Priscilla Merriman Lewis 1a 2a 3a 4a 5a 6a

Birth Name Priscilla Merriman Lewis
Gender female
Age at Death unknown

Parents

Relation to main person Name Birth date Death date Relation within this family (if not by birth)
Father Frederick G Lewis29 May 184428 June 1920
Mother Agnes Reid Ferguson21 September 18436 October 1920
    Sister     Mary Lewis about 1854
    Sister     Barbara Catherine Lewis about 1866 March 1868
         Priscilla Merriman Lewis October 1867
    Sister     Agnes Lewis 5 April 1872 5 April 1947
    Sister     Adlinda Lewis January 1878
    Brother     Fred Lewis 17 August 1880 29 December 1921
 
Father Frederick G Lewis29 May 184428 June 1920
Stepmother Adlinda Hillman21 February 1916

Families

Family of Swenson and Priscilla Merriman Lewis

Married Husband Swenson ( * + ... )
   
Event Date Place Description Sources
Marriage about 1890     6a
  Children
Name Birth Date Death Date
Lewis J SwensonMay 1891
Priscilla L SwensonNovember 1892
Fred R SwensonJanuary 1895

Attributes

Type Value Notes Sources
WikiTree Lewis-1360
 

Source References

  1. Brigham Young University, Center for Family History and Genealogy: Welsh Mormon History
      • Date: March 1927
      • Page: Lewis, John A. - Biography
      • Citation:

        “John A. Lewis – My Grandfather”
        Written by Priscilla Lewis Swenson, March 1927

        My recollections of Grandpa Lewis are of the most pleasant sort. He was a kind, dear grandpa to me, always polite and pleasant. He was rather tall, bright blue eyes, dark brown hair, curled, and fine, high forehead, high cheekbones. Walked straight, and sat straight. My father resembled his own mother and my Grandpa used to tell me that I was like her too, and as I grew older, Aunt Mary told me I was about her mother's build and height, and resembled her [Ann John]. He spoke quietly and loved to tell a joke, or listen to one. He could retell a story well. He enjoyed a good theater, and it was his delight to go to Conference in Salt Lake, Spring and Fall, and attend the Salt Lake Theater shows. Phil [Margetts] was one of his favorite actors. My first recollection of Salt Lake City was,, when Pa and Ma drove up in a wagon with a mule team, old Trump and Bell, and Grandpa and Grandma Lewis went along, as did also Kate, Will, and I. We walked up the hills and Ma [bought] us children an orange, the first time I had ever seen oranges. Will helped himself to a peach out of a box in a store, and gave me one, and we had them nearly eaten when Ma made the discovery. Pa gave me 25 cents each New Year's Day until I was a large girl. I was heart-broken the year he failed.

        I remember when Grandpa left for his mission to Wales in 1872 [date corrected by Thelma Ludlow] and later when he returned. But he was so lame he walked with a cane when he came back. He fell a distance of 20 feet and lit on his hip bone, he was seriously ill in Wales for months. His spine was injured and grew more until he died. He lived with us for six months, and died at our home. He is buried on my father's lot, with his second wife [Priscilla Merriman] and “Grandma” Morgan, a nice old Welsh lady who was sealed to Grandpa for eternity. She lived in a room of Grandpa's house and he supported her. She died of cancer in the forehead. A pimple appeared and she picked at it and burned it with caustic, until it became a cancer. She had children in Wales. She did her Temple work for her relatives. She gave me a wooden toy box she [brought] with her from Wales—a gift from her daughter's sweetheart to the daughter. She grew flowers and loved poetry. She was a kind, sweet old lady, and as homely as she was good. She lies next to my husband in the cemetery, and I have a white lilac growing by her head. It blossoms profusely, I loved her.

        Grandpa was born at Llandaff, Glamorganshire, Wales, 11 December 1814. His father's name was Edmund and his mother, Amelia Preece. Edmund died and Amelia married Edward Harding and they had two children, Edward and Elizabeth. Edward died, leaving Amelia a widow the second time. Grandpa's brother Edmund and he worked together. At one time, they repaired the Cardiff Docks: Their trade was contracting and building. Edmund died of cholera before 1855. Grandpa very often spoke of his brother Edmund as he grew older.

        Grandpa married Ann John, born in Cardiff 3 May 1818, and they had seven children. Ann, Frederick (died), Mary, Amelia (died), Frederick, William and Lewis (twins—Lewis died). The three children died when babies [Amelia was 6]. The mother contracted consumption or tuberculosis and passed away on 10 May 1850, leaving her husband and four little children. His mother lived with them now, and took care of the children. They all attended school, though Uncle Bill refused to go and usually had to be carried to school. He was delicate and had lung trouble. Grandmother Harding was generous and kind, over-indulgent to the children. A girl did the house work. The were well to do.

        Grandpa married a widow [Priscilla Merriman] four years older than himself, with one child—a girl. Her name was Mary Louise Phillips. (She went in polygamy and married Franklin Pace as his second wife.) He is dead, but she is living at Spanish Fork now.

