Monday, March 10, 2008

Autobiography of Son, Nephi Martineau

Written by him 4 February 1933

I was born 11 March 1862 at Logan, Cache County, Utah, the fifth child of James Henry Martineau and Susan Ellen Johnson. I always felt that I had been given a choice name of Nephi.
I was one of the first white children born in Logan and remember many incidents of the early settlers and their experiences in dealing with the Indians who mingled at that time with the white people. At one time my mother saw a squaw going past their home and she had something concealed under her blanket. Mother went up to her and jerked aside the blanket and found the squaw had a little white boy, Al Curtis. Mother took the boy back to his parents. Al grew to manhood and was ever grateful to my mother and spoke of it many times.
When I was very young our family had a very hard time to make ends meet and, even though my father was a civil engineer and there was much work to be done in surveying, he was unable to collect the money due him. We children were rather thinly clad at times but we never lacked for food. I usually went barefoot during the summer months.
My schooling was rather meager. We had to pay tuition and for books, so I barely passed the 8th grade.
About this time there were 1200 Indians camped about three miles from Logan. This caused much anxiety among the settlers. There was some fighting and one white boy was killed near Providence. Several Indians were taken as prisoners.
I well remember how outfits with ox yokes, chains and other equipment were prepared to help the saints from Florence, Nebraska to Utah.
Across the street from where the Tabernacle now stands was a ten-acre tract that a large bowery was built, using eight-inch posts with a board in the center and more boards placed horizontally pushed down to make a tight wall which encircled the outside. I well remember seeing assembled on the square wagons, ox teams, cooking utensils, bedding and all camp equipment preparing to go after emigrants to Florence, Nebraska or anywhere to meet them, and young men volunteering to act as drivers to be gone for months on the trip.
In 1870 when I was a boy 8 years old, my sister Elvira was married to Benjamin Samuel Johnson of Spring Lake, Utah. I was privileged to go and live with them for a time. My Uncle Benjamin Johnson lived there, too. He had a large family. He did shoe repairing, raised sugar cane and made brooms from broom corn.
While at Spring Lake I remember going with my Uncle David LeBaron, an older man, to the south. We would make holes through the ice and fish on the lake. They would ship the fish to Salt lake City where they were sold on the market. Uncle David caught many wild ducks in the warm springs and marshes. We stayed there about one week.
At another time I went to the Tintic District with fruit and melons which Uncle David sold and brought back cedar posts which grew in abundance there. At that time the railroad only extended from Salt lake City to Provo, Utah.
When I was 12 years old I began singing in the Sunday School choir and later sang in the ward and stake choirs. In 1893 when the Salt Lake Temple was dedicated I sang with that choir. I sang bass in three operas with Evan Stephens.
On February 14, 1876 I was ordained an Elder by my father James H. Martineau.
In October, 1877 when I was 15 years old I went to Logan Canyon with others to round up cattle to be taken to Arizona. About this time some missionaries were called to make settlements on the Little Colorado in Arizona. Moroni was going so I was permitted to go along to help drive the cattle.
Some of the men killed a bear about two years old. They dressed it and stored it in a cave at Ricks Springs and later ate it.
Our party consisted of Brother John Bloomfield and family, Alex Richards of Mendon, Moroni and myself, four dogs, a dozen chickens, 100 sheep, 125 head of cattle. Nearly all belonged to the man who had gone previous.
Starting out October 1st, we were one month on the road, going about 15 miles a day. It was a good trip and we were given permission from the Presiding Bishop to feed the cattle tithing hay at the small settlement along the way. After making camp the chickens were turned loose to exercise some. When night came they would return to their coop. Arriving at Johnson, there were men to take them on their way across the Colorado.
At the end of the journey we visited some of the ancient places formerly occupied by the Nephites. Signs on the cliffs and prints of moccasins were marked in sandstone in the caves.
While in southern Utah this time I lived with my brothers Henry and Moroni. They had a contract to carry mail from Hillside to Marysvale, Utah, which I worked at. It was a long lonely ride of 65 miles through sparsely-settled country. The cold piercing winds were hard for a boy of 15 years to endure. But prayers to my Heavenly Father gave me courage.
After living there a year I returned back home to Logan, Utah. About t his time my father took a contact to survey five townships in the mountains southeast of Logan. I acted as chief cook for 10 men and we were gone all summer. We used pack animals on some of the route. The beauty of the mountains, the clear cold water, grassy vales and the beautiful mountain deer we saw made this a delightful experience to remember.
I went to school in Logan, Utah and my most outstanding teacher was a Miss Ida Cook who instilled in my heart a great love of poetry which I have held dear all my life. One of the loved poems, the name which I do not remember, was “He walked by the seashore and the pebbles looked so beautiful but when he held them in his hands their beauty vanished.” My children have all loved to hear me repeat “Sparticas to the Gladiators” or “Ye Call Me Chief” as they called it; also “Mister Finney’s Turnip” and “The Mule Who Always Kicked Behind.”
As I grew older my father bought me a nice team of mules and a new wagon. I spent two summers hauling lumber out of Logan Canyon. I received nine dollars for 1000 foot and made two trips per week. This was the only job available. I also hauled rock from Logan Canyon to be used in the construction of the Logan Temple.
My father later moved the family to Arizona and took the team. I remained in Logan. I got a job floating logs down the canyon to the sawmill and earned dollars. This I used as a marriage stake and was married in the Salt lake Endowment House on 14 June 1883 to Emmeline Pamela Knowles.
After buying the wedding ring and paying the railroad fare, there wasn’t much money left to begin our married life, but there was plenty and I now had the companion I dearly loved and had been waiting for. And we have lived happily together all our lives.
In the church at that time cattle were turned into the church as tithing. These cattle were all assembled and put on the range in Idaho during the summer months. In the month of November they were all brought back to Logan and taken to the farm owned by the church which was known as the Church Farm, located about two miles west of Logan City.
There was a fenced pasture of 3000 acres for cattle. The fattest ones were taken to a farm four miles southwest of Logan City to be killed as needed. The poorest of the cattle were left at the church farm and fed tithing hay that had been taken there. On this farm that had been laid out by Brigham Young, it had long sheds covered with bulrushes and other poor quality of hay. There were many different corrals to suit the different grades of cattle. Flowing wells were driven there so there was plenty of water available.
President Young instructed that haystacks were build containing 100 tons of hay in each stack so to shed the rain and snow. Most of the farm was planted in hay with large ditches to carry sufficient water for the hay crop. In winter it took four big loads of hay per day to feed those cattle kept on the winter feeding ground. And so it was to this church farm that I took my young bride, Emma. I had been hired to be the foreman of the farm and at that time I took over, there were 22 men working there.
We used four mowers and two rakes and it was all hand work, pitching the hay from one man to the next to get it to the last stacker on top of the haystack. I had a good helper, just arrived from Sweden. His name was C. J. Clawson, a good man. We worked together nearly seven years. It has always been a faith-promoting plan how so much has been accomplished in the church when so little money was had, all of these wonderful things being done by faithful people to help build the kingdom of God.
t was at this farm where four of our oldest children were born – Howard, Aurelia, Leigh, and Susan. Then in 1890 we moved to Clarkston, Utah. It was a dry farm and not very fertile and later we moved back to Logan. That year, 1893, the dedication of the Salt Lake Temple was held and we went to the dedication.
On February 14, