Hole-in-the-Rock Landmarks and People

Hole-in-the-Rock Landmarks and People
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Showing posts with label Lyman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lyman. Show all posts

January 13, 2010

Bayles *, Hanson, Mary Ann Durham

 (Hanson Bayles story written by Jill Bayles, submitted March 29, 2010 --Thank you so much!)

Hanson Bayles was just twenty one when he was called to leave for the San Juan country in 1879.  He left his sweetheart in Parowan as he was one of twenty-two in the first exploring party on the southern route to San Juan.  In the fall the full expedition set out with Hanson herding some of his own cattle as he helped manage the large herd of livestock that accompanied the party.  In April, 1880, the weary pioneers finally pulled into Bluff after their grueling six month journey. Next to the San Juan River they built a fort, their cabins, and established the San Juan Mission.  The men drew lots for acreage to farm and for city lots to build their homes.

Later that year Hanson returned to Parowan to get his sweetheart, Mary Ann Durham; they were married in the St. George Temple and they were in Bluff to begin their married life by Christmas, 1880.  The family prospered in spite of the hardship and four children were born in Bluff - Annie, Hanson Durham, Emma, and Caroline.  Unfortunately, Mary Ann died in 1888 when their last child was born and Hanson was left a widower with four children under eight.  His sisters Juliette & Emma came to Bluff to help care for the motherless family.

As Bluff grew, Hanson prospered and was able to build his herds & grazing land.  He was a founding partner in the Bluff co-op.  Meanwhile, a young woman named Evelyn Lyman, a daughter of Platte Lyman, was growing up in Bluff.  She noticed Hanson & his little family and Hanson was aware of Evelyn as she played in the Bluff band and attended church activities.  Her father warned her that she could be a widow for many years if she married an older man; his words turned out to be quite true.

Hanson was forty and Evelyn twenty two in 1897 when they married in the Manti Temple.  Their first child, De Lyman Bayles, was born the next year and in 1900 Velyn was born.  By this time their new block home was under construction.  This home was located across the street west from Dorothea & Jens Neilsen's home and the growing family, now with six children, was anxious to move in.  Soon Clark, Grant, and Adelia arrived, joining the teenagers from Hanson's first family.

Outlaws and Indian trouble continued to plague the settlers.  During those early years, some of the men took turns being the sheriff.  It was while Hanson was sheriff that he had a unique experience.  Two outlaws were on their way through the San Juan country & he was notified to be on the lookout and try to apprehend them.  He & a deputy had captured them & were taking them to Thompson where they could catch the train to take them on to Colorado.  This was over a hundred miles so they spent a few nights on the trail with their horses and the prisoners.  Hanson and the deputy would take four hour shifts during the night to guard the outlaws.  One of those nights Hanson was on guard; he was sitting, leaning against a tree with his rifle across his knees.  Everyone seemed to be sleeping as Hanson rested.  Suddenly he awakened with a start grabbing his rifle.  One of the outlaws had managed to get out of his handcuffs & was standing in front of Hanson just reaching for his gun!  Quickly Hanson re cuffed him and tied him up tighter.  A few days later the outlaws were turned over to the authorities without further incident.  Back in Bluff, Hanson told his family of the close call.  The outlaw told Hanson that he had planned to get the gun & kill him and the deputy.  Why had Hanson awakened so suddenly when he was in danger?  Hanson said he heard his Mother calling him in her distinctive Danish accent, HAN-SON!  Anna Frederikka Oster Bayles, his Mother, had died years earlier, but he heard her that night.

By 1908, Grayson, 26 miles north of Bluff, was beginning to grow as more families settled there.  It was that year that Hanson was called as the first Bishop of Grayson Ward (later called Blanding).  Evelyn had a sad heart as they moved their growing family - now ten - from their nice home in Bluff to a tin granary in Grayson.  The twins were born in Grayson, at Hanson's Mothers', and Mary came along in 1911.  Mary may have been born in the new brick home Hanson had built on the corner of 200 South 100 East.  Scott, the last child, was born there in 1915.  This pioneer home is still occupied, now almost 100 years old.

Hanson was Bishop as the saints sacrificed and the South Chapel was built.  The first telephone in Grayson was placed in the Bayles home.  Around this time the Mormon Saints were run out of Mexico and many arrived in Grayson.  As Bishop, Hanson helped them with food & shelter; many arrived with nothing.  Many times he sent those in need to his own granary and fields for supplies.

Evelyn remembers tithing being paid in grain, vegetables, eggs, meat, fruit, and other items piled on their porch before it was distributed to the needy.

Hanson Bayles died in Blanding in 1922 and was buried in the Blanding Cemetary.  Evelyn was eighty seven when she died; she is buried in Blanding.  Mary Ann Durham Bayles is buried in the Bluff Cemetary.

============================== 
(Saga of San Juan summary)
 Hanson Bayles was born to Herman D. Bayles and Anna Easter Bayles 1858 at Parowan, Utah
In 1879, he was called to help in the settlement of San Juan County. He was a member of the Mormon Exploring and Hole-in-the-Rock Parties. Later, he married Mary Ann Durham in the St. George Temple and they moved to Bluff. They had four children: Annie, Hanson Durham, Emma, and Caroline. When Caroline was born Jan. 31, 1888 her mother died.
Hanson served as county treasurer, also county commissioner and was bishop of the Bluff and later the Blanding ward. He was considered one of the leading business men of the county. His counsel was sought in financial and spiritual matters. He owned vast tracts of land, also cattle and sheep. He was a successful farmer and rancher. He was dependable and just in all of his dealings. He died Nov. 1922.

Poem about Mary Ann Durham Bayles

January 9, 2010

Jones, Kumen and Mary Nielson Jones

Five Stars ***** to the Kumen Jones family for their wonderful web site.  http://kumenjones.org/
Not only did Kumen keep good records of his life, but took the time to write wonderful observations about the trek to San Juan, and also tributes to other pioneers, his parents, wives and children.  This is a wonderful model for other Hole-in-the-Rock families to follow.

Kumen Jones: 5 May-1856 -- 11 Jun-1942  (Died at age 86)
Kumen was a member of the first scouting party and the first Hole-in-the-Rock company.  He is esteemed highly in the pioneer history of San Juan.  He was born in Cedar City, May 5, 1856.  He was taught the old Welsh ballads by his mother Sage Treharne Jones.  When his father died, he and his brother Lehi helped their mother with the four younger children and worked to provide a livelihood for the family.  He and Lehi carried the mail on horseback to Bullion, Nevada for 3 years.  He then went into the cattle business and prospered in it.  It was at this time he fell in love with Mary Nielson, daughter of Jens and Elsie Nielson, who were from Denmark.  They were married in the St. George Temple, Dec. 19, 1879.  The next year in April 1879 he was called to join the inital exploring party into the San Juan Country.  He was gone five months, and after returning was only home long enough to prepare for the long trek back to San Juan with the full company.  Kumen was a cheerful mainstay and helpto the colonizers (Saga of San Juan p. 314-315).  Please read more on his web site.

