| Title |
Daughters of Utah Pioneers, Phillips Camp Biographies, Allen to Barton |
| Alternative Title |
Histories, Allen-Barton |
| Creator |
Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Phillips Camp |
| Contributor |
Forbes, Ellen Anderson; Anderson, Pernilla J.; Cheney, Beatrice Barnes; Barker, Lucille H.; Cooley, Edna; Odd, Maud M.; Barnett, John; Barton, Joseph |
| Publisher |
Digitized by J. Willard Marriott Library, University of Utah |
| Date |
1927-12; 1937-10; 1938-05; 1938-05-05; 1942; 1947 |
| Date Digital |
2013-04-18 |
| Temporal Coverage |
approximately 1927-1947 |
| Spatial Coverage |
Kaysville (Utah); Davis County (Utah) |
| Subject |
Frontier and pioneer life--Utah; Latter Day Saint pioneers--Emigration; Latter Day Saint women--Biography; Daughters of Utah Pioneers. Phillips Camp; Allen, Mary Sims, 1847-1925; Allen, William, 1849-1928; Anderson, Anthone Edward, 1839-1906; Anderson, Pernilla J., 1853-1946; Ashton, Mary Bunting, 1820-1900; Ashton, Samuel, 1815-1890; Bair, John, 1810-1884; Bair, Lucinda Owens Tyler, 1812-1893; Barnes, Charles, 1848-1926; Barnes, Frances Fitzjohn Chapman, 1818-1876; Barnes, Mary Simmons Fanning, 1841-1932; Barnes, Rebecca Phillips, 1852-1906; Barnes, Rosa Ellen Webb, 1850-; Barnes, William, 1844-1904; Barnes, William Jefferies, 1820-1893; Barnett, James, 1812-1894; Barnett, Ellen Mary Bone, 1856-1921; Barnett, John, 1858-1953; Barney, Lewis, 1808-1895; Barton, Ellen A. Beazer, 1852-1918; Barton, John, 1840-1916; Barton, Joseph, 1848-1934; Barton, Peter, 1845-1912 |
| Keywords |
Mary Sims Allen; William Allen; Anthone Edward Anderson; Pernilla J. Anderson; Mary Bunting Ashton; Samuel Ashton; John Bair; Lucinda Owens Tyler Bair; Charles Barnes; Frances Fitzjohn Chapman Barnes; Mary Simmons Fanning Barnes; Rebecca Phillips Barnes; Rosa Ellen Webb Barnes; William Barnes; William Jefferies Barnes; James Barnett; Ellen Mary Bone Barnett; John Barnett; Lewis Barney; Ellen A. Beazer Barton; John Barton; Joseph Barton; Peter Barton |
| 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: Mary Sims Allen (1847-1925), 1 page; William Allen (1849-1928), 2 pages; Anthone Edward Anderson (1839-1906), 2 pages; Pernilla J. Anderson (1850-n.d.), 5 pages; Mary Bunting Ashton (1820-1900), 1 page; Samuel Ashton (1815-1890), 1 page; John Bair (1810-1884), 2 pages; Lucinda Owens Tyler Bair (1812-n.d.), 2 pages; Charles Barnes (1848-1926), 2 pages; Frances Fitzjohn Chapman Barnes (1818-1876), 1 page; Mary Simmons Fanning Barnes (1841-1932), 2 pages; Rebecca Phillips Barnes (1852-1906), 3 pages; Rosa Ellen Webb Barnes (1850-n.d.), 3 pages; William Barnes (1844-1904), 1 page; William Jefferies Barnes (1820-1893), 1 page; James Barnett (1812?-1894), 2 pages; John Barnett (1858-n.d.) and Ellen Mary Bone Barnett (1856-1921), 4 pages; Lewis Barney (1808-1895), 3 pages; Ellen A. Beazer Barton (1852-1918), 3 pages; John Barton (1840-1916), 3 pages; Joseph Barton (1848-1934), 5 pages; Peter Barton (1845-1912), 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_01.pdf |
| Conversion Specifications |
Original scanned on Epson Expression 10000 XL and saved as 400 ppi TIFF. Display image generated in CONTENTdm |
| ARK |
ark:/87278/s6zk8dwq |
| Setname |
uum_dup |
| ID |
787390 |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6zk8dwq |
| Title |
page 6 |
| Format |
application/pdf |
| Setname |
uum_dup |
| ID |
787343 |
| OCR Text |
Show LIFE SKETCH OF PEHNIJi,JL,A J. ANDER SON I, Pernilla Johnson Anderson, was born September 16, 1850 s.t Annelof Scone, Sweden, daughter of Eskel Johnson and Hanna Larson. I was baptized in to the L. D. S~ Church June 29, 1 859 by M~ F. Rossenberg. I lived at Annelof until I was 13 years old when I with my parents and two brothers left for America. We set sail from Hamburg April 18, 1863 on the ship "Electric". We le.nded at New York June 5, 1863, seven weeks crossing from Sweden to America. On crossing the North Sea we suffered very much with sea sickness and cold. We landed in En gland, name of city or town f orgotten, however, a large city. I r•mem' ber welking along with the rest of the emi grants, seemingly hundreds of them, for wuite a long distance before reaching the boat we were ·to set sail on aero s s the Atlan tic.. VJhile walking we were advised to stay close together. Mother had my brother and myself h ol d on to her skirt fearing we would get lost. How funny we must have looked parading down that street with our native costumes. Kerchief tied under our chin. My little life long friend being a little braver than I wanted to ts.ke in a few si ghts, however, tha t was soon put to a stop by a nice li t tle slap on the ear by her mother and told to march on. After arriving in ,New York we ro4C ln box cars that had been us~d for cattle.. The reason wa s that th e war was still rag;i.ng in the South. We stopped at a sma.ll tov10 in the war zone and we were cautioned to be quiet. My brother had a fel on on his finger. That was the first t ime I ever saw a colored woman, and there perched on top of a h aystack were four of the blackest girls I have ever seen, dressed in their bright full flouncing dresseC! and a ppare ntly laughing at us. I wes very frigh"t ,ened and stayed very close to my brother. We joined the saints at Omaha where we started on our trek across the p lains with ox team. After eros sing the Missouri River we encountered |
| Reference URL |
https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6zk8dwq/787343 |