Showing posts with label Jr.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jr.. Show all posts

Sunday, January 18, 2015

12 Characteristics of 12 Impressive Ancestors


I thought I would share some of the outstanding characteristics of our ancestors.  Most of these individuals have more complete stories elsewhere on this blog. These are characteristics that have impressed me and are worthy of emulation by their descendants. 

Perseverance-Jensine Marie Jensen Moulton
Mary was one of three plural wives who moved to Old Mexico to try to keep the Joseph Moulton family together.  Things didn't work out when the law against polygamy caused her husband to live with his first wife and "Mary" did her best to provide for her family.  First as a seamstress, then a store owner.  She ran boarding houses in Utah and California and cared for many years for her invalid daughter. 

Overcoming Obstacles-Emma Amelia Croft Chase
Emma Amelia Croft would settle for nothing less than a temple marriage in the Logan Temple. Amelia wrote letters to her fiance's Centerville Bishop to help Frank get his temple recommend.  Twenty-five years into their marriage, her husband deserted their family of nine children.  She did the best she could to carry on as a single mom.  She passed away in 1933 in the home of her daughter, Clairissa Chase Weiss, before knowing whatever happened to her husband.  

Taking Risks-George Ogden Chase
George Ogden was unafraid to try.  He fearlessly headed west with his family in 1847 as a young boy of 15.  One risk he took was marrying Emily Hyde, the Apostle Orson Hyde's daughter.  Emily had a home in Farmington and was mother to six of George's children.  She felt George was away from home to much and eventually asked to be divorced and moved to California.  George was obedient to the Prophet Brigham Young when Brigham suggested he take the young school teacher, Josephine Streeper, as a plural wife.  Fifteen children were born to that union.  George helped build the mill at Liberty Park and another mill in Farmington.  He discovered natural gas in Ogden and built the first bicycle track and lakeside resort on the shores of the Great Salt Lake.  He was a farmer and respected in Chase Park, north of Centerville, UT.  He was unafraid to take risks.

Creativity-John Croft
John was a branch president in England.  He was a counselor in the Presidency on the boat as they crossed the ocean. He married into a respected family and brought his new wife with him to America in 1860.  He did carpentry work on the Lion House, the Bountiful Temple and many of the fine homes in Salt Lake.  He helped plan and build the canals in Enterprise/Peterson area.  He helped his son in law, Frank Leslie chase, build the farmhouse that still stands in Centerville, UT.  John Croft's Enterprise farmhouse and outbuildings were among the finest in Utah.  He was an inventor and was among the first to use a power pump to irrigate his fields.

Hospitality-Phoebe Chase & Chase Family
Christmas was quite a production at Chase Park in Centerville, UT.  The tradition of hosting all the extended family continued until Kate Chase's death in 1937.  Kate learned from her mother, Josephine and her grandmother, Phebe.  Phebe regularly hosted her son-in-law, Brigham Young, and his good friend, Heber C. Kimball, at their Liberty Park home.  The Salt Lake Chase home was known a favorite "out of town" spot and the site of numerous dances, parties, and sleigh rides.

Generosity-Simon S. Weiss
Simon S. Weiss was a Jewish man with a very generous streak.  When his wife's father disappeared, he was quick to take the family in and support them during difficult financial times.  His mother-in-law, Amelia Chase, was cared for in his home until her death. 

Devotion to Family-Hyrum Chase Moulton
Chase would lower the kitchen counters to make them easier for his eleven children to help their mother.  He was continually remodeling and enlarging his Heber City home.  His Ford Garage was "through the block" and water filled inner tubes brought fun to all the neighborhood kids in summer. He left his business in Heber and worked as a plumber in Wyoming and in Salt Lake to provide for his large family during the depression. His children all learned to thread pipes and dig ditches after school to help him in his work. 

