1856 Port of Departure: Liverpool, England 2 CONT LDS Immigrants: 856 Church Leader: Edward Martin 2 CONT Date of Arrival: 30 Jun 1856 Port of Arrival: Boston, Massachusetts 2 CONT Sources: BMR, pp. 151=188 (FHL #025,691) 2 CONT 2 CONT MORMON PIONEER OVERLAND TRAVEL, 1847–1868 2 CONT Stocks [or Stokes], Jeremiah 2 CONT Birth Date: May 1819 2 CONT Death Date: Unknown 2 CONT Gender: Male 2 CONT Age: 39 2 CONT Company: James S. Brown Company (1859) 2 CONT Family that came with him: 2 CONT Stokes (or Stocks), Elizabeth 15 2 CONT Stokes (or Stocks), Fanny 5 2 CONT Stokes (or Stocks), Fanny [or Frances] 50 2 CONT Stokes (or Stocks), Jeremiah 8 2 CONT Stokes (or Stocks), Robert Walker (24) 2 CONT Stokes (or Stocks), Tamar 11 2 CONT Stokes (or Stocks), Thomas 16 2 CONT 2 CONT BURIAL: 2 CONT Burial Information: Stokes, Jeremiah 2 CONT Birth: 11/9/1819 2 CONT Death: 7/2/1875 2 CONT Burial: 0/0/0 [ 5 Jul 1875] 2 CONT Place of Birth: [England] 2 CONT Place of Death: [Draper, Salt Lake, Utah] 2 CONT Cause of Death: 2 CONT Grave Location: Draper Corporation Cemetery 2 CONT A-12-2 2 CONT Comments: Shared Monument with A-12-3 [Faney W. Stokes], Mormon Pioneer marker 2 CONT 2 CONT SOURCES: 2 CONT A. From Winona S. Erickson's records/research 2 CONT 1. FHL Film #087781, 1851 Census, Bolsover 2 CONT 2. FHL Film #025905, Draper Ward Rec 2 CONT 3. FHL Film #183406, Endow for Living, 1868-1872 2 CONT 4. FHL Film 497384, Bolsover BT's 2 CONT 5. copy of Marr cert. - Ken Erickson, SLC, UT 2 CONT 6. FHL Film #170493 MT Slgs, ch to par, 1888-1894 2 CONT 7. FHL Film #188405, EH End for Lvg, 1864-1868 2 CONT 8. FHL Film #170439, MT End for Dead, incl 1891 2 CONT 9. FHL Film #183404, End for Lvg, EH, 1861-1864 2 CONT 10.FHL Film #170386, MT bap for dead, 1891 2 CONT 11.FHL Film #821690, Index of deaths from Deseret News 2 CONT B. Ord. dates 2 CONT 1. family records 2 CONT 2. IGI 2 CONT C. Immigration - church CD 2 CONT D. Mormon Overland Travel - lds.org, church history 2 CONT E. Burial 2 CONT 1. Family Records 2 CONT 2. http://history.utah.gov/apps/burials/execute/viewburial?cemeteryid=SL4900&id=373 2 CONT 2 CONT Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah 2 CONT Genealogies and Biographies 2 CONT S 2 CONT Privates 2 CONT 2 CONT Married Fanny Walker in 1836, Bolsover, Eng. (daughter of Robert and Elizabeth, who came to U 2 CONC tah with husband). She was born March 15, 1819. Their children: Robert, m. Ann Wilson; John 2 CONC , died; Thomas, m. Ellen L. Canfield; Elizabeth; Tamer, m. John McGuire; William, d. infant 2 CONC ; Jeremiah, m. Josephine Olsen; Fanny; Alvin Sylvester, d. infant; Sarah Ann, m. Lewis Andrus 2 CONC . Family home Draper, Utah. 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S4610@ 2 NOTE Walker Family Records. - Stephen W Walker family records in possession of Mildred Walker McRa 3 CONC e 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 15:34:38 0 @I195@ INDI 1 NAME Patience /Bent/ 2 SURN Bent 2 GIVN Patience 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE from 28 Aug 1670 to 28 Apr 1676 2 PLAC Sudbury, Middlesex, Massachusetts 1 DEAT 2 DATE 23 Feb 1731/1732 2 PLAC Sudbury, Middlesex, Massachusetts 1 AFN G4F0-TD 1 _UID A4D8414E327ED5118AA40020780409188C9B 1 FAMS @F225@ 1 FAMC @F226@ 1 NOTE REFN: 8WHW-VV 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: G4F0-TD 2 CONT REFN: 8WHW-VV 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S4@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 13 May 2007 3 TIME 00:18:31 0 @I203@ INDI 1 NAME William Reynolds /Terry/ 2 SURN Terry 2 GIVN William Reynolds 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 2 Jun 1812 2 PLAC Exeter, Washington, Rhode Island, USA 1 DEAT 2 DATE 30 May 1868 2 PLAC St. George, Washington, Utah, USA 1 BURI 2 DATE 3 Jun 1868 2 PLAC St. George, Wash, Utah 1 AFN 1D36-BP 1 _UID B4D8414E327ED5118AA40020780409189C9B 1 FAMS @F40@ 1 FAMC @F232@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1D36-BP 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 5 Apr 2007 3 TIME 20:06:54 0 @I204@ INDI 1 NAME Flora Maria /Frampton/ 2 SURN Frampton 2 GIVN Flora Maria 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 22 Dec 1869 2 PLAC Pleasant Grove, Utah, Utah 1 DEAT 2 DATE 18 Jul 1946 2 PLAC Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 22 Jul 1946 2 PLAC Sandy, Salt Lake, Utah 1 AFN 1FVT-9L 1 _UID B6D8414E327ED5118AA40020780409189EBB 1 FAMS @F84@ 1 FAMC @F36@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 BURI 2 DATE 22 Jul 1946 2 PLAC Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., Utah 