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Pioneer 1848-1868 Companies
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1849 (age 26), Little, James Amasay (Brigham Young's
Nephew)
William Little Jr. had three sons, Moses, Malcolm, and James.
The latter is the father of James A., the subject of this sketch.
William Little Jr., with his sons, emigrated from Ireland April
11, 1807 and arrived in New York City May 18, 1807. About the year
1815 James, the father of James A., married Susan Young, the daughter
of John Young Sr. and Nabby Howe Young. She is also the sister of
John, Joseph, Phineas H., Brigham, and Lorenzo Dow Young, five brothers
who have played a conspicuous part in the early history of the Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. On their farm, about four
miles from Aurelius, Cayuga County, New York, were born to James
and Susan Young Little, Edwin Sabriska, Eliza, Feramorz, and James.
The latter was named James after his father, but when about twenty
years old he worked in a shop where there were so many by the name
of James that to distinguish himself from the others he added Amasy
to his name and has since been known on the records as James A.
Little.
James was born September 14, 1822. The father was killed by his
wagon's overturning in 1822 leaving Susan a young widow with three
little boys, James (A.) being a babe in arms. Eliza, the only daughter,
had died before the father. After the death of her husband Mrs.
Little moved to Munden, Monroe County, New York where, in time,
she married William B. Stilson.
[Some of] The James A. Little story follows:
I was bound out at an early age to a Mr. Bouton and his wife,
who married late in life and who had no children to soften and tone
down their characters. They were Presbyterians and very strict.
Mr. Bouton was a kind-hearted man, but quick-tempered, and naturally,
under the influence of his wife, who was of a melancholy mind and
apt to find much fault about trifles. Her reports of my boyish delinquencies
resulted in my getting many serious beatings. There was no love
manifested by either of them for me, and as I grew up I longed more
intensely for someone to love. There was a void in my young heart
which there was nothing to fill, and fault-finding and beating caused
increasing discontent in my bosom. When about sixteen years old
I declared my independence, in the barn, when Mr. Bouton picked
up the end of an ox gad to hit me. The first move I made was in
self defense. He seemed amazed and desisted. This created a change
in our relative positions and relieved me of much abuse. I remained
with him another winter and got four more months of schooling. Considering
the stringent code of discipline under which they were raised I
think they did very well with me. They trained me in strict principles
of morality, and through diligence and perseverance I acquired a
good education.
In the spring of my seventeenth year I took my belongings on my
back and went on foot to see my uncle, Malcolm Little, in Seneca
County and my brother, Feramorz, in Genesee County. I hired out
to a widow lady, Mrs. Smith. She had two children, Chauncey, and
Emeline. I had been acquainted with them for some years. A strong
attachment grew between Emeline, and myself, and she favored my
suit. Although I was industrious, moral, and fairly well educated,
the mother objected to our union as her daughter would inherit a
few hundred from her father's estate, and I was penniless. That
winter I taught school. I worked for Mrs. Smith the next summer,
then again engaged to teach school in the Pine Wood District. The
boys had turned the teacher out the previous winter, and I had learned
some lessons in my school the previous year also. So when I discovered
mutiny among the larger boys I quelled it with a strong hand, and
succeeded in gaining the respect of both parents and children.
I went up to visit my brother, Charles Oliphant, at Rochester
and saw my first railroad. The cars were then running between that
city and Buffalo. I next got a job from Mr. Carter, a long-faced
praying Methodist who cheated me out of my seasons' wages amounting
to twelve dollars per month. Always after that if I had anything
to do with him I thought he would bear watching. The winter of 1842
was a very severe one. I went out into the country where I met a
couple of Mormon elders, the first I had seen. They claimed to know
President Young, and were on their way to Nauvoo. I took a notion
to visit my relatives in Nauvoo, so a friend and I started and made
our way to Chicago, with some unusual experiences. From Chicago
we traveled on foot to the head of Steamboat Navigation, on the
Illinois River. A canal was being constructed between these points.
We found a steamer going to St. Louis without cargo, so we went
free. I was young and thought I knew more than I do now, after fifty
years of study, and experience. Like most people of that time who
knew little or nothing of the Mormons, I was much prejudiced against
them. There were some on the steamer, and as I remember, I fairly
ventilated my prejudices. When I arrived in Nauvoo I was poorly
clad, but as the Saints had colonized the place when driven from
Missouri I was about on a level with them. My mother, uncles Brigham,
Phineas H., Joseph, and Lorenzo D. were there, and many more of
my relatives, but all alike were strangers to me, and it was some
time before I could sense the relationship. My mother's sister,
Aunt Fanny was the last one excepting my mother, whom I had parted
with when I was thrown, a waif on public charity.