Developing a Talent-Margaret Lillian Moulton
Lilly played the organ for church functions from the time she was eight years old.   For many years she accompanied soloists and played the hymns for funerals all over Wasatch County.  Lilly could have been a concert pianist or a tabernacle organist according to her professor at Brigham Young Academy.   Instead, she became a mother of eleven very musical children, helping them each develop their own musical talents.  

Work-Henry Clegg, Jr. 
Henry Clegg, Jr. was a beloved Conference President in England for many years before leaving to come to America.  With help from the Perpetual Emigration Fund, he planned to bring his wife, Hannah Eastman, and his two sons, to Zion.  In Kansas his wife became ill and died from cholera. A few days later his infant son passed away as well and was carried back to be buried in his mother's arms.  Henry came to Utah and married two more wives.  He worked hard to provide for his large family in Salt Lake, then Springville, and was an early settler in Heber Valley.  He was always teaching his 25 sons how to work to provide for their families.  He was a cobbler, kept cattle and sheep, worked a farm, made shingles, ran a grocery store and made time to become a beloved Bishop in Wasatch Stake, Heber City 2nd Ward.

Sisterhood-Ann Lewis and Margaret Griffiths-Plural Wives
Ann Lewis and Margaret Griffiths were sealed to their husband the same day by Brigham Young.  They learned how to work well together and even sang and performed with their husband all over Provo/Springville.  They sang in the choirs and worked with their husband to build up his new businesses.  They supported him while he was Bishop in Heber.  These sister wives respected each other and learned to work well together.

True Conversion-Isaac Chase  
This good Quaker recognized restored truth and joined the LDS Church in 1840.  As one member of the family wrote:  "He left his wealth in New York and Nauvoo.  He left his tools at Liberty Park but he always kept his testimony."  "Father Chase" once spoke in General Conference.  When asked to leave his mill at Liberty Park and move to Centerville, he did.  We don't have all the details of his business dealings with Brigham Young, but we know he died faithful to the Gospel of Jesus Christ that he loved.  Some family members felt Brigham had cheated Isaac in taking over the Liberty Park Mill property.  Isaac said, "Land o' mercy, don't look at the faults and shortcomings of the people for your guidance.  Look well to the principles of your Church!"


Testimony-Emma Amelia Mitchell Croft
Emma Amelia wrote a letter to her missionary son encouraging him to be patient with those who persecuted him.  This letter to her son was read by a member of a mob in Arkansas who was about to tar and feather Frank.  The ruffian's heart softened as he read of the missionary's mother counsel and Frank was allowed to leave unharmed.  Emma Amelia was known for her powerful prayers.



Sunday, September 21, 2014

Look On The Side That’s Bright-The Life of Henry Clegg, Jr.



"Look On The Side That’s Bright" - The Life of Henry Clegg, Jr.

Henry Clegg - My Hero



Bishop Henry Clegg is one of my heroes.  His life is evidenced deep faith, sensitivity, great love,  and kindness.  His musical talent has been passed onto many of his descendants.  He lived looking for goodness in all situations. He could be the poster child for the modern #share goodness.  

Henry Clegg wrote a poem that I have often enjoyed reading:

Look on the side that’s bright;
Let Hope your bosom swell;
All things will turn out right
So whisper:  “All is well”.


I have one 90 page book entitled “Oh, Henry” that has been written about the life of Henry Clegg, Jr.  by Noal C. Newbold in 1998.  At one time Clegg descendants produced a play about his life.  (Another more complete 261 page pdf  “From England to Utah” compiled by Chris Christiansen is available at the amazing Clegg Family History website:  ww.clegghistory.org.)

Below are a few of the more interesting details about Henry’s life.

Henry was 12 years old when Heber C. Kimball and other LDS missionaries from America arrived in Preston England with the message of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ.  Tradition says Henry’s father (Henry Sr.) ran a race to the River Ribble in Preston to see who was to be the first baptized but lost the race to George D. Watt, a younger man.  (See Blog of August 2014- Deep Roots, Henry Clegg, Sr. and Ellen Cardwell.)

