Ebenezer Clawson RICHARDSON

Birth:
7 Aug 1815
Dryden, Tompkins, New York
Death:
25 Sep 1874
Plain City, Weber, Utah
Burial:
27 Sep 1874
Plain City, Weber, Utah
Marriage:
Nov 1843
Greenfield, Saratoga, New York
Sources:
Ancestral File - v4.19
Ancestry World Tree
Pedigree Resource File
Internet IGI, Apr 2008
Child Family History pg. 94 - Utah Pioneer Book
Notes:
                                         EBENEZER CLAWSON RICHARDSON  RICHEBEN.815  RIN 232

                                         MATERNAL 2ND GREAT GRANDFATHER

      Ebenezer Richardson was born August 7, 1815, in Dryden, Steuben County, New York.  He grew to young manhood in this family of eleven children, and when he was eighteen years old (1833) he  met and married a beautiful dark-eyed, brunette girl, Angeline King.

      Mormon Missionaries had converted his parents as early as 1834, and in the fall of 1834 both Angeline and Ebenezer were converted to the church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.  They were baptized into the church by the Prophet Joseph Smith.

      Their first child, a little girl, Mary Amanda, was born to them the 24 of August 1834 in Greenwood, New York where they continued to live for some time.  Albert Ebenezer was born to them 31 May 1837, George Allen 24 Dec. 1839, and Eliza the 17 Mar 1843.

      Sometime between 1838 and 1839 the entire Richardson clan had packed up and left New York in order to join the Mormons gathering in the west.

      Ebenezer and his families moved along with the Saints from place to place.  They migrated to Kirtland where the majority of the Saints were living.  He was requested to be a body guard to President Joseph Smith and at Joseph's request, at the time of Haun's Mill massacre, he was sent with another man to Haun's Mill to get Joseph Young's family.

      On Tuesday the 30th of 0ctober 1938, that bloody tragedy was acted.  It began about four o'clock with a large company of armed men, on horses, directing their course towards the mills with all possible speed.  People were hacked to death without reason, even little children.  The many bodies were buried in a well for lack of time and help to be buried properly.  This hasty burial was performed because of the threat of a return visit by the mob to complete the work of extermination.

(The whole story of Hauns Mill is in the history of the church page 181 through 326)

       He was sent back to get Joseph Young's family (brother of Brigham Young) and to help bury the dead.  Ebenezer  was shot by one of the mob.  The bullet struck him in the chest and lodged in his back just under the skin.  One of the brethren cut it out with a pocket knife and administered to him and helped him on his horse.  Through their faith they were able to go on their way.  He rode home and recovered rapidly.

       The church convened in conference in Commerce Ill.  On October 6,7,and 8th, in 1839 "the conference met Sunday morning the 6th. Pursuant to adjournment at 8 o'clock A.M., when Ebenezer C. Richardson and others were appointed elders.

      The minutes of the Conference held on the morning of the 6th are as follows.

      "The conference met on Sunday morning the 6th, pursuant to adjournment at 8 o'clock. A.M. When Samuel Williams, Ruben Foote, Orlando D. Hovey, Tunnis Rappleyee, Sheffield Daniels, Albert Milner, David B. Smith, Ebenezer Clawson Richardson, Pleasant Ewell, and William Helm were appointed Elders, of the church  and were ordained under the hands of Reynold Cahoon, Seymour Brunson,  Samuel Bent, and Alpheus Cutler.

      After some remarks by the President Joseph Smith, as respecting order and decorum during the conference.  Elder Lyman Wight spoke concerning the duties of Priests and Teachers.  President Joseph Smith Jr. then addressed the conference in relation to appointing a Patriarch, and other matters connected with the well being of the church."

      According to our calculations, Ebenezer would have been 24 years old at the time he was ordained an Elder.

      Ebenezer and Angeline had followed the migration of the Saints from Missouri to Illinois.  Sometime between 1839 and 1843 he made his way to Spring Prairie, Iowa.  There he hired Polly Ann Child to help care for his family.

