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Alfred Davis
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ECP Missionary Letters
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Romania
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Sarah Ann Wright Jones
Thomas Bateman
William Roberts Jones
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WILLIAM ROBERTS JONES
William Roberts Jones, the son of Samuel
Jones and Betty Roberts, was born in Stockport, Cheshire, England,
February 4, 1821. His parents died, leaving seven small children, four
girls, and three boys.
William, a dark haired blue-eyed
youngster, had a lingering illness that settled in his feet. They were
numb with a feeling of pins and needles running through them, and he
could not put his feet to the floor. His father took him to every
available doctor without success. One day a traveling tradesman came to
see them. He noticed the boy and said he knew what was the trouble and
gave them a prescription. One application helped him, but the disease
had retarded the growth of his legs and left him short in stature.
As a young man he spent seven years
studying the art of tailoring. Later he joined the Mormon Church and in
1844 sailed for New Orleans. The voyage was made in a sailboat, which
took seven weeks and three days to make the crossing. From New Orleans
he went to St. Louis where he worked for five years as a tailor.
With the epidemic of cholera in 1846 he
worked hard with the sick, and when the war broke out with Mexico, he
enlisted as a Missouri volunteer in Captain De Corkoran's regiment.
After the war he returned to St Louis, but soon resigned from the army
and came to Salt Lake Valley with the Mormon people. He purchased a
wagon and team of oxen and proudly joined the line. On March 30, 1849,
he became a citizen of the United States of America.
On arriving in Salt Lake in the year
1850, they camped in the old fort, which now is the Pioneer Park on
Second (now Third) West and Fourth South. He was given the choice of
two lots ten by twenty rods, one where the Walker Bank and Tribune
Building now stands; the other on Second South and Third West. The
first lot was rocky with City Creek running through it; thus he
preferred the lot on Third West on which he built a two-room house. He
worked in the old adobe yard on Second South between Sixth and Seventh
West making adobes for his home.
When trouble arose with the Indians, he
joined the militia and worked in the capacity of a minuteman. One
experience, which almost cost him his life, is told when a group of men
went to meet a wagon train. There was an upper and lower road, and the
train was expected to come on the upper. After waiting some time, the
captain of the group asked for a volunteer to go to the lower road. It
was William who unhesitatingly proffered to risk his life alone, taking
just his gun with him to give a signal if help was needed. The wagon
train, however, came on the upper road. In the excitement of greeting
the wagon train the men with provisions forgot William at his post. On
arriving at camp they found that he had not returned. Men were
dispatched to look for him. When he was found, he was almost dead from
thirst.
Within two years of his arrival here he
sent for his sweetheart, Sarah Ann Wright. That same year in the fall
of 1852 she arrived from England with her brother, William Wright.
Sarah and William Jones were married a few days later by Apostle John
Taylor in the little home built by the bridegroom, which was in the old
Fifteenth Ward, and later sealed in the Endowment House. In this home
were two large rooms in which they celebrated their wedding by dancing
the old square dances. His wife bore him ten children, only four of
which lived to maturity.
When the President of the United States
sent Johnson's army to drive the Mormon people out of Salt Lake, William
was a guard watching over the homes that had been vacated by the people
and filled with straw ready for a match to be dropped if trouble arose.
The people all moved south, William's family going to Springville.
Trouble did not arise, however, as the leaders of the church met the
army and gave it permission to go through the city provided not one man
placed his foot on the sidewalk or leave his position in line.
William though small of stature, only
five feet, was large of heart. His dress was neat, usually consisting
of a soft felt hat, a long black coat, and trousers made of fine serge.
As a young man he had a long black beard and heavy mustache, but they
turned white in later years.
He had courage, ever ready to serve his
country and his people; also he was an active church worker being
ordained April 7, 1856, an elder and in 1891, a high priest.
His generosity is shone in the following
story: One time when at work, his lunch consisted of a crust of bread,
which he shared with a fellow worker without food. To the surprise of
both the crust of bread well satisfied their hunger and they felt this
was the work of the Lord.
In 1891 he purchased a home at 620 South
Eighth West, which put him in the Twenty-sixth Ward in which he donated
a piano. Bishop Stanley spoke of his faithfulness and helpfulness he
had toward the ward.
He was always ready to help the sick,
lay out the dead, and give to the widow and orphans.
He was a good kind father, loyal
partner, true to all, home, country, religion, and associates. He died
at the age of eighty-six years on May 24, 1906 and was buried in the
City Cemetery at Salt Lake City, May 27, 1906.
With the help of his wife, William was
able to accomplish many things.
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