Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memorial Day. Show all posts

Monday, May 26, 2014

Earliest Foys to Join the Saints


Memorial Day


Yesterday the cashier at Staples politely asked me what my plans were for the Memorial Day weekend. I told her I would be going to the cemetery to decorate the graves. She smiled at me pityingly and then continued to ring up my purchases. Since Memorial Day also marks the beginning of the summer vacation season, she must have felt sorry that I had no barbeque or boating trip planned. When I was growing up, I would meet Grandma Barker early in the morning to help her fill the large funeral baskets with blooms freshly picked from her garden. She would cut and I would arrange and then we would take them to the Kaysville Cemetery where we would findwhole families out cleaning the headstones and arranging peonies.



I can't speak for the rest of the country, but in Utah the cemeteries are filled with pots of mums and vases of iris placed on graves of all the ancestors. We called it Decoration Day and may have roots in the southern tradition of holding a religious service and eating a potluck picnic at family grave sites after decorating the grave.  That's my Memorial Weekend.

As my grandchildren help me locate the graves in a bit-too-rambunctious treasure hunt - there is always one grave site that will not be easily located, I remember the earliest family members to be baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint. Some sailed from Liverpool or Bristol, some migrated from New England. I think of them crossing the plains and the words of the Battle Hymn of the Republic come to mind. Were they not Christian soldiers, marching on to war? Can you not picture them gathered around a hundred circling camps in the fire and lamp light? My grandson, Brooks, who is on a church mission in West Virginia, challenged his mom to search out the first members in each family and find where and when they were baptized. For you, Brooks:

I have seen Him in the watch-fires of a hundred circling camps,
They have builded Him an altar in the evening dews and damps;
I can read His righteous sentence by the dim and flaring lamps:
His day is marching on.
Glory, glory, hallelujah!
Glory, glory, hallelujah!
Glory, glory, hallelujah!
His day is marching on. 


None of the Foys, Finks, Binghams, Freemans, Gates, Farrs, or Plumleys were buried in the Kaysville or Bountiful cemeteries so I was not able to visit their graves this year. They traveled to the Salt Lake Valley and then were called to settle Zion throughout the west.

                   Foy & Fink


William Bosley Foy 1837-1920; Born in Pennsylvania; Baptized 1845; Pioneered in 1850 with Snow-Young Co. – age 12. Died in Colorado.
Thomas Birk Foy [father of William Bosley Foy] 1802-1873; Baptized 1842 in  Pennsylvania by Erastus Snow & William Bosley – Endowed in 1846 in Nauvoo; Patriarchal blessings from Hyrum Smith, John Smith & Isaac Morley; Pioneered in 1850 with Snow-Young Company age 47. Died in Washington County, Utah.


Catherine Fink [wife of Thomas Birk Foy] 1809-1870; Baptism probably 1842 at the same time as husband. Pennsylvania - Endowed 1846 Nauvoo; Couple sealed by Heber C. Kimball in the home of Willard Richards, Winter Quarters. Received patriarchal blessing from Hyrum Smith; Pioneered in 1850 with Snow -Young Company - age 40 - when she contracted cholera. Died in Minersville, Utah.

Bingham & Gates

 

Lucinda Maria Bingham [wife of William Bosley Foy]. 1849-1924; Born into church membership in Salt Lake City, Utah. Died in Colorado.




 
 Erastus Bingham, Jr. [father of Lucinda Maria Bingham] 1822-1906; Baptized 1833; Called to build roads for the trek west. Joined Mormon Battalion to California and then back to Salt Lake Valley soon after the advanced company arrived. Met his wife and parents in Wyoming on the way west. Died in Arizona.
  

Olive Hovey Freeman [wife of Erastus Bingham, Jr.] 1820-1905; Born in Vermont; Baptized ;Endowed 1846 Nauvoo; Pioneer 1847 Spencer-Eldredge Co. – age 27 - being ill when husband found her on the plains of Wyoming. Died in Idaho.





Erastus Bingham, Sr. [father of Erastus Bingham, Jr.] 1798-1882; Born Vermont ; Baptized 1833; Brought family to Far West, Missouri. In 1846 driven from Missouri to Illinois where they lived until 1846. Pioneered in 1847 with the Spencer-Eldredge Co. – age 49. Died in Weber County, Utah.
Lucinda Gates [wife of Erastus Bingham, Sr.] 1797-1874; Born New Hampshire ; Baptized 1833; Pioneer 1847 with the Spencer-Eldredge Co. with extended family – age 49. Died in Ogden, Utah.