      This was the year that Ebenezer was called to enter the covenant of plural marriage.  This casual relationship ripened into love and he took to wife Polly Ann Child, a beautiful and educated girl of twenty-two as his second wife.  This marriage was performed by Pres. Joseph Smith in November 1843.

      Angeline gave birth to Josiah on the 16 April 1844.  Ebenezer also lost his beloved mother, Lowly Foote Richardson, who died of chill fever and was buried in Nauvoo in 1844.

      Ebenezer was in Nauvoo when the temple was built.  A square hole had been chisled in the large corner stone like box.  Any one had the privilege of putting in any little memento they wished to.   Pres. Joseph Smith came up with the manuscript of the book of Mormon, and said he wanted to put that in there, as he had trouble enough with it.  It was the size of common foolscap paper and about three inches thick.  There were also deposited the book of Doctrine and Covenants, a five cent piece, a ten cent piece, a twenty-five cent piece, a fifty cent piece and one dollar all American coin.  The close fitting cover of stone had been prepared and was laid in cement and the wall built over it.  The day was clear and cool.

      Among the great things preached in this same conference Pres. Joseph Smith said on the third day of conference "the Saints could be baptized for any of their dead relatives or friends who have not been murderers..."

      It was on the after noon of the 4th day of the conference that they watched as Pres. Joseph Smith was talking, "All at once his countenance brightened up, and he said 'Verily thus saith the Lord.  Let there not be another general conference held until it is held in mine house.'"

      They were driven from Nauvoo eventually, and we find Ebenezer and families in Council Bluffs, Iowa, at Winter Quarters in 1846.  Here Angeline gave birth to a little daughter, Lola, and 1848 another daughter Jane.  Both of these little girls died in 1848 and are buried in the Council Bluffs, Iowa, cemetery.

      Ebenezer rose rapidly in the church and was given many responsible positions during his lifetime.  When the church became embroiled in the Missouri perse-cutions, he was selected to be one of Joseph Smith's bodyguards. More about Sugar Creek later.

       Grandfather Richardson lived just across the river from Nauvoo in a place called Sugar Creek.  He had many holdings of worth.  He traveled across when ever there was need to go with of for Pres. Smith.

      Upon receiving the word of the Prophet Joseph and his brother Hyrum, Ebenezer went immediately to Nauvoo, as further trouble might need his presence, as he was always at his post, when necessary to defend the Prophet and the cause of truth.  Ebenezer attended the funeral of President Smith.  ( Being a bodyguard of the President, I wonder if he helped arrange the burial when they hid the bodies so that the mob could not ravage them further)  (see history of the church for the whole story of their deaths.)

                     Book ---------- Page ---------

      The saints were horrified and heartbroken when the Prophet Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum, the Patriarch, were martyred, but the church soon had at its helm the able leader Brigham Young.  During this trying period there were many unable to stand the mob violence and persecutions who left the church, but the Richardsons remained faithful and accepted the persecutions as the will of God.

      Why they moved to Galena and where they lived prior to this is not known.  The first question may be answered, in part perhaps, through speculation.  Galena in the 1840s and 1850s was a river-port where huge shipments of grain, lead and zinc were freighted to the east for consumption.  The move to Galena might indicate the need for work.  Perhaps Ebenezer hoped to support his families by working on the docks or in the mines.  The latter may be the most justifiable if we take into consideration his later activities in the gold mines of California.  At any rate, by the fall of 1845 the two families had returned to Nauvoo.

      Nauvoo by this time was a beehive of activity.  The Saints had been given until spring to dispose of their property and leave the state to avert mass blood-shed.  The old prejudices, misconceptions, political ambitions, etc., had again raised the ugly head of mobocracy, and it would not be lowered until the Mormons were driven from the state.

      If we consider Ebenezer's former close relationship to Joseph Smith and undoubtedly to other authorities of the church, it becomes a feasible possibility that he came to Nauvoo to help in preparing for the spring exodus. This can only be a speculative, since no definite information is given.  Without a doubt, however, Polly and her husband knew that they must follow the Mormons westward come spring.  If for no other reason, they came to Nauvoo to get their own affairs in readiness.

