Historical Pioneer Biographies
John Myers
Born: 1814 Died: 1900
Came across the plains to the Great Salt Lake valley in 1852.
Biography: The source of this history
is unknown but it was copied it as it was, with no changes in content
or spelling. MELyon Apr 1995
John Myers was born February 6, 1814 of English ancestry and came
across the Atlantic Ocean when he was six months old, with his parents
Richard Myers and Mary Close Myers, and the following brothers and
sisters: Thomas, Sarah, Mary, Nancy, Richard, William, and Anthony.
His father was a sailor and followed this profession for a while
and finally located in the Providence of Canada. Here John Myers
grew to manhood, marrying Miss Sarah Dixon who was fifteen years
old and him twenty four. (A little story goes--that he courted his
wife's sister who was his age, but because he wasn't a member of
the Latter-Day Saint Church she would not marry him and he said
that he would not join the Church just to win a wife so he gave
her up.) Just a short time after marrying her sister, he and his
brother William joined the Church and left their folks who not members
of this Church to go and live among the Mormons. They settled at
Council Bluffs and Winter Quarters,
He was a personal bosom friend of the Prophet Joseph Smith. He
spent many hours playing ball with the Prophet, while he had to
disguise himself to keep the mob away. Brother Myers was away on
a mission in Maryland when the Prophet was murdered. At this time
all the Elders were called home; his companion being Elder Jacob
Hamlin. Mrs. Myers walked three miles to see Joseph and Hyrum when
their bodies were brought home.
He was a very useful man, being a mechanic. Therefore, he was very
useful in the early history of the church. While living in Canada,
he worked as an apprentice to his father who was a gun-smith, Just
before his father's death he was going to make him a present of
a gun-lathe and had it all packed to sent him. But after his father's
death, the family was so bitter against him and his Mormon followers
that it was never sent to him.
Sometimes Brother Myers had to turn to the soil for a living, but
his main line of work was in a mechanical line and it was for this
purpose he was called out at various times to help build up the
country. His main work was in iron working, like black smithing
so to speak. Anyone in the early days visiting the blacksmith shop
at Panguitch could see some of the rifles hanging on the wall that
Brother Myers had made.
They had to make what they used in those days. The made their hoes,
plows, shovels, guns, harnesses, and almost every thing they used
to farm with. Brother Myers proved to be very essential at times
as he was an all-around man, and gave his time freely to others
in teaching them how to make different farm implements. He made
all the shoes that his family required for years until his daughters
were grown.
He crossed the plains in 1852 and was six months on the way. He
was in charge of fifty people who reached the valley nearly a month
before the rest came. He settled after coming to the valleys of
this country a little north of Salt Lake at a place called Kaysville
for a short time. Here he found that he couldn't make a living farming
because of the grasshoppers. From here he went to Centerville where
his work as a blacksmith was required. He made all the plows that
were used there, he also made guns.
From here he was called to the Muddy River Mission, but he did
not remain there so very long because the climate was not very good
there. It was damp and many of the saints were sick and some of
them lost their lives with chills and fever, so it was found advisable
to come back. So the people that were called down there were called
back and Brother Myers located at Panguitch. It was on their march
back that his wife died on the 14th of December 1870, just ten miles
from "Meadow Valley," which probably received its name from that
historical event the "Mountain Meadow Massacre." It was during these
early privations that the sturdy characters of the family were formed.
There were four children then: Tyresha, John Ephraim, Adeline, and
Joseph William. Their father told them that they had lost a good
mother and him a faithful wife who had stood by him in all that
he did.
Three years later he married a second wife, Barbara Pace from Payson,
Utah. He was the only man around that could shoe an oxen properly.
He was at the Hans Mill Massacre and was personally acquainted
with the Prophet Joseph Smith. No one could ever call Joseph Smith
anything but "the Prophet" when talking to him.
He died May 11, 1900 at age 86 and was buried at Panguitch, Utah.
Source: Miscellaneous
personal histories This information has been gathered by various
people interested in Utah history. These are unpublished biographies.
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