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Show her arms. Her second child her third child on was born in Salt Lake and the Jordan River in 1852. driven out of Nauvoo in 1846, resettling in Council Bluffs, Iowa. He was called on a mission to New York. Upon completing his mission, he met and married Theodosia They later moved to Lehi. Ann Morton, daughter of John and Lucy Gillet Morton of Rockland, New York. Harold H. Price HARMON CUTLER Harmon Cutler settled in West Jordan (Midvale) in the autumn of 1852. He was born in Dover, New York July 16, 1799. At an early age, he was apprenticed to learn the wagon making trade. He married Susannah Barton of Cobberskill, New York in 1825. Seven children were born to this couple there. joined the LDS Church and on August 6, 1840, took family and household goods in a wagon he had made and moved to Nauvoo. The journey took fifty days. About two months after they arrived, his wife, Susan nah, died. In 1842, he married Lucy Ann, daughter of David Pettigrew, by whom he had five children. He his When the Mormons was _ appointed a were Royal J; forced to leave Nauvoo, he Eleventh Company. He - captain of the refitted his wagon, sold most of his goods and loaded what he could take with his family in the wagon. There were 262 souls in his group with 63 wagons. All those who were able were Mississippi May 25, Cutle, Royal and his wife came to utah in 1852 with his father's company. They spent the winter in Salt Lake City, but by spring Royal homesteaded in West Jordan Mor (Midvale). They were blessed with five children ton Brigham, Theda Ann, Roeanna Viola, Sarah Lavina and Ida Estella. In 1860, Royal moved his family to Alpine, later to Kane County, where he spent the remainder of his life. expected to walk. They crossed the 1846 and journeyed across Iowa to Violette Council Bluffs. they moved on to the valley of Salt Lake, last of September 1852. He settled with his Sharp Cutler In June 1852 arriving the family on the was BENJAMIN LEWIS AND ANNA CUTLER Benjamin Lewis Cutler, son of Harmon and Susannah Barton Cutler, was born in 1835 in Amboy, New York. In 1852, Harmon Cutler emigrated to Utah with his family east side of the Jordan River. His land east of the river and west of Midvale. There were present Main Street two other families in this area in at and homesteaded spent the winter of 1851 here. settling in Midvale, Harmon's second wife, Lucy, not being contented, asked for a divorce and a property settlement, which was granted. In 1853, he married Elizabeth Shields, but she died a year later. He married Agnes McGregor in 1860 and they had five children. Their daughter Elizabeth (Mrs. Henry Williams) taught school for many years. "Aunt Agnes" lived at 322 North Main on 7th Avenue in Midvale. Her son, Youngs Cutler, lived next door to the time who had was land east of the Jordan River Ben married Anna Sarah Willes in 1864. Anna was born in 1843 in Kent, England, the daughter of William and Anne Kebbey Willes. Ben had was very prominent in early Midvale affairs. He of the first stores in Midvale and the front room used as a post office. He had the first and only was one telephone in Midvale at one time. He was the first Justice of the Peace. Ben and Anna her and worked for the smelter until his death. Harmon died in 1869 and on (Midvale). Soon after Harriet buried in the Cutler Hill were the parents of ten children Lillian Annie, Sarah - Kibbey, Benjamin Lewis, Geneva, Fredrick Willes, Grace Edith, George William, Royal Wallace, Morrel Clyde and Leon Raymond. Cemetery (later the U.S. Smelter property), now known His wife, Agnes, later as the Pioneer Cemetery. married Fred Cooper. Ben died in 1888 at the age of 53. He was buried in the Cemetery. When the property was bought by the U.S. Smelter, the bodies of Ben and his son Morrel Cutler Hill Violette S. Cutler ' Clyde, were moved to Midvale Cemetery. Nellie S. Cutler ROYAL JAMES AND THEODOSIA ANN CUTLER Royal James Cutler was born in son 1828 in New York, JOSIAH ARNOLD the of Harmon and Susannah Barton Cutler. He moved with his family to Nauvoo, Illinois in 1840. They Josiah Arnold were 20 born in 1801 in New York, the son of Enoch and Naomi Arnold. His first wife and two was |