Mary Nielson Jones:   Born 3 Oct-1858 -- Died 28 Feb-1933 
Married: 19 Dec-1878.  After arriving in Bluff in April 1880 the two worked hand in hand to help the new settlement grow.  The couple had no children, but Mary was promised in a blessing given by her father Jens Nielson, that she would have a son, if she consented to her husband taking a 2nd wife.  This blessing was not fulfilled until 1889 when their only child, Leonard was born.  She was a mother of many, however, as Kumen's 2nd wife Lydia May Lyman, died becasue of a tragic fire in 1906, and Mary raised May's 10 children as well.

Kumen's Desciption of his wife Mary.  . . .Aunt Mary started out in life from childhood with a sympathetic nature, and early in young womanhood fell heir to the prefix "Aunt" to her name, about everyone using it, even cowboy strangers, "Drummers" (now called "traveling salesmen," etc., and Stamoskezy by the Indians), with whom she served as store keeper and also as a nurse in times of sickness and trouble for many years. For in these misfortunes she served all alike without regard to color or station; many times going into the hogans of Indians on her mission of mercy. She has held office in all Church organizations that are open for women to hold from Primary to Stake President of the Relief Society, which position she held for several years. She worked in the San Juan Co-op store for about 35 years as saleswoman; helped run a dairy several seasons in early pioneer days.

     The biggest job and one that shows the bigness of her heart is the most wonderful way she took over the children of my honored wife, Lydia May, unselfishly mothering and caring for them and their every need; and they with myself should honor her for the noble life-long service rendered to our motherless children.

Lydia May Lyman Jones:      Born 1 May-1865 -- Died 17 Apr-1906       Married: 2 Dec-1882  (she came to San Juan after 1880)
Lydia May ws the daughter of Amasa M. Lyman and Lydia Partridge Lyman.  May was born in Fillmore, May 1 1864.  She was a fine dressmaker and seamstress.  She was also a good housekeeper and cook.  She and Mary became very good friends and loved each other.  May and Kumen had 10 children, only one being a girl, named Mamie.  The boys who survived infancy were Stanley, Thomas, Marvin, Leland, Marion, Alma and Francis.  When May was 42 she was severly burned and died from the effects of the fire.

Kumen's testimony of the San Juan Mission
Kumen Jones'http://www.bluffutah.org/tour/jones.htm home in Bluff

January 8, 2010

Lyman, Amasa Mason, Jr.

Amasa Jr. was born 22 Feb 1846, the son of Amasa and Maria Louisa Lyman.  He and died 21 Feb 1937

It is likely that it was Amasa Jr. who is identified as one of the men bringing cheese and pork into camp.  He had come from Panguitch with Joseph Smith Woolsley to help build the road.  Since there was not adequate supplies to distribute to all 250 people, they decided to auction it off.  Thus the name Cheese camp stuck for this site (Hole in the Rock by Miller, p 126).

More information needed

Lyman, Edward Leo

Edward was born 4 Jan 1857 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Ut.  to Amasa Mason Lyman and Lydia Partridge Lyman.  He died 22 May 1906 Oak City, Millard, Ut

The Lyman web site includes information about him.  http://sites.google.com/site/edwardleolyman/    or http://ell.lymansite.us/

He married Mary Maranda Callister  and they had 10 children.
Mary was married to Edward Leo Lyman, Sr. in the Endowment House, 14 November 1878 by D. H. Wells. He was 21 and she was 24. They set up housekeeping in one room of Caroline Lyman’s3 home in Oak City where Edward was associated with his brothers in the sawmill business. They spent their honeymoon at the sawmill.
      Mary was staying in Fillmore with her mother when her first child was born 22 Aug. 1879. The baby was stillborn and the young mother nearly lost her life. Mary was advised by her Doctor never to attempt to have another child as it would mean almost certain death. She did go ahead and have her family, 10 children. Ida May (stillborn,) Edward Leo Jr., Philomela (Millie), Lydia, Frank Arthur, Thomas Callister (Callis), Willis Jay, Evelyn (stillborn), Clara and Alma Rich.

    Edward actually went on the Hole in the Rock expedition, which was the reason he was away when his first child was born. On his second trip to San Juan he had built a log cabin in Bluff, Utah and expected to return with his family. Mary, however, did not want to move to the desolate Four-corners area away from family and civilization. Mary’s uncle George A. Smith told her that she would not have to go to the San Juan. On Edward’s return to Millard County to get his wife he had two horses die and almost didn’t survive himself. This trip convinced him that he didn’t want to move to the San Juan.
     This is one of the letters he wrote home to Mary while he was on the trek to San Juan: 

Gunsite Crossing Dec 14, 1879
Dear Mary [in Fillmore]
            I received your letter dated 21st on the 10th and I was very glad to get it as I have only heard from home twice since I left home but I expect there is two or three letters on the road for me. I got the papers all right but have not had much time to read yet. I have left the cattle and am going to work on the road for a week or two it is a hard road to travel from Escalante to here the teams can make from 2 ½ miles to 6 miles in a day and they have to double a good deal of the way the last five miles is over solid rock a good deal of the way and some places it goes over rock hills so steep that they have to put three or four spans on one wagon to get over some places the wagons have to be held to keep them from going over and the road is so steep in some parts that the horses and brake cannot hold the wagon and it goes down spinning but we got here all right. We are camped about one mile from the Colorado and it is the roughest place to make a road I ever say you can not immagen anything half as rough I have never seen any place in the Oak Creek mountains near as rough and there is twice as much work in six miles on the other side as there is on this and what there is beyond that we don’t know.
        I think I will go down to the river today as I have not been down there yet I went part way down yesterday we had to go down about forty feet on a road but we have got a trail worked around the rock where a man with a clear head can go down without a roap. I must stop and eat breakfast. I have ate and am going down to the river I am going to take some fish hooks down they catch fish over two feet long. Bro. Smith is coming today and they are going to have a meeting it is very comfortable here the weather is warmer there now than it was there when we left home. We are 240 miles from home and I expect we will have to go 80 miles farther but we don’t know there will be nearly 100 wagons when they get together.
      Bro. Smith is going to start back to Parowan tomorrow to see bro Snow and get powder and tools it will be two or three months before we will get to San Juan so it will be some time before I will get back home but you must keep up your spirits darling and it will all come out right after a while. I am glad you did not take the school for I don’t want you to work so hard any more for I am better able to work than you are Mary and nothing will make me happier than to work for you darling all my life for I love you more and more every day of my life and when we get a home we can enjoy our selfs
more than we have before. Tell Fred I would like to write to him but I have not got time today. I have got a horse that will just suit him to hunt deer on I have rode my horse twice and I never saw a better horse to break there is lots of rase where the cattle are and they are doing well. Alma Steavens and I started from the heard last Tuesday we hunted half a day and found a beef and then went about 15 miles our horses gave out and we had to camp without any hiding. Se sat up all night and by that means we got an early start the next morning and went 15 miles to where we expected the folks were but they had moved on 10 miles so we asked some folks for some grub and then went on
and got there about sundown with our horses all give out it is the worst road to travel over I ever saw - good bye my darling little wife. -E.L. Lyman.  (437-443_1879_Dec14_Eddy_to_Mary.doc)    found at http://sites.google.com/site/edwardleolyman/hitr-letters
Additional letters can be found on the site.

