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Pioneer 1848-1868 Companies
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1846-52 (age 46-52), Standley, Alexander Scobia
(Iowa experience)
My father, Alexander Scobia Standley, was born May 12, 1800, at
New Brunswick, New Jersey. He was put out to work as soon as he
was old enough to earn his clothes; therefore, he never had a day's
schooling in his life. When he was eighteen he went with his father
to Portage County, Ohio. He obtained a book called The Young Man's
Companion which contained the rules for reading, writing, arithmetic
and grammar. With the aid of this book he educated himself sufficient
that he was chosen to teach the district school. He obtained a small
piece of land and in the summer spent his time clearing and fencing
it. In the winter he taught school. He was also elected Justice
of the Peace of that precinct.
Father built a log house and was married to Philinda Upson March
10, 1829. Their first child, Eliza, was born April 13, 1830, and
died May 10, 1830. In the spring of 1837 a Mormon missionary came
into the neighborhood. ...Father and Mother went to his first meeting.
They were baptized March 10, 1837. [The family went to Far West,
Missouri, then to Springfield, Illinois in 1837-1838.]
...He sold his farm in Ohio, mostly on future payments. He returned
to Ohio in 1845 accepting as his pay anything useful in outfitting
his family to cross the plains.
In the spring of 1846 Father started with what is known as the
Miller Company. They went some distance and in consequence of the
Battalion being called at that time, they located for the winter
in Nebraska and returned to Council Bluffs next spring with very
scanty rations. They settled near Kanesville at what was known as
Miller's Hollow, or Pottawattomie. He there struggled for a livelihood
and to render what assistance he could to others. In helping to
fit out one company, who lacked one animal of having enough, Father
offered a cow. When they asked if he could spare it he said, "Oh,
I could use it all right, I have a large family and only two cows,
but we will manage with one." Elder Orson Hyde said, "Brother Standley,
you shall be blessed in time and all Eternity." This was in the
spring of 1848. With the help of two boys he raised a large crop
of corn, and as this was the year before the gold rush to California
the price of corn went up enormously. He sold his corn and bought
20 cows and calves, and in a short time had the family well fitted
with the necessities of life. He also assisted others for the journey.
At this place on May 7, 1849, I [Michael Standley], the eleventh
child, was born.
In 1852 Father yoked up his cows and young steers, and with them
we crossed the plains. When we arrived he was true to his word and
asked for nothing more. My father died February 20, 1856. He reached
the Valley in October, spent the winter in Weber. In the spring
he settled in Bountiful.
- 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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