River Ribble in Preston, England

Pic of Preston England
Henry Clegg, Jr., was baptized at age thirteen by Joseph Fielding in Preston and was associated with the Church in Preston for eighteen years, meeting Brigham Young, Orson Hyde, Parley P. Pratt, John Taylor, Wilford Woodruff, George A. Smith, and John E. Page.   (See: http://welshmormon.byu.edu/Resources/pdf/7512.pdf page 188.)
Henry was following the boot and clog making trade of his father in Lancashire, England.  He and his wife of eleven years, Hannah Eastman, were saving means for ten years to immigrate to Utah with their two sons.  

 Prior to leaving England, Henry had already suffered the loss of his oldest son, Thomas, who was accidently burned to death in 1853.

In March of 1855, the Rose Place Branch of Liverpool Conference, presented their Branch President, Henry Clegg, a “testimonial” before leaving for “Zion”.  (The original testimonial is in LDS Historical Archives.)  It begins:

Dearly Beloved President,
In presenting this testimonial to you, we feel that words are inadequate to convey those sentiments of esteem and regard that we have for you as a Brother, A Man of God and an Elder in Israel.” 

They also composed a three-stanza poem which reads in part:

“Farewell, dear Brother Henry, Till we all shall meet again;
And may Brigham’s God defend thee, Till Mount Zion thou doest gain,
Then may his spirit still attend, And be with thee until the end.”

The Clegg family sailed from Liverpool, England in the American steamship “Juventa” on March 31, 1855.


Ship manifest from Juventa says Henry was a “clockmaker” but it probably should have read “clogmaker”.
Juventa Ship Manifest
Liverpool, England to Philadelphia
7 May 1855

145*
Henry       Cleg        29     M Clockmaker     England     US    3 Packages
146* Hannah      Cleg        36     F Wife           England     United States 
147* Israel      Cleg         5     M                England     United States 
148* Henry J.    Cleg           10m M                England     United States


Six weeks later they landed in Philadelpia.  They took a train to Pittsburgh and then a steamboat down the Ohio River to St. Louis.

In June, Hannah died of cholera and was buried at Mormon Grove (near Atchison, Kansas) along with her one year and 3 month old son, Henry James. (Some sources say he was 3 years old).

Henry Clegg, Jr. and his son 6 year old son, Israel, joined the Richard Ballantyne Company of 42 saints and 45 ox-drawn wagons.  They left 1 July 1855 and four months later arrived in Salt Lake Valley on September 25 1855.  Thirty year old Henry was greeted by a Welsh girl, Ann Lewis who eventually became his second wife.  They settled in the 19th Ward in Salt Lake City.

There still exists a copy of a paper signed by Brigham Young giving Henry permission to be sealed to his third wife, Margaret Ann Griffiths. 

Signature of B. Young in the lower left quadrant.

Some sources say Brigham Young sealed them in the Endowment House.  Margaret Griffgiths was a young 17-year old immigrant girl who lost three members of her family in the early snows faced by the Martin Handcart Company in 1856.  Margaret was taken into the Clegg household while she was recovering from frostbite.


In 1859, Henry moved his family to Springville and then joined other men in Echo Canyon holding back the invasion of Johnston’s Army.  He decided to stay in Springville, UT where he became a leading citizen.  He was a fine musician and he played the dulcimer for dances.  His dulcimer can still be seen in the Provo Museum on 5th West and 6th North.  There are 3 surviving dulcimers that were built by Henry and his sons.  All were built out of wood from Big Cottonwood Canyon. The wire and pegs were brought from England.
Henry Clegg's Dulcimer in the Provo City Museum on 5th West 6th North.


Henry organized and directed a 60-voice choir in Springville.  Both of his wives were good singers and would sing with him when he gave lectures in nearby wards and towns.  He continued his shoemaking trade and managed to make one pair of shoes a year for each member of the family.