Mary's letter on January 2, 1880 from Oak Creek says, “I was so afraid that you were suffering with the cold.... I am afraid you will get hurt working at such work I am sure it must be dangerous don't go down such steep places anymore it scares me to read about it... Give my love to Ida and May, I am so glad they are enjoying the trip. It will be your birthday day after tomorrow O Eddy how I do wish I could make you a nice present or could see you...”

Eddy took the time to chisel his name, “EL Lyman”, at Register Rock on the east side of the river. After arriving in Bluff on April 6, 1880, Eddy left the new Bluff to return to Oak Creek on April 29th. He arrived home in Oak Creek exhausted and worn out on May 24th 1880.
On November 5, 1880 Edward left Oak Creek again to travel to Bluff to work, spend the winter, and prepare to settle  there. He arrived at Bluff City on January 1, 1881. Later that following summer he returned to Oak Creek.

Edward and Mary decided to stay in Oak City instead of going to San Juan. The Lyman Brothers organized into “The Lyman Brothers Co.” Edward bought a lot and built a small home. Mary taught school to help out the family finances, even though children were coming along regularly. Fire destroyed the two sawmills, one after the other and the Lyman Brothers were so in debt that they went to work for the Consolidated Wagon and Machine Co. to pay off the indebtedness. Edward and Mary moved to Ogden in the summer of 1888. The family lived in Ogden11 until 1897 when the debt was paid.

The great tragedy of Mary's life was the death of her beloved husband, on May 22, 1906 of pneumonia. With the help of her sons she managed the farm, and was both father and mother to her children. She moved to Delta in the spring of 1912 to be with her boys who were farming there. She was called to be the President of the Relief Society in the new Deseret Stake Aug. 11, 1912. She was devoted to her calling and earned the love and respect of the women of the stake. She bought a one seated buggy so that she could travel around the stake in her duty. She was released March 27, 1921.

Mary and Ed Lyman family 1885  (High quality resolutions can downloaded for a fee at: http://picasaweb.google.com/carl.lyman/ELLymanFamilyPhotos#
The collection includes photos of Lyman and Callister grandparents as well as Edward and Mary and their family.

Lyman, Ida Evelyn (Nielson)

Ida Lyman was born March 28, 1859 in Salt Lake City, a daughter of Amasa Mason Lyman and Lydia Partridge Lyman.  Her childhood was spent in Salt Lake and Millard County.  When the call came for the Saints to go to San Juan, Ida left with her brothers and sisters: Walter, Platte D. and May for that destination.  It was on this trip that she met her future husband, Hans Joseph Nielson.  Ida drove a span of mules down the "Hole" and prided herself on that feat, as she was on 21 at the time.
 In the fall of 1880, Ida taught school in Bluff, the first teacher in that town.  Her wages were an old cow named "Blue."  In Nov. of 1881, she and Joe Nielson went in a coverd wagon to St. George to be married (30 Nov 1881).  As a wife and mother she lived the typical life of a frontier woman.  To keep her husband on a mission in the Eastern States, she made and sold exquisite bucksin gloves.  She was adept in caring for the sick and was a member of the burial committee in Bluff for years.  She was active in LDS church affairs.  She died in April 1922 (Saga of San Juan p 321).
Wife of Joseph Nielson
Sister of Edward, Lydia, Frank and Lydia Lyman
Half sister of Amasa, Francis, Maria, Matilda, Love, Agness, Ruth, Lelia, Mason, Laura, Solon, Oscar, Charles, Clark, William, Lorenzo, Henry, Platte, Joseph, Lucy, Don, Lucy, Caroline, Walter, Frederick, Martha, Anne, Harriet, Harriet, Martha, Annie, Walter, Martha, Harriet, Frederick and Amasa

Lyman, Joseph Alvin and Nellie Grayson Roper

Joseph Alvin was born December 13, 1856 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT.  His parents were Eliza Maria Partridge and Amasa Mason Lyman.  He married Nellie Grayson Roper 25 Apr 1878 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah.   Photo on left was taken in 1880, the same year as the trek.
Joseph along with Platte and Walter C Lyman and Kumen Jones formed a corporation to create a White Mesa Canal Company in 1897 (Saga of San Juan p 136) Jody, as Joseph was called, bought the L.C. Ranch from Walter and Jim Woods of Colorado.  He became the first postmaster of Grayson at this time. He named the first post office, Grayson after his wife; the future town of Blanding also carried her name until 1915. The mail was delivered on horse twice a week, going to and from Bluff (Saga of San Juan p 139).  He moved his family to the Ranch Feb. 22, 1902.  They had to pitch tents to live in, as the Lacey house had burned down some time before. 
Along with his wife came their young children: Henry M. Alton A., Carlie, Ezra De, Wayne R., Lucy, Angie.  His maried son Alvin and his wife, Vin and their adopted son Joseph Platte Callister also moved to the ranch as did their daughter Nellie May and her husband Hans C.H. Bogh.  Some alfalfa had been raised on the ranch earlier, and the Lymans expanded those fields and also planted vegetable gardens, and some wheat.  The ranch at this point served as headquarters for those working on the Johnson Creek ditch, until spring of 1903 when water finally ran through the completed ditch into the "park land" above Grayson (Saga of San Juan p 137).

