Thursday, June 13, 2013

1955 Negatives - Family Pictures Never Before Seen

Click on photos to enlarge. 
D, L, G
C, L, D, G
 G, D, L, C
My Mother had four daughters born in 5 years, 1 month and 27 days.

 G, D, L, C
 G, D, L, C
G, D, C, L

G, D, C, L

G, D, C, L
G, D, C, L 
 G, D, C, L
G, D, C, L
G, D, C
G, D, C, L
G, D, C, L

G, D, C, L

 G, D, C, L
G, D, C, L
 L baby teeth
 C
 D
 G
 G
G
 D

 C

 Dad - K. D. WOOD
 Uncle Lex and Mom - Camilla S. WOOD
Lex is holding mom's right arm with his other arm around her.  My guess is mom was in her apron and didn't really want her picture taken.  Lex must be helping to keep her in the shot.  
 D, C
Lex, D, C
Uncle Lex and Uncle Chase 
 Chase McCray WOOD
 Uncle Chase




Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Monuments and Markers - Hurricane, Utah



2. WC MONUMENT  #12 BIRTH OF HURRICANE, 284 E. 200 N., Hwy. 9, Historic Hurricane
Canal Trail and Bowery Park, 84737
Open to Public
Erected by Sons of Utah Pioneers August 1, 1987
Large lava boulder set in cement foundation 64”x59”
Marker (#15)/Plaque Placed by Sons of Utah Pioneers August 1, 1987
Metal 30”x29”-1 picture – man with shovel
Marker Text
 This monument is near the spot where a celebration took place on August 6, 1904. 
After nearly eleven years of arduous work on the canal, water was ready for diversion on to 
the land. 

 Five or six wagon loads of people came from the little towns near by. The crowd was 
solemn but happy. They let out a big shout as the water gushed down the hill. Names for 
the new city to be were discussed and voted upon. 

 We thank God for these Pioneers of our valley. 
 For the complete story, visit Pioneer Park. 



3.WCMONUMENT #13THE HURRICANE CANAL, 35 W. State St., Pioneer Heritage Park,
84737
Open to Public
Erected by Utah State Historical Society 1992
Metal Post of Permaloy; 15”x19”x35”
Marker Text
 The construction of the Hurricane Canal is one of Utah’s proudest stories of pioneer 
determination. This canal built completely by hand opened the Hurricane Bench to farming 
and the establishment of the town of Hurricane. In 1893, two local men, James Jepson and 
John Steele decided to try to build the canal even though earlier reports had determined it 
impossible. Company shares were sold to help finance the project. This stock was issued in 
blocks not to exceed 20 shares. Each share was one acre of land with water rights. Nearly 
100 men subscribed to stock in the Hurricane Canal Company. Many of the shares were 
paid for in labor. Work on the canal was difficult and dangerous. The canal’s 7 ½ mile 
length clings to the sheer walls of the Virgin River Canyon then follows the Hurricane Fault 
and circles the farmlands of the Hurricane Bench. The canal is 8 feet wide and 4 feet deep 
laid out on a 12 foot shelf of conglomerate and lime stone rock. Twelve tunnels had to be 
blasted through solid rock and six flumes on wooden trestles were built to span ravines. 
Ten cisterns were built on the hillside below the canal to hold drinking water. Construction 
could be done only during the winter months in order to leave the men free to take care of 
their farms. Work progressed slowly and landslides often wiped out months of hard labor. 
After eleven years of tenacious effort, the canal was finished in 1904, providing water for 
2,000 acres of farm land and the new community of Hurricane.



6.WCMONUMENT #16THE HURRICANE CANAL, 35 W. State St., Pioneer Heritage Park 
84737 
Open to Public
Erected 1988 
Metal plaque on large Pioneer Gratitude Statue on Large stone monument 
Marker/Plaque Placed by Sons of Utah Pioneers (#23D)
Marker Text 
The Hurricane Canal 
On August 6, 1904, pioneer families from Virgin City, Grafton, Toquerville, 
LaVerkin, Rockville and Springdale met in the shade of a bowery and watched the Virgin 
River water gurgle out of the Hurricane Canal on the fertile, parched soil of this valley. 
Finally, the Rio Virgin was conquered! At that joyful celebration, the city they had 
dreamed about for many heartbreaking years was named Hurricane from the historic 
Hurricane Cliffs. In 1906, the first homes were built here. 

Source: DUP (Daughters of the Utah Pioneers) Saint George, Utah web page. 