Thomas Gates [father of Lucinda Gates]  1776-1851; Born in New Hampshire; Married in Vermont; Baptized 1833 and then went with family to Kirtland, Ohio, in 1836. Subsequently moved to Far West, Missouri, in 1836, but was evicted by mob rule, escaping to Illinois 1839; Endowed 1845 in Nauvoo; Pioneered in 1847 with the Spencer- Eldredge Co. – age 71, widower. Died in Salt Lake City, Utah Territory.
Patty "Lucy" Plumbley [wife of Thomas Gates] 1776-1845; Born in Vermont. Baptized 1833; Her son, Jacob, became one of the first seven presidents of the Seventy and was imprisoned in Richmond for three weeks. She was called with husband to serve a mission as branch president, location unknown. Died in Nauvoo. 
Isaac Farwell Freeman [father of Olive Hovey Freeman] 1795-1843; Born New Hampshire ; Baptized prior to 1846 when he was sealed to spouse in Nauvoo; Died in Nauvoo  before making trek west.
Lydia Farr [wife of Isaac Farwell Freeman] 1799-1827; Born and married in Vermont; Died in Vermont prior to meeting missionaries.

Sources:

http://digitalheritage.org/2010/08/decoration-day/ 
http://thestonerabbit.typepad.com/the_stone_rabbit/gardening/
Family Search and Ancestry online family trees

Sunday, May 26, 2013

Of War: Stripling Warriors and Refugees

Leslie Thomas Foy, WWI
My mother remembers little of her father as she was just eight years old when he died. In family stories, however, he is larger than life, a missionary for God, a soldier in the Great War, a man of letters, a businessman, a loving husband and father. On Memorial Day weekend we remember his service to country thanks to a history of that service written by mother, his daughter Inez, and a synopsis by her brother Leslie printed by my cousin Shelly.

The brave die never, though, they sleep in dust:
Their courage nerves a thousand living men. 
                                            - Minot J. Savage

Leslie was intimately associated with war beginning with the black clouds which boded ill in 1913, while stationed in France as part of a hospital evacuation unit and continued after the armistice in occupied Germany. War didn't end for Leslie at his discharge either. It extending through physical and emotional after-effects which haunted the family for years.

Leslie was serving a mission in the Netherlands or Holland in when conflict began in Europe. He wrote home from the War Zone from Leemwarden, Holland, October 10, 1914.

"...Holland has not yet been forced to take part in the present conflict, thereby escaping that great calamity which is waging in this part of Europe. She has become the refuge of many thousands of fugitives who have been driven from their homes penniless, seeking shelter at the hands of their hospitable neighbor, the Dutchman. Many rumors have reached my ears of the great tragedy which is being played in Belgium and France; of the people who are being slain, of the cities which are being burned; but is was not til last night that I could really sense the terribleness of the situation. Last night brought a climax to the whole problem, when two extra trains pulled into the station at midnight carrying between five and ten hundred fugitives. The whole population had turned out and awaited the arrival of those homeless wanderers and when they emerged from the station, what a sad sight met our eyes! There were mothers and babes in their arms; children with nothing but a bundle of clothes - no father nor mother, no home. On they came, a little army of rich and poor. Such a scene had I never witnessed before. They were taken to a large exchange building and given food and clothes, and from there they were taken to several different school buildings which had been arranged for their comfort. Those who the day before were millionaires slept side by side with their servants on a bundle of straw. This is but one of the hundreds of similar incidents that occur everyday. It will be a great lesson to mankind and they are paying dearly for it. I only wish they could see it as I do. Experience is a dear school. There is no wheat bread here in Holland. All we get is brown bread and I am afraid that if things continue so, that we will have a famine. The cost of living is raising everyday and work is becoming scarce. All we can do is to live and hope. I am one of the eight missionaries who have been called to remain..."

Belgians fleeing into Holland




I think of that young missionary who had been called to Holland just one year after his mother, Juliette (Julia) Burr Foy, had died. This put a great strain on the family. Leslie’s father was finding it impossible for him to be caring for his younger children and be earning a living for them with his cattle on the range. For Leslie to leave was a great sacrifice. Today in church a woman likened the Sons of Helaman to the veterans of our era. Having learned at his mother's knee, Leslie knew he should serve a mission. He later knew, just as those stripling warriors had know from their mothers that he should enlist in the war effort.


"1917 was a year which changed the lives of most of the citizens of the United States, including the Foys.  When war was declared, Leslie and his cousin, James, who had lived with the family while he attended high school, dutifully registered for the draft along with the other young men of the area.  Little did anyone realize what the future held for the two cousins, especially James, but the Master weaver’s shuttle was deftly passing back and forth through the loom, repatterning the lives of these two young men as they appeared on the family tapestry.  James’ registration number was the first one to be drawn of all the draftees in the entire country.  Leslie’s was low enough that he got busy applying for admission to the medical corps.


"Leslie had been working hard to get as much of the dry farm plowed for planting as possible before winter set in, when opportunity came knocking.  The school at Bluff needed a teacher, who would also act as principal.  Although he knew he might be called up for military service at any time, he still decided to take the job.  What a shock when he learned that James had died in an army hospital in Virginia and that his body was being shipped home for burial.  Not even waiting for his pay, Leslie, very downheartedly, left Bluff for Moab to attend the funeral of his cousin.

"Leslie didn't go back to Bluff. In February he left for basic training in the medical corps at Fort Riley, Kansas (Barker). 