      Had they been allowed to continue their hurried preparations, Polly and Ebenezer and the Mormons in general would have left Illinois with much less hardship and suffering.  However, mob violence had reached such a extremity by February 1846 that they were forced to flee--woefully unprepared as they were. Polly describes the heartrending scenes as follows:

      "In February 1846 we were all driven from Nauvoo" and we now find Ebenezer and his families in Council Bluffs, Iowa, at Winter Quarters.  Here Angeline gave birth to a little daughter, Lola, and 1848 another daughter Jane.  Both these little girls died in 1848 and are buried in the Council Bluffs, Iowa, cemetery.

      Here Ebenezer married as his third wife, Phoebe Wooster Child, a beautiful girl and sister to Polly Ann.  A little son, Alfred Bosworth, was born,Feb 8, 1848, to Polly Ann and also was buried, the 16 May 1848 in Council Bluffs, Iowa, beside little Jane and Lola.  In 1849 Phoebe's first baby, Amanda Melvina, was born, and she felt favored of heaven in being able to keep her.  So many little babies were buried in Council Bluffs.  This was to be her only girl, for in due time she became the mother of ten more children, all boys, and raised all but John Lawson, who died when three years old.

      There was some that stopped until summer but they fared very hard for they had trouble and some were killed.  We crossed the river on ice, the snow was about a foot deep and we camped about seven miles out on a stream called Sugar Creek in the state of Iowa...We made shanties of brush and blankets and wagons were our homes.  We were obliged to stop there until the roads were fit to travel and grass big enough for our teams to eat...We were then in barren Indian country, uninhabited and to the mercy of the savages, but to us (they the Indians) were more merciful than the whites.

      Four hundred wagons shared the campground at Sugar Creek with Ebenezer, Angeline, Polly and Pheobe, his wives, and his small children.  When Brigham Young arrived two weeks later he found many of the people in want--their provisions gone, shelters inadequate, and their clothing insufficient.  Eight hundred men reported that they had less than a fortnight's provisions for themselves and their teams.  By the first of March over 5,000 people were camped at Sugar Creek, waiting for orders from the church leaders. On March 1st, orders came, and the first group of Saints started on the first leg of the journey across Iowa.  Ebenezer, Angeline, Polly, Phoebe, and their children were among this group.  Behind them was to follow a steady stream of Mormons, forming a procession 300 miles long from the Mississippi to the Missouri.

       When the family left Sugar Creek I was surprised at a listing given me By Brother Smith of the Genealogy Library.  That list included names of many of our family and what amount of money in property that was left behind.
        Ebenezer Richardson        1,000.00
        Josiah Richardson          9,000.00
        Ashel Lathrop             30,700.00
        Samuel Lake                  237.00
        Jabez Lake                 1,183.00
        Vinson Knight             10,000.00
        Newel Night                1,775.00
        Nathan K. Knight           6,647.77
        Joseph,Jr Knight           1.014.00
        Reuben Foote               1,108.00
        Timothy B. Foote           1,515.00
        T. B. Foote                1,080.00
        Stephen Foot                 218.00
        David Foote                  700.00
        Warren Foote                 500.00
        Alfred B. Child              520.00

Many had lots over $30,000.00 that was left in property.  This list was made to try to get the State of Missouri to re-imburse them for their losses.
      Ebenezer and his families traveled as far as Garden Grove before their supplies gave out.  Many of the other pioneers found themselves in like circum-stances.  Consequently Ebenezer and some of the other brethren left their families and went down into Missouri to get supplies.  They took anything they could spare that might be saleable--clothing, bedding, pots and pans, etc.  It was several days before they returned, having acquired enough provisions to sustain themselves for a while longer.  Ebenezer and family remained at Garden Grove for several weeks before traveling on.  Polly describes this period with a great deal of poignancy:

     It would be impossible to describe the suffering and hardships we had to pass through the few weeks there.  Snow, rain, mud, I never knew what it was to sleep in a dry bed.  I would take my shoes and stockings off and wash the mud off and put them on again."