  In Oct. of 1904, Joseph moved his family from the L. C. Ranch to the Mesa, four miles north of where the town was to be, to an area called the "Park"  He also moved the cabin for the Grayson post office to the same area. In about 1905 Benjamin Perkins, or his hired men, brough the mail there in a buckboard (Saga of San Juan p 139).
   On Nov. 13, 1904 the first branch of the LDS church was organized in Grayson.  The meeting was held out doors on the Hans Bogh lot west of the 2nd reservoir.  Joseph was the 1st president of the branch, Bogh was superintendent of the Sunday School and Albert R. Lyman was president of the YMMIA.  The next year, in 1905 AR Lyman's family became the first to settle in Blanding, and Jody and Nellie's family joined them, moving the post office cabin yet again, placed north of the South Chapel near the corner of Main and 2nd south (Saga of San Juan p 140).  Joseph died 18 Dec 1925 Mayfield, Sanpete, Ut

(See Article: The Prickly Pear Poultice: How Baililly Saved Jody Lyman, And Taught the Mormons Some Medicine, Blue Mountain Shadows Vol 11, p. 44)


Nellie Grayson was the 12th of 14 children of Henry Roper and Mary Ann Grayson who were from Sheffield, Yorkshire, England.  (Were they the prototypes for the Dickerson family in Undaunted?)
She was born 13 Apr 1862 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah and died 22 Dec 1931 Place Mayfield, Sanpete, Utah


Parentage and other siblings Joseph's mother was first sealed to the Prophet Joseph, note that many of the children have Smith family names.
Burial list  How is Waddoups, Carlie connected to Joseph and Nellie?
Pedigree chart

Wonderful Photo of Oak City Sunday School Oak City Sunday School, 1880. Also includes many others connected with Hole in the Rock

Back Row, Left to Right: Joseph Alvin Lyman, Harry Roper, Ann Elizabeth Lovell Lyman, Olie Jacobson, John Dutson, Brigham Lovell, Sylvia Lovell Lyman, Charlie Rawlinson. Middle Row, L-R: Joseph Smith Anderson, George Finlinson, Ann Jane Dutson Roper, Hannah Rawlinson Tumbo, Christian Jensen, Harriet Jane Lyman Lovell, Anthony Christensen.Front row, L-R: Walter Clisbe Lyman, Edward Leo Lyman Sr., Joseph Dutson, Hyrum Jensen, Eve Jensen, Martha Lovell Dutson, Mary Ann Jensen, Libby Finlinson Lyman, John Edmund Lovell.

Lyman, Lydia May (Jones)


Lydia was born 1 May 1865 Fillmore, Millard, Ut.  She was the daughter of Amasa Lyman and Lydia Partridge.  She was the second wife of Kumen Jones whom she married Dec. 2, 1882.  Lydia gave birth to ten children before she died tragically April 17 of 1906 after removing an oil lamp from the house that had exploded, and which consequently caught her clothing on fire, causing severe burns. She was buried in Bluff. (See cemetery records)

Genealogy info
Pillow case made by Lydia

January 7, 2010

Lyman, Platte DeAlton and Adelia Robison

Platte DeAlton Lyman
Born: August 20, 1848 Platte River, Goshen, Wyoming
Died: November 13, 1901 in Bluff, San Juan, Utah and is buried there.
Parents: Amasa Mason Lyman and Eliza Partridge
Married: (1) Adelia Robison on May 18, 1867  (2) Annie Maud Clark in 1879
Children on the trek: Evelyn and Albert Robison came through the Hole in the Rock with them

Childhood
Platte De Alton Lyman was born in a wagon box on the east bank of the Platte River (Nebraska) on the morning of August 20, 1848. He was not the first child to have been born to Eliza Partridge Lyman in a wagon box. Little Don Carlos, Eliza’s first child, had been born in a wagon as she crossed Iowa with the Mormon Saints following their exodus from Nauvoo. Sadly, Don Carlos’s life was short, and Eliza buried him in the sandy banks of the Missouri River. The next summer, when the Saints began their westward trek to the Salt Lake Valley, Eliza was well into her second pregnancy, and soon little Platte was born, restoring gladness to her heart (1).

Platte’s childhood years were marked by poverty and want. His father, Amasa M. Lyman, was an Apostle of the Church at the time, and his church duties, as well as his responsibilities to his other wives and children, kept him away from Platte’s family much of the time. Eliza provided the best she could for her children’s temporal needs by spinning wool and making clothes. Spiritually, however, she nourished them with her unwavering faith in the truth of the gospel. Platte was deeply influenced by her example and testimony, and especially her love for the prophet Joseph Smith, whom she had known well. He was known to frequently say, both in public and in private, “I thank the Lord for such a mother.” (2) And In his later years, under adverse circumstances that might have destroyed the faith of others, Platte remained true to the Church thanks to the foundations of belief that had been laid within him by his mother.

Platte received less than three weeks of formal education his entire life (3). His mother taught him rudimentary skills, but was left to his own to study and become widely read. But most of his experience was gained and his character developed in the great outdoors, for he loved to be outside in the fresh air under a boundless sky. He loved dogs, and always seemed to have one at his heels. One dog of his had a peculiar interest in hunting skunks, a fetish which brought with it the obvious consequences. Yet Platte’s family tolerated the dog and the smelly skunks simply because they loved Platte so much (4).

For the first nine years of his life, Platte lived in Salt Lake City. His family moved briefly to Payson at that time, and then northward again to Farmington. As the years progressed, his family circle grew to include the families of two of his mother’s sisters, who had also become wives of Amasa M. Lyman. Thus the three sisters, and their children, lived together pretty much as one family, and as the oldest son among them, Platte felt the growing responsibilities of helping to provide for them all. He did so through hunting for food and plowing the fields. In fact, the only thing he remembered ever asking his father for was a yoke of oxen to help him with his work in the fields (5).

In 1863, Platte’s family moved to Fillmore, Utah. It was about this time that his father was excommunicated from the Church for preaching false doctrine. It was a bitter experience for Platte’s family, but his mother and her two sisters, also wives of the fallen Apostle, remained faithful to the Church and endured the humiliation brought on them with patience (6).

Marriage, Family and Missions
At the age of eighteen, Platte became engaged to Adelia Robison. At about the same time, he also received a mission call to Great Britain. He and Adelia were married by Brigham Young in Brigham Young’s office on May 18, 1867, and two days later Platte started eastward by wagon to begin his missionary labors. He became President of the London Conference, and served faithfully in his mission until his release on August 25, 1868. Upon returning home he was called to be a High Councilman in the Millard Stake. In 1874 he joined in the “United Order” with the church members of Oak City, but was called to serve a second mission in Great Britain the next year. This time he was assigned to the area of Nottingham, and became President of the Nottingham Conference until his release on October 25, 1876.