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1FVT-9L 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 SOUR @S4610@ 2 NOTE Walker Family Records. - records from Sylvester Walker and Effie Walker Irish and Naomi Walke 3 CONC r Brady 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 22:39:44 0 @I211@ INDI 1 NAME Robert Sylvester /Walker/ 2 SURN Walker 2 GIVN Robert Sylvester 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 19 Feb 1861 2 PLAC Draper, Salt Lake Co., Utah 1 DEAT 2 DATE 21 Jun 1927 2 PLAC Union, Salt Lake Co., Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 27 Jun 1927 2 PLAC Sandy Cemetery, Sandy, Salt Lake, Utah 1 AFN 1KF1-ZN 1 _UID C4D8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918AC9B 1 FAMS @F84@ 1 FAMC @F52@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1KF1-ZN 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 SOUR @S5107@ 2 NOTE Ruth Vincent Gritton, Gritton Family Records. - records in possession of Sylvester Walker, Mi 3 CONC dvale, Utah, copied from archive record submitted by Mrs. Raymond C. Wolters, LaPuente, CA 3 CONC . Records also from Effie Walker Irish and Naomi Walker Brady 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 18:43:14 0 @I212@ INDI 1 NAME Robert /Tyrrell-Tyrell/ 2 SURN Tyrrell-Tyrell 2 GIVN Robert 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT 1812 2 PLAC Westleton, Suffolk, England 1 CHR 2 DATE 19 Apr 1812 2 PLAC Westleton, Suffolk, England 1 _UID C6D8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918AEBB 1 FAMS @F165@ 1 FAMC @F168@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 8 Apr 2007 3 TIME 14:26:28 0 @I218@ INDI 1 NAME William /Stocks/ 2 SURN Stocks 2 GIVN William 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 26 Jun 1786 2 PLAC RolsoverHeath, Derbyshire, England 1 CHR 2 DATE 26 Jun 1786 2 PLAC Heath, Drbysh, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1860 2 PLAC Bolsover, Derbyshire, England 1 BURI 2 DATE 25 Jan 1860 2 PLAC Near Bolsover, Derbyshire, England 1 AFN BD0D-5N 1 _UID D2D8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918BA7B 1 FAMS @F219@ 1 FAMC @F244@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: BD0D-5N 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: BD0D-3B 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 15:35:35 0 @I224@ INDI 1 NAME John /Wilson/, Jr. 2 SURN Wilson 2 GIVN John 2 NSFX , Jr. 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 18 Apr 1791 2 PLAC Nathan, Nottingham, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 17 Sep 1846 2 PLAC England 1 AFN BGPS-SW 1 _UID DED8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918C63B 1 FAMS @F241@ 1 FAMC @F252@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: BGPS-SW 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 20:22:45 0 @I227@ INDI 1 NAME Mary /Meaking/ 2 SURN Meaking 2 GIVN Mary 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 7 Jul 1789 2 PLAC Rotherham, Yorkshire, England 1 AFN BGPS-T3 1 _UID E4D8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918CC9B 1 FAMS @F241@ 1 FAMC @F255@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: BGPS-T3 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 20:24:40 0 @I228@ INDI 1 NAME Joseph /Goodenow/ 2 SURN Goodenow 2 GIVN Joseph 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1 Dec 1674 2 PLAC Sudbury, Middlesex, Ma, Sudbury, London, England 1 CHR 2 PLAC Sudbury, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USA 1 DEAT 2 DATE 3 Sep 1758 2 PLAC Sudbury, Middlesex, Massachusetts, USA 1 BURI 2 DATE Sep 1758 1 AFN 1LP5-FC 1 _UID E6D8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918CEBB 1 FAMS @F225@ 1 FAMC @F246@ 1 NOTE REFN: 1LP5-FC 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 1LP5-FC 2 CONT REFN: 1LP5-FC 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 1LP5-FC 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S4@ 1 SOUR @S8@ 1 SOUR @S9@ 2 PAGE Batch #: 5019939, Sheet #: 6, Source Call #: 1553737 1 SOUR @S10@ 2 PAGE Batch #: 5019939, Sheet #: 6, Source Call #: 1553737 1 SOUR @S11@ 2 PAGE Film #: 170777, Page #: 116, Ordinance #: 2710 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S1311@ 2 PAGE Batch #: 5019939, Sheet #: 6, Source Call #: 1553737 1 SOUR @S1312@ 2 PAGE Batch #: 5019939, Sheet #: 6, Source Call #: 1553737 1 SOUR @S1356@ 2 PAGE Film #: 170777, Page #: 116, Ordinance #: 2710 1 CHAN 2 DATE 7 Apr 2007 3 TIME 11:51:57 0 @I231@ INDI 1 NAME Thomas /Jones/ 2 SURN Jones 2 GIVN Thomas 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 13 Feb 1812/1813 2 PLAC Pentra