        Then they heard the gospel and embraced it. Ann, Mary, and Fred were baptized in Cardiff, Wales. Grandpa was educated as a Wesleyan Minister, but he did not follow that occupation: He was always religious, and even zealous in his religion. His mother greatly opposed the Latter-Day Saint religion and was angry to think that he would leave old Wales for a new country, especially when he had so delicate a child as William, who would certainly die on the journey. He loved his mother dearly, and it was very tender parting. The children clung to Grandmother, she clung to them, and her son.

        A child was born to Grandpa and his second wife. They named her Amelia.

        In 1854 they took leave of their native land and turned their faces to America. They crossed the ocean in the Golconda and were six weeks on the ocean.

        Uncle William got better every day, and had no more trace of consumption. He is living at Spanish Fork now, quite feeble. Aunt Mary had the gift of tongues on the vessel, -sang in tongues. Grandpa paid the fares of all the poor LDS in the Parish from Wales to Salt Lake. He loaned money too. I have notes for different amounts of pounds, gotten up in a legal form, but not paid. He also bought a farm and home in Sanpete, of a missionary [Dan Jones], paying a large sum for it. I have the deed for this farm and it lies in the heart of Manti.

        At St. Louis they outfitted for the journey across the plains and started from there in July 1854. Grandma had a team of two steers and two cows, and a teamster. He had never seen an ox before in his life. He came across the plains in an Independent Company with Dr. Levi [Richardson] Company. The children who could, walked all the way and the two older girls with Caroline Matthews, a niece of Grandpa's second wife, who lived with them, and did so until she married Franklin Pace as his first wife. She was childless. Those three girls enjoyed the dancing and merriment around the campfires of an evening, and on wash and clean-up days, when the camp would take a few hours off to bathe and wash the clothes.

        At one time on the journey, in a most unexpected moment and a lonely spot, Ash Hollow, the camp was surrounded by Sioux Indian braves all on horseback. Excitement ran high, and I have heard Aunt Ann tell, how the camp were fixing for the the night and most of the oxen were unyoked. The women huddled together, children screamed, oxen and cows stampeded, women fainted, and the Indians rode round and round. Finally the Indian Chief stopped, and the Captain went to him and they talked. The Indians demanded food, so the food was divided between the camp and the Indians and they took their share and rode away. Aunt Louise Pace says Grandpa had two wagons and two teamsters. William Geddes was one (and his wife,) who was a nurse, was along too. I think Aunt Louise is right in this.

        When this train of immigrants reached Nebraska, on a boiling hot day, in a big heavy wagon, and in an Indian country, a team pulled out of the road to one side, and halted. There were no trees, no shade, two or three men on horses were detailed to guard this wagon. In a short time my uncle, John Samuel Lewis, made his bow in this world, he came a little too soon.

        Dr. Levi [Richardson] waited on Grandma and nurse Geddes took care of mother and child. Grandpa, knowing that a baby was expected, made provision of doctor and nurse. In a short time, the wagon had to be on its way, as it was dangerous to linger, and so the mother rocked and jolted over the rough roads with the blinding glare of sun on the wagon cover above, and the fear of Indians and a stampede at any time. But the baby thrived and grew. [Note from John D. Lewis: “Arrived in Utah September 30, 1954 – Darwin Richardson Co.”]

        The whole family was overjoyed when at length Utah [?] Lake could be seen shimmering in the sunlight for they knew their long tiresome journey would soon be to an end. Arriving in Salt Lake, Grandpa started work on the foundation of the Salt Lake Temple and got paid out of the tithing office.

        Then President Young sent the family to Brigham City to locate, as a good stone mason was needed there. So once more, one wagon was loaded, and the family started north with the exceptions of the three girls—Mary, Ann, and Caroline, who found work in homes in Salt Lake. They built them a little home on Main Street in Brigham, and Grandpa fixed a piece of ground on the south of the house, and planted the peach stones Brigham had given him, and told him how to plan them: After the ground was prepared, he dedicated it for the planting of the seed, and asked God to bless his efforts; he then planted the stones and when the trees were big enough, he transplanted them to the orchard with a fervent prayer for their growth and fruiting. This peach orchard was the first to bear fruit in Brigham. He put up rock houses in Brigham and vicinity. The first winter there, was a severe one and food was most scarce. There was nothing much to eat in the tithing offices and although Grandpa had scrip on them, he could not get flour nor the necessities. Their shoes and clothes were wearing out too. Pa and Uncle Bill would take sacks and climb the mountains and get dry grass and carry it back with a cow and oxen. They killed one ox to save its life. It was starving. It was poor and tough but better than nothing. My father, however, never did want any more soup or boiled beef. It was a trying time, for all their lives they had been blessed with plenty. Then the news of Johnston's Army coming and the order for all to move south. Once more the cows and steers were hitched to the wagon and the few articles of furniture and clothes piled in. Then straw was carried into the house and some placed around each tree so that the guards who were to remain could set fire to the straw and burn the house to the ground and trees. Then if the Army took possession, all they would find in the whole of Utah would be ruin and waste. They journeyed to Spanish Fork and made a dugout in a hillside on the southeast corner of town and lived there until they bought and built a little adobe house on north Main Street. Grandpa worked at his trade, the three girls married, my father freighted to Camp Floyd. The crickets had taken the crop, flour was scarce, and it was hard to get enough to eat. I have heard that Grandpa built two small adobe rooms and a little later added two rooms on the front, with two upstairs rooms. (I think this is correct. I think he got a vacant lot and maybe paid tithing scrip for it.) He took up some land in Spanish Fork, but he did not take kindly to farming. When they left Brigham, they owned a pig which they tried to lead with a rope. I never did hear what became of it. They had a great deal of good clothing and some nice things when they came to Utah. The most of which was traded for a trifle to eat. The old family Bible fell into the family of Lorenzo Snow, so the girls said. And Bishop Thurber of Spanish Fork went on a mission. They had no money to give him and Grandpa gave him father's mother's (Ann John) wedding ring, and he took it and kept it. Needless to say, the children did not approve of it.