      The weather undoubtedly added hardship to the migrating Mormons.  It is not difficult to imagine the muck and mire resulting from hundreds of wagons and hoofs rolling and plodding over the same ground day after day.  In the morning the sharp frozen ruts of the trail would be like so many sharp knives against the hoofs of the animals and the feet of men, and women and children forced to walk.  By mid-day these same ruts would be churned to inches of sticky, thick mud, dragging the very life out of the men and animals.  Five miles a day was the most the wagons would make under these conditions.  And yet in spite of all the suffering and hardships, the people were happy.  Speaking of this, Polly makes a statement that is almost unbelievable in view of the pathetic conditions she experienced.

         We all started our journey as happy not knowing
         wither we were going or where our next stopping
         place would be.  But our leaders were ahead
         leaving marks for us to follow.

      Our historian corroborating Polly's statements says they were "cheerful, childishly confident that God and Brigham Young would look after them."

      It took Ebenezer and his family four months to travel the three hundred miles from Nauvoo to Winter Quarters.  Near the end of June 1846 their wagon rolled into this prairie city of Saints.  The party led by Brigham Young had arrived a few weeks earlier so that some degree of order had already been established when Ebenezer and Polly arrived.  The summer was spent in constructing cabins, planting crops, repairing wagons, and harnesses, cutting prairie hay, hunting game, and salting it down or drying it, gathering wild berries, etc.  All these things in preparation for the journey in the spring and the preservation of the Saints left behind.  Ebenezer was either given the job of herding the church's cattle or he took the responsibility upon his own shoulders.  This left many of the brethren free to do other essential things.  Polly comments on the situation as follows:

          "The brethren had to leave their families and
          go in search of provisions again and recruit
          up that winter, so we could start in the
          spring, and complete our journey, so your
          father took some of the church cattle to herd.
          Our teams were all cattle and had to be fed
          and got into good condition ready for the long
          journey in the spring."

      The cattle were driven short distances from the Quarters on to a place called Rush Valley.  The pasturage was better and the cattle could be kept in condition for the exodus.  Here Ebenezer
Angeline,
                  
Polly Ann CHILD
Birth:
20 Jul 1821
Baldtown, Saratoga, New York
Death:
19 Jan 1905
Plain City, Weber, Utah
Notes:
                                POLLY ANN CHILD   CHILPOLY.821   Rin 233

     HISTORY OF POLLY ANN CHILD RICHARDSON WRITTEN BY HERSELF

    I was born in the little country village of Greenfield, Saratoga County, New York the 20th day of July, 1821, daughter of Alfred Bosworth and Polly Barber Child.  I was the 3rd generation of Childs to be born and raised in this little community in the Kyadeross mountains.  It was pleasant growing up in this section of New York, especially in the summer-time, when the cooling saline breezes of the Atlantic often traversed up the Hudson River, giving a climate similar to the seacoast.

    The deep ravines and valleys cut irregularly into the mountainsides, the marsh and swamplands at the headwaters of the Hudson, the numerous stand of beech, maple, wim and hemlock must have contributed immensely to the pleasure and probing enjoyment of childhood.  Here I grew into young woman hood amid the simple comforts and pleasures of the pioneer.

    In the year 1822, my family moved to Milton (it would now be Morristown) St. Lawrence Co., New York, where they took up a new farm and with the aid of a hired man cleared and put into cultivation some 30 acres of land situated on the banks of the St. Lawrence River.

    In 1823 a mortgage is recorded between my dad, Alfred B. Child and Abraham H. Wooster for $150.00, and this mentions a piece of land of 40 acres.  This on what is now called the Wooster road in Hammond, and this mortgage was recorded in 1828.  It was satisfied in 1838, and was recorded in July of that year.  The School District in the small area where our family lived was known as the Child School Dist...May 8, 1827, my father Alfred B. Child(s) elected Constable at the 1st town meeting.  Commissioner of Schools 1828-1829, and 1829-1830,,,feb, 21, 1832 through the 17 feb. 1835, He also held the position of Overseer of Highway (title changed to Post-Master in 1833).  In that same year father sold his farm and soon afterward bought another farm of about 160 acres, in the same town, for which he paid ten dollars per acre.

