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Pioneer 1848-1868 Companies
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Hannah Hood Hill (Romney), 1849 (age 7)
Near the city of Toronto, Canada on July 9, 1842 a daughter was
born to Archibald N. and Isabelle Hood Hill. She was given the name
of Hannah. Parley P. Pratt brought the message of the gospel to
the Hill home and in September, 1842 they left Canada, arriving
in Nauvoo on the 30th. Here the family lived until 1846 when they,
with other Saints, were forced to leave their beautiful home. Through
extreme exposure, Isabelle died in Winter Quarters March 12, 1847,
leaving three small children. When, in the same year, Archibald
decided to join the Saints in Salt Lake Valley, he left Samuel with
his parents, Hannah and Rebecca with his sisters.
After arriving in Utah, Mr. Hill worked for Newel K. Whitney for
eighteen months, during which time he built a house and in 1849
his sister Mary arrived with his two little daughters. Later his
father and mother came, bringing his son Samuel.
From the autobiography of Hannah Hood Hill Romney, written during
her later years:
When I was nine months old my parents moved to Nauvoo. I well
remember the house we lived in. It was a rock house with two rooms
above and a basement below. My grandparents lived with us. Father
worked on the temple. He took me to the temple one day to meeting.
I heard the Prophet Joseph Smith preach but was too young to remember
what he said. I can remember how he looked. After meeting, father
took me up on top of the temple and I saw the Mississippi River.
It looked like an ocean to me then as I had never seen such a great
body of water. We lived in Nauvoo until the prophet Joseph and Hyrum
were killed. We were driven out with the rest of the Saints to wander
in the wilderness. We wintered in Winter Quarters. My father built
a log house. We could afford one room only, a fire place in one
side, a window without glass, a door in the end with a quilt hung
up for a door.
I haven't many pleasant remembrances of my childhood days, for
while in Winter Quarters my mother took sick and died, owing to
exposure and hardships. This was my first great sorrow. Father left
his children; my brother Samuel with his father and mother, my sister
Rebecca with one sister, and I with another, and he started with
the pioneers to find a home in the west. My aunt moved to a place
called Honey Creek, a short distance from Winter Quarters, where
my uncle built a log cabin and also cleared some land to plant a
crop. While there I remember getting lost in the woods. I started
out with my uncle's dinner, saw a little squirrel and thought I
could catch him. It led me a chase and I couldn't find my way. I
started to cry and called for my uncle. He happened to hear me so
told me to stand still, but I was very badly frightened. I didn't
get the squirrel. My brother and two cousins and I used to have
nice times together, gathering flowers and different kinds of berries
and nuts. One day I was sent to the spring for water a mile away
from where we lived. When I got there I saw a snake sunning itself
by the spring. I would not go near it to get the water so had to
wait until it left. Snakes were very plentiful in that part of the
country. We lived there about two years, then my father sent for
me to come to Salt Lake Valley, in the year 1849. I was very excited
and thought we were going on a pleasure trip, but found it was a
very long, hard one before we got to the end of our journey. The
first night I started out with strangers; they cut off all my hair.
I traveled bare-footed and bare-headed; sometimes we would travel
two or three days without water. My father met us in Emigration
Canyon with vegetables and melons which we enjoyed very much. When
we arrived in the valley my father had built a home in the Eighth
Ward, where I lived with another aunt, father's oldest sister. When
I was eight years old I was baptized by Bishop Everett. My father
then bought a home in the 14th Ward and I went to the first Sunday
School that was organized in Salt Lake City. Brother Ballantyne
was the Superintendent.
- 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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