Friday, May 31, 2013

Family Tragedy



William Heber ROUNDY son of  Lauren Hotchkiss ROUNDY and Joanna CARTER
and wife and first cousin


William Heber Roundy

Birth 5 Feb 1846 in Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Death 23 Jul 1899 in Alton, Kane, Utah

Husband of Malinda PARKER daughter of John Davis PARKER and Almeda Sophia ROUNDY.  William and Malinda were the parents of ten children. 
Kanab, 1899: 
William [Heber] Roundy and Daniel Seegmiller, both respected citizens, engage in a quarrel over irrigation water. Each is looking after his own family--his own special group--each wanting to make sure his family gets its fair share. Resentment grows into rage, and Roundy kills Seegmiller. Shortly afterward, he kills himself.
On July 23, 1899, Wm. Roundy, finding no water in the ditch, became enraged and going to the home of Bro. Seegmiller, he called him outside and a few minutes later shot him through the heart. The murderer then returned to his home and ... (Latter-Day Saint biographical encyclopedia:)
Resentment grows into rage, and Roundy kills Seegmiller. Shortly afterward, he kills himself... (Utah History Society)
Sun. 23 Daniel Seegmiller, counselor to Pres. Edwin D. Wooljey of Kanab Stake, wasshot and killed by Wm. H. Roundy in Kane County. Utah. (Church chronology: a record of important events pertaining to the history of ...)
... Roundy had often accused Dan Seegmiller, on whose land the reservoir had been built, of stealing other ... (Western folklore: Volume 18)
Daniel Seegmiller, Counselor to President Edwin D. Woolley of Kanab Stake is shot andkilled by Wm. H. Roundy. (Improvement era, Volume 2, Part 2By Young Men's Mutual Improvement Association)
 ------------------
The proper edge of the sky: the high plateau country of Utah By Edward A. Geary p.118 -120
There is scarcely a town in Utah that has not had, somewhere in its past, a violent dispute over water rights.  Most cases have been resolved as quietly as possible and consigned to the dark unspoken underside of the community’s Memory.  But occasionally one survives in the literary record - for example, the anonymous folk ballad titled “The Recent Kanab Tragedy,” memorialize sing an event that occurred on July 23, 1899In Kanab they will always remember This Twenty-Fourth of JulyFor this year there’s no celebration, No band plays and no pennants fly.The speeches they give in the Church house,Do not boast of our brave Pioneers;There’s no shouting, no dancing, no picnic,  But there’s sorrow and mourning and tears.For two of the town’s best men are lying In their coffins awaiting the earth;[Line illegible where paper was folded]There’s no room in our hearts now for mirth.It happened because of hot anger -A quarrel about their water right,William Roundy accused Dan SeegmillerOf stealing his turn in the night.So Roundy jumped up on his pony, Rode right down to Seegmiller’s door;He shouted, “Come out and I’ll show you, You’ll not steal my turn any more!”And Dan, little thinking of trouble,Came out with his babe in his arm;His wife Emma stood there beside him,Neither yet felt the faintest alarmThen Roundy quick lifted his shotgunAimed it straight at Dan Seegmiller’s heart;Emma screamed and ran forward to stop him,[Another illegible line]Dan fell to the ground with his boyWeeping, poor Emma knelt down,Not knowing if both husband and babyWere dead beside her on the ground.Roundy turned then and rode to his own house,Where he kissed his wife fondly goodbye,Then out into the yard he staggered,By his own cruel hand there to die.So today there is no celebration,Kanab has no thought for Pioneers;Two fine men now lie in the Coffins -No wonder the town’s bathed in tears!Other reports of this murder-suicide indicate that the ballad-writer has taken some poetic license.  Roundy apparently shot Seegmiller in his farmyard after an exchange of angry words, rather than at his doorstep without warning. As the ballad suggests. And there is no indication that Seegmiller was holding a child when he was shot.  On the other hand, the killing was in some respects more vicious than portrayed here Roundy severely wounded Seegmiller with the firs shot, then pumped two additional shots into him as he attempted to escape. …But the main point of “The Recent Kanab Tragedy” is precisely that the killer and his victim were both community insiders, “two of the town’s best men.”  The Seegmillers and Roundys were large and prominent families in southern Utah, and the feud over water rights therefore threatened to divide the community.  The ballad, evidently composed shortly after the events is commemorates, can be viewed as an attempt at healing the community wounds. 
-----------------


Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia Volume 4 Biographies Seegmiller: 

Daniel Seegmiller, Daniel, second counselor in the presidency of the Kanab Stake from 