His return home was a joyful one. His children, Alton, Eliza and Evelyn, were more precious to him than gold, and eager to open the presents he had brought them. Sickness soon over took poor Alton, however, and within a month of Platte’s return home, the little boy died. Tragically, two more of Platte’s children passed away within the next three years, which brought great sorrow to the Lyman home and enticed Platte to consider relocating what was left of his family to Southern Utah. He was serving as the bishop of Oak City at the time he was called to be part of the San Juan Mission. He had also recently married a second wife, Annie Maud Clark, with whom he had become acquainted with in England. Unfortunately, Annie was never able to bear children, a sorrow to her all her life (7).

Hole-in-the-Rock
Platte De Alton Lyman set out for the San Juan on October 21, 1878. He was formally called as a Counselor to Silas Sanford Smith, the President of the San Juan Mission, on August 13, 1879, and received word of his appointment by letter a week later (8). When it became apparent to President Smith that the settlers would need additional supplies and funding in order to travel through the Hole-in-the-Rock, he set out for Salt Lake City to do the lobbying himself, as he had many ties to the legislature from twenty years of experience as a member of it. This left Platte, the “Assistant Captain” of the expedition, in charge of the wagon train for the majority of the arduous journey (9).

The journal that Platte kept during the trek is the most reliable, complete and informative source about the Hole-in-the-Rock expedition that exists today. In fact, it is the only record of the expedition written at the time, as all other accounts of Hole-in-the-Rock were put on paper years later (10). . . .

1. Albert R. Lyman, “Platte De Alton Lyman, Born on Platte River 20 Aug. 1848. Written by his son Albert Robison Lyman, Typed by Alice K. Hatch, Historian D.U.P. Manti Camp, Sanpete Co., (nd),” Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 2. Albert was Platte’s oldest living son, who greatly revered him, and also became a prolific historian and writer about the Hole-in-the-Rock expedition.

2. Ibid., 4. Albert noted, “The faith and hope and love of Eliza Partridge Lyman lived in her son Platte, not only in his heartfelt declarations that he thanked the Lord for such a mother, but he cherished her standards and held proudly to them wherever he went.” 5.
3. Ibid., 5.
4. Ibid., 7.
5. Ibid.,10.

6. Ibid.,11.
7. Ibid.,16-17.
8. David E. Miller, Hole-in-the-Rock; An Epic in the Colonization of the Great American West (Salt Lake  City: University of Utah Press, 1966), 14.
9. Ibid., 109

10. Ibid., 60.

Article by C.S.M. Jones LLC, Family Heritage Consulting for Hole in the Rock Foundation
==========

A complete copy of the journal is in Miller's Hole in the Rock. It has also been printed in
Blue Mountain Shadows: Volume 19 / Fall 1997 / pages 1-13 - Journal of Platte D. Lyman

Platte D. Lyman was called by the LDS Church to settle in San Juan County in 1879. He served as a leader in the expedition. Although called as an assistant to President Silas S. Smith, Lyman was often the active leader of the group, as Smith was often taking care of administrative duties in Salt Lake and other places. More...
After arriving in San Juan, he played an important role in the little community, serving as San Juan Stake President twice. He also presided over the LDS European Mission and was considered one of the Church's most eloquent speakers. He returned to Bluff in 1884 after being away for a time, and is buried in the Bluff Cemetery. He and his wife "Delia" reared a large family. Evelyn and Albert Robison came through the Hole in the Rock with them, and Mary, Lucretia, Edward , Caroline "Dollie" were born later (Saga of San Juan p 317)Albert R. Profile from San Juan Record.

Three other children: Platte DeAlton Lyman Jr, Eliza Adelia Lyman, and Lydia, died before they left Oak City.  Lyman's second wife, Annie Maude Clark Lyman, was born April 11, 1861, at Standwich, Northamptenshire, England. She is the daughter of Jonah Wilson Clark and Mary Smith Clark. She became a plural wife to Platte DeAlton Lyman October 24 or 25, 1880, in Logan, Utah. She had no children, but she and Platte had a five-year-old Swiss girl named Emma Lyman sealed to them in 1900. Annie died August 5, 1908 at Smithfield, Utah.

Lyman genealogy
Family Group sheet
Kumen's bio on Platte Lyman
Adelia Robison Lyman bio
Adelia Lyman home
Kumen Jones' tribute to Adelia Lyman
Early days in Blanding, Lymans help refugees
Kumen's writings about Albert R. Lyman


Lyman, Walter Clisbee

Walter C. Lyman is "The Father of Blanding."  He was born Oct. 1, 1863, at Fillmore, Utah.  He was an intensely public-spirited man, having served the community from the time he was a teenager. Walter accompanied has brother, Platte D. Lyman through the Hole-in-the Rock in 1880.  This trip inspired  him to want to come back to San Juan.  He eventually came north to White Mesa with his brother Joseph A. in 1897.  The possibilities of the country burned into his heart and from then on he devoted his time to the Mesa.  He was a natural-born organizer--with a dream to match.  He proceeded to survey ditches and land, and to try to get water onto the Mesa.

He married his childhood sweetheart Sylvia Lovell in 1883. He served a 2 year mission, then returned and went to work. 
After Sylvia's tragic death, he was left with two little boys to raise: Walter Clisbee Jr. and Frederick Stanley.
He then married Elizabeth Finlinson. They had eight children together: Ethel, Marvin, Zola, Susan, Raymond F., Lynn, Margaret, George, and Barton. After Elizabeth's death he married Lucy Halls and they had three children: Bruce, Larue, and Wayne Demar. Leah Brown Lyman brightened the last 14 years of his life.
In 1902 he was make Stake President of the San Juan State, serving for 11 years (Saga of San Juan).

Walter C. Lyman home in Blanding, at the corner of  1st South and 1st West, 
where the Hecks live now. (See article in Blue Mountain Shadows about his home Vol. 24 p. 19-21)

The articles below illustrate the role that Walter C. played in San Juan County history, especially Blanding:
Bringing Water to Blanding
The Blanding Tunnel
Blanding Irrigation Company
Lyman's role in development of Blanding
Father of Blanding San Juan Record Article
LDS Biographical Encyclopedia
Article on Walter C. Lyman home in Blue Mt. Shadows
Photos of Walter C. Lyman and descendants
Kumen Jones biographical comments on Walter C.