Farm, Ystradyfodwg, Glmrgn, Wales 1 CHR 2 DATE 25 Apr 1813 2 PLAC Ystradyfodwy Parish, Glamorgan, Wales 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1 Nov 1871 2 PLAC Ystrad Rhondda, Glmrgn., Wales 1 BURI 2 PLAC Nebo Baptish Church, Glmrgn, Wales 1 AFN 19NQ-QJ 1 _UID ECD8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918D41B 1 FAMS @F256@ 1 FAMC @F257@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 19NQ-QJ 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 2 Sep 2007 3 TIME 22:32:56 0 @I232@ INDI 1 NAME Elizabeth /Jenkins/ 2 SURN Jenkins 2 GIVN Elizabeth 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 6 Nov 1812 2 PLAC Ton Farm, Ystradyfodwg, Glmrgn., Wales 1 CHR 2 DATE 3 Jan 1813 2 PLAC Ystradyfodwy, Glmrgn., Wales 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1 Mar 1889 2 PLAC Malad, Oneida, Idaho 1 BURI 2 DATE 4 Mar 1889 2 PLAC Malad Cemetery, Malad, Oneida, Idaho 1 AFN 19NQ-RP 1 _UID EED8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918D63B 1 FAMS @F256@ 1 FAMC @F258@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 19NQ-RP 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S2172@ 2 PAGE Film #: 537130 1 CHAN 2 DATE 7 Apr 2007 3 TIME 12:49:40 0 @I238@ INDI 1 NAME Elizabeth /Calver/ 2 SURN Calver 2 GIVN Elizabeth 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT 1811 2 PLAC Wenhaston, Suffolk, England 1 _UID FAD8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918E2FB 1 FAMS @F21@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Apr 2007 3 TIME 10:45:56 0 @I240@ INDI 1 NAME Laura /Farnsworth/ 2 SURN Farnsworth 2 GIVN Laura 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 11 Jan 1806 2 PLAC Milton, Grand Isle, Vermont 1 DEAT 2 DATE 24 Jun 1881 2 PLAC Pleasant Grove, Utah, Utah 1 BURI 2 PLAC Pleasant Grove, Utah, Utah 1 AFN 3KDJ-FX 1 _UID FED8414E327ED5118AA4002078040918E63B 1 FAMS @F14@ 1 FAMC @F45@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 3KDJ-FX 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Apr 2007 3 TIME 20:15:36 0 @I245@ INDI 1 NAME Thomas /Mountford/ 2 SURN Mountford 2 GIVN Thomas 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT 1543 2 PLAC Muchli, Wenlock, Shropshire, England 1 AFN G4W6-0C 1 _UID 08D9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918F1EA 1 FAMS @F269@ 1 FAMC @F271@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 11 Mar 2005 3 TIME 20:23:26 0 @I253@ INDI 1 NAME Nathaniel /Frampton/ 2 SURN Frampton 2 GIVN Nathaniel 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 5 Mar 1798 2 PLAC Derry Township, Mifflin, Pennsylvania 1 DEAT 2 DATE Sep 1883 2 PLAC Richmond, Ray Co., Missouri 1 AFN 2DZ8-VG 1 _UID 18D9414E327ED5118AA400207804091801EA 1 FAMS @F14@ 1 FAMC @F223@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Invalid endowment temple code: NauvOO. 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 2DZ8-VG 2 CONT Invalid endowment temple code: NauvOO. 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 2DZ8-VG 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 7 Apr 2007 3 TIME 11:29:53 0 @I265@ INDI 1 NAME Emma /Webb/ 2 SURN Webb 2 GIVN Emma 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 23 Dec 1817 2 PLAC Moore Green, Nottingham, England 1 CHR 2 DATE 1 Jan 1818 2 PLAC St. Mary's Parish, Nottingham, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 17 Oct 1862 1 BURI 2 DATE 23 Oct 1862 2 PLAC St. John's Church 1 AFN 1TC7-PG 1 _UID 30D9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918196A 1 FAMS @F60@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1TC7-PG 2 CONT of Eastwood, Or More Green, Notts., England 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 18:47:52 0 @I270@ INDI 1 NAME Joseph /Wilson/ 2 SURN Wilson 2 GIVN Joseph 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 24 Dec 1813 2 PLAC Brinsley, Greasely, Nottingham, England 1 CHR 2 PLAC Near Brinsley, Nottingham, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 16 Jul 1896 1 AFN 1TC7-N9 1 _UID 3AD9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918230A 1 FAMS @F60@ 1 FAMC @F241@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1TC7-N9 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 18:49:02 0 @I272@ INDI 1 NAME Nancy Agnes Elizabeth /Kelly/ 2 SURN Kelly 2 GIVN Nancy Agnes Elizabeth 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1750 2 PLAC New Jersey 1 DEAT 2 DATE ABT 1810 2 PLAC Lewistown, Mifflin, Pennsylvania 1 BURI 2 PLAC Int. Lewiston, Miffl., Pennsylvania 1 AFN 2DZ8-5T 1 _UID 3ED9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918274A 1 FAMS @F223@ 1 FAMC @F299@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 2DZ8-5T 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 14 May 2005 3 TIME 19:49:56 0 @I279@ INDI 1 NAME Mary Allen /Phillips/ 2 SURN Phillips 2 GIVN Mary Allen 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 11 Mar 1815 2 PLAC Wakefield, Washington, Rhode Island, USA 1 DEAT 2 DATE 9 Oct 1898 2 PLAC Draper, Salt Lake, Utah, USA 1 BURI 2 DATE 11 Oct 1898 2 PLAC Draper, Sl, Utah, USA 1 AFN 1D36-CV 1 _UID 4CD9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918352A 1 FAMS @F40@ 1 FAMC @F304@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1D36-CV 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 7 Apr 2007 3 TIME 19:14:32 0 @I280@ INDI 1 NAME Sarah Ann /Ashton/ 2 SURN Ashton 2 GIVN Sarah Ann 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 8 Aug 1848/1849 2 PLAC Billing, Upholland, Lancashire, Eng 1 CHR 2 DATE 1853 2 PLAC St Lewis 1 DEAT 2 DATE 25 Oct/Nov 1911 2 PLAC Portage B-Eld Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 30 Oct 1911 2 PLAC Portage Cemetery, Portage, Box Elder, Utah 1 AFN 2H2L-HC 1 _UID 4ED9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918374A 1 FAMS @F305@ 1 FAMC @F308@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE REFN: 2H2L-HC 2 CONT 2 CONT REFN: 2H2L-HC 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 2H2L-HC 2 CONT REFN: 2H2L-HC 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 2H2L-HC 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S5@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S49@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 17 May 2007 3 TIME 15:10:14 0 @I281@ INDI 1 NAME Robert A /Ashton/ Jr 2 SURN Ashton 2 GIVN Robert A 2 NSFX Jr 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 15 Aug/Mar 1827 2 PLAC Upholland, Lancashire, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 28 Dec 1916/1917 2 PLAC Muddy Creek, Woodruff, Oneida, Idaho 1 BURI 2 DATE 30 Dec 1916/1917 2 PLAC Portage, Box Elder, Utah 1 AFN 2585-HH 1 _UID 50D9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918396A 1 FAMS @F308@ 1 FAMC @F315@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Name Suffix: Jr 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 2585-HH 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S5@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S4@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 23 Oct 2006 3 TIME 13:37:58 0 @I283@ INDI 1 NAME Elizabeth Betty /Harvey/ 2 SURN Harvey 2 GIVN Elizabeth Betty 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1790 2 PLAC Gedling, Nottinghamshire, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 1865 2 PLAC England 1 BURI 2 DATE 19 Nov 1865 2 PLAC Heath, Derbyshire, England 1 AFN BD0D-4H 1 _UID 54D9414E327ED5118AA40020780409183DAA 1 FAMS @F219@ 1 FAMC @F318@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: BD0D-4H 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 Jun 2007 3 TIME 15:35:11 0 @I306@ INDI 1 NAME Matthew /Colby/ 2 SURN Colby 2 GIVN Matthew 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1530 2 PLAC of Poynton, Sempringham, Lincolnshire, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 10 Oct 1591 2 PLAC Horbling, Lincoln, Eng 1 BURI 2 DATE 10 Oct 1591 2 PLAC St. Andrew, Sempringham, Lincoln, England 1 AFN K6LX-G4 1 _UID 82D9414E327ED5118AA40020780409186B8A 1 FAMS @F341@ 1 FAMC @F342@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 11 Mar 2005 3 TIME 20:26:13 0 @I307@ INDI 1 NAME Mary /Colby/ 2 SURN Colby 2 GIVN Mary 2 NPFX Mrs. 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT 1532 2 PLAC Pointon, Lincoln, England 1 DEAT 2 DATE 18 Dec 1591 2 PLAC Horbling, Lincoln, England 1 BURI 2 DATE 18 Dec 1591 2 PLAC Sempringham, Lincoln, England 1 AFN K6LX-H9 1 _UID 84D9414E327ED5118AA40020780409186DAA 1 FAMS @F341@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: K6LX-H9 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 22 May 2005 3 TIME 19:11:39 0 @I312@ INDI 1 NAME John /Axtell-Axstyl/ 2 SURN Axtell-Axstyl 2 GIVN John 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1561 2 PLAC Berkhampstead, Hertford, England 1 AFN XPKZ-FD 1 _UID 8ED9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918774A 1 FAMS @F348@ 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: XPKZ-FD 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 6 May 2005 3 TIME 19:44:32 0 @I333@ INDI 1 NAME Charles /Bill/ 2 SURN Bill 2 GIVN Charles 2 NPFX Mrs. 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE ABT 1530 2 PLAC of London, London, England 1 AFN MTTP-WH 1 _UID B8D9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918A1EA 1 FAMS @F367@ 1 NOTE Name Prefix: Mrs. 