Edward OTTLEY
AN APPRECIATION OF MY FATHER SIDNEY JAMES OTTLEY by Wayne W. Ottley, January 1955 PREFACE Many great men are eulogized only as a show of respect at their death. Because they have expired, and out of courtesy to their relatives, glib tributes are offered which may or may not be exactly the truth. I make this writing about the best man I know, my father, who is in the "fall" of his life, but continues to be a good example while giving service to his fellowmen. It is my plan to review his life and his influence on me as a guide for me, my children and theirs. It is not my purpose to write a complete autobiography, but to record my impressions from that which I have heard or personally experienced. Of equal stature, in my heart, is my devoted mother of whom I hope to write about at another time. "Having been born of goodly parents". . .could certainly be the way to start this transmission. Dad was born of immigrant parents from London, England on September 2, 1890 in South Cottonwood, Utah. He was the next to youngest of a large family raised in a humble home. By the time he was twelve years old he had learned to work, play and appreciate the blessings and struggles of a pioneer life. At that time, left motherless, he was forced to become adult and share in the provisions of the family needs. As a teen he worked in a smelter as a water boy, as a yard and delivery boy for a lumber yard and as an assistant to his father and brothers as they pursued their crafts as carpenters and builders. In spite of the necessity to work in his youth, he paid his own way through high school and furthered his education by reading or taking special study courses. I'm sure he had some fun along the way by different ways than youth do today. I get excited as I hear him tell the story of riding his pinto horse from his home in Delta to Salt Lake in a day when there wasn't much in between. It was a long two day ride, and he stayed overnight in an abandoned cabin that was often used by travelers. Early in life he embraced the Gospel of Jesus Christ by the teachings of his parents and through his activity in the Church, and developed a firm testimony of its divinity. He learned that "Faith in God gives meaning and purpose to human life and that service to humanity is the best work of life," creeds by which young men pledge themselves to follow but often forget in their pursuit of worldly goods. By his industry and thrift, he prepared himself to fill a mission and received a call to serve in far away New Zealand, then a primitive province of Great Britain. In a short time he learned the Maori language, and was soon bearing his testimony to the natives in their own tongue. He spent four years in the islands and made many friends. He wrote a song, "THE LAND OF LOVE" which is still sung there today. On January 3, l917 he married my mother, Alice Warren of Murray, in the Logan Temple, (Salt Lake Temple was closed) then traveled to Banida, Idaho to make their first home. On July 31, l922, I was born, their third son. My first recollection of life was just previous to the birth of my sister, Lael, September 30, 1925. I remember many things about Dad but can't set them in a sequence of their happening. I remember that he whistled as he left for work and as he returned, he had unending energy as a young Bishop, with wisdom in his leadership. He showed loving care to Mother and all of us. I will always remember how he would pick me up and hold me up over his head as he talked to me, how he taught us the importance of prayer and "family night" and understanding the gospel. I remember that he took me with him as he fed and milked the cow; he helped the older boys plant gardens and taught them responsibility. I remember him cleaning out the well, building a garage for the Model T and enlarging the little house to make room for more little feet. I remember the exercise regimen he led us in every morning ending with several trips jogging around the house. I got so tired. I remember several trips to the mountains where we slept out under the stars and were reminded of the beauties that Father in Heaven had provided for our benefit. His undaunted enthusiasm and energies have always been a marvel to me, even though I haven't been able to keep up with him. I remember how we would visit him at the lumber yard where he worked and how he would set us up to pick up the lath strips and neatly stack them to earn a nickel for a Dixie Cup (ice cream) from Day's store. We took many trips in the car that seemed very long but none could have been more than a few miles. While I was still five, Mom and Dad took a trip to Salina, Utah to look over an opportunity to step up in Dad's employment. They returned with glowing reports of a town with cement sidewalks and one full block of cement road, neither of which I had ever seen. They talked about hills and mountains so close that you could walk to them in a few minutes; a newer, more modern lumber yard to explore with a home right next to it. I remember the tears of the Saints who bid farewell to their Bishop and family and gave him a beautiful gold watch in appreciation for his services. In Salina, as always, Dad worked extra hours to make us all comfortable. The house was too small so some of us slept in a back room of the lumber yard store, where I remember watching the lights from passing cars travel across two walls in our quarters. In the summer we could sleep on lumber piles in the yard, but the best deal was when Dad acquired an old van body and made a sleeping room out of it parked in front of the house. A kerosene