January 6, 2010

Redd, Lemuel Hardison, Jr. and Eliza Ann Westover

Lemuel Hardison Redd, JrBorn: October 25, 1856, in Spanish Fork, Utah County, Utah
Died: June 1, 1923, in San Juan County, Utah
Married: (1) Eliza A. Westover (April 11, 1878) on 10 Apr 1878 in St. George,Washington,Ut. They were called to the San Juan Mission in 1878. 
(2) Lucy Lyman (October 31, 1883) [Married on 31 Oct 1883 in St. George,Wshn, Ut. She was born 26 Aug 1860, Salt Lake, S-Lk, Ut and was a sister to Platte DeAlton Lyman.]
Father: Lemuel Hardison Redd
Mother: Keziah Jane Butler

Childhood
Lemuel Hardison Redd, Jr. or “Lem,” as he was commonly referred to, was born in Spanish Fork, Utah on October 25, 1856. When he was 6 years old, his parents, Lemuel and Keziah, were called to settle “Dixie” and they moved south to New Harmony. He spent his childhood on a small farm there with his nine brothers and sisters. Life was certainly not easy for these pioneers, and the trials were even more acute for those like the Redds, living on the edge of the frontier. From a young age, Lem was expected to do much more than was typical for someone so young. He worked side by side with his brothers and sisters to build their home. His job was to carry mud and help fill in the holes in the log house. As a family, they raised everything they ate. The Redd family traded what they made and grew with others and thus made their way on the frontier. Lem helped harvest the wheat, potatoes, corn and vegetables. He was counted on to help with the animals, particularly the cows. Milking, making cheese, and churning the butter were solely his responsibilities. Large tasks fell upon his small shoulders, but he never shirked his duty. Lem “was a quiet, sober boy, and took life and his tasks seriously.”1

Time as a schoolboy was short for young Lem. He had to do what so many only claim to have endured: he walked a mile and half through the snow each morning to the schoolhouse, then walked a mile and half home in the afternoon! Because he was so heavily needed on the farm, he only attended one winter quarter of formal schooling. Reading came naturally to him, and though not formally educated, he read everything he could get his hands on.  

Becoming a Teacher and Getting Married

When he was about twenty years old, Lem was selected to attend the University of Deseret (present-day University of Utah) to study to be a teacher. Not many people were selected and this was a tremendous honor for the whole family. It was while studying there that Lem met his sweetheart, Eliza Westover. They became friends and dated, but they were both busy studying and did not have the time together they would have liked. Lem soared through his classes and finished the course of study in just one year. He then returned to New Harmony and took over the role of teacher at the only school in town. He literally became everyone’s teacher. Young and old met together in the small classroom and he did his best to keep everyone interested and on task. With that kind of responsibility, he did not have time to entertain the class clowns. His older sister Jane was one of his students and she recalled what kind of teacher he was: “Well do I remember when a group of them [town rowdies] ganged up on him and defied his authority. They were going to run the teacher out, so they said. How surprised and relieved I was, and how frightened too, to see him pitch the ringleader out of the door, down the steps and on his head into the snow! . . . There was no further trouble from [that] source.”2

Lem’s sweetheart Eliza had also graduated and was teaching a class of her own in Pinto, Utah. He would visit her as often as he could, and always brought his sister Jane along. They had an Aunt Charity who lived nearby and claimed they were going to check on her as an excuse to go see Eliza. Growing weary of living so far apart, Lem and Eliza eventually married in the St. George temple on April 11, 1878. Shortly thereafter, Lemuel gave up teaching and became a butcher. He and his friend Charley Westover started a butcher shop and sold their slaughtered hogs at the Silver Reef Mining Camp in Nevada. Lem and Eliza lived in Nevada for a few years and it was there that sweet Lulu, their first child, was born.

Hole-in-the-Rock

In 1878, John Taylor, president of the LDS Church, felt it was time to settle the unclaimed land surrounding the San Juan River. Church membership was growing, and more land was needed for families to establish farms and home sites. Also, it was felt that a “buffer” settlement was needed to protect growing communities from the threat of Indian invasion and from being overtaken by stockmen from Colorado. The San Juan area was so far out and so desolate that it was considered “no-man’s land.” The leaders of the LDS Church wanted to change that. And, they saw a great opportunity for missionary work among the Indians. Erastus Snow, a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles, was put in charge of the project to claim the San Juan. He held a meeting in St. George, Utah in the fall of 1878 to announce his plans. On April 14, 1879, a scouting party left Cedar City to find the shortest route to San Juan. After encountering many setbacks, they scouted a path, and returned home in the middle of September, after traveling nearly one thousand miles roundtrip. The leader of the expedition, Silas Smith, reported to Church leaders that the area around the San Juan could sustain a few settlements, but that a more direct route should be found to get there. The distance he had traveled was just too far.

In the fall of 1879, a call was issued to blaze a shorter trail to the San Juan and settle the surrounding area. Among those called was Lemuel Redd, Jr. He was 23 years old, had only been married for two years, and had a new baby girl. He had just opened a butcher shop that was gaining customers, and had everything going for him. To walk away from it all and venture into the dangerous, unknown future took a lot of faith. But Lemuel Redd had a lot of faith. He knew he had been called by an apostle of the Lord, and he had every intention of answering that call. His wife Eliza likewise knew how hard it would be to walk away from what they had and start over somewhere new. Yet she also knew they had been called of God. Willingly, she packed up all that would fit in their wagon, and, with baby Lulu on her lap, took her place as driver of their team. Lem’s father and younger brother, Lemuel Redd Sr. and Monroe, respectively, joined them on the adventure though they had not been formally called to the mission.

All those called were to gather at Escalante. When they set out, there were 70 families, about 225 people and 82 wagons. They also brought 400 head of horses and oxen and 1000 head of stock cattle. The pioneers were organized into groups of ten families and someone was assigned to be the leader over the group. As these faithful Saints traveled and worked, each person had a job to do. Eliza and the other women gathered shad scale and other scrub brush for fuel because wood was scarce. They prepared food for the weary travelers, tended to their children and tried to keep spirits up, while the men hauled water up from the river, corralled the livestock on the rocky terrain, and chiseled a hole in the rock wide enough for the wagons to get down. There was no other way to reach the Colorado River from that location, except to go down. “The crevice which was to become the Hole-in-the-Rock was narrow at the top and at the bottom converged so that, viewed from below, the opening between the rocks was but a knife-blade of blue sandwiched between the reddish-white sandstone cliffs. It was this slit which would have to be blasted wider until wagons could squeeze through.”3

Lem and the other men worked ten hour shifts each day blasting away at the rock. When they ran out of gunpowder, they worked with hammer and chisel to clear a way. During this time spent carving a path down to the Colorado River, Lem’s father and three other men left on a scouting expedition to find a way to cross the river and get to Montezuma, which was their destination on the San Juan. They were gone for 25 days, which was much longer than they had prepared for, but they were successful in finding a safe direction to travel in. Upon returning from his scouting expedition, Lem’s father received news that Lem’s mother Keziah was seriously ill, so Lem Sr. left the company and returned home as quickly as he could.

It took approximately six weeks of painstaking labor to blast a space down the rock face wide enough for the wagons to fit through. This was a major setback, considering the party had anticipated the entire trip to the San Juan would take six weeks and they still had many miles to go. But their spirits stayed high and they carried on.