So far as poverty and sickness were concerned we could not have
been worse off, and live. I found my mother in very poor circumstances.
Her husband, William B. Stilson, had left home several years before,
and had not been heard from. My first effort was to find labor and
get something to live on. I applied to the Messers. Laws who were
men of considerable business. They set me at very heavy work, breaking
hemp. They were to pay me fifty cents per day in cornmeal, and I
was to board myself. The weather was very warm, and besides, cornmeal
of itself would not sustain a man under such labor. It was about
ten o'clock A.M. when I concluded to do the work. I labored until
noon, went to mothers for some dinner, and decided not to go back
again as such labor would not supply the necessities of life, to
say nothing of its comforts.
I recollect seeing my oldest brother, Edwin, but once in Nauvoo.
My uncle Lorenzo D. Young, who lived out east of Nauvoo about sixteen
miles, came into Nauvoo about this time, and I went home with him.
He had been driven out of Missouri, and, like most of the Mormon
people, was in indigent circumstances. A part of his family was
then sick. It wasn't long before I moved Mother out there, and put
up a log cabin near Uncle Lorenzo's. I sought something to do that
would better our circumstances, and made a contract with a Mr. Maynard
to do a job of work for a good cow, at twelve dollars. I did part
of the work, but as it was not pressing, I did not finish at once.
[He left Nauvoo, joined the Army, and participated in the Mexican
War in Texas before being discharged as a mail clerk.]
I think it was the first day of September, 1848, that I arrived
at my brother's in St. Louis. He was still in the grocery business
and still keeping a boarding house. I do not think I was very well-fitted
for the business, but I worked into it the best I could. Soon after,
the Saints were driven from Nauvoo. I heard of their going into
the wilderness the winter we lay on Aransas Bay. It appeared, before
leaving Nauvoo, Mother married Alonzo Pettingill, and as near as
I can learn, left the camp of the Saints when on the march west,
and came down to St. Louis to find means of subsistence. There I
found them on my arrival from the south. Feramorz and I were prejudiced
against the Mormons, and as a consequence, more or less against
our relatives who belonged to them. I was a confirmed skeptic so
far as the Bible and sectarian religion were concerned. After awhile,
as opportunity offered, Father Pettingill and I had some conversations
on the doctrines. He found it a little difficult to get along with
me.
In February, 1849, Father Pettingill took cold and came down with
lung fever. We had the best physicians, and did all we could for
him, but in a few days it was evident that his end was approaching.
He seemed fully aware of this and I felt a strong desire to know
if the principles he had taught me sustained him in his last hours.
I sat down by his bed and talked over matters plainly with him.
Calm and resigned, he testified that he had the most implicit faith
in the principles he had advocated, and his appearance indicated
that his words were in accord with the sentiments of his heart.
After I had received a testimony of the Gospel, I would have expected
that any dying, faithful Latter-day Saint would bear the same testimony
as Father Pettingill, but at the time his testimony made a strong
impression on me. He passed away, and was buried in a graveyard
in St. Louis, without anything to mark the spot where lies the remains
of a faithful, good man, my father in the Gospel.
After studying over the subject a little longer, I concluded to
be baptized.
As fast as I could understand, I endeavored to conform my life
to the principles I had adopted. I do not recall of any special
change in myself at once or of receiving any direct testimony of
the truth of the Gospel, but there appeared to be a new current
of light and truth flowing into my mind. Not long after my baptism,
the spirit of gathering began to work on me. My mother was anxious
to gather to the mountains, and certainly the way was opening up
for her to do so. I had several hundred dollars in our trading concern,
and proposed to Feramorz to draw out what was necessary to take
Mother and our half-sister, Cornelia, and go into the mountains.
There had been, in the few months previous, frequent cases of cholera
in the city, and I had an attack that was checked by a timely dose
of medicine. As if to drive me out, there was a marked impression
on my mind that if I remained I would die of the cholera. I fitted
out with a wagon and two yoke of oxen, necessary provisions, and
a reasonable amount of money for future expenses. I started for
Council Bluffs, in company with John Gray and family, his single
brother, Benjamin, and their mother, and John Russell, her son-in-law.