In 1872, Henry Jr. and his family moved on to Heber City in order to better provide opportunities for his sons.   
Sons of Henry Clegg, Jr.

In Heber, he homesteaded the southeastern portion of Heber and he farmed, raised stock, and worked a saw and shingle mill in Clegg’s Canyon.  The Clegg family also worked a rock quarry. 

Clegg Canyon near Heber City, Wasatch County, Utah.


Apparently there is a hiking trail up Clegg Canyon in Wasatch County.
Henry taught in a private school with 40 students that met in one of the lower rooms of the court building in 1882.  He was so popular that his classroom was full and he had to “refuse admission to seventeen who recently applied to him for instruction, having no room to accommodate them.”  (See article in Heber City paper, Feb 3, 1882)  as well as organized and directed the “Band of Hope”.   He would become an honored Bishop of the Heber City West (2nd) Ward for many years.  He also served as stake clerk, Sunday School Superintendent, and in the Wasatch Stake High Council. 

Bishop Clegg wrote many poems and hymns. His Christmas Hymn was published in the Springville, UT Telegraph and can be found at the Clegg Family site (www.clegghistory.org).   


Henry Clegg was an expert mathematician and helped with surveying the canals in Heber Valley.  (While searching for other family members we found the documents for the transfer of property in Strawberry Reservoir area in the Duschene County records before the Wasatch County was formed.)  He was part of the director of the Lake Creek Irrigation in 1888.   He was Justice of the Peace for a number of terms.  In 1884 he was an officer of the Heber Dramatic Combination.

Later he worked the mercantile trade and ran the store on Center Street that also helped support his wives after his death.  Elsie Clegg Condie wrote,  “Tenderhearted Henry Clegg, Jr. never killed a living creature.  He hired his pigs butchered and stayed away from home until they were dressed.”

Henry Clegg died at the age of 69 years on 30 August 1894 of a heart attack while working in the store.  He left two widows, Anne Lewis Clegg and Margaret Griffiths Clegg to provide for the family.  His funeral was noted in the local paper with “A Good Man has Gone.  The people universally mourn his loss.  The Stake House was profusely draped.  The longest funeral Procession ever held in the County.”  (See the article at the

There were 12 pall bearers carrying the casket from the Clegg home to the Stake Tabernacle.  The Tabernacle was still draped for the mourning of the death of President Garfield who was assassinated in July.  There were 120 teams in the procession to Heber City Cemetery.  (Wasatch Wave, 4 Sept. 1894).
Clegg headstone in Heber City, Utah Cemetery. Many of our ancestors are buried here. We would do "grave rubbings" of Henry's headstone when we visited the cemetery.
Henry Clegg, Jr. and his wives Ann Lewis and Margaret Griffiths are buried together in the Heber City, Utah Cemetery. There is a tall monument with the west facing side having the inscription:
IN MEMORY OF
HENRY
CLEGG
BORN
JUNE 7, 1825
BAMBER BRIDGE
WALTON LE DALE
LANCASHIRE. ENG.
DIED
AUG. 30. 1894

The base of the monument is inscribed with:
CLEGG
A loving husband a father dear
A faithful friend he has been here
He lived in love he died in peace
We hope his joys will never cease
Inscription on Henry Clegg headstone in Heber City Cemetery.
The North facing side is inscribed for Ann Lewis Clegg, and the Southside is inscribed for Margaret Griffith Clegg. Their graves are in front of the monument, with Henry in the middle, Ann to the North and Margaret to the South.
Clegg Family Headstone in Heber City, Utah.
Another interesting fact was that the old Clegg home was used from 1920-1925 for LDS Seminary classes.  When the old Clegg home was torn down, the materials were used to build the Seminary Building. Today the location where the old home once stood (next to the old Heber High School) is a City park.


