James Otis BRADLEY

Birth:
9 Feb 1870
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Death:
3 Oct 1943
Provo, Utah, Utah
Burial:
7 Oct 1943
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Marriage:
5 Dec 1894
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Sources:
Ancestral File - v. 4.19
Pedigree Resource File
Ancestry World Tree
New.FamilySearch.org, Jun 2010
Notes:
                   HISTORY: James Otis Bradley
1870-1943

HISTORY: James Otis Bradley was a great-grandson of George Washington Bradley, an early ancestral pioneer born in New York who came west with the Saints after he found the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. Soon after his familys arrival in the Valley of the Great Salt Lake, Brigham Young called him to go and help settle the Sanpete Valley, where he became the first bishop in Moroni and also served as that citys president for the next 18 years.

HISTORY: 	With the Bradleys having established such a strong presence in the Sanpete area-where more and more Bradleys lived and died over the next several generations-it should not be surprising that James Otiss parents, George Henry and Elizabeth Angeline Love Bradley, were also living there 135 years ago when he made his journey to earth from the spirit world, landing in Moroni on Wednesday, 9 February 1870.

HISTORY: 	So James Otis grew up in Moroni in Sanpete County, where he met and married his sweetheart, Johannah Sophia Arnoldus. Her family had put down their roots in the same place after having joined the Church and migrated westward to be with the Saints in Zion.

HISTORY: 	Today James Otis and Johannah Sophia Arnoldus Bradley have a large posterity of faithful children, grandchildren, and so on. Many of those still living today who knew him in life have fond memories of him.

HISTORY: 	One of these was reported by Verdeen and Ronald Bradley. Ronald recalls that when he was about three years old and Verdeen eight they often rode sitting on the floor of a wagon pulled by two horses with their father, Clifford, and grandfather, James Otis, sitting on the wagon seat. Ronald remembers how excited he was about being able to go with them because he thought he would be allowed to stay and help his father work on the farm-probably thinning beets.

HISTORY: 	Ron, who still lives in Moroni today, remembers vividly that they traveled south on Turkey Plant Road from Grandfathers home and then went west to get to the farm. But as soon as they arrived, Grandfather said he had better take them home, so he left the wagon for Clifford and started up the road with the children. This upset Ronald terribly because he had thought both he and Verdeen would be able to stay at Grandfathers for the night. Several blocks from the farm as they traveled along the road they passed Russ Baileys farm, which had an abundance of peas growing. Grandfather took them in and helped them get some handfuls of peas and then continued home. It was several miles to his house.

HISTORY: 	Arriving at Grandfathers home, they were given thick slices of homemade bread with molasses and sugar sprinkled on top. Ronald remembers it was very good. Then Grandfather said they were to go straight home because their mother would probably need them. So Verdeen took Ronald and walked nearly a mile further to get to their own house.

HISTORY: 	Verdeen recalls that Grandfather was called Ottie by his friends and that he whistled and hummed a lot. Many remember him for that. In fact, he was known for his whistling and singing, whether at home or in the business section of town. One speaker at his funeral stated that he was truly great because it is only a great man who can whistle his troubles away.

HISTORY: 	His son Clifford carried on his tradition of whistling and people would know he was coming before they saw him because they could hear him whistling.

HISTORY: 	James Otis had a large farm on which he grew mostly sugar beets but also grain and alfalfa. He had two horses named Rock and Rye, and they were the best horses in all of Moroni, Ralph recalls. He also had a cow, some chickens, and a pig or two. The chickens were not cooped up but were left to wander all over the farm at will. But they laid their eggs in the barn and Ralph remembers having collected them there. Then Grandfather let him trade one for an all-day sucker. Grandfathers farm also had a great garden with an abundance of turnips and peas, which the children loved to eat raw.

HISTORY: 	Grandma Bradley, James Otiss wife, Johannah Sophia Arnoldus, passed away in 1922 when Ralph was scarcely two years old, leaving James with six children (three boys and three girls) to raise on his own. After Sophie died, Jamess daughter Beth cared for him and the rest of the children in his nice, five-room, brick home in Moroni, which was located kitty corner from the chapel, the tithing office, the post office, and the town marshal. Ralph remembers that Grandfathers house had a large swing in the tree, which the children loved to swing on.  Mealtime at Grandfathers always featured meat, potatoes, and milk gravy. Sometimes they had liver and onions, which the kids didnt like.