No doubt, it was in part because he knew his rancher father would need him to return home alive to help care for the motherless children in the family that Leslie applied to the medical corps. Patriotism and responsibility must have weighed heavily. Excerpts of a letter published in Moab's newspaper, "The Independent" which was sent by Leslie from Ft. Riley, Kansas.

Leslie above training trench at Ft. Riley
 "...Every one is eager for action and I guess that we will get it and perhaps mighty sudden at that...The big drive that is being launched present is a very serious one. It is filling the army hospitals with wounded men. They are over worked and it is up to us to lend them aid...

"As many of your readers might wonder as to the duties of an Evacuation Hospital, I shall try to describe some of the details and labor connected with this organization. In the first place, Evacuation means that we must be ever ready to sway back and forth with the ever changing line of action. We must be prepared to move - in case of a drive on our lines from the enemy, to the rear - carrying with us all our patients and equipage and in case of an advance we must follow keeping always just within the line of communication which is approximately eight miles behind the first line of trenches. There are in this company about fifteen officers who are experienced doctors and surgeons who will be in charge of everything connected with the hospital. Attache to these is a corps of about two hundred hospital men - such as myself - who perform general hospital work..." 

Excerpt of letter from Kansas dated March 7, 1918.
"Sure gets lonesome sometimes for a good talk with some of the home people. Those of the world are so much different you know. You can be mighty thankful that you are a L.D.S. Saint."

Leslie loaded with gear. Ft. Riley, Kansas, 1918.

Excerpt of letter from Kansas dated March 28, 1918.
"We are asked not to disclose any names, towns, companies, ships, trains or dates of moves or arrivals. This much I can say, we are ready to go... Have you ever received any notice that you are the benefactor of that $10,000 Government Insurance I took out in your favor? If not I will see into it."

Excerpts of letters to his father and siblings from Kansas dated April 1918.
"...One cannot take life too serious. You must all work together and help Papa. It would make him feel like we were grateful for the sacrifices he has been making for us...By all means kids, choose good companions and read good books. You are judged by the company you keep...What is the use of living if we cannot be or do something above the ordinary. Lead good, clean, moral lives...Cultivate cheerfulness and by all means kindness and good will toward each other. Your best friends are your brothers and sisters...Well, be good and be thankful that you were raised among the Mormons...Kids, if you could only see what comes out of careless and loose morals. Dirty, irksome diseases are eating out the vitals of our young men and women. I have seen lots of sin and sorrow in my rounds, but what I have seen here in these hospitals since my sojourn here puts a cap on it all."

Excerpt of letter from Kansas dated May 10, 1918.
"...I want to go where I can do the most good. Am proud that I'm here protecting you loved ones...You must do your part. Be good, live clean lives."

Those bound for Evac Hospital 8 boarded a small Italian liner at Hoboken, New Jersey. The following excerpt is from the book Stretchers written by a comrade and friend, Fred Pottle.

"We entered the vast, echoing sheds, passed boat after boat, and finally stopped beside the smallest and least impressive vessel we had seen that morning, a vessel bearing an Italian name, the Caserta. We had secretly expected it. Things for some time had been going much too well. Our quarters, we found, were the very worst in this very bad ship, at the lowest level, far below the water line.  The whole middle of the ship had been cleared out and filled with tiers of rough wooden bunks. Our dungeon naturally had no portholes, but received such light as it did get from the open hatch in the deck, far above. The impression one received as he looked up was something like that of being in a well, a shaft having been left open from the hatch, down through the various levels of bunks, to our quarters. At the bottom of the well, under the hatch, were built rough tables, while the bunks rose up in tiers on all four sides. It was pitch dark at all times in the tiers against the sides of the vessel, and there was none too much light anywhere. When it rained, or the sea was rough enough to break over the deck, the hatch had to be covered up with canvas, which allowed still less. Below decks it was stuffy and intolerably cramped, and when everyone was on deck it was equally cramped there. Our extravagant enthusiasm for the pleasures of ocean travel on an army transport was considerably damped, and matters were not improved by the execrable mess to which we were soon served. As dark came on, we went to bed early, for lights were not permitted, and it was difficult to grope your way down into the bowels of the ship and find your own bunk in the dark (Pottle)."

Eating aboard ship.
"We were thirteen days on the way, and had had a great deal too much of ocean travel after three or four... Of all lands and cities, is any lovelier than Brittany or more picturesque than Brest?...France at last (Pottle)!" 

My heart is tender as I think of this honorable young man leaving home to serve his country in a conflict meant to end further wars. He is so concerned about helping others and living clean while he does so. Much bloodshed and horror, mustard gas and ill health are in his future. His family is forever grateful to this stripling warrior and all the other patriots and pioneers we memorialize this weekend.

Note:

History of Leslie T. Foy in World War I by Inez F. Barker.

Stretchers by Fred Albert Pottle.

The photograph of Belgium refugees fleeing into Holland was found on the Kings Academy site by Miles Hodges http://www.kingsacademy.com and attributed to Abbot, p. 43. Further citation information is welcome.