Widowed Margaret Griffiths Clegg lived at 100 West and 300 South until her death in 1929.  This "newer" home is still standing on the northwest corner.


Clegg home in Heber City, UT today.



Here is the entire poem about “Look on the Side That’s Bright”:
I like to think that these might have once been lyrics to a hymn that Henry sang with his two wives:

Look on the side that’s bright;
Let Hope your bosom swell;
All things will turn out right
So whisper:  “All is well”.
Suppose the times are hard,
‘tis useless to look sad.
It can no help afford
And invites the sad..

If troubles fill your breast-
They also come to me;
It may be for the best,
That grief at times we see.
If we the bitter taste
We more enjoy the sweet,
And oft’ from dregs of waste,
Spring joys that are complete.

Seas are not always still
Oft’ angry billows roll,
And test the sailor’s skill
His vessel to control.
Our hearts can find relief
Our burdens be made light
If we in facing grief
Look on the side that’s bright.

And so Henry Clegg, Jr. lived, looking on the side that’s bright.
It seems that Henry’s motto was similar to that of a modern prophet, Gordon B. Hinckley:

“It isn't as bad as you sometimes think it is. It all works out. Don't worry. I say that to myself every morning. It all works out in the end. Put your trust in God, and move forward with faith and confidence in the future. The Lord will not forsake us. He will not forsake us. If we will put our trust in Him, if we will pray to Him, if we will live worthy of His blessings, He will hear our prayers.”
Gordon B. Hinckley

May we “sing” with our most honorable ancestor, Henry Clegg:

Look on the side that’s bright;
Let Hope your bosom swell;
All things will turn out right
So whisper:  “All is well”.

Mormon Grove Cemetery and “The Finisher”-Henry Clegg, Jr.


Mormon Grove Cemetery and “The Finisher”-Henry Clegg, Jr. 


Historical Marker near Atchison, Kansas.

Near Atchison, Kansas there is a Kansas State Historical Marker marking a city that disappeared: Mormon Grove.

In 1855, many Mormon pioneers from England were hit with a cholera epidemic which killed hundreds.  Among them were two of our Clegg family members.

Henry Clegg’s wife (Hannah Eastman) and third son (Henry James) are buried in what was simply called “The Saints Graveyard”  by Henry in his journal.


The cemetery at Mormon Grove contains about 50 unmarked graves, mostly cholera victims from 1853 and 1855.  http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=2184780

Here is a little background about “Mormon Grove” from the “Legends of Kansas” website.
http://www.legendsofkansas.com/atchisoncountyextincttowns2.html

Mormon Grove - When thousands of Mormons were moving westward to the great Salt Lake Valley between 1848 and the completion of the transcontinental railroad in 1869, they developed several points of departure along the Missouri River. Mormon Grove was but one of the many outfitting stations utilized by the Mormons. Located about four miles west of Atchison in a grove of young hickory trees, the grove became an important rallying point in 1855-56. The first large group of Mormons debarked the river boats in Atchison in April, 1855 and moved westward to Mormon Grove. There, they immediately began to fence 160 acres and planted crops. The site, at the head of Deer Creek, also served as an excellent camping place with water, wood, and range for stock. Like the other Mormon camps along the Missouri River, it was close enough to the port city so the Mormons could easily purchase supplies. The temporary village also had a small cemetery and a couple of permanent structures, but most residents lived in tents, covered wagons, or make-shift dwellings.
 
In 1855 eight companies, totaling 2,041 people and 337 wagons, left Mormon Grove for the Salt Lake Valley. Their route across Kansas appears to have been northwest on the "New Ft. Laramie Road" to the vicinity of Kennekuk, and then continuing on the "Old Ft. Laramie Road" as established by Major Wharton in 1844 to the head of Walnut Creek in present Brown County. Unfortunately, for those many pioneers, they were also hit with a cholera epidemic that year, which killed hundreds of them along the way. About 15 people were left at Mormon Grove to await the next year’s immigrants.
===



Hannah Eastman Clegg was the first first wife of 29 year old Henry Clegg, Jr.   She died in “Mormon Grove” 6 days after contracting cholera.  Their infant son, Henry James, also died of cholera the day after his mother and is buried near his mother.    