HISTORY: 	The house was surrounded by a nice, white, picket fence, through which they watered their lawn with irrigation water by flooding the whole lawn whenever it was their turn to take water. Inside the house they had an old Edison record player, which operated by cranking it up before playing it. The sound came out through a large horn that sat atop the apparatus.

HISTORY: 	The grandchildren loved to climb up on Grandfathers big mahogany bed and lie on his thick and comfy straw tick. Theyll never forget the marble slab that adorned the top of the chest of drawers.

HISTORY: 	Ralph remembers that during the beet harvest Grandfather would take him for a ride on his horse, complete with what it felt like to sit atop the horse pushing in with his right or left knee to turn the horse in either direction. Because he was so small, there wasnt really much else he could do to help with the work.

HISTORY: 	Even the children remember how very happy Grandfather always was. He was constantly whistling and when people heard him coming they would holler out, Here comes Oat

HISTORY: 	In later years James Otis had a job in Fountain Green maintaining road shoulders. His grandson Ralph used to ride with him on his maintenance runs and thought it pretty neat to be able to work with Grandfather.

HISTORY: 	Grandpa Bradley was always generous to his children and their families. It must have been hard for him to see his daughter-in-law Nida struggle financially when his son William Otis, who had all but deserted her and her children, failed to send his monthly allowance of $20.00 for their support. He was working and living in Oregon and did not appear to intend to come back to Moroni to be with his family. It was that year, 1928, that Grandpa Bradley loaned Nida $5.00 so she would not have to disappoint her children, Ralph and Betsy, for Christmas.

HISTORY: 	It was on a Sunday, 3 October 1943, that James Otis Bradley quietly passed away at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Don Nielson, in Provo, Utah. Funeral services were held in the West Ward chapel in Moroni. An unusually large number of relatives and friends came to pay their respects to the man whom they held in the highest esteem. He was interred in the Moroni City Cemetery, as was the custom with the Bradley family who had come there 95 years earlier after being called by Brigham Young to settle the Sanpete Valley.


HISTORY: James Otis Bradley was a great-grandson of George Washington Bradley, an early ancestral pioneer born in New York who came west with the Saints after he found the restored gospel of Jesus Christ. Soon after his familys arrival in the Valley of the Great Salt Lake, Brigham Young called him to go and help settle the Sanpete Valley, where he became the first bishop in Moroni and also served as that citys president for the next 18 years.

HISTORY: 	With the Bradleys having established such a strong presence in the Sanpete area-where more and more Bradleys lived and died over the next several generations-it should not be surprising that James Otiss parents, George Henry and Elizabeth Angeline Love Bradley, were also living there 135 years ago when he made his journey to earth from the spirit world, landing in Moroni on Wednesday, 9 February 1870.

HISTORY: 	His son Clifford carried on his tradition of whistling and people would know he was coming before they saw him because they could hear him whistling.

HISTORY: 	Grandma Bradley, James Otiss wife, Johannah Sophia Arnoldus, passed away in 1922 when Ralph was scarcely two years old, leaving James with six children (three boys and three girls) to raise on his own. After Sophie died, Jamess daughter Beth cared for him and the rest of the children in his nice, five-room, brick home in Moroni, which was located kitty corner from the chapel, the tithing office, the post office, and the town marshal. Ralph remembers that Grandfathers house had a large swing in the tree, which the children loved to swing on.  Mealtime at Grandfathers always featured meat, potatoes, and milk gravy. Sometimes they had liver and onions, which the kids didnt like.

HISTORY: 	The grandchildren loved to climb up on Grandfathers big mahogany bed and lie on his thick and comfy straw tick. Theyll never forget the marble slab that adorned the top of the chest of drawers.
                  