    (Again we found more information through Warren Gould Child a brother which fills in some empty places of Polly Ann.)  While living on the above mentioned 160 acre farm the Child family heard the gospel of Jesus Christ, called Mormonism.  They had opened up new farms and were in the process of improving them when there came into the town or neighborhood one George E. Blakely, a  Mormon elder, who after a time succeeded in getting a few to come out to hear the strange doctrine of the new prophet, known as Joe Smith.  He met with little success in the neighborhood.")

    Polly Ann says "My father, after  hearing him several times, was somewhat impressed with his doctrines, so much so that he continued to investigate them.  On the 5th of June 1838 the following members of the family with himself were baptized, with wife Polly Barber Child, and his children Mark A., Myself, Myron B., And Hannah P., The rest being under age for baptism.  On August the 11th the same year he started with his family, then ten in number, for Kirkland, Ohio."

    Embarking on a small steamer up the St. Lawrence River and crossing Lake Ontario and landing at Lewiston, a short distance
below the great Niagara Falls.  Having shipped his team and wagon and such of his effects as could be loaded with the family in one wagon drawn by two horses, thus he started by land via way of arriving at Kirkland some time in September.

    Little is know about Polly personally until she was 17 years old.

Polly says of her baptism

"On the 5th day of June 1838, with my parents I was baptized into the Mormon Church (I being 17 years of age), the 11th of August the same year we started from New York to Jackson County, Missouri, where the Morman Church was located."

    "My father came the entire route with one span of horses, a wagon, and ten in the family."  It takes little imagination to fill in the blanks in Polly's statement.  Carrying food, clothing, bedding, cooking utensils and a few meager supplies for an unknown farm in the West would have taken up every spare space in the wagon.  Thus, most of the 1500 miles would have been traversed on foot, sleeping in tents, or underneath the wagon at night--this through sparsely settled and often savage wastelands.  One must admit that a journey of this sort required a great deal of courage and fortitude--a courage and fortitude that would be tested to the breaking point within a few short months.

    The immediate destination of Polly's father was Kirtland, Ohio-about one-third of the distance to Jackson County.  Here he hoped to join up with a body of Saints moving from Kirtland to Missouri.  However, events moved faster than he, for many of the Mormans had vacated the city by the time he arrived.  Polly stated that the Saints had "left a few days before we got there."

    "We stopped over a few days in Kirkland, Ohio."  The city, however, offered Polly and her family only a brief respite from the rigors of the trek.  They stayed to rest the animals and replenish supplies before returning to the well-defined trail of the Saints moving west.  They had been traveling almost a month by the time they reached Kirtland.  It would be another month and a half to two months before they reached their destination in Missouri.

    "It was there I saw the first temple built by the Latter Day Saints."

    The Mormans had been advised to go to "Di-Amon" for safety.  Polly stated that they went 14 miles and pitched their tent and lived in it two weeks.  The people thought after the battle at Crooked River and Haun's Mill the mob would be pacified and they could live in peace for a time.  Everyone went to work again building houses for the settlement of Adam-Ondi-Ahman.

    Owing to the persecutions they had to leave all they had done there and go to Jackson County.  They were driven from Jackson County to Caldwell and Daviess Counties.  They called the city of tents and wagons (Adam-Ondi-Ahmen).  It was late fall when Polly's family finally reached Missouri.  Here, after months of back-breaking travel, they found a temporary resting place at Adam-Ondi-Ahman in Daviess County.  The Mormans were building quite a community after their expulsion from Jackson County.

    Polly has left us little information regarding this period.  However, one may well imagine the hardships the family must have experienced that first winter in Adam-Ondi-Ahman.  They had arrived late in the year--too late to plant crops or prepare an adequate shelter against the rapidly approaching winter.  They would have lived that year as they had traveled, in the meager shelter of the wagon, or in a tent pitched on the frozen ground.  It would be spring before a house could be build, lands cleared and crops planted.  In the meantime they must share in whatever sustenance was available for the entire community.

