Family History Questions – Part 3

Continuing on the Bodell side…

Emma Jane Farmer crosses the plains in 1856 with her family at 13 years old.  In May 1862 she marries a young widower named Joseph Bodell.  Joseph was born in England to Henry Bodell and Jane Elsie (Elsey?).  Jane was baptized when Joseph was seven, with Henry being baptized two years later.  Joseph was baptized 4 FEB 1852 at age 12.  It is unknown when Joseph came over, but before his 20th birthday he is already in SLC and getting married to his first wife (May 1860).  They have a baby a little over 18 months later, and his wife dies two weeks after that (14 APR 1862).  He marries Emma Jane Farmer about a month later (17 MAY), and the baby dies 2 SEP 1862, about six months old.

The following year (1863), his father Henry dies and is buried “on the plains.”  When did Joseph Bodell come over?  Is it possible that he came over with his father’s family, and Henry died on a later trip bringing another group of Saints across?  When did Henry’s family leave England?  Anybody want to tackle these questions?

Jeremiah Reuben Freeman’s side is next….

Family History Questions – Part 2

*** Initial Disclaimer*** I’m getting a lot of this info from Church websites (e.g. new.familysearch.org, FamilySearch Family Tree, etc.) which doesn’t necessarily make it accurate. If anyone has access to records that dispute this info PLEASE let me know!

OK, so with all this reunion talk, it got me thinking about our family history, and when each particular root first joined the church.  This is Part 2 of

Dad’s side is a little more tricky.  Grandma Freeman’s side we know, with all four of her grandparents being baptized in Denmark and emigrating to Utah and California.

Grandpa Freeman’s parents were Jeremiah Reuben Freeman and Emma Jane Bodell.  All four of EJB’s grandparents were born in England, with most emigrating to/toward Utah, with her maternal grandstepmother (Elisabeth Morris) being buried on the plains in July 1856, and her paternal grandfather (Henry Bodell) being buried on the plains in 1863.  Anyone have any info on their respective pioneer companies, or how to find that out?  It would be interesting to find any details about those two deaths.

EJB was the daughter of Joseph Bodell and Emma Jane Farmer, both of whom were born in England.  Emma Jane Farmer was the second of seven kids born to James Morris Farmer and Sarah Trussler.  Her mother seems to have died either in labor or due to complications of childbirth, as her death date is 26 AUG 1851 and “Baby Farmer” was born and died AUG 1851.  Emma Jane was 8 yrs old when her mom and baby sibling died.  Two years later (1853), her father married Elisabeth Morris.  James has a confirmation date of 1 JUL 1848 (when he was 32), and Elisabeth’s baptism/confirmation are dated 6 OCT 1837, so it’s possible they met at church.

!!!WEIRD ALERT!!!  It’s possible they met LONG before that.  I’m guessing that there’s been a data entry/merge error somewhere along the line, because it seems this Elisabeth Morris is actually his widowed mother!  Was that allowed?  At first you’d think, maybe she’s just helping out with the kids and is just listed as living there.  BUT there is another kid listed between their marriage date and Elisabeth’s death date.  Anyone want to figure out what’s up with that one? 

That kid was Willard Biddle Farmer, born 26 OCT 1855 in Nottingham, and died 26 JUL 1856 “on the plains.”  He was nine months old.  Elisabeth Morris also died “on the plains” JUL 1856.  It couldn’t have been easy to have a baby, get on a ship, then start crossing the plains.  Emma Jane would have been 12 during the sea voyage, and was baptized 10 MAY 1856, turning 13 on 26 JUN.  Would her baptism have had to been in the U.S., or would there have been time to leave England in May and still get to Nebraska (or wherever) by July?    So at 13 years old, she’s already seen two mother figures and two baby siblings die, has crossed the Atlantic, and crossed the plains.  No doubt being the second oldest she’s got a lot to do to help with the younger kids as well.

To be continued…

Family History Questions – Part 1

*** Initial Disclaimer*** I’m getting a lot of this info from Church websites (e.g. new.familysearch.org, FamilySearch Family Tree, etc.) which doesn’t necessarily make it accurate. If anyone has access to records that dispute this info PLEASE let me know!

