Residence
Date | 30 September 1854 |
Place | Salt Lake City, Utah, United States of America |
Source References
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Deseret News
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- Date: 1 December 1887
- Page: Page 4
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Citation:
OBITUARY.
LEWIS. - Died in Spanish Fork, Utah, on the 4th inst., at the residence of his son Frederick G. Lewis, Brother John Lewis, at the ripe age of 72 years, 10 months and 23 days.
Deceased was born in Llandaff, Glamorganshire, South Wales, Dec. 11th, 1814. He was married twice, to Mary Ann John, Sep. 20th, 1835, (who bore him four sons and three daughters, and then died, May 10th, 1850), and to Priscilla M. Phillips, on the 30th day of August, 1851, who bore him a son and a daughter. She died June 24th, of the present year.
Brother Lewis joined the Wesleyan church in youth and continued a devout advocate of its doctrines until he heard the revealed truth from heaven preached by the lowly followers of Christ. He was baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the town of Newport, Wales, by Elder Shurtliff, in March, 1853, from which time he has exercised his best efforts to lead a consistent life by harmonizing his works with his profession as a Latter-day Saint.
In the spring of 1853, he and his family, together with twenty-one members of the Cardiff branch, whose emigration he paid to the valley, bade adieu to home, friends and comforts, to make a new home with the Saints in the far off west. On their journey the dread cholera broke out among them, at which time Brother Lewis was a conspicuous person, because of his cheering visits among the sick, and the great power of healing God had blessed him with. Indeed he retained that power, as hundreds here can testify, until he was prostrated by the hand of death. At Kansas City he hired a blacksmith to make ox shoes for the entire herd. He arrived in Salt Lake City September 30th, 1854. Being a master mason he found ready employment on the Temple Block, where he worked about one year; he then moved north to Box Elder, where he became counselor to Bishop Alvin Nichols and was the first home missionary in that county.
In the spring of 1857 he and family moved to Spanish Fork, where he has resided ever since. In 1872 he went on a mission to his native land and was tireless in propogating the eternal principles of truth. While there, and ever since, his ambition was to enlighten the pathway of friend and stranger with the effuigence of truth. Where sickness was, there Brother Lewis was seen; where poverty, his means; and when duty called him he was always at his post.
The funeral services were held at the meeting-house, to which place his body was carried by sixteen High Priests. Bishop Evans, of Salem, and Bishop Snell, of this place, also Elders P. Syker and T. D. Evans delivered appropriate discourses.
He leaves 6 children, 39 grandchildren, and 10 great-grandchildren, besides a host of friends, to mourn his death.
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Frank Esshom: Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah: Comprising Photographs, Genealogies, Biographies
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- Page: John A Lewis
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Citation:
JOHN A. LEWIS
Born Dec. 11, 1814, Llandaff, South Wales. Came to Utah Sept 30. 1854, Darwin Richardson Company.
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Kate B Carter: Our Pioneer Heritage
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- Page: Vol 5, Page 412-415
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Citation:
STALWART CITIZEN
Frederick Lewis, the son of John A. and Ann John Lewis, was born May 29th, 1844, in the port city of Cardiff, Glamorganshire, South Wales. His mother died just before his sixth birthday. His sister, Ann, was nearly fourteen and his sister, Mary, ten and a half years old. His little brother william, a surviving twin, was three and a half.
Frederick's father was a rock mason by trade and a master builder. He and his brother built the Cardiff docks. He owned and operated a store, owend and leased twelve houses, accumulating quite a fortune. He had private tutors and a governess for his children and in addition, Frederick went to a Wesleyan school for boys. Frederick was known all his life for his beautiful penmanship, was an excellent reader and expressed hismelf well. Cardiff was a bustling city, one of the chief coal shipping centers of the world. There were iron and steel works and flour mills, it was the county seat and the City and County Hall was located there. Frederick and his little brother often visited St. John's parish church, and when allowed would visit their mother's grave in the ancient churchyard that surrounded the edifice.
Frederick's father had been educated as a Wesleyan minister and did not hear of Mormonism until after his second marriage to Priscilla Phillips Merriman in 1851. Priscilla had a little daughter, Louise, and her deceased sister's daughter, Caroline Matthews, when they were married. The family studied the gospel carefully for two years before embracing it. Nine-year-old Frederick was baptized with his sister Mary and their father in 1853 before leaving their native land for America. They left Cardiff by train for Liverpool, England, January 22, 1854. Here the father secured first-class passage for his family on the sailing vessel Golconda, January 25, 1854. They arrived at New Orleans March 16, having spent seven weeks on the water. Some days the high winds would drive the vessel back farther than it had progressed the previous day. They sailed up the Mississippi on the boat John Simmons, were delayed -stranded on a sandbar, but finally reached St. Louis where they joined other Saints at McFee's Camp Grounds on the outskirts of the city where all were preparing to move on to Utah. After about three months of preparation and delay they departed with the Darwin Richards Company, arriving in Great Salt Lake City, September 30, 1854.