    Sometime during that year (1838), possible in the spring Polly says "My father had let his wagon to towards a piece of land."  Where this piece of land was located cannot be ascertained at the present time.  Polly Ann's mother sheds some rather ambiguous light on the subject, however, in a letter written to relatives in New York in June 1839--after the Saints had been driven from Missouri to Caldwell County Illinois.  She explains that their flight had taken them up to Far West, where they stayed for a short time before continuing toward Adam-Ondi-Ahman.  From this vague remark it may be assumed that Polly's family had located 12 miles below Far West, probably in either Caldwell or Ray County where the inhabitants had shown a great deal of sympathy for the Saints in times past.

    Polly B. stated in a letter to her sister, she and son Mark went 12 miles into Farr West to shop for flour, salt, toys for the children, and other items.  (Farr West at this time was quite a thriving town.)

    Polly B. returned home to find her husband and son Mark were to be put on guard duty with the armed Mormons, because the mob was burning houses in the area.  The satanic mob were on their march to Crooked River and Haun's Mill, where those saints were cruelly massacred.

    It was undoubtedly comforting to sink their roots into the soil again.  I'm sure that Polly and her family looked forward to the security a good  crop and a new home would bring.  The hoped-for-security was not forthcoming, however, for in February of 1839 they, along with the remainder of the Mormons in Missouri, were driven into Illinois at gunpoint.  Fear, jealousy, and political ambition led to an onslaught of persecution which rolled over the Mormon people like a great wave, tumbling and rolling them before it like so much flotsom and jetsom.

    Polly Ann's mother in the afore-mentioned letter provides more insight into the fear and determination of the times.

    "Alfred was called on to go to Diammon.  It was evening.  Some Brethren came and said orders was that every man that was able and willing to help what he could for the mob was gathering fast.  Already five or six hundred at Grindstone a few miles distance.
I was getting supper, I stopped, was motionless until one of them asked me if I was willing he should go.  All fear, all fluttering of the heart was gone from me.  I was all calm as ever I was when sitting in your house, mother...In the morning it was Monday, he came home on Friday... It was thought to go to Diammon for safety."

    In February 1839, persecutions commenced again.  They took nearly all the men.  The men were taken prisoners.  My father and oldest brother, Mark, were taken with the rest but they did not keep them very long.  They let all the men, except the leaders of the Church go, with the orders for them all to leave the state within fifteen days.  They took all the heads of the Church, or most of them, and put them in prison while the rest had a hard struggle to get out of the state.

    Thus Polly Ann and her family were forced to flee the state of Missouri in the dead of winter, leaving behind "a large farm...confiscated by the ruthless invaders,"  as well as their best horse--without compensation.  Their one remaining horse was given to one of the brethren "to help him".  Polly's father then took what little money he had and hired a man named Allred, a citizen of Missouri, to move the family out.

    Polly presents a very pathetic picture of her family and the Mormons in general as a result of their forced exodus.

    "A few of (us) had teams and some had to go on foot across frozen prairie, destitute of food and clothing...and there was a great deal of suffering among the women and children before we got to the Mississippi..The line between Missouri and Illinois.  When we got to the river the ice was running so that we could not cross.  Consequently we had to camp there the next three weeks before we could cross into Illinois.  By that time it was the middle of March.  (Read the History of the Church, see how it's records describe the same."

    It is impossible for us today to realize the misery Polly Ann was describing.  Her family was only one of hundreds and hundreds--women and children making up the greater part--driven from their homes and subjected to the rigors of winter on the prairie, not knowing where they were going or what they were going to do.  How can any of us today appreciate what these people bore, what Polly Ann and her family bore?  It defies the imagination as it defies description.  This was merely a foretaste of what the future held.

    With the coming of March the river was sufficiently clear of ice and the Child family was able to cross over into Illinois.  Most of the Saints headed toward Commerce, but Polly's Ann"s father stopped just across the river in the vicinity of Quincey.

    "Again I will not attempt to describe the suffering of the Saints up to that time, as you have the history of the Saints to read.  After we got into Illinois, my father rented a farm and remained there throughout the summer of 1839.  Mother and I took in washing to help maintain the family.

    We can again credit Polly's mother with providing information about the family at this time.