Sophia Johannah ARNOLDUS
Birth:
14 Sep 1874
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Death:
27 Mar 1922
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Burial:
31 May 1922
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Father:
Blocked
Mother:
Blocked
Sources:
Universal Genealogy, ALIAS: 5261-317, GENDB
Children
Marriage
1
Birth:
2 Feb 1897
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Death:
24 Jun 1986
Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Marr:
12 May 1933
Vancover, Clark, Washington 
Notes:
                   OBITUARY: William Otis Bradley, age 89, passed away in Salt Lake City, Utah, June 24, 1986.
Born February 2, 1897, Moroni, Utah to James Otis and Johannah Sophia Arnoldus Bradley.  Married Nida Hales March 12, 1919, Manti LDS Temple; later divorced.  He lived in Portland, Oregon much of his adult life, where he married Ofa Anna Marts; she preceded him in death .  Worked as a meat cutter most of his life and owned his own meat market in Portland.  Upon his wife's death, he returned to Moroni, Utah.  He has lived in Salt Lake City the last six years.
Survivors: son, Ralph O. Bradley; daugher, Betsy B. Sorbonne; three sisters, Ora Blackham, Beth Church and Helen Johnson; 19 granchildren and 77 great grandchildren.
Funeral services Monday, 1:00 p.m. in the Moroni 3rd Ward, 82 North Center Street, where friends may call Monday from 12 noon to 1:00 p.m.  Interment, Moroni City Cemetary under the direction of Larkin Mortuary.

BLESSING: Blessed by Faux Jabez Sr.

BAPTISM: Baptized by Edward Anderson in the Moroni Sanpitch River.
Cornfirmed by Orlando Bradley 1 July 1906.

PRIESTHOOD: Deacon - Ordained by Orlando Bradley 29 Nov 1909
Teacher - Ordained by Orlando Bradley 20 Jan 1913
Elder - Ordained by Daniel Rasmussen 8 March 1919

MARRIAGE: Married to Nida Hales  in the Manti Temple by Lewis Anderson on 12 March 1919


BIOGRAPHY: Patriarchal blessing by Toyn David Harry on 24 Jan 1928

HISTORY: William Otis Bradley
                     1897-1986

HISTORY: William Otis Bradley was born in Moroni, Utah, on 2 February 1897 to James Otis and Johanna Sophia Arnoldus Bradley, the second son in a family of seven children. Otis, as he was called, came from good pioneer stock, his great-grandfather George Washington Bradley having served as the first Bishop in Moroni and also as the town president for eighteen years.

HISTORY: Otis worked at a local firm known as the Moroni Co-op. It was there he met and began to date Nida Hales, who, after only two years of high school had also gone to work there to help her familys financial situation. Nida had dated many young men previous to that time, but in Otis she felt she had finally found the one the Lord intended for her. By the fall of 1918 they were dating steadily and planned to be married the next spring. But early that same fall a serious flu epidemic broke out that plagued the entire nation. It was so severe that all public gatherings such as school, church meetings, picture shows, and dances were closed down. Otis and Nida had often attended the Wednesday and Saturday night dances so were now forced to cultivate their relationship in other ways while they waited for the flu epidemic to subside-and for the ban on the temple to be lifted.

HISTORY: The Manti Temple reopened the first week of March, and it was in that first week after the closure, on 12 March 1919, that Nida and Otis went there to be married. Their first home was in the front part of the James M. Christensen home.

HISTORY: Unfortunately for Nida, her marriage got off to a much different start than she had dreamed of since she was a girl. Despite Otiss having qualified to go to the temple, he was not truly converted to the gospel. His mother died shortly after he was married, so the responsibility fell to his widowed father and his sisters to give him spiritual support in his new patriarchal calling. He floundered because of his lack of leadership sense and this deficiency  was immediately apparent to Nida when he did not preside over her in his new home. Each night, for example, Nida prayed alone then had to persuade Otis to pray with her-but she always had to be mouth.

HISTORY: When Otis and Nidas first child, a son, Ralph Otis Bradley, was born to them on 24 Feb 1920, Nidas first concern was how she could successfully teach him to return home to Father in Heaven. His had been a rough delivery, which led to her prolonged sickness, requiring that she receive continuous care from her family. Ralph was a big baby and was hard to feed. Then Nida nearly died giving birth on 5 May 1921 to her second child, a girl whom they named Betsy, after Nidas mother. Both children were born in Moroni.

HISTORY: Otis left the Moroni Co-op and went to work for Peoples Sugar Company, where he boiled sugar all day. He liked that kind of work but it was seasonal, which meant moving around from job to job in the off months. Otis and Nida bought a building lot from his Aunt Eliza Bradley just one block west of the Moroni Co-op, between her home and Otiss fathers home. The moved from their first house in the Christensen home into a two-room lumber house they had purchased from Nidas Uncle Alma Blackham and moved onto their new lot. They dug a basement and a foundation with a floor and were happy when they moved into their very own home.

