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Pioneer 1847 Companies
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Decker (Little) (Hanks), Harriet Amelia , 1846
(age 20), Iowa
Harriet Amelia Decker, 1846, Iowa (including death of husband,
Edwin Little, at Richardson's Point)
Harriet Amelia Decker was born 13 March 1826, at Phelps, Ontario
county, New York, the daughter of Harriet Page Wheeler and Isaac
Decker. The family made several moves while Harriet was still a
young child; first to Cattaragus county, New York; then to Portage,
Ohio, and later to Franklin and Kirtland, Ohio. While living in
Portage the family joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day
Saints. Harriet was nine years old when she was baptized. The Decker
family became close friends of the Prophet Joseph Smith, Brigham
Young and Lorenzo Dow Young. They traveled with the Saints to Missouri
and then to Illinois. Harriet experienced the fear of the mobs who
persecuted the members of the Church.
While living in Winchester, Illinois she met Edwin Sobieski Little,
son of Brigham Young's sister, Susannah, and James Little, and was
married to him in her father's home by Joseph Young, on the 22nd
of March, 1842. Edwin was 26 years of age and even though she was
only 16, she was well trained in home making. Their son, George
Edwin, was born 6 August, 1844 in Nauvoo, Illinois.
Harriet's mother and father separated the 9th of March, 1843.
She later married Lorenzo Dow Young, brother of Brigham Young. Harriet's
sisters, Lucy Ann and Clara Decker married Brigham Young. Her sister,
Fanny, married Feramorz Little, a brother of her husband; so Harriet
and her family were closely associated with the leaders of the Church.
During the time of the exodus from Nauvoo Harriet and Edwin with
their son, George, crossed the Mississippi River and it is recorded
in Harriet's history, "that Edwin was helping his Uncle Brigham
Young across the river with the wagons, when the ice broke through
throwing him into the icy water. He gained shore in safety but was
chilled and wet."
When the Saints arrived at Richardson's Point, fifty-five miles
from Nauvoo, they remained there a few days and several of the brethren
found work for which they received corn to sustain their teams.
It was here Edwin Little was taken ill with lung fever. He was removed
to a house two miles from camp but his condition continued to grow
worse and he died on the 18th of March, 1846. He was buried near
the present site of Keosauqua, Iowa, in a grove of trees a few rods
from the road. The Saints stayed in Winter Quarters the winters
of 1847-8.
- 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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