1887 to 1899, was born Dec. 6, 1836, in Preston, Canada, the son of Adam Seegmiller 

and Anna Eve Knechtel. As a youth he located in New York City, where he became a 

convert to the Church and was baptized there Sept. 3, 1853. He came to Utah in 1861 and the following year 

returned as far as the Missouri River with Church teams to assist in bringing L. D. S. emigrants to Utah

Altogether he crossed the plains six times in that capacity. He served on the police force in Salt Lake City and

at times acted as body guard for President Brigham Young. He filled a mission to Germany and Switzerland

from 1877 to 1879, during which he presided over the East Swiss, Zurich and Frankfurt on the Main

conferences successively. Previous to, going on this mission he located in St. George, Utah, where he acted as 

Chief of Police and later as Sheriff of Washington County. Later he moved to Kanab, Kane County, where he 

operated a farm and raised choice stock. On May 24, 1887, he was set apart by Apostle Francis M. Lyman as 

second counselor to Edwin D. Woolley, president of the Kanab Stake, which position he occupied until his

untimely death. For some time previous to this tragedy, a  misunderstanding had existed between himself and a

neighbor, Wm. Roundy, over land and water matters, their land being contiguous and their water interests 

vested in the same system. On July 23, 1899, Wm. Roundy, finding no water in the ditch, became enraged and 

going to the home of Bro. Seegmiller, he called him outside and a few minutes later shot him through the heart. 

The murderer then returned to his home and after bidding farewell to his family, shot himself with fatal result.   

Bro. Seegmiller had three wives, 1st, Ellen Smith (daughter of Joseph Smith and Sarah Sailor), who bore him 

three sons and five daughters; 2nd, Artimesia Snow Woolley (daughter of Erastus and Artemesia Snow, and the 

widow of Franklin B. Woolley, who was killed by Indians in 1862), 3rd, Emma Isabella Carroll (daughter of 

Charles Negus Carroll) who bore him four sons and one daughter. Bro Seegmiller was a frontiersman with a 

commanding appearance and knowing no fear. But to his family he was a kind and loving husband and father

and was highly respected by his associates in the Church. He died, as stated, July 23, 1899, at Upper Kanab.








Sunday, May 12, 2013

Your Mother Loves You!


May 2013 JR
I know my mother loves me because...
She learned to text.
She wants to talk to me.
She thinks I'm nice. 
She prays for things I'm afraid to ask for. 
She listens to my complaints. 
She doesn't raise her voice at me. 
She reminds me to be nice.
She does hard things to make my life comfortable.
She asks me to visit. 
She drives across the country to visit me.
She tells me the truth.
She gives me advice. 
She worries that I'm lost in the airport. 
She sits on the other end of the phone when we've run our of things to say, or I just need to know that someone will listen when I'm ready to speak. 
She taught me how to sew and bought me a sewing machine.
She allowed me to do things like sing, perform in plays, and play the flute.
She sat through hours and hours of boring concerts.
She trusted me to make good choices. 
She drove me/or let dad drive hours and hours to be with Mormon friends once every few months. 
She gives me hugs.
She reads the scriptures.
She has a picture of me on the fridge.
She's not worried that I'm not married.
She likes my hair no matter how I cut it.
She ate pie for breakfast on my many birthdays.

(Mother's Day)

"Love is Spoken Here"


IMG 0147 from Cook Shack on Vimeo.

Thank You, and Happy Mothers Day to you too. 

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Moses QUIMBY Wounded at Bunker Hill 1775 at age 20

Moses QUIMBY age 75 - Pension Application

click images to Enlarge



Ancestry Chain: Moses QUIMBY b.1755 NH- 1840 VT, Betsey QUIMBY b. 1795 VT, Almeda Sophia ROUNDY b.1829 NY, Charles PARKER b.1853 UT, Laura Elizabeth PARKER b.1889 UT, Kirt DeMar WOOD b.1923 UT, Lark, TR. 



Sunday, April 7, 2013

The Most Noble Order of the Garter

Sir. Simeon the Super Knight, descendant of  the founders of the Order of the Garter. 

King Edward III Founded the Order of the Garter [great grandfather]

"The foundation year is usually presumed to be 1348"
Our Grandfather's Among the 26 Founder Knights of the Order of the Garter

Edward, Prince of Wales (1330–1376) [great grand uncle]

Thomas De Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick (d.1369) [great grandfather]

Ralph de Stafford, 2nd Baron Stafford (1301–1372) [great grandfather] 

Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March (1328–1360) [great grandfather]

Hugh De Courtenay (d.1349) [great grand uncle] 

Thomas Holland1st Earl of Kent, 1st Baron Holand (d.1360) [great grandfather]