HISTORY: The following spring Otis was laid off at the sugar company, so he went to Salt Lake and found a position as a meat cutter, a trade he had learned from Lawrence Larson at the Moroni Co-op. Once settled, Nida also moved to Salt Lake with the children. There they rented a furnished house at 245 Hampton Avenue, across the street from Nellie Morleys family, another of Nidas relatives. Late that summer the sugar factory in Moroni contacted Otis asking him to return in the fall to Moroni to boil sugar for them again, so he accepted the offer and they moved back home.

HISTORY: They were happy to be around family again in Moroni, but shortly after Thanksgiving Otis was laid off once more, and they were out of work-again. Otis wasted no time trying to find employment back in Salt Lake but nothing was available, so he went to McGill, near Ely, Nevada, where he was able to get another job as a meat cutter. The family followed by train the following January, but they only stayed about a year in McGill because the copper ore fumes from the nearby smelter were harmful to Betsy. She could not breathe and in the nighttime it became even worse. So Nida and the children returned to their little house in Moroni, leaving Otis to fend for himself in McGill.

HISTORY: The first part of October 1925 the family was reunited when they all moved to Sparks, Nevada, three miles north of Reno, where Otis had secured a position with Safeway Stores. In Sparks Nida began immediately to serve in the Church, being called as a counselor in Primary the very first month. When her father died suddenly on 7 May 1927, she and the children went home for the funeral and when they returned, they found that Otis had been transferred to Safeways large store in Reno as manager over the entire store. It was a good career move for him.

HISTORY: To facilitate Otiss new position, the family moved to Reno. But they did not like it there because the school was too far away for Ralph to walk. So they moved back to Sparks, where Ralph could walk to school. They did not have a car at the time and the small town was much more convenient. It was not difficult for Otis to get to work from Sparks because a street car went every 30 minutes to Reno and returned about as often. It stopped just a half block from their home in Sparks and one block from the Safeway store in Reno, and the fare was very reasonable.

HISTORY: Over the next several years the Bradley family moved again and again, during which time Otis mysteriously began to distance himself from Nida and the children, even living apart from them for long periods of time. In July 1928, he asked for a transfer to Santa Barbara so moved there on his own, leaving his family in Sparks to facilitate their own move back to Moroni, where it was agreed they would go. He left for California on July 5 without even saying goodbye to his children.

HISTORY: In the ensuing months Nida suffered in private because of the outcome of her marriage, but she constantly prayed for Otiss return.  California did not prove to be a good venture for him, though, so he moved on and found an opportunity to cut meat in Portland, Oregon, where he ultimately opened his own butcher shop.

HISTORY: For a while Otis sent $20 a month to Nida, from which she always paid $2 in tithing the very first thing. When her Christmas check didnt arrive that year, however, Nida borrowed $5 from Grandpa Bradley so her family would have a Christmas. Then in May 1929 she suffered another heartbreak when a parcel post package arrived with Otiss garments and the church books the local missionaries had given to him when they tried to reactivate him in the Church.
Nida and her children were invited to go and live with Aunt Nellie Blackham Morley in Salt Lake City. During that time she visited Otis once in Portland to try to get him to come back to her, but it was no use, so she had to face the ugly reality that she was totally on her own.

HISTORY: After making a few modifications to Nellies basement, Nida set up housekeeping on a shoestring, and her cousin Doris got her a job at Auerbachs, which enabled her to now carry some of the financial responsibility for her family. All this while Doris, despite her rheumatoid arthritis,  maintained her usual cheerful spirit, which proved to be a real boon to Nida.

HISTORY: Life was bearable, and ultimately even enjoyable, at Nellies, but Nida so longed to have her family back together again. Though her husband was gone she was at least able to help pay the rent now that she had her job at Auerbachs. But shortly after Thanksgiving Otis wrote asking for a divorce-which broke Nidas heart.

HISTORY: After the divorce, Otis married Ofa Anna Marts and he ended up having lived much of his adult life with her in Oregon. In Portland Otis owned his own meat market and was a great success. His son, Ralph, recalls that he had real people skills, which was partially why he did so well in his own business.