stove was used for heat in the winter and it cast a snowflake shadow on the ceiling. I suspect now, that these strange accommodations were the necessity of an approaching depression, but to us, the exciting innovations that Dad came up with were done for our pleasure. The days and years to follow would get even more desperate for Dad and Mom but great for us. After a day in the hospital to have my tonsils removed, I was ready to start school (first grade, there was no kindergarten then.) In my second year I remember how Dad tried to fashion a Halloween mask from an old flour sack since "ready-made masks" were just not in our budget. I bawled because I thought his efforts were dumb, but he patiently told me how fun it would be and that I looked like a very respectable Ghost. The most terrifying part of starting school was the shots and vaccinations required to be cleared to go to school. I suffered for days anticipating the ordeal and broke in tears as I was dragged to the school for old Dr. Merrill to make the injection. (even today, I don't like them, but have learned not to look while it is going on.) From Salina we traveled with Dad to nearby towns and found adventure while he did his business. One day he was summoned to Axtel to remount a door that had been pulled off the hinges by a horse that had been tethered to the handle. While Dad fixed the door we explored the school yard which included sage brush, mounds of dirt and desert like country. On other occasions while he was trying to "collect" unpaid bills for the lumber yard, we explored barns, outbuildings and animal stalls. Dad was always pleased to "show off" his kids to customers, associates and bosses; he even coaxed us out of the back room to show us the Indians that would come in to look at pocket knives or bright colored paint sample chips. They seldom bought anything but Dad usually bought from them a few pine nuts to keep them from lifting some merchandise from the shelves; they usually had to be watched closely. They spoke very little English but Dad could communicate with them in a rough sign language. We were always a little timid with them because of the stories we had heard about the Indians taking white scalps. They knew we were frightened and would often pull faces or make quick moves toward us to scare us further. Some other strange folk we met in Salina were the Gypsies who camped down in the creek beds among the willows. They dressed in bright colors and wore lots of jewelry. We were always warned to stay away from them because they were known to steal children and sell them. (I still wonder if that story is true.) Salina will always be our most exciting town because it was here that Dad planned and built our only "NEW" home. In 1929-30 we watched our home built from blueprints. I remember the basement being dug with a slip shovel behind a horse out in the middle of a former cow corral. The top soil was nice but down deeper there were lots of rocks. As was common in those days the basement was made liveable and we moved in. Dad did much of the work himself but I remember that there were others who helped including my dear Grandpa Ottley whom I loved very much. The stone columns in the front fence that stand today were laid up by him. Similar columns mark the entrance of Murray Park and Wheeler Farm in Murray. I am told that these are some of his craft. I think we were considered fairly prosperous, by comparison to other families because we were getting a new home. As I recall, Dad was paid $150.00 per month at Bonneville Lumber Co. for whom he managed. He took some of his salary in company stock which was lost as the company failed later. He put in long hours at the yard then worked late into the night to build on the new house. To help out, Mother was busy giving music lessons in several small towns nearby, or playing in dance bands, also often out of town. Verlo was born in Salina Hospital July 14,l930, the first of the children born in a hospital. We enjoyed our first radio, a small table model Philco. Mom and Dad bought this at great sacrifice for the children for our Christmas. That Christmas Eve, Dad worked on the house while Mom played a dance job in Scipio. The radio was a revered instrument for many years bringing us Amos n' Andy, Ma Perkins, Mert and Marge, Jack Armstrong, The Whistler, The Shadow and many others including the Salt Lake Tabernacle Choir. The "crash" came to Salina in 1932 and building stopped. Dad was directed to close out the Salina yard and was offered another yard in Spanish Fork. Dad sold the house to Bishop Peterson on a contract and we moved north to the Utah County Community to a strange new life. In Spanish Fork there was a new lumber yard to explore and a rented house a few blocks away right on Main Street, with interurban trains going right up the middle of the street, all hours of the day and night. The yard was filled with black walnut trees. This town offered more swimmin' holes, a more uptown atmosphere and lots of automobiles, the most interesting were abandoned behind the stores. We enjoyed stripping them of their magnets and cast iron parts which brought coins with which to buy candy. As usual, Dad took the move in stride and soon had us all very comfortable again. I remember he had a fine young assistant at the yard named Paul Christensen, who kind of fussed over us. We thought he was great. It was here I cried most of the first day of school, coming into the third grade in October or November. It seemed you were expected to fight your way into a new school, but I just couldn't cope with it. My