Being inexperienced, we all overloaded our teams, and soon had to
begin to lighten up by trading things to the people of the country
for supplies, or cows that could supply us with milk, and carry
themselves. For some money and articles we could part with, I purchased
a pair of steers, and two cows. Not being acquainted with the country,
instead of taking the usual route up the Missouri River, we struck
up the country by Salt River for the Mormon road across Iowa. We
encountered much bad road, and experienced great difficulty and
fatigue, that we would have avoided had we traveled the usual route.
To the Mountains, 1849
When we struck the road across Iowa to the Bluffs we found many
people traveling west, and a fair road. I have no dates of these
moves. We left St. Louis quite as soon as the grass began to grow,
and we probably arrived at Kanesville about the first of June. There
I recollect seeing Uncles Phineas H. and Joseph Young, and their
families. I did not visit long but soon crossed the Missouri River
and encamped with the others who were gathering to organize for
crossing the plains. I perfected my outfit as well as I could under
the circumstances. It was a good, average outfit. I think we remained
in that camp two or three weeks before we were instructed to move
on across the Elk Horn River. Then I was organized in Lorenzo Clark's
ten, Enoch Reese's fifty, and Capt. Perkin's hundred.
The first serious difficulties encountered after starting, were
stampedes of our cattle. These sometimes occurred when traveling,
but more generally while encamped with our cattle in a corral formed
by our wagons for safety; they were sudden, unexpected and dangerous.
We found the best remedy for night stampedes was to tie up our cattle
separately outside our wagons. These stampedes were so dangerous
and frequent that they overbalanced our fear of Indians, and the
tens were directed to travel and camp by themselves. I think our
ten had one stampede after this and the trouble ceased. In the hundred,
one or two persons were killed and some injured. Sometimes cattle
were seriously damaged. One of my oxen was so seriously injured
that I could not work him for some time, which weakened my team.
The difficulties that ordinary emigrants passed through in crossing
this thousand miles of desert can never be understood except by
those who pass through them.
Our ten traveled very quietly together. In it were John Lytle
and family, whose eldest daughter I afterward married; the Gray
and Rumel families; Thomas Judd and family; a man by the name of
Porter and family, and others whose names I do not recall. We encamped
on the bench near the mouth of Emigration Canyon the evening of
October 16, 1849. We had the first intimation that we were near
civilization in the morning when we looked for our cattle and found
them in a stray pound. They had wandered for feed and found it in
a field of grain. We knew nothing of the probabilities of this.
When we camped our cattle were returned to us without expense. We
drove into Salt Lake City, which comprised houses enough for a respectable
village had they been closer together, but they were scattered over
a large area of ground. I had but little recollection of my relatives,
as it was several years since I had met them, and my acquaintance
with them in Nauvoo was quite limited. There were no familiar faces
except those who had crossed the plains with me. Several of Uncle
Brigham's families occupied a row of log rooms on one end of which
was a large kitchen. I think the adobe house, afterwards known as
the "White house on the hill," was enclosed so as to afford some
shelter.
I soon found an adobe house of one room in which I located Mother
and Cornelia, and called it home. My cattle, necessarily in poor
condition, were turned out for the winter on the range about ten
miles from the city, north. Like others, I had yet to learn how
to live in a country so strange and peculiar. I had been in only
a few days when Uncle Brigham sent for me and expressed a wish that
I come and work for him, and attend to the business connected with
daily wants of his families. At that time gold was more abundant
in the country than the necessaries of life. Consequently food and
clothing were high. I forgot the wages he offered me, but I told
him I considered it too low to live in that country, and sustain
my mother. I think I went without wages being agreed upon.
On December 16, 1849, Mother got up a little dinner to which Uncle
Brigham was invited, and I was united in marriage to Mary Jane Lytle
Our little supply of food and comforts which we had brought across
the plains were soon exhausted. Food was scarce and much of the
time that winter we lived on shorts, bread and a little tea. I worked
early and late for Uncle Brigham, and I sometimes ate at his table
which helped to keep up my strength. After a little I obtained a
house with two rooms, and I lived in one, and mother in the other.
Our housekeeping outfit consisted principally of the following articles:
a camp-bake-oven, a teakettle, a pan or two, two earthen plates,
two knives and forks, and two cups and saucers. The crockery I paid
a high price for. We lived in a log house, and I created a pole
bedstead in one of the corners. My father-in-law had been in the
drivings of Missouri and Illinois, and had made the exhaustive journey
across the plains, and had but little with which to dower his daughter,
but I think she brought with her a feather bed. Such marriages were
common in those times and probably quite as happy as those in which
wealth has formed an important factor. (D.U.P. Files)
- 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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