HISTORY: Otis saw very little of his family after his divorce from Nida. Ralph was 35 years old before he had any kind of a relationship with him. Once when he was in Boise, Idaho, on a business trip he felt impressed to drive over to Portland, Oregon, to see his dad. They had a good visit and were able to get re-acquainted with each other. Years later, after his wife died, Otis called Ralph and said he would like to move back to Moroni, Utah, to live with his brother Cliff and his wife, Rhea. So Ralph sent his sons Craig and Jim up to Oregon to help with the move. There they rented a U-Haul truck and brought their grandfather down to Moroni with all his things.

HISTORY: Otis had bought Cliff and Rhea a home in Moroni, which he had given them as a gift, but things didnt work out for him to live with them for very long so Otis built a small addition on his nephew Rons house and lived there for several years.

HISTORY: Ralph often took two of his daughters, Barbara and Lisa, down to Moroni to see Otis and to take him to lunch. He particularly liked the food at a favorite restaurant in Ephraim. They enjoyed those trips because it gave them a chance to nurture him and show love and concern for him. And their efforts proved successful because Otis was really trying hard to become active in the Church again. He was obeying the commandments, including paying his tithing, but he needed to qualify for a temple recommend, which didnt seem to be forthcoming.

HISTORY: Ralph learned that his father had been struggling with some past things he wanted to clean up in his life and didnt quite know how to go about doing it. He talked to his bishop and asked for his help, but the bishop wasnt very responsive, so nothing happened. Finally, Ralph intervened and talked to the bishops wife and she encouraged the bishop to move things along, which he did, and Otis finally got his temple recommend. After he moved to Salt Lake Ralph had the privilege of performing the sealing of his deceased second wife, Ann, to him in the Salt Lake Temple. (Nida, Ralphs natural mother and Otiss first wife, who was sealed to him initially in the Manti Temple, had that sealing canceled when she was married and sealed to her second husband, John A. Donaldson.)

HISTORY: In Salt Lake, Ralph bought a trailer home for Otis to live in and they parked it near the Bradleys store so he could easily go back and forth to where Ralphs family members worked. They all enjoyed having him around. He was, in fact, a great help to them all the while he lived there, partially because of his own past experience in business.

HISTORY: About the time Ralph and Mildred were called on their mission to North Carolina Otiss health was beginning to fail so they assigned their daughter Barbara to care for him regularly during their absence. She took him out and about each day to run errands and tend to personal needs. Later, when she was no longer able to keep up with his physical demands, the family moved him to the Salt Lake Home on 200 North, and he lived there until he died on 24 June 1986 at age 89.

HISTORY: After having been away from Utah and the majority of his family and friends for so many years, Otis felt blessed to spend the last six years of his mortal life back home again in Utah. It was only fitting that, even though he was living in Salt Lake at the time of his passing, he should be buried back home in the Moroni City Cemetery.

HISTORY: Having reconciled himself again with his Father in Heaven, his children have every reason to one day see him back home again in the Bradley Family Mansion, filling his own chair among the others whose hearts have been-and are still being-turned to him.
                  
2
James Samuel BRADLEY
Birth:
28 Sep 1895
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Death:
6 Nov 1895
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
 
Marr:
 
3
Birth:
19 Aug 1900
Moroni, Sanpete, Utah
Death:
4 Dec 1930
Sparks, Nevada
Marr:
20 Dec 1922
Manti, Sanpete, Utah 
4
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
5
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
6
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
7
Blocked
Birth:
Death:
Blocked  
Marr:
 
FamilyCentral Network
James Otis Bradley - Sophia Johannah Arnoldus

James Otis Bradley was born at Moroni, Sanpete, Utah 9 Feb 1870. His parents were George Henry Bradley and Elizabeth Angeline Love.

He married Sophia Johannah Arnoldus 5 Dec 1894 at Moroni, Sanpete, Utah . Sophia Johannah Arnoldus was born at Moroni, Sanpete, Utah 14 Sep 1874 .

They were the parents of 7 children:
William Otis Bradley born 2 Feb 1897.
James Samuel Bradley born 28 Sep 1895.
Mark Bradley born 19 Aug 1900.
Blocked
Blocked
Blocked
Blocked

James Otis Bradley died 3 Oct 1943 at Provo, Utah, Utah .

Sophia Johannah Arnoldus died 27 Mar 1922 at Moroni, Sanpete, Utah .