 |
Pioneer 1848-1868 Companies
Previous | Next
1850 (age 33), Clemens, Ann Wilde
Ann Wild was born 28 August 1817 at Carlton, Yorkshire, England,
the daughter of James and Mary Wild. She married William Clemens
and their first child, Mary Ann, was born at Doncaster, Yorkshire,
England 5 July 1841. William was a scissors grinder by profession.
The branch records of Doncaster states that William was baptized
in 1841 by George Yardley and Ann was baptized in 1842 by Edwin
Senior.
William and Ann emigrated to America from Liverpool, England 1
January 1844. They came to New Orleans and up the Mississippi River
to St. Louis where they lived until 1850. Both were signers of the
charter of St. Louis. They opened a store and being diligent people
were better prepared for the journey westward than many of the pioneers.
Two more sons had been added to the family, William George, born
December 26, 1847, in St. Louis and James Hyrum, born December 24,
1849, also born in St. Louis. The Clemens family were part of the
company formed by Orson Hyde two miles from the ferry above Bethlehem
with Warren Foote as captain. They traveled the long road across
the plains, the same trail the Saints had been traveling for three
years, along the Platte River for the sake of grass for the stock,
timber for fires, fish in the streams and then, on August 7, 1850,
Ann was left alone with her children to care for. Captain Foote
wrote in his diary:
"We started this morning one-mile east of the bend in the road
near Dead Timber Creek. As the first ten reached the deep ravine
a stampede took place in the fifth and tenth as they were coming
into line on the road. The teams that were running providentially
stopped, or who can tell the awful scene that would have taken place
in that deep ravine, for every wagon would have been at the bottom
of it. Poor Brother Clemens lost his life endeavoring to stop the
wagons. He was knocked down by a team that trod on his body and
a heavy wagon passed over his bowels. He lived until toward evening.
August 8th, the company stopped over one day to bury the dead and
clean up after the accident."
Ann came on with her family arriving in Salt Lake, September 26th,
fifty days after her husband was laid to rest on the plains of Nebraska.
Her baby was then only nine months old. Shortly after her arrival
Ann married again and two more children were born to her. Her husband
was drowned in the Missouri River while helping to bring emigrants
to Utah. In 1852 she was sealed to William with Alexander Neibaur
as proxy in President Young's office. She used her first husband's
name and all five of her children are called Clemens.
Ann was one of the first settlers of Santaquin and lived there
until 1880. Her son George's first wife, Eliza Maxham, died leaving
two little girls and Ann took care of them. When he married a sister
of Eliza, Jane Maxham, they took the children with their own little
son to Arizona. Ann became so lonesome for the children that she
went to Arizona.
- Source: Our Pioneer
Heritage
- © Carter, Kate B., ed. 20 vols. Salt Lake City: International
Society, Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 1958-1977. All rights reserved.
No part of this material may be reproduced in any form or by any
means without permission in writing from the publisher. Documents
and images are exerpted by permission from the LDS
Family History Suite CDROM from Ancestry.
|