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: MTTP-WH 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 1 May 2005 3 TIME 19:56:48 0 @I334@ INDI 1 NAME Samuel /Frampton/ 2 SURN Frampton 2 GIVN Samuel 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 1748 2 PLAC Trenton, Beaver, New Jersey 1 DEAT 2 DATE Jan 1798 2 PLAC Int. Lewiston, Mifflin Co, Pennsylvania 1 BURI 2 PLAC Int., Lewiston, Mifflin, Pennsylvania 1 AFN 2DZ8-4N 1 _UID BAD9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918A30A 1 FAMS @F223@ 1 FAMC @F368@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 2DZ8-4N 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 13 May 2007 3 TIME 07:41:25 0 @I349@ INDI 1 NAME Elena Valeria /Hemenway/ 2 SURN Hemenway 2 GIVN Elena Valeria 1 SEX F 1 BIRT 2 DATE 23 Nov 1840 2 PLAC Gilsum, Chshr, Keene, New Hampshire 1 DEAT 2 DATE 26 Feb 1922 2 PLAC Downey, Woodlawn, Bannock Co, Idaho 1 BURI 2 DATE 29 Feb 1922 2 PLAC Cambridge Cemetery, Downey, Bannock, Idaho 1 AFN 1L47-P8 1 _UID D8D9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918C1EA 1 FAMS @F13@ 1 FAMC @F378@ 1 NOTE Last Name: WAKLEY First Name: Eleana Valeria Hemenway Age: Gender: F Cemetery: Cambirdge,Idah 2 CONC o Birth Date: 23 NOV 1840 Birth Place: Gilsum,Chshr.,N.H. Date Died: 26 FEB 1922 Death Place 2 CONC : Downey,Idaho Father: Luther Singleton HEMENWAY Mother: Elvira DAY Spouse: John Nelson WAKLE 2 CONC Y, 16 Nov 1856, S.L.C., Utah Sources: ANCESTRAL FILE CEM. RECORD Remarks 2 CONT 2 CONT 2 CONT REFN: 1L47-P8 2 CONT DOWNEY AND BEYOND by DARREL LA MAR WAKLEY 2 CONT http://www.ida.net/users/lamar/titelofbook.html 2 CONT CHAPTER 4 PART 2 2 CONT LIFE HISTORY OF ELENA VALERIA HEMENWAY WAKLEY 2 CONT Daughter of Luther Hemenway and Elvira Day Hemenway 2 CONT Elena Valeria Hemenway was born in Gilsun New Hampshire on 23 November 1840. The family move 2 CONC d to Daysville Illinois. They remained at Daysville for 7 years, living with Luther's brothe 2 CONC r Luke Hemenway in their beautiful home. Luther gave up the beautiful home, work shop, and de 2 CONC ar friends and he with his wife Elvira and small children, 4 girls and 2 boys, and a baby onl 2 CONC y 7 Months old journeyed west. Elena at this time was 10 years old when on the trail. They ha 2 CONC d started to the West, her father in charge of the caravan. They stopped to help a pioneer b 2 CONC y the name of Mayfield who had sick oxen. Father Luther Hemenway said, No neighbor of mine i 2 CONC s going to be left alone in the wilderness." Poor Elvira huddled her small family about he 2 CONC r - "We shall all be massacred by the Indians" she said, When a band of roving Indians came a 2 CONC long and circled them. The pesky hired man grabbed Elena's arm, and taking her to the bigges 2 CONC t buck indicated he could take her. As long as she lived her flesh would creep, when she thou 2 CONC ght of the experience she had as a little girl - Father Luther rebuked the hired man severel 2 CONC y and motioned to the Indian, that the hired man was touched in the head. It took 6 month's j 2 CONC ourney to reach Great Salt Lake on October 6,1851. Soon after arriving in Salt Lake City, Lac 2 CONC honus, a brother of Elena fell into a tub of hot molasses and was so seriously burned in hi 2 CONC s lower parts they did not think he could walk again if he recovered. Father Luther Hemenwa 2 CONC y gave his a blessing and promised through the spirit "That he would run with the swiftest.' 2 CONC " The family was organized and with constant care and massaging the promise in the blessing w 2 CONC as fulfilled. Elena a growing girl, experienced her first love with a separation - both snowb 2 CONC ound with occupation to take him away - and no word could he exchanged. Then you dreamed yo 2 CONC u were in some sort of trouble and John N. Wakley came to the rescue. After some months she w 2 CONC as married to John N. Wakley. Elena being trained as a Midwife was called on at all times t 2 CONC o help. This brought her continued joy. She would carry to the needy foods of her own preserv 2 CONC ing. John Smith in June 9, 1881, pronounced blessing on Elena Wakley - "Thy table shall be s 2 CONC pread with the bounties of the earth and no one shall be turned from your door hungry." Thi 2 CONC s part was taken literally. How many free meals did she serve, "I could not estimate, 50,00 2 CONC 0 and not half know the number," said her daughter Ida Wakley Brown'. Elena helping in confi 2 CONC nement (midwife) helped many of her own grand children. She had 84 grand children and 56 grea 2 CONC t grand children. She was really courageous. When Elena was seventy and past, she turned to g 2 CONC enealogy. She worked and prayed to get finances to help in this work. She gave all of these s 2 CONC ervices and sympathetic understanding in addition to rearing eleven children of her own, thre 2 CONC e sons and eight daughters. Death came February 26, 1922. Perhaps as long as the earth turn 2 CONC s on its axis the voices of your descendants will echo in these mountains. Your neighbors cal 2 CONC led you, "Mother of Marsh Valley". I think Elena you deserved that title. 