    "Mark did work on the railroad but two weeks.  Did not want to work there; hired to Mr. Thompson, a real old fashioned Baptist man from the state of Maine for eight dollars a month, a half mile from home.  Polly worked there two weeks and three days for six dollars.  They would give her two dollars a week all summer if I could spare her, but the babe is so unwell with his ulcers and leg, it takes one of us all the while to take care of him."

    Warren Gould Child says in his diary, "While here, we received kind treatment from a mr. ----, the name I do not recall, who let us occupy one room of his house, in which to make down on the punchion floor, our beds at night.  They would be rolled up and carried to the wagon during the day to wrap the smaller children, to keep them warm, as there was not room in the two room log cabin, which was the usual size of the country farm houses at that time.  The raw March winds that swept up or down the great river rendered our condition quite uncomfortable, and the few days that we were detained here seemed like weeks."

    The L.D.S. were scattered everywhere in the State where they could find anything to do.

    About this same time the majority of the Saints moved to the town of Quincy, State of Iowa, just across from Commerce, or Nauvoo as it was now called.

    That fall my father decided to move again.  The heads of the Church had bought a little tract of land in Hancock County, Illinois, where they started a little town called Commerce, later called Nauvoo."

    In the fall of 1839, my father went about 200 miles into Iowa, just across the Mississippi River from Commerce (or Nauvoo) and took him up a piece of land that was called the "Half Breed Land" as it was purchased from the Black Hawk Indians.  He started to put up a little log house and sent for us.  We hired a man to take what little we had to our new little home.  Unfortunately, winter arrived before father had the house finished.

    The move evidently took what little money the combined efforts of the family had accumulated during that summer.  Polly says:

    "Father had to leave his house unfinished while he and my two oldest brothers had to go and find work to get something to eat.  Just the body of the house and a few slabs on top that he had hewn out of logs for a roof, were our house, we had no floor.  We built a fire on the ground floor as we had no chimney.  My mother took in washing and I worked out for 75 cents a week.  We did all we could to live until Spring, then my father managed to put in a little grain and garden.

    With the coming of Spring the fortunes of Polly's family seem to be infused with a swelling, newness of life, for the next few years the family prospered exceedingly.  In 1840 Alfred planted his crops and reaped a bounteous harvest.

   "My father finished his house and raised a pretty good crop and I earned quite a little teaching school to help maintain the family.  My father raised a good crop of flax the year of 1841,
(I worked out all summer where I could get a chance and in the Spring and Summer of 1841, I taught school and in 1842) so the greater portion of 1843 I stayed home and helped my mother spin and make into cloth to clothe the children and make father pants and shirts.  We made sheets and pillow cases and we had dresses made out of flax."

    By this time several other pioneer families had joined Polly and her family, taking advantage of the cheap land offered by the Government.  By 1842 there were enough people in the area to consider themselves a community.

    On the 3rd of September 1842, my father was appointed post master.  They called this little settlement String Prairie.  Part of the year of 1843 I worked out a good deal, but mother not being very well, I helped at home.

    Polly captured that happiness and prosperity they were enjoying in the following lines: "Father attended to the office and with the help of my brothers made a nice 
                  
Children
Marriage
1
Alfred Bosworth RICHARDSON
Birth:
8 Feb 1848
Pottawattamie, Iowa
Death:
16 May 1848
 
Marr:
 
2
Birth:
4 May 1850
Pottawattamie, Iowa
Death:
28 Mar 1917
Marr:
27 Dec 1870
Plain City, Weber, Utah 
3
Birth:
11 Oct 1852
El Dorado, California
Death:
22 Nov 1922
Marr:
25 Oct 1875
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Uta 
4
Birth:
21 Aug 1857
Ogden, Weber, Utah
Death:
7 Jun 1907
Plain City, Weber, Utah
Marr:
27 Oct 1873
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Uta 
Notes:
                   Historical information included in notes.