Henry Clegg, Jr. and his 6 year old son, Israel, survived the cholera epidemic and made their way to Utah as part of the Richard Ballantyne Company on September 25, 1855.  
(http://history.lds.org/overlandtravels/trailExcerptMulti?lang=eng&companyId=59&sourceId=4807) 



Richard Ballantyne.  Henry Clegg was 30 years old when he came to Utah in 1855 with the Richard Ballantyne Company.




Below are selected excerpts from “An Account of the Voyage from Liverpool to Great Salt Lake”, a journal kept by Henry Clegg, Jr. kept in 1855.  

 (A complete copy of Henry Clegg, Jr.’s journal is found here:  http://mormonmigration.lib.byu.edu/Search/showDetails/db:MM_MII/t:account/id:769 and here:  http://history.lds.org/overlandtravels/trailExcerptMulti?lang=eng&companyId=59&sourceId=4807)



Saturday, May 26, 1855
My wife (Hannah Eastman Clegg) still worse (who became sick from cholera on May 22).  Henry James (age 3) and Israel (age 6) took it also.

Sunday, May 27, 1855
Arrived at the Camp Ground at 11:o’clock in the forenoon.

Monday, May 28, 1855
My dear wife died at ½ past 4 o’clock in the afternoon.

Tuesday, May 29, 1855
My wife buried at Atchison at 11 o’clock in the saints grave yard next to Amelia Mercer on the north side X forward.

In the afternoon my lovely son, Henry James Clegg, died at 6 o’clock.  I buried him that same night next to his dear mother.  Went forward to the camp, 5 miles, very wet night.  I was very tired and ready to die with fatigue.

Wednesday, May 30, 1855
Israel well, but I went worse and worse and worse.  For several days I was brought to death’s door.  I cannot describe my situation nor the hardships I endured.  Must be felt to be known.

Henry Clegg, Jr. made no entry for 8 days, but a special occasion prompted him to write on June 7th.

Thursday, June 7, 1855
Being my birthday I am now 30 years of age.  This afternoon I took a change and began to mend fast.

June 9, 1855
Still Moving. 

Sunday, June 10, 1855
Felt considerably worse and low spirited.

Monday, June 11, 1855
Still sickly.  Given to fret overmuch after my dear wife and child who had gone and left me along by myself.

June 12
A little better.  Walked out a little.

June 13
A great deal better.  Increasing in strength and spirits.





Henry's journal entry dated June 9, 1855,  “Still moving” has always had a great impact on me and many other Clegg descendants. In LDS General Conference of 2004 Gayle M. Clegg spoke of Henry’s difficult challenges:
Why do any of us finish a hard task, especially if no one demands its completion?
My husband’s great-grandfather Henry Clegg Jr. was a finisher. He joined the Church with his family when the first LDS missionaries went to Preston, England. Henry had a view of his destination in his mind as he and his wife, Hannah, and their two young boys immigrated to Utah. Henry left his older parents, who were too feeble to make such a long and arduous journey, knowing he would never see them again.
While crossing the plains, Hannah contracted cholera and died. She was laid to rest in an unmarked grave. The company then moved on, and at six in the evening, Henry’s youngest son also died. Henry retraced his steps to Hannah’s grave, placed his young son in his wife’s arms, and reburied the two of them together. Henry then had to return to the wagon train, now five miles away.
Suffering from cholera himself, Henry described his condition as being at death’s door while realizing he still had a thousand miles to walk. Amazingly he continued forward, putting one foot in front of the other. He stopped writing in his journal for several weeks after losing his dear Hannah and little son. I was struck with the words he used when he did start writing again: “Still moving.”
When he finally reached the gathering place of the Saints, he began a new family. He kept the faith. He continued his story. Most remarkably, his heartache over the burial of his sweetheart and son gave birth to our family’s legacy of moving forward, of finishing.
I have often wondered as I have heard pioneer stories like the one of Henry Clegg, “Could I ever do that?”
(See entire text at https://www.lds.org/general-conference/2004/04/the-finished-story?lang=eng)

