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Pioneer 1848-1868 Companies
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1868 (age 10), Miller (McAllister), Mary Ann
Mary Ann Miller McAllister was born in Norwich, England, in the
year 1858, the eldest of five children of William, a book-binder
and cobbler, and Ann Winter Miller. When Mary was a very small girl,
she helped to earn the first Christmas dinner she was to remember.
Her father, being out of work, had searched for weeks for some books
to bind, or shoes to sew, but could find none. Small Mary asked
if she might try her luck, and after some coaxing gained her father's
consent. She went to a nearby shoemaker, who said he just couldn't
ignore the knock of such a tiny girl. The cobbler handed her three
pairs of shoes to be sewed (the uppers to the bottoms), and after
they were finished, Mary delivered them and received the money.
She then stayed with the smaller children while her parents went
shopping for their Christmas. Next day, her mother gave the little
girl the largest piece of plum pudding for having earned it.
About this time, William had a boy helping him as an apprentice.
The boy was not satisfactory, so he discharged him. From that time
on, Mary Ann helped her father sew shoes. When the family was ready
to come to Utah, Mary's uncle, John Daynes, Salt Lake musician and
father of Tabernacle organist Joseph J. Daynes, sent money for the
emigration.
They left England in May of 1868 with a company of 800 Saints,
sailing from Liverpool on the ship John Bright. Grandmother Winter
was very bitter toward the Saints and vowed she would not even bid
her daughter and family goodbye. But when they departed, forgetting
their carefully prepared lunch basket in the flurry of last-minute
excitement, Grandmother ran to catch them, holding the basket in
front of her. She then stood waving her hand until the little family
was out of sight. This was the last time Mary Ann or her mother
were to see Grandmother Winter.
The ocean voyage lasted six weeks, and was very rough. To make
the long trip more enjoyable, the captain arranged a concert. Ann
Winter Miller was a fine vocalist and she was asked to sing. So
well did she perform, they called her back again and again, and
would not let her stop until she had sung four songs. They were:
"Sweet Spirit, Hear My Prayer," "Willie We Will Miss You," "Beautiful
Star," and "Under the Mistletoe Bough."
One day, people were crowding into the ship's kitchen when a mast
fell, very seriously injuring a woman who pushed ahead of Mary Ann's
father. This was only one of a number of things which convinced
the Millers that someone held a grudge against the head of their
family. He had been chosen as guard at the landing in New York.
The Saints went from the ship to Castle Garden, but were directed
back to the shipyards to camp. William went on guard at midnight
and was drowned.
Mary Ann got the impression as a child that there was a heated
argument between her father and some of the ship hands, and that
they had caused his fall into the ocean. No one will ever know the
cause, but she often reminisced that "My mother was leaning over
me in the middle of the night and I said, 'Mother, I dreamed Father
was dead.' She said to me, 'It is not a dream, my child, he was
drowned just now.'"
Ann lost her 15-month-old baby ten days after her husband's death.
They stayed over the 4th of July to find and bury William's body,
and then boarded a train for Laramie. From here, teams and wagons
provided by the Church took them on to Utah. Said Mary Ann, "I remember
seeing the Tabernacle for the first time. It looked to my small
eyes like a huge satin ball or melon."
The Millers went to live with the Daynes family. Mary Ann remembered
much that happened to her during those exciting days. She said,
"I stood and watched the Golden Spike being driven in the railroad
track in 1869." Her new friends were not long in finding out about
her musical abilities, for she noted, "I sang in Brother Goddard's
choir of children for the 24th of July. We sang 'In Our Lovely Deseret.'
I (also) sang in the 20th Ward choir, Uncle John D. (Daynes) leading,
with cousin Joseph J. at the organ. I worked for Aunt Eliza Daynes,
then for Becky, (the second wife of John Daynes) until I was 16
years old. My uncle wanted to send me to Europe to study music,
but instead I was married in 1876 on the 14th day of February."
Accompanied by her cousin Joseph, Mary Ann sang many times in the
new Tabernacle. Never, however, was she allowed to go into the Daynes
parlor or touch the piano except to clean, or to practise a song
with Joseph. Consequently, she didn't learn to play until her daughter,
Emily, taught her some simple chords on a rented organ.
Mary Ann and Joseph Warrington McAllister were married in the
Endowment House by Daniel H. Wells. They were the parents of eleven
children: Joseph William, Elizabeth Eleanor, Emily, Lavinia, Richard
Wesley, Agnes Maud, Mary Ann and Viola. Three children-Alma, Minita
and Wesley-died as babies. The Duke of Wellington, who won the Battle
of Waterloo in 1815, was an ancestor of Mary Ann. The wife of another
relative who fought in the same war gave birth to a baby girl the
night of the battle and was named Victorious. It became a part of
Viola's name, and through the years was given to others in the family,
as well.
- 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.
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