teacher, Miss Bearnsen, was very kind to me and helped me through that first day. I remember hiding my face on the desk most of the day. We enjoyed the "Farr House" but Dad was always looking for ways to upgrade our housing as the family grew larger. He contracted to buy a building lot a few blocks west of Main Street for the future but during the summer vacation, Dad moved the family to the Coltrin House on First South while Glen and I were "working?" on the Larsen place in Orem. When we returned, we were sure that our Dad was the most clever person we knew because of the way everything fit in the house. This new house meant a new school for me but we were in the same town and nearer the favorite swimming holes and the pastures where we took the community herd of cows each morning and brought them home in the evening. Dad always felt the need for us to have a cow for nutritious food for "his kids." I suppose it would have been slim pickin's without milk and homemade bread. Money was hard to come by. Dad was obliged to travel to nearby towns to collect money owed the lumber yard. We got to go with him many times and found many opportunities to explore new surroundings. I remember one trip clear out to Price, passing the little but very busy railroad marshaling yards at Soldier Summit. The dirty little town of Thistle buzzed with trains, engines and repair yards. As we traveled through the various types of country, Dad pointed out the beautiful shapes of the mountains, the little babbling brooks or the deer or other wildlife lurking in the trees. Dad was a true Smokey Bear as he taught us that it was our responsibility to keep the woods clean and free from the ravages of fire. On other occasions we traveled up Hobble Creek, Diamond Fork, Provo and American Fork Canyons, all special events full of memories. It wasn't long before the local economy fell "flat out" and once again Dad was advised to move the lumber yard inventory to Provo and close the Spanish Fork yard. He was offered another position in Tooele, but with not much hope the economy would be strong enough to keep it going. At the same time the buyer of our Salina home defaulted and Dad chose to take us back to Salina to see what he could pick up in work there, knowing we could again occupy our new home for a while. Dad soon lined up some work with the city and county in removing some old poplar trees, worked on some road crews and several other jobs not befitting his size and strength. Some time later he made arrangements with Brother Albert Albertson to paint Forest Service houses and outbuildings. Brother Albertson was the Forest Ranger in the area. His family had moved to Salt Lake so son, Preston could be near his doctor as he suffered terribly with asthma. Mother and Dad offered to take Brother Albertson into our home as a boarder to help with his expenses as well as ours. As carefree kids we were delighted to be back in our Salina home with our former friends. Our parents didn't shield us from the impending economic problems, in which we might lose the house and eventually have to look for new employment but their kindly sweet spirits assured us that all would be well. Late that year Dad went to Salt Lake to attend the funeral of my beloved Grandpa Ottley, who passed away quietly while visiting his brother's family in Elba, Idaho. While in Salt Lake, Dad made several contacts with paint distributors with a plan for him to open a paint, glass and wallpaper store in Sugar House. He got very little encouragement because he had little to offer in assets, but John Bennett appreciated his enthusiasm and offered to back him with a little inventory. Dad's enthusiasm and will to succeed was his greatest asset as he carefully made a plan to not only provide for this growing family, but his vision showed him a way to provide opportunities for his growing boys in days to come. I will forever be grateful for the opportunities he made for me to learn to work and accept a stewardship in life as a preparation for an eternal realm. His foresight would affect his children, grandchildren, and even beyond if each would learn the lessons he taught so well. The move to Salt Lake came in late April. Dad and Glen had gone ahead and opened the store April l, l933 (The Paint Bucket, later changed to The Paint Pot at 1074 East 21st South, Salt Lake City, Utah, Sugar House.) The move was tough because we had no car. With a borrowed car and a four wheeled hay rack we headed north on the mostly gravel roads to Salt Lake. It took us two days since we had so many flat tires to fix. We stayed overnight in Spanish Fork with understanding friends. I had completed fifth grade in Salina before the move. Salina schools dismissed on April 21, but I reluctantly went back to Forest School i
He married Thirza Timbers 24 Feb 1872 at Sco-Ruston, Norfolk, England . Thirza Timbers was born at Sco Ruston, Norfolk, England 10 Jul 1851 daughter of Joseph Timbers and Ann Pooley .
They were the parents of 12
children:
Jessie Timbers Ottley
born 28 Jul 1873.
Henry George Ottley
born 13 Dec 1874.
Eleanor Timbers Ottley
born 26 Jan 1876.
Walter Edward Ottley
born 14 Oct 1877.
Frederic Joseph Ottley
born 25 Oct 1878.
Edward Charles Ottley
born 5 Jun 1880.
David Frank Ottley
born 8 Mar 1882.
Thirza Timbers Ottley
born 14 Mar 1884.
Walter William Ottley
born 7 Jul 1886.
Ernest Arthur Ottley
born 20 Apr 1888.
Sidney James Ottley
born 2 Sep 1890.
Herbert John Ottley
born 14 Nov 1892.
Edward Ottley died 24 Feb 1933 at Malta, Cassia, Idaho .
Thirza Timbers died 1 Nov 1903 at South Cottonwood, Murray, Salt Lake, Utah .