| Title |
Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Phillips Camp Biographies, Campkin to Curtis |
| Alternative Title |
Histories, Campkin-Curtis |
| Creator |
Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Phillips Camp |
| Contributor |
Clark, Sarah; Patillo, Esther Clark; Hayes, Ada Openshaw; Evans, Emma Foxley; Collett, A. T.; Williams, Bertha Cotterell; Odd, Maud M.; Tolton, J. F.; Herndon, Marjorie Crafts; Carter, Kate B.; Robins, Lola Curtis |
| Publisher |
Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
| Date |
1938-11-28; 1946; 1947 |
| Date Digital |
2013-04-18 |
| Temporal Coverage |
approximately 1938-1947 |
| Spatial Coverage |
Kaysville (Utah); Davis County (Utah); Cove Fort Historic Site (Utah) |
| Subject |
Frontier and pioneer life--Utah; Latter Day Saint pioneers--Emigration; Latter Day Saint women--Biography; Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Phillips Camp; Campkin, George, 1826-1892; Carbine, William Van Orden, 1835-1921; Checketts, Jane Smith Graham, 1861-1937; Clark, Eliza Smuin, 1840-1905; Clark, Harriet Smuin, 1836-1902; Clark, Michael, 1832-1891; Clift, Mary Ann Mayo, 1805-1887; Colemere, George, 1814-1879; Colemere, Rachel Burgess, 1823-1910; Collett, Elthura Roseltha Merrill, 1842-1915; Collett, Reuben, 1839-1920; Coombs, Elizabeth Walker, 1833-1906; Cotterell, Ellenor Taylor, 1819-1859; Cotterell, Sarah Jefferson, 1791-1888; Cotterell, William, 1790-1850; Court, Ann, 1818-1913; Court, William, 1812-1899; Cove Fort Historic Site (Utah); Crafts, David King, 1832-1916; Willden, Curtis; Curtis, Dorr Purdy, 1819-1904; Curtis, Edwin Morrell, 1841-1908; Curtis, Fannie Harrison, 1841-1929 |
| Keywords |
George Campkin; William Van Orden Carbine; Jane Smith Graham Checketts; Eliza Smuin Clark; Harriet Smuin Clark; Michael Clark; Mary Ann Mayo Clift; George Colemere; Rachel Burgess Colemere; Elthura Roseltha Merrill Collett; Reuben Collett; Elizabeth Walker Coombs; Ellenor Taylor Cotterell; Sarah Jefferson Cotterell; William Cotterell; Ann Court; William Court; Old Cove Fort; Curtis Willden; David King Crafts; Dorr Purdy Curtis; Edwin Morrell Curtis; Fannie Harrison Curtis |
| Description |
The Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Phillips Camp biographies (circa 1940-1974) is a collection of biographical sketches of Utah pioneers submitted to the Phillips Camp, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, in Kaysville, Utah. The individual sketches give insight into the socioeconomic status of European, as well New World, converts to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during the nineteenth century. They contain biographical and genealogical information, as well as descriptions of experiences crossing the Atlantic to America and traveling across the plains to Utah. Minute details of pioneering life in Davis County, Utah, and other frontier outposts of settlement are illuminated. Described also are individual occupations and survival techniques along with information on offices held in, and services to, the church and the community. Biographies include: George Campkin (1826-1892), 2 pages; William Van Orden Carbine (1835-n.d.), 16 pages; Jane Smith Graham Checketts (1861-1937), 2 pages; Eliza Smuin Clark (1840-1905), 2 pages; Harriet Smuin Clark (1836-1902), 3 pages; Michael Clark (1832-1891), 3 pages; Mary Ann Mayo Clift (1805-1887), 2 pages; George Colemere (1814-1879) and Rachel Burgess Colemere (1823-1910), 3 pages; Reuben Collett (1839-1920) and his wife Elthura Roseltha Merrill Collett (1842-1915), 4 pages; Elizabeth Walker Coombs (1833-1906), 3 pages; Ellenor Taylor Cotterell (1819-1859), 1 page; Sarah Jefferson Cotterell (1791-1888), 2 pages; William Cotterell (1790-1850), 1 page; Ann Court (1818-1913), 1 page; William Court (1812-1899), 2 pages; Old Cove Fort (Charles Willden family pioneers 1860), 2 pages; David King Crafts (1832-1916), 2 pages; Dorr Purdy Curtis (1819-1904), 1/2 page; Edwin Morrell Curtis (1841-1908), 3 pages; Fannie Harrison Curtis (1841-1929), 3 pages |
| Collection Number and Name |
Accn1439 Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Phillips Camp Biographies |
| Type |
Text |
| Genre |
Typescripts |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Language |
eng |
| Rights |
 |
| Relation |
http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv20547 |
| Scanning Technician |
Niko Amaya;Tim Arnold; Halima Noor |
| File Name |
1439_01_04.pdf |
| Conversion Specifications |
Original scanned on Epson Expression 10000 XL and saved as 400 ppi TIFF. Display image generated in CONTENTdm |
| ARK |
ark:/87278/s60k56s2 |
| Setname |
uum_dup |
| ID |
787042 |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s60k56s2 |
| Title |
page 1 |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Setname |
uum_dup |
| ID |
786983 |
| OCR Text |
Show LIFE SK~ TC H OF MI CHAE1 CLARK (Taken from sketch in Pione ers and Prominent Men of Utah)~ o/ Jc~f Jt~ s J "1...- ... ~ Michael Clark was born June lQ, 1832 at Chelmsford, IIS~X England, He was the son of William Clark and Mar y Sams . He married Harriet Smuin september 24 , 1859 at Salt Lake City. They had s even childres; Sarah Ann, Jas per , Mi chael, Esther, Hannah, Elizabeth and Edwar d . The family made their home south of Kaysville . Michael Clark also married Eliza Smuin October 27, 1861 at Salt Lake City. Their chruld re~ William Thomas , Sophia, David , Edel bert Edmond, Eliza Jane, Irintha Maria, Alice, John, Mary Ann, Charles, Sarah Lily, and Geo:pge. This famil y made their mome south of Kaysville by Haight 's Creek. Michael Clark came to Utah in 1859. He was a ward teachet school trustee, farmer, and stock r a iser . The following is a sketch of Michael Clark as told by hi s oldest daughter Sarah Ann C. Rudd . Michael Clark, my f ather , went to a tailor in London to have a suit made. That tailor was Aunt Harvey (Hannah Smuin Harvey) . Harriet Smuin, my mother , was her hel p, and father go t acquainted with her. Before any serious relations took p l ace between them, Harri et sailed for America. Father soon afte r started to earn a way to come to America. He hi "·~ d himself out to a f amily to work. After he ;' had worked some time the people he worked for decided t o come to America. He came with them and earned his way over by his s e rvic e , and then WOP ked hi s way across t he plains by being teamster for th·:.is family . It seems as if he d idn 't have any real har dship s, or I feel it would have been mentioned sometime . The pa t hs across the p l ains had been broken by earlier travelers , it being a bou t ten years since t he first i mmigrants came , according to all the dates we know at the p rvs ent . It was the year of 1859, August 16, tha t father c ame to Salt Lake city • When the company arrived with Harriet Smuin he fov .,~d her and soon |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s60k56s2/786983 |