William Greenwood
[1819-1899]



William Greenwood was the son of William Greenwood.

Born 4th March 1819.

He was an overlooker [1839].

On 24th January 1839, he married Ann Hartley [1821-1897] at St Peter's Church, Burnley, Lancashire.


Ann, of Hill Top, Burnley, was the daughter of Mary (née Beck) & Barnard Hartley.

She became interested by the preaching of the Latter Days Saints but was afraid to let her family know.

William also became curious and attended meetings with her.

Ann was baptised in September 1840 and William in June 1841

 

They decided to move to the USA.

Children:

  1. Martha [2nd April 1842-3rd January 1844] who was buried at St Peter's Churchyard, Burnley, England
  2. Sarah [14th November 1844-13th January 1877] who married [San Bernardino, California 11th March 1861] Isaac Turley, had about 12 children & was (possibly) buried at Colonia Juarez, Chihuahua, Mexico
  3. child who was born and died in England & was buried St Peter's Churchyard, Burnley
  4. Foster [18th February 1847-31st January 1848] who was born and died in England & was buried St Peter's Churchyard, Burnley
  5. Barnard Hartley [b Warsaw, Illinois 9th September 1849] who married [about 1871] Eunice (Fuller) Howd, had 11 children & was buried at Inverury, Utah [27th May 1905]
  6. William [b 27th July 1852] born as the family were crossing the plains; (possibly) married Matilda Stewart, died in Los Angeles [27th July 1930] & was buried at Salt Lake City Cemetery
  7. Mary Ann [b Cedar City, Utah February 1855] who married [Salt Lake City] Charles Dennis White [1851-1933], had about 10 children, died at Tremonton, Box Elder, Utah [23rd May 1935] & was buried at Mountain View Cemetery, Beaver, Utah
  8. Adam [20th February 1857-6th August 1904] who (possibly)  married Henrietta Young & was buried at Kirtland Cemetery, Kirtland, San Juan County, New Mexico
  9. Nathan [b Beaver County, Utah 15th August 1859] who married [17th February 1888] Sarah Alice Parkinson, had about 10 children, died 18th October 1917 & was buried at Union Cemetery
  10. Titus [b Beaver County 14th July 1861-9th November 1904] who was buried Mountain View Cemetery, Beaver
  11. Rachel [b Beaver 21st February 1863-23rd February 1863] who was buried Mountain View
  12. Ruth Ann [b Beaver 1865] who married [1883] William Anciel Twitchell, had about 10 children, died [13th January 1952] at Cedar City & was buried at Mountain View

When they decided to go to America, Ann's parents told her that if she ever wanted to return to England, they would send her the money.

After arriving in America, Ann became homesick and wanted to return home, but William refused to write the letter so a friend wrote it for her.

However, when she returned home, William came with her, taking their daughter Martha with them.

Martha died in Burnley, England in 1844.

William was still unhappy and decided to return to America with, or without, Ann, and he left without her [1846/7], but she eventually followed him to Warsaw, Illinois [September 1849].

In May 1852, they made plans to trek across the plains to join other church members in Utah, arriving in Salt Lake in November 1852.

About 3 weeks after arriving in Salt Lake and although they were very tired after the long arduous trip, they were ordered by the church to go to Cedar City to settle. This meant another long arduous trek to a new wild region where many earlier settlers had already left Cedar City for California. On the way to Cedar City they arrived at Beaver Valley and decided to settle there.

They lifted the wagon off its wheels and this became their home. They lived off the milk from their one cow, berries, fruit and greens from the wild.

Later, they built a log cabin and then a stone-built 6 bedroom house.

Ann died in 1897.

After her death, William went to live with his daughter Mary Ann and her husband Charles Dennis White.

There was a rail service from Beaver Valley to Milford (about 30 minutes away) so, in October 1899, Mary Ann, Charles Dennis and William decided to make a trip to Salt Lake. On the return trip, William was in a different carriage to his daughter, and – for some reason – he decided to get off the train when it stopped for a few moments at Clearwater. It was a stormy night and the wind blew William's hat off, and whilst trying to recover it, the train left without him. He started walking along the tracks until he met a railroad worker who soon realised that William was lost. William asked the way and the man pointed along the tracks. Next morning, the worker heard that the old man was missing so he returned to the place where he had last seen him. He followed the trail to the Sevier river where he found William's body. It appeared that he had slipped from the bank, and had fallen into 2 feet of water where he drowned [13th October 1899].

William was buried in Mountain View Cemetery, Beaver, Beaver County, Utah




© Malcolm Bull 2023
Revised 11:31 / 16th December 2023 / 7444

Page Ref: Y2

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