Saturday, June 29, 2013

An Ancestral History or Two




Bertha Marie Hansen

                Bertha Marie Hansen is my great-great grandmother. She is an incredible woman. She was born in Denmark is 1862 and was raised by her strong Lutheran parents. They were kind to her and her siblings, but Denmark was in an era of war and poverty. Times were very hard for them. The boys in her family went off to earn their keep at the age of seven, and the girls were raised to learn homemaking skills like cooking, baking, knitting, weaving, spinning, and needlework, as well as clothing construction as an early age. When Bertha was fourteen she heard the message of the restored gospel from the Elders in Denmark and became converted.
                Upon discovering this, her parents and family disowned her and kicked her out. When talking to my grandmother, she remembers Bertha talking about the disgrace she had felt and the sorrow. She never saw them again. She lived with her sister and was there baptized and confirmed a member. She moved to Copenhagen where she rented a room and set up a dressmaking business in order to earn passage to America. She traveled by sea with a twelve-year-old companion named Wilhelmina Maria Dreyer in 1883. They boarded the train going west to the Utah Territory. They were picked up in the city of Nephi by Parley Rogers Young who was headed to Fairview. When they got there, Parley took them to the home of L.P. Anderson. Bertha was supposed to marry him, but found him married with his wife dying of tuberculosis and him living in a horrible condition.
                During the next year Parley hired Bertha to help out at his home where his wife was dying of cancer. They eventually were married in 1884 in the Salt Lake Temple. Parley built their own little stone home. A year into their marriage, Bertha had a dream that Parley was going to marry Eliza Jane Briggs as a plural wife. Eliza was a crippled young woman from England. They were married just as Bertha has her first child, Parley Absalom. Later in the next year Bertha had another son, Jesse Leroy who is my great-grandfather, at the same time that Eliza had her first daughter Hannah.
                Parley was sent to jail a few years later for unlawful cohabitation, which was rough for the two families. After he returned, one of his daughters from his previous marriage died of typhoid fever. During the next five years Bertha gave birth to five more children and Eliza had two.
                When I was interviewing my grandmother, she remembered her father, Jesse Leroy, talking about Bertha. He fondly remembered her as a good woman who made a good home for her family. She was very capable and talented. She would sing and dance and talk in Danish. She loved to gather wildflowers and put them in vases to beautify her home. She was a woman of short stature and full figure. She wore her light brown hair parted in the middle and pulled back in a bun. She had a quiet, calm disposition.
                In the summer of 1895 Bertha was expecting her seventh child. She worked very hard that year, helping Parley lift heavy grain sacks. The night before her baby was born she scrubbed the floors on her hands and knees. This particular birth was very difficult for her, although the rest had always been difficult, but Bertha died from the ordeal as did her infant son. Parley named and blessed him that very day. None of the children heard Bertha die that night. Some contributed the death to the hard work she did prior to delivering, but others suspect it was a breech birth. She was only 33. My grandmother recalled Jesse telling them the story of her death. He had said that the light went out in their world when Mother died. They were left with Eliza. She was not nearly as kind, generous, calm, talented, and capable as Bertha. It was difficult for all of the children to lose her. Even though she died when my great-grandfather was young, he remembered her for her valiance and her kindness despite the many difficult things she went through. She was a good woman and a great mother.

Works Cited:
-          Personal phone call interview with my Grandmother
-          The Ancestors and Pioneers of Jesse Leroy Young and Alice Dorthea Tucker
Compiled by: Ruth Young Baum






George James Tucker

                George James Tucker is my great-great-great-grandfather. He was born December 1, 1861 in Mt. Pleasant in Utah. He was the son of George Tucker and Jorgine Dorthea Svendsen who had traveled over from Denmark. The Tucker home was a happy one, though it had been full of trials. Each parent had endured the trials of crossing the plains. They finally settled in their home in Mt. Pleasant. George James was their first born child, and sadly their only child to grow to maturity.
                Soon after George came his younger sister Sophia. When George was only six, his mother died after giving birth to two beautiful twin boys, Amasa and Louis. The twins lived only a few short months after her because they were so tiny and immature. They were difficult to feed and take care of. Not long after, Sophia followed them in death at only fourteen months old. This was a very trying time for George and his father, who were left to carry on alone.
                Some beloved relatives of the Tucker’s, the P.M. Peels, invited George and his father to live with them. They lived there until 1868, when George Sr. married his second wife Emma Hurst. When George was eight years old, his step-mother gave birth to a boy named Travers. Although they were several years apart, a close bond grew between the two. They had many travels together. My grandmother can remember her relatives talking about George James. She remembered them describing him as being very mild natured, of an affectionate disposition, and very easy to get along with. Many people, especially his family, looked up to him with pride.
                In 1880 George James began courting a beautiful young woman by the name of Sarah Jane Brady. After a year or so of courting, they were married on April 28, 1881 by George’s uncle. They began a very happy home in Mt. Pleasant. They were later sealed in the Salt Lake Temple. A year later in 1882, George’s step-mother Emma Tucker died. Travers came to live with George and his wife, and Sarah Jane took the baby of Emma, Charles, to care for. She also had her own baby, George Warren Tucker, to care for. My grandmother remembers the stories of the two boys who were raised like twins.
                George took over the 180-acre farm in Oak Creek. My grandmother and grandfather told of the hard times in those days, especially for farmers. Crops were harvested the difficult way. They eventually moved to Fairview to a one-room log house. After they were situated George went to work at the Temple Sawmill in the canyon.
                That next year, in December of 183, George and Sarah had another baby girl whom they named Sarah Jane. She sadly passed away only a month or two later. At that time, George Sr. married again and took his young boy, Charles, to live with him. It is understandable that the family felt a double loss at the time. The next year they tried again, and were blessed with a baby boy they named Amasa in November of 1884. He lived only a short time and died. This was one of the roughest trials for the family. Their grandmother Nancy also passed away that November, and their Uncle passed away from a saw mill accident. That made four deaths within a year in the family. My grandparents talked about the strength of the family’s love for each other despite these challenges. They knew for certain where they would go, and when they would all see each other again.
                In March of 1885, George James came home from the Sawmill seriously ill. He suffered from a kidney ailment that killed him on March 24, 1885. He didn’t suffer long, but the family was crushed to lose him. It added a death to the four already suffered through. George James was only 24 years old. He was buried in the Fairview Cemetery on the third birthday of his little son.  My grandmother talked about Sarah Jane after George’s death. It seemed as though the life had gone out of her. She felt crushing sorrow, but always said she was grateful for the faith and trust she had in the Lord. He sustained her through her trials.


Works Cited:

-              Personal phone call interview with my Grandmother

-              The Ancestors and Pioneers of Jesse Leroy Young and Alice Dorthea Tucker
              Compiled by: Ruth Young Baum 



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