OK, so with all this reunion talk, it got me thinking about our family history, and when each particular root first joined the church.

Of course, Mom’s side is pretty easy, with her parents both being the first in their respective lines to be baptized.  I had always assumed Mom was BIC, but I just noticed that Grandpa wasn’t baptized until December AFTER Mom was born, with Grandma Judy being baptized a year later.  Interestingly, Grandma Helen’s book say she was baptized by Wayne on May 3, 1953, with Edward and Marlene.  However, the Church sites have her baptismal date listed as 18 DEC 1999 in the Dallas temple.  Anyone have any idea what happened with that?

Mom, can you find out what the circumstances were behind your parents taking the discussions and getting baptized?  If you already know, can you share that with us?

We’ll start with Dad’s side in the next one…

Two worlds collide

Thought I’d share with you all a fun collision from two of my former lives last night. One of guys I coached with at Chapel Hill…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

…now is on the staff at Tennessee State.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It was fun to see a commrade from my days on the sidelines at CHHS now on the sidelines at the Marriott Center.

Um, yeah…so we had a baby…

She’s here. Born on a Saturday, like all our other kids. Born on a football rivalry game day where the good guys lose, like her brother Elijah. (Though technically, since we live in the future, they didn’t actually lose until the next day. It was tied at half when we stopped watching.) 6 lbs. 7 oz. 19 inches. Final verdict on the name is Coralie Xiuqin. Still not EXACTLY sure where “Coralie” came from (the girls have been vague on the actual source), but Xiuqin was Grandma Judy’s given name. (“Judy” wasn’t all the rage in the 20’s in Chinese baby name circles as it is now–or isn’t.)

If you want to see pictures, look at Chris and Leah’s pictures of Oliver. She kind of looks like that. But different. And she’s a girl.

***UPDATE***
Laurie has posted some pics on the facebook.

***UPDATED UPDATE***
She posted stuff on her blog too.

Musicians unite! (Hey, it could happen.)

So everybody dust off your band skills. (Except Ti, who for some reason was exempt from the band mandate. What’s up with that Ti? So what if you sang. So did Melissa. And piano? Please! Exactly how many piano concerts/recitals did you have? FAVORITE BABY! FAVORITE BABY!) Anyway, I digress.

Some time ago I sent Laurie this link, thinking how fun it would be to do something like this in FHE someday. With our fourth on the way, we have just the right number. Then I saw this and set my sights higher. But with that number of people, it’ll never happen until our kids have kids and we did it at a family reunion.

Then I thought, hey I come from a family that could play circles around those VonTrapp amateurs! (And Ti, you could play piano, since Melissa has other options and Mom has an accordian.) Does this NOT look like a ton of fun to anyone out there?

We’d probably have to get kids and spouses involved too, if they’re up for it. Nick could wail on that violin solo, eh? We could do classics, spirituals, or whatever. (I’m telling you, if you don’t click on each link and watch the whole thing you’re missing out!) Billy’s got dibs on the ‘bone, but due to other needs elsewhere, there can only be one trumpeteer (kind of like Highlander), so you guys will have to figure it out.

So who wants what?

Happy Irish!

SO, it’s Spring Break here, and since I have nothing better to do I decided to figure out just how Irish I am.

Our (meaning me and my siblings) 7th-Great Grandparents, Daniel Malone and Mary Busby, were born in Ireland in the 1640s. So that makes us 1/512 Irish.

I found a calculator online that figures blood volume using gender, height, and weight, and it said I have 5.97 liters of blood. Doing the math and conversions, it turns out I have about 2.4 teaspoons of Irish blood flowing through me. Who knew?

Future WCC title game?

As we’re waiting for the tipoff of the Michigan game, anyone else think Gonzaga looked scary good last night? Moved the ball well (especially against the zone), ran the floor, monster night on the boards, shot lights-out, and on and on. All this made even more magnificent by comparing it to the lackluster, complacent, sloppy Cougs.

And Jimmer said he was happy with their play in the post-game press conference? I’ve only seen two games this year, and I wasn’t impressed with half of them.

Do any of you think the Cougs will get to wear their road blues in this tourney? If so, why; if not, why not? Discuss!

PS-any arguments based purely on loyalty will be politely disregarded.