| OCR Text |
Show forced to spend much time rnrnng out and avoiding the officers. He went to California to work again on the was sea but finally decided to turn penitentiary. Rawlins, Wyoming to work. Robert's took work them for a time to Provo, where two daughters were born: Susanna Katherine and Sarah Isabella. In Provo the older children attended the Brigham Young Academy with Dr. Karl G. Maeser as a teacher. Then himself in. He served six months in the they moved to Juab, Utah, where another daughter, Charlotte Anne, was born. About 1908, the Milne family built a small grocery store at the west end of their property in front of the cars passed in front of the store going Sandy or Midvale. There was a fifteen minute waiting period and often the passengers would come in to buy something or just to get warm by the friendly little house. The street to coal stove. From this home, the seven to make homes of their Olaus Johnson Brady); Mary Ann (m. F. E. Crouch); John Robert (m. Nancy O. Brady); David Hyrum (m. Sarah Ellen Jones); William Henry (m. Anna L. Rosengren); Susanna Katherine (m. Daniel Jones); Sarah Isabella (m. James M. Brady). He served two missions to Norway. Most of his life was spent farming and building houses for other people. He made his own adobes and bricks. Olaus and Anna Helena celebrated their in 1913. wedding children married and left Charles (rn. Martha R. own. golden Robert died in 1921 and Sushannah died in 1935. Violette S. Cutler Daisy M. Heugly ROBERT AND SUSHANNAH MILNE Robert and Sushannah Mounteer Milne time residents of East Midvale. were long They bought their home and small farm in 1875. It was situated on the east side of State Street near the Midvale Junction. The large was surrounded by lawns, fruit and shade trees, black currant bushes and vegetable gardens; also a 'barn with a hay loft, stalls for horses and cows, pig frame home Sushannah Milne pens and chicken coops. Robert Milne was born in Hawick, Scotland in 1846 to John and Mary Lindsay Milne. In 1857, his father went Robert Milne JOHN AND CHRISTI NA PEARSON LARSEN Larson, born in 1840, in Haslos, Sweden, was raised by Lutheran parents who taught him to read and to write. After the death of his mother, he was appren put up for Rangoon. Then he went to Calcutta to be superintendent of the engineering department of the East India Railway. In 1864, the family sailed to join their father. Robert got ashore, but the rest of the family could not leave the ship because of the plague in India. He stayed with his father while the rest of the family returned to England. to India to take out two sheet iron churches to the East India Company at Mulmain John near ticed to learn the blacksmith trade. When he moved to Gotheborg, he met the Mormon missionaries and joined the, LDS Church in 1862. He was sent on a mission to northern Sweden, where he met Christina Pearson who ' later became his wife. He sailed from Liverpool for America in 1869. He worked in Wyoming on construction for enough money to send for Christina. They were married in 1870 and lived in Salt Lake for two years, then moved to Sandy before finally making their home in East Midvale. He was a section foreman on the Union Pacific until 1876 when an accident crippled him. Determined to make a His father died there in 1865 and Robert returned to England and commenced railroading as an engineer. Sushannah Mounteer, born in Warmfield, England in was the eighth .child of John and Ann Fields Moun teer. She was sent to school and completed the ninth 1851 grade equivalent. Trips to the seashore were among the pleasant experiences of childhood. Robert and Sushannah England and Robert were came married in Normanton, America in 1871 to living to 36 for his family, he secured a set of blacksmith |