For a short time the Lewises remained in Salt Lake, the father working on the Temple block. One day, President Young approached him, placed four peach stones in the palm of his hand and sent him on a mission to begin an orchard in Brigham City. He started the first trees to bear peaches in that community. Here and in Willard he built stone houses with his young apprentice, Frederick, to help him. Some of the old rock houses still standing in Willard were built by them. The family lived in Brigham City until '58 the time of the move south when they too abandoned their homes, settling in Spanish Fork.
Frederick continued to wear the clothing he had brought with him from Wales which consisted of short black broad-cloth trousers and coat, black fine leather shoes and a black velvet cap. He was conspicuous among the boys who wore home-made cowhide boots, canvas pants and shirts and home braided straw hats. Naturally he was made the butt of their jokes and they delighted in tormenting him. His two sisters had married, but young Fred had a champion - little Agnes Ferguson who never failed to take his part. Perhaps it was his forbearance and his acceptance of life, as it was, that appealed to the diminutive Scottish lass who later became his wife. Agnes was not without a sense of humor. She and her twin Barbara looked so much alike they couldn't be identified and often worn some things of a different colour to set them apart. For a dance one night they added handkerchiefs to their costumes and wore them around their necks. During the evening they exchanged them. Fred was the victim of the joke; although he and Agnes were enngaged to be married, he took Barbara as far as the gate when she laughed and told him he had better go back and get Agnes. They were married January 28, 1865, at the home of Barbara and her husband, Willard Orson Creer and the following October were sealed in the Endowment House in Salt Lake City. In March 1868 death claimed their two-year-old, Barbara Catherine, and that summer Agnes' twin, Barbara Creer, died following the birth of a baby son, William Orson. The infant was brought to Agnes who was at the time nursing her own babe, Priscilla Merriman. He and his four-and-a-half-year-old sister became a part of the family.
In June of 1873 Fred and Agnes Lewis and John and Adlinda Koyle were having dinner together, as they often did, and the question came up as to what the young women would do if anything ever happened to their husbands. One of them jokingly proposed that if one of the men should die the other would marry his widow and take care of her and her family. This they agreed upon and strange as it may seem, in just one week John Koyle was killed in a rock quarry in Spanish Fork Canyon. It was three years before the promise was fulfilled. Agnes and Adlinda had always been friends and loved each other dearly. When Fred and Adlinda were married there were two young Lewis daughters, and now with Adlinda's six the number took a sudden jump to eleven children. Altogether Frederick Lewis fathered eight daughters and one son, helped raise Barbara's two and Adlinda's six children.
Fred built Agnes the home they lived in most of their lives on 1st South and 1st West in Spanish Fork. After the death of his father's wife, he moved him from his first home on North Main Street into a little log house next to his own. As a young man, Fred homesteaded a farm on Spanish Fork River and was a successful farmer. From 1862-76 he was the leader of the martial band in Spanish Fork. During the Indian War troubles he was a drum major for the county and stood guard when raids were suspected, at which time he beat his drum to warn the settlement. He was the city marshal of Spanish Fork from 1870-77.
In 1883 Fred responded to a mission call to Wales. On arrival he waent to Old St. John's Churchyard to visit his mother's grave, where he picked flowers which he pressed and sent to his sisters. He was a good missionary, and became a fluent speaker and upon his return home served as counselor to Bishop George D. Snell. He was an accomplished musician, and played the dulcimer for dances. The Lewis home was always open to their children and their friends. Their grandchildren still reminisce of the holidays when they all gathered in the parlor around the flickering fire, and listened to the scores of stories grandfather so enchantingly told. They recall, too, that as pre-teeners they were paid ten cents to go to the farm with Grandfather, fifteen cents if they stayed home.
On January 28, 1915, Fred and Agnes celebrated their Golden Wedding Anniversary in the Spanish Fork Auditorium when about four hundred guests gathered in a social and dance. It should be mentioned that at this date Fred had not yet lost a tooth. In the fall of 1918 he sold the old house in Spanish Fork and moved to Provo to be near "the girls." Frederick Lewis died Jun 28, 1920, and was buried at Spanish Fork. He was a gentleman - kind, thoughtful and understanding. He was honored and revered by his family for his teachings, his example, his love and his name. This was the heritage he bequeathed them.
Agnes Reid Ferguson Lewis died three months following the death of her husband, October 8, 1820. Adlinda Hillman Koyle Lewis preceded them by over four years, February 21, 1916.
- Agnes Lewis Crandall
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