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 1L47-P8 2 CONT REFN: 1L47-P8 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 1L47-P8 2 CONT 2 CONT REFN: 1L47-P8 2 CONT 2 CONT ID: 50916 2 CONT Name of Deceased: WAKLEY, ELENA W. 2 CONT Year: 1922 2 CONT Certificate Number: 037115 2 CONT County of Death: Bannock 2 CONT City: DOWNEY 2 CONT Date of Death: 02/26/1922 2 CONT Date of Birth: 11/23/1840 2 CONT 2 CONT ID: 50916 2 CONT Name of Deceased: WAKLEY, ELENA W. 2 CONT Year: 1922 2 CONT Certificate Number: 037115 2 CONT County of Death: Bannock 2 CONT City: DOWNEY 2 CONT Date of Death: 02/26/1922 2 CONT Date of Birth: 11/23/1840 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S5@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5487@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5479@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 SOUR @S5481@ 1 SOUR @S5488@ 1 SOUR @S5482@ 1 SOUR @S5483@ 1 SOUR @S5484@ 1 SOUR @S5243@ 1 SOUR @S4496@ 1 SOUR @S5270@ 1 SOUR @S5273@ 1 SOUR @S5272@ 1 SOUR @S5267@ 1 SOUR @S3209@ 1 SOUR @S5268@ 1 SOUR @S5266@ 1 SOUR @S5275@ 1 SOUR @S5274@ 1 SOUR @S4490@ 1 SOUR @S5095@ 1 SOUR @S1348@ 1 SOUR @S2326@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 26 Mar 2008 3 TIME 01:34:42 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM Y 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 1 OBJE 2 FORM jpg 2 FILE webpages\elenavaleria.jpg 2 TITL Elena Valeria Hemenway Wakley 2 NOTE 2 _SCBK Y 2 _PRIM N 2 _TYPE PHOTO 2 _SSHOW Y 0 @I360@ INDI 1 NAME Nathan /Wakley/ 2 SURN Wakley 2 GIVN Nathan 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 11 May 1776 2 PLAC Hebron, Washington Co., New York 1 DEAT 2 DATE ABT 1860/1861 2 PLAC Lombardy, Leeds Co., Ontario, Canada 1 AFN 1W15-MX 1 _UID EED9414E327ED5118AA4002078040918D74A 1 FAMS @F388@ 1 FAMC @F118626@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE Ancestral File Number: 1W15-MX 2 CONT 2 CONT 2 CONT Civil War Songs 2 CONT The Battle Cry of Freedom by George Frederick Root (1825-1895) Yes, we'll rally round the fl 2 CONC ag, boys, we'll rally once again, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom; We will rally from th 2 CONC e hillside, we'll gather from the plain, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom. CHORUS: The Unio 2 CONC n forever, hurrah, boys, hurrah! Down with the traitor and up with the star; While we rally r 2 CONC ound the flag, boys, rally once again, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom. We are springing t 2 CONC o the call of our brothers gone before, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom; And we'll fill th 2 CONC e vacant ranks with a million freemen more, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom. We will welco 2 CONC me to our numbers the loyal, true and brave, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom; And altho' t 2 CONC hey may be poor, not a man shall be a slave, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom. So we're sp 2 CONC ringing to the call from the East and from the West, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom; An 2 CONC d we'll hurl the rebel crew from the land we love the best, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedo 2 CONC m. * * * * * * * * * * Just Before the Battle, Mother by George Frederick Root (1825-1895) 2 CONC Just before the battle, mother, I am thinking most of you, While upon the field we're watch 2 CONC ing With the enemy in view. Comrades brave are 'round me lying, Filled with thoughts of hom 2 CONC e and God For well they know that on the morrow, Some will sleep beneath the sod. CHORUS: Far 2 CONC ewell, mother, you may never Press me to your breast again, But, oh, you'll not forget me, mo 2 CONC ther, If I'm numbered with the slain. Oh, I long to see you, mother, And the loving ones at h 2 CONC ome, But I'll never leave our banner, Till in honor I can come. Tell the traitors all aroun 2 CONC d you That their cruel words we know, In every battle kill our soldiers By the help they giv 2 CONC e the foe. Hark! I hear the bugles sounding, 'Tis the signal for the fight, Now, may God prot 2 CONC ect us, mother, As He ever does the right. Hear the "Battle-Cry of Freedom," How it swells up 2 CONC on the air, Oh, yes, we'll rally 'round the standard, Or we'll perish nobly there. 