Hardship became the norm during this mission. Passing through Hole-in-the-Rock was not the only major slope they had to scale. San Juan Hill likewise posed its own dangers. This time, instead of going down, they needed to go up. It was incredibly steep and the sheer sandstone face was jagged at every turn. It required a span of seven horses to pull each wagon. As two or three horses would slip and fall, it was hoped that some of the others would remain standing until the stumbling horses could get back up. The men had to beat the bone-weary horses to keep them going. Some of the horses were so exhausted that they started to spasm and convulse. “By the time most of the outfits were across, the worst stretches could easily be identified by the dried blood and matted hair from the forelegs of the struggling teams. [Lem Redd, Jr.] was a strong man and reluctant to display emotion; but, whenever in later years the full pathos of San Juan Hill was recalled either by himself or by someone else, the memory of such bitter struggles was too much for him and he wept.”4 [See quote at bottom]

On April 6, Lem, Eliza, little Lulu, Lem’s brother Monroe, and most of the original wagon party had reached a place deemed suitable for settlement. Though exhausted and hungry, they looked around at what would be their new home. Hope for the future filled their aching bodies, and they were glad to be at the end of their journey. [One child, Lula (1879-1939, came with them. Their other children were born later: Hattie Ellen Redd (1881-1970), Lemuel Hardison Redd III (1883-1928)- Marriage: 10 April 1878, Herbert Haven Redd (1885-1928,) Edith Redd (1887-1970), Charles Redd (1889-1975), Marian REDD (1892-1967), Amy Redd (1896-1987).]
Life in Bluff

Not all who traveled through Hole-in-the-rock stayed in Bluff, but Lem and his family did. They built a home and began a new life for themselves. Lem quickly became a prominent member of the civic and church communities. He was called as a counselor in the bishopric to Jens Nielsen, and held that position until he became bishop of Bluff when Jens died twenty years later. He served as superintendent of the Sunday School and secretary of the YMMIA (Young Men’s Mutual Improvement Association). He also served as ward clerk. Lem served faithfully as president of the San Juan Stake from 1910 until he died in 1923.

President Heber J. Grant and George Albert Smith both spoke of their high regard for Lem. Brother Lem had an “unquestioning faith in the Gospel.”5 He knew it was true. He was quick to respond to any call given, and served wholeheartedly. Faith seemed to come naturally to him and when he spoke, he spoke with authority.

Lem also found time to hold prominent positions in the community. He was the first assessor and collector for the city of Bluff, and was elected to represent his district in the Utah State Legislature. Lem Redd anxiously wanted to see Bluff succeed and put his heart and soul into doing all he could to make it happen. As well as serving in his community and church callings, he was a wise and trusted businessman.

Shrewd Businessman

Lemuel Redd had an eye for business and was thoroughly invested in seeing San Juan County grow and prosper. He had a number of business ventures over the years. He raised sheep and cattle and would borrow a great deal of money to finance his endeavors. The secured loans that exist today were not part of business arrangements in the 1890’s when Lem Redd would walk into a bank. He simply assured his lenders he would pay back every penny. They trusted him, and he never betrayed that trust.

His son explained:
Each spring he would drop in to the First National Bank at Durango and ask about a loan. Mr. Camp recalled that Father often asked for money to buy as many as 20,000 head [of sheep], since there was unrestricted grazing in our mountains in those days. Using procedures that would be frowned upon today, Mr. Camp simply handed Father some checkbooks and told him that when he got through buying the sheep he should come in and they would fix up a note for the amount he had drawn. It was often August before Father could get into the bank to sign a note. During these months Mr. Camp had only the checks Father had written as evidence of the indebtedness--and this sometimes went as high as $60,000--a dickens of a lot to money for those days. Mr. Camp concluded by saying, ‘Over a long period of years, I loaned your father a great deal of money. I only wish that today our notes secured by ironclad mortgages were as sure of being repaid as your father’s unsecured ones.’”6

Mr. Camp was not the only one who loaned Lem a considerable amount of money and never worried about being paid back. There were many others. Among them was Governor John C. Cutler. He said to Lem’s son Charlie:
“‘We regard your father as one of the most honest men the bank has ever dealt with.’ Governor Cutler was a very frugal man--even when it came to paying compliments.

I said, ‘Governor, that’s a strong statement, but it pleases me very much.’
He continued, ‘Well, Charlie, I hope so, for it has been an unusual experience to loan a great deal of money to your father. He operates way off down in San Juan, and we don’t know anything more about his operations than what he tells us. He has often been very heavily in debt, but we can always count on his promise to pay.’”7

Because of his honesty and integrity, Lem was highly regarded and well-respected by many. On one occasion, he and a friend were being hassled by some cowboys because of their humble appearance, lowly sheep herd, and practice of polygamy. Harry Pyle, a good friend of Lem’s, overheard the bantering and stepped in. He asserted the following:
Here fellows, are Mr. Redd and Mr. Bayles. They are intelligent men, men of character and integrity. They’ve got you all beat, but you don’t really know it. They live in a poor country, and are having a dickens of a time. They may only be running a few cattle and sheep now, but they are thrifty and are making steady progress. What are you fellows doing? You are carousing your lives away, and one of these days the sons of Mr. Redd and Mr. Bayles will own the ranges that you now ride on.”8  The prediction of Harry Pyle has, to a high-degree, been fulfilled.

Throughout Lem’s career, he played a role in co-operative stores in Bluff, Monticello and Grayson; in the San Juan-Dolores telephone system; the State Bank of San Juan; the Blanding Irrigation Company; and the LaSalle Livestock Company. Lem H. Redd, Jr., was the financial backbone and one of the most prominent founders of San Juan County.

Family Life in Bluff

Lemuel Hardison Redd, Jr. faced a difficult scenario as a father. He had to divide his time not only between his ecclesiastic obligations, his vocational pursuits, his community responsibilities and his family, but between two families. On October 31, 1883, Lem was sealed in the St. George temple to his second wife, Lucy Zina Lyman. She was a strong and able pioneer woman. Her father was Apostle Amasa M. Lyman and her mother was Eliza Maria Partridge, daughter of Edward Partridge, the first presiding bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Lucy, or “Aunt Lucy” as she was called by most, occupied a room in the house Lem and his first wife Eliza and their children lived in. After Lucy and Lem had their first child, Lucy was forced to flee to Colorado to live in hiding from the U.S. Marshals. The LDS Church had not yet issued the manifesto prohibiting polygamy, but federal law did not allow it and the government would prosecute any and all they could find still living plural marriage. After her second child, L. Frank, was born, Lucy moved back to Bluff and into her own one-room house. In total, Lucy and Lem had four children – Carlie, L. Frank, Amasa Jay, and Annie. She eventually moved to a beautiful home in Blanding where she raised her children.