        Grandpa went to Manti to look over the farm he had purchased. It had been so misrepresented that he looked at it in disgust, turned around, and came back. I suppose he got part of his money's worth of experience. He was a fast walker and an athlete. He did not fall in with the ways of this new country. He liked roast goose, his favorite hymn was “Up Awake Ye, Defenders of Zion.”

        He wore a number eight shoe and a 15 ½ collar. Shoes always polished, he was a good conversationalist. His mission to Wales was from 1872 to 1874. And he was President of the conference. He acted as a guard in Echo Canyon at the time of Johnston Army. Aunt Louise said they had two wagons. John Flowers drove one team, and William Geddes the other. Pa says he learned to drive oxen crossing the plains. All the older children walked most of the time. The young folks liked to walk and visit together. Aunt Mary had a beau in the company.

        Grandpa liked the good things of life—good clothing, shoes, and good houses, good furniture. In fact, he had a million dollar taste and a one hundred dollar purse. He did not prosper financially in Utah. He and oxen and mules never would mix. He worked at his trade, that of a mason, but had a terrible time collecting his pay and he had to take it in anything the people had to pay. The same way with the school teachers and all other professions in those days. The co-op store issued a scrip. If a man sold a bushel of wheat, he was paid in scrip. Then all the shops and stores began issuing their own scrip, and it was a hard matter to get enough cash to pay taxes and go to conference. Phillip Sykes, a Welshman about the age of Grandpa, “tended mason” so he and Grandpa worked together on building. Later in life they visited the sick and administered to them. There were no doctors in Spanish Fork at that time, so midwives delivered women, and many women have told me that Grandpa was at her bedside when John or Mary was born. And he had the gift of comforting and healing. He was kind to the poor and thoughtful of any in sorrow.

        I remember my mother was an invalid, sick for a year, and these two old men would come so often and sit and talk to her. Zebedee Coltrin would often meet them there and they talked of early days of the Church and of early days in this country. Zebedee Coltrin was well acquainted with the Prophet Joseph Smith and, young as I was, I loved to get in the corner and listen to their conversations. They all wore heavy black capes in cold weather that reached a little below the waist. Crossing the plains, this company was called “The Ten Pound Company.” I do not know why. Grandpa was the only one of the family that joined the Church. I have been reading his diary the past two or three days, that he wrote while on his mission, but he seems to have been more interested in the saints than he was in gathering genealogy, though he has some genealogy.

        [Priscilla Lewis Swenson is the daughter of Frederick Lewis and Anges Reed Ferguson.]

  2. Kate B Carter: Our Pioneer Heritage
      • Page: Vol 5, Page 412-415
      • 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

  3. Spanish Fork Press
      • Date: 1 July 1920
      • Page: Page 1
      • Citation:

        PIONEER SPANISH FORK CITIZEN DIES AT PROVO

        Frederick Lewis, one of Spanish Fork's earliest settlers, and best known citizens, died at his home in Provo Monday night of a complication of troubles incident to advanced age. He had been seriously ill for a number of weeks.

        Mr. Lewis was born in Cardiff, Wales, May 29, 1844. He came to Utah in 1853 and for three years resided at Brigham City. He then moved to Spanish Fork where he lived until three years ago, when he moved to Provo.

        Mr. Lewis was always a very active worker in church and civic affairs. He was an Indian war veteran and was drum major in a company comprised of Utah county men.

        Mr. Lewis is survived by his widow and the following children. Mrs. Priscilla Swenson, Mrs. Agnes Cramdall, Mrs. Mary Markham, Mrs. Addie Ludlow, all of Provo; Fred Lewis of McCammon, Idaho; Mrs. Alfred Jackson of Spanish Fork and an adopted son W. O. Creer of Provo. He is also survived by twenty-nine grandchildren and four great grand-children.

        The remains were brought to this city today at noon and funeral services are being held this afternoon at the Second ward meeting house.

      • To Do:

        Who is Mrs Alfred Jackson, daughter?

  4. United States Federal Census, 1870
      • Page: Roll 1612, Page 309B
  5. United States Federal Census, 1880
      • Page: Roll 1338, Page 185D
  6. United States Federal Census, 1900
      • Page: Enumeration District 166, Page 14A
  7. (Death unknown but obviously not living)