Angeline Richardson Draney (information received from Viola D Miller and Mrs. Clarence Richardson.)Angeline Richardson was born 21 aug 1857 in Ogden, Utah. The only daughter of Ebenezer Clawson Richardson and Polly Ann Child.She was married at the early age of sixteen to Samuel P Draney in the endowment house in Salt Lake City, Utah. She moved with her husband to Plain City, Utah where they had a small farm. After her eight child was born her husband was called on a mission to Scotland leaving her to work the farm and raise her family as best she could. Which she cheerfully did although at times under very discouraging circumstances. After her husbands return seven more children were born to Angeline. She had three daughters, but lost them all in their infancy, also one son, which was a great sorrow to her.When her youngest son was six months old, her husband fell from a tree, killing himself instantly, leaving Angeline a widow with eleven boys to raise alone. With the aid of her older boys she managed her small farm, trying to carry on as best she could to make a living for her family. When her baby was four years old, she was burned to death trying to get one of her son's new buggy out of a burning shed. Thus ending the live of one of the bravest and most courageous women I know of, my grandmother.She was a very sweet person. Everyone loved her. She worked in the relief society presidency in plain city. Mrs Clarence Richardson relates the following story about her. " I was out with my new baby in the evening when a rain storm came up. Aunt Angeline at the time had a big black plush cape which she wore so she took the baby and put her under the cape and carried her home for me".Burned woman dies after great agony (a newspaper clipping.)After suffering untold agony for almost twenty-four hours, Mrs S P Draney, of Plain City, who was horribly burned while trying to save some property from a burning barn last Friday, died at 10:30 this morning.Mrs Draney was a widow. When her barn caught fire she attempted to save a buggy. In pulling the vehicle out she became entangled in a wire fence and could not extricate herself. She labored heroically until the flames overtook her. Neighbors attracted to the scene were not able to liberate the woman until the clothing had been burned from her body. In a semi-conscious state she was carried to the house, where medical aid was summoned. An examination showed that she had been fatally injured and the efforts of the physicians were directed toward relieving the awful pain.At 12 o'clock noon yesterday the woman, realizing that she could not live long, called her eleven children, all boys to her bedside and bade them farewell. Her death was expected momentarily from that time, but with wonderful fortitude she lived until this morning.One calamity after another seems to have followed the Draney family, for years. Out of fifteen children born to the couple twelve were boys and three were girls. It was the mother's desire to save at least one of the girls, but one after another they passed away. About nine years ago four of the children, were stricken with scarlet fever. For weeks they hovered between life and death. The disease left one of the boys deaf and dumb and one of the girls was left with heart trouble, from which she died a short time later . Four years ago last February Mr Draney, the father and husband, fell from a tree on the farm, sustaining injuries f rom which he suffered terribly and died in less then twenty -four hours.Mrs Draney was fifty years old and her parents were among the early settlers of Plain City. The funeral will be held at the Plain City meeting-house at 4 o'clock tomorrow afternoon. Burial will be made at Plain City.
                  
5
Birth:
16 Oct 1860
Ogden, Weber, Utah
Death:
19 Sep 1943
Marr:
10 Apr 1884
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Uta 
6
Orville RICHARDSON
Birth:
11 Jul 1863
Ogden, Weber, Utah
Death:
10 Jan 1866
 
Marr:
 
FamilyCentral Network
Ebenezer Clawson Richardson - Polly Ann Child

Ebenezer Clawson Richardson was born at Dryden, Tompkins, New York 7 Aug 1815. His parents were Josiah Richardson and Lowly Foote.

He married Polly Ann Child Nov 1843 at Greenfield, Saratoga, New York . Polly Ann Child was born at Baldtown, Saratoga, New York 20 Jul 1821 daughter of Alfred Bosworth Child and Polly Ann Barber .

They were the parents of 6 children:
Alfred Bosworth Richardson born 8 Feb 1848.
Warren Richardson born 4 May 1850.
Ebenezer Clawson Richardson born 11 Oct 1852.
Angeline Richardson born 21 Aug 1857.
Levi Asa Richardson born 16 Oct 1860.
Orville Richardson born 11 Jul 1863.

Ebenezer Clawson Richardson died 25 Sep 1874 at Plain City, Weber, Utah .

Polly Ann Child died 19 Jan 1905 at Plain City, Weber, Utah .