2 CONT 2 CONT MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA Words and Music by Henry Clay Work 2 CONT Bring the good ol' Bugle boys! We'll sing another song, Sing it with a spirit that will star 2 CONC t the world along, Sing it like we used to sing it fifty thousand strong, While we were march 2 CONC ing through Georgia 2 CONT Chorus: Hurrah! Hurrah! We bring the Jubilee. Hurrah! Hurrah! The flag that makes you free, S 2 CONC o we sang the chorus from Atlanta to the sea, While we were marching through Georgia. 2 CONT How the darkeys shouted when they heard the joyful sound, How the turkeys gobbled which our c 2 CONC ommissary found, How the sweet potatoes even started from the ground, While we were marchin 2 CONC g through Georgia. 2 CONT Chorus 2 CONT Yes and there were Union men who wept with joyful tears, When they saw the honored flag the 2 CONC y had not seen for years; Hardly could they be restrained from breaking forth in cheers, Whil 2 CONC e we were marching through Georgia. 2 CONT Chorus 2 CONT "Sherman's dashing Yankee boys will never make the coast!" So the saucy rebels said and 'twa 2 CONC s a handsome boast Had they not forgot, alas! to reckon with the Host While we were marchin 2 CONC g through Georgia. 2 CONT Chorus 2 CONT So we made a thoroughfare for freedom and her train, Sixty miles of latitude, three hundred t 2 CONC o the main; Treason fled before us, for resistance was in vain While we were marching throug 2 CONC h Georgia. 2 CONT Chorus 2 CONT 2 CONT GOOBER PEAS by A. Pindar Sittin' by the roadside on a summer's day, Chattin' with my messmat 2 CONC es, passing time away, Lying in the shadows, underneath the trees -- Goodness, how delicious 2 CONC , eating goober peas! CHORUS:Peas! Peas! Peas! Peas! Eating goober peas! Goodness, how delic 2 CONC ious, eating goober peas! When a horseman passes, the soldiers have a rule To cry out at the 2 CONC ir loudest "Mister, here's your mule!" But still another pleasure enchantinger than these I 2 CONC s wearing out your grinders, eating goober peas! CHORUS Just before the battle, the Genera 2 CONC l hears a row; He says "The Yanks are coming, I hear their rifles now"! He turns around in wo 2 CONC nder, and what do you think he sees? The Georgia Militia, eating goober peas! CHORUS I thin 2 CONC k my song had lasted almost long enough! The subject's interesting, but rhymes are mighty rou 2 CONC gh! I wish this war was over, when free from rags and fleas, We'd kiss our wives and sweethea 2 CONC rts and goble goober peas! CHORUS 2 CONT 2 CONT HERE'S YOUR MULE Words and music by C.D. Benson A Farmer came to camp one day, With milk an 2 CONC d eggs to sell, Upon a mule who oft would stray, To where no one could tell. The Farmer, tire 2 CONC d of his tramp, For hours was made the fool, By everyone he met in camp, With "Mister, here' 2 CONC s your mule." CHORUS: Come on, come on, Come on, old man, And don't be made a fool, By every 2 CONC one you meet in camp, With "Mister, here's your mule." His eggs and chickens all were gone B 2 CONC efore the break of day, The "Mule" was heard of all along, That's what the soldiers say. An 2 CONC d still he hunted all day long, Alas! the witless fool, Whil'st every man would sing the song 2 CONC Of "Mister, here's your mule." CHORUS The soldiers ran in laughing mood, On mischief wer 2 CONC e intent; They lifted "Muley" on their back, Around from tent to tent. Thro' this hole, and t 2 CONC hat, they push'd His head, -- And made a rule, To shout with humerous voices all, I say" "Mis 2 CONC ter, here's your mule!" CHORUS Alas! one day the mule was miss'd, Ah! who could tell his fa 2 CONC te? The Farmer like a man bereft, Search'd early and search'd late, And as he pass'd from cam 2 CONC p to camp With stricken face -- the fool Cried out to everyone he met, Oh! "Mister, where's m 2 CONC y Mule." CHORUS 2 CONT 2 CONT Civil War Songs 2 CONT The Battle Cry of Freedom by George Frederick Root (1825-1895) Yes, we'll rally round the fl 2 CONC ag, boys, we'll rally once again, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom; We will rally from th 2 CONC e hillside, we'll gather from the plain, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom. CHORUS: The Unio 2 CONC n forever, hurrah, boys, hurrah! Down with the traitor and up with the star; While we rally r 2 CONC ound the flag, boys, rally once again, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom. We are springing t 2 CONC o the call of our brothers gone before, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom; And we'll fill th 2 CONC e vacant ranks with a million freemen more, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom. We will welco 2 CONC me to our numbers the loyal, true and brave, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom; And altho' t 2 CONC hey may be poor, not a man shall be a slave, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom. So we're sp 2 CONC ringing to the call from the East and from the West, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedom; An 2 CONC d we'll hurl the rebel crew from the land we love the best, Shouting the battle-cry of Freedo 2 CONC m. * * * * * * * * * * Just Before the Battle, Mother by George Frederick Root (1825-1895) 2 CONC Just before the battle, mother, I am thinking most of you, While upon the field we're watch 2 CONC ing With the enemy in view. Comrades brave are 'round me lying, Filled with thoughts of hom 2 CONC e and God For well they know that on the morrow, Some will sleep beneath the sod. CHORUS: Far 2 CONC ewell, mother, you may never Press me to your breast again, But, oh, you'll not forget me, mo 2 CONC ther, If I'm numbered with the slain. Oh, I long to see you, mother, And the loving ones at h 2 CONC ome, But I'll never leave our banner, Till in honor I can come. Tell the traitors all aroun 2 CONC d you That their cruel words we know, In every battle kill our soldiers By the help they giv 2 CONC e the foe. Hark! I hear the bugles sounding, 'Tis the signal for the fight, Now, may God prot 2 CONC ect us, mother, As He ever does the right. Hear the "Battle-Cry of Freedom," How it swells up 2 CONC on the air, Oh, yes, we'll rally 'round the standard, Or we'll perish nobly there. 2 CONT 2 CONT MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA Words and Music by Henry Clay Work 2 CONT Bring the good ol' Bugle boys! We'll sing another song, Sing it with a spirit that will star 2 CONC t the world along, Sing it like we used to sing it fifty thousand strong, While we were march 2 CONC ing through Georgia 2 CONT Chorus: Hurrah! Hurrah! We bring the Jubilee. Hurrah! Hurrah! The flag that makes you free, S 2 CONC o we sang the chorus from Atlanta to the sea, While we were marching through Georgia. 2 CONT How the darkeys shouted when they heard the joyful sound, How the turkeys gobbled which our c 2 CONC ommissary found, How the sweet potatoes even started from the ground, While we were marchin 2 CONC g through Georgia. 2 CONT Chorus 2 CONT Yes and there were Union men who wept with joyful tears, When they saw the honored flag the 2 CONC y had not seen for years; Hardly could they be restrained from breaking forth in cheers, Whil 2 CONC e we were marching through Georgia. 2 CONT Chorus 2 CONT "Sherman's dashing Yankee boys will never make the coast!" So the saucy rebels said and 'twa 2 CONC s a handsome boast Had they not forgot, alas! to reckon with the Host While we were marchin 2 CONC g through Georgia. 2 CONT Chorus 2 CONT So we made a thoroughfare for freedom and her train, Sixty miles of latitude, three hundred t 2 CONC o the main; Treason fled before us, for resistance was in vain While we were marching throug 2 CONC h Georgia. 2 CONT Chorus 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S5@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 SOUR @S5477@ 1 SOUR @S5487@ 1 SOUR @S5478@ 1 SOUR @S5479@ 1 SOUR @S5480@ 1 SOUR @S5243@ 1 SOUR @S4496@ 1 SOUR @S5270@ 1 SOUR @S5273@ 1 SOUR @S5272@ 1 SOUR @S5267@ 1 SOUR @S3209@ 1 SOUR @S5268@ 1 SOUR @S5266@ 1 SOUR @S5275@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 26 Mar 2008 3 TIME 01:34:47 0 @I372@ INDI 1 NAME Luther Singleton /Hemenway/ 2 SURN Hemenway 2 GIVN Luther Singleton 1 SEX M 1 BIRT 2 DATE 10 Mar 1811 2 PLAC Boylston, Worcester, Massachusetts 1 DEAT 2 DATE 19 Jun 1891 2 PLAC St. George, Washington, Utah 1 BURI 2 DATE 21 Jun 1891 2 PLAC St. George, Washington, Utah 1 AFN 1RS8-06 1 _UID 06DA414E327ED5118AA4002078040918F0D9 1 FAMS @F378@ 1 FAMC @F400@ 2 _PRIMARY Y 1 NOTE REFN: 1RS8-06 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 1RS8-06 2 CONT REFN: 1RS8-06 2 CONT 2 CONT Ancestral File Number: 1RS8-06 1 SOUR @S1@ 1 SOUR @S5@ 1 SOUR @S2@ 1 SOUR @S4@ 1 SOUR @S3@ 1 SOUR @S72@ 1 CHAN 2 DATE 15 Aug 20