Lem and his wife Eliza had eight children – Lulu, Hattie, Lemuel H., Herbert, Edith, Charles, Marion and Amy. His children did not have the luxury of knowing if their father would be returning home to them each evening; they would have to wait their turn. Because of this, establishing a sense of familiarity and openness among his children took a more conscious effort. His youngest son Amasa recalled that on the joyous occasion that their father was in their home, “We didn’t feel free to climb on his lap or to hug and kiss him and talk to him . . . .”9 Yet, when it was time for him to go, they often didn’t want him to leave, and would follow him down the street, asking to go with him. Sometimes he would let them accompany him on his errands, depending on where he was going. It was likely a tremendous strain to have stewardship over so many people and be needed in so many places. As his children got older, and began to marry and have families of their own, they began to better understand the heavy demands placed on their father. This improved their relationship with him. Amasa related the following: “The more I became acquainted with him and his life and nature, the greater became my appreciation, love, and respect for him.”10

With a much absent father, and many mouths to feed, all family members did their part to help. The youngest were in charge of herding sheep, plowing the cornfields with a walking plow and planting seeds for harvest. There was not a barber in town, so one of Lem’s sons cut his hair and trimmed his moustache. No butcher shop and no refrigeration meant slaughtering their own sheep every few days so they would have meat on the table come suppertime. They wore their shoes and overalls to thread bare, and learned the true meaning of the pioneer motto of “fix it up, wear it out, make it due, or do without.”

Because of his many responsibilities, Lem’s wives made sure things ran smoothly in the home. Eliza was an excellent housekeeper and cook. Lucy was resourceful and efficient. She would spin the wool from their sheep to make yarn, which she would transform into beautiful quilts and mattresses. She learned to can and preserve fruit from their trees and made laundry soap from grease and tallow she saved. She also was a good cook; her specialties were homemade candy and honey cake.

Lem’s children, grandchildren, and in-laws recall fondly the power of his prayers. He was a deeply spiritual man. He knew his Father in Heaven, and when communicating with Him, Lem spoke with reverence and humility. His prayers were impressive. Through them, he conveyed a tenderness and compassion for others, particularly his family members. If he was not available to them physically and emotionally, he was always available to them spiritually.

Lemuel Redd and his wives Eliza and Lucy lived honorable lives. They paved the way for a brighter future for their vast posterity. Lemuel Hardison Redd, Jr. passed away on June 1, 1923, after contracting influenza. “Aunt Lucy” passed away in Blanding on January 4, 1930. Eliza Ann Redd lived 15 years after her husband died. She died peacefully in Salt Lake City on March 17, 1938.
--------------
Researched and written for the Hole-in-the-Rock Foundation by: C.S.M. Jones LLC, Family Heritage Consulting.

Bibliography
Alter, Cecil J. Utah the Storied Domain: A Documentary History of Utah’s Eventful Career. Chicago: The American Historical Society Inc., 1932.

Embry, Jesse L. La Sal Reflections: A Redd Family Journal. Provo, Utah: Charles Redd Foundation, 1984.

Jenson, Andrew, ed., Latter-Day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia: A Compilations of Biographical Sketches of Prominent Men and Women in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Salt Lake City: Andrew Jenson History Company, 1901. Reprint, Salt Lake City: Western Epics, 1971. Available digitally online through Brigham Young University.

Perkins, Cornelia Adams, Marian Gardner Nielson, and Lenora Butt Jones. Saga of San Juan. Monticello, Utah: San Juan County Daughters of Utah Pioneers, 1957.

Redd, Amasa Jay. Lemuel Hardison Redd, Jr. 1856-1923: Pioneer Leader Builder. Salt Lake City, Utah, 1967.

1 Amasa Jay Redd, Lemuel Hardison Redd, Jr. 1856-1923: Pioneer Leader Builder (Salt Lake City, Utah: 1967), 149.
2 Ibid., 150
3 Jesse L. Embry, La Sal Reflections: A Redd Family Journal (Provo, Utah: Charles Redd Foundation, 1984), 69.
4 Ibid., 77.
5 Ibid., 109.
6 Ibid., 105.
7 Ibid., 106.
8 Ibid., 106.
9 Redd, 163.
10 Ibid., 166.

===========================
Lemuel H. Redd, Jr., drove a horse team up the hill, the steep, slick grade took its toll on the exhausted animals and men. Many of the horses went into "spasms and near-convulsions" as they battled for footholds on the upward climb. When it was all over "the worst stretches [on the hill] could be easily identified by the dried blood and matted hair from the forelegs of the struggling teams." (http://historytogo.utah.gov/utah_chapters/pioneers_and_cowboys/hole-in-the-rocktrekremainsanepicexperience.html)
Charles Redd, the son of L.H. Redd Jr., remembers what his father told him of the trip, more particularly San Juan Hill, and recorded it in this way:
"Aside from the Hole in the Rock, itself, this was the steepest crossing on the journey. Here again seven span of horses were used, so that when some of the horses were on their knees, fighting to get up to find a foothold, the still-erect horses could plunge upward against the sharp grade. On the worst slopes the men were forced to beat their jaded animals into giving all they had. After several pulls, rests, and pulls, many of the horses took to spasms and near convulsions, so exhausted were they. By the time most of the outfits were across, the worst stretches could easily be identified by the dried blood and matted hair from the forelegs of the struggling teams. My father, L.H. Redd, Jr., was a strong man, and reluctant to display emotion; but whenever in later years the full pathos of San Juan Hill was recalled either by himself or by someone else, the memory of such bitter struggles was too much for him, and he wept.
As they rested in exhaustion from the last intensive strain, for the first time they began to see themselves for what they were: weary, worn out, galled, both teams and men. For so long they had walked and slept and eaten and lived on sloping uneven ground that the thought of level bottom-land was extremely sweet. Yet one woman spoke for the whole group when, recalling this last phase of the journey she said later, "I was so tired and sore that I had no desire to be any place except where I was." Someone pointed out to her that Montezuma wasn't even twenty miles away, and that some of the head wagons were already over Butler Wash and onto dirt road- eventhen it made no difference. When they begain to sing "The Latter-day Work Rolls On," she had to sing to keep from crying." (http://holeintherock.info/pioneers/lhredd,jr.htm)
He was the first San Juan County assessor.

Information about their home in Bluff : Blue Mountain Shadows Vol 24 pp. 47-49 also has an article about the Redds and their home in Blanding, across from the Elementary School.