Henry and Hannah Clegg are among the honored pioneers that have blessed my life.
I am forever indebted to them for their faithfulness in choosing to accept and sacrifice for the restored Gospel of Jesus Christ.

I want to be a “Finisher” like Henry Clegg, Jr.

Sunday, September 7, 2014

Pushing and Pulling Through Life


Today in our Sunday School Class we spoke of the changes in the traditional family.  There is a battle over the definition of the family.  As I ponder the changes during the last forty years, I am thinking that it is "no small thing" to raise a righteous family in these times.

Gratefully, I do feel surrounded by those who care for me and my family.  There are many around me I claim as my "support network" and I am so thankful for their influence.  I am also aware of the help I have received in raising my family from the other side of the veil.

 I think often of the righteous women in my life.  My own mother, my grandmothers, my great-grandmothers and my great great grandmothers who all were faithful God-fearing believers.
Did they pray for their posterity as I pray for mine?

 Eliza R. Snow was close friends with "Mother Chase".  This quote was one of her most famous and indicative of her resilient, powerful spirit.  These two friends rejoiced together in the richness of the 'testimony of Jesus' they shared.  I think of their friendship and rejoice in my own friends who lift me the way Eliza and Phebe lifted each other on the Pioneer trail in 1847.


From reading the diary of Josephine Streeper, I know she "looked to heaven" as she struggled with her earthly challenges.  The loss of many of her infant children, the trial of living as "second wife", the challenges in educating, providing for, and organizing a large family (15 children!) were just some of her trials.

It wasn't always easy dealing with her enterprising but exasperating husband, George O. Chase.    When George, was divorced from his first wife, Emily Hyde, Josephine didn't complain in her diary about the negative impact of the large alimony payments now being made to her former "sister wife's" family.  She looked to heaven to bear her grievous trials.

As a modern apostle Neil L. Andersen taught, there are "Spiritual Whirlwinds"-tests, temptations, distractions, and challenges-but there is also a Rock under our feet solid and secure (Helaman 5:12).  Christ will not leave us comfortless.  He will come to us. (John 14:18).  He will make my spirit strong and capable of being resilient to the whirlwinds of life.  (Ensign, May 2014, pp. 18-21.)


 There are sacred promises that have been given to us about our posterity.  We hold fast to our faith that the Lord will keep His promises.  James and Maxine Owen had similar promises about their nine children.  The truth is "Families can be together forever!"


Like our faithful ancestors, we simply go forward with "faith in every footstep".   Our path is sure and we just keep moving forward.  We remember and honor Henry Clegg who buried his young wife and infant child in Kansas and then took the hand of his three year old son and kept walking.   We remember and honor Thomas and Sarah Moulton who were promised safe arrival in Zion and survived the trek in the "ill-fated" Willie Handcart Company with their eight children.  It is not a small thing to walk through all the challenges of earth life.  These faithful ancestors are my inspiration.   

As parents, we are leading a family handcart "company" of 11 amazing children and soon to be 15 grandchildren on the trail of life.  We have been given a priceless heritage of hope.  If we let Christ be the leader of our family, things will work out.  We will leave an inheritance of hope to those who choose to follow our example.

"In the short run, there will be troubles and Satan will roar. And there are things to wait for patiently, in faith, knowing that the Lord acts in His own time and in His own way."  (See Henry B. Eyring, Ensign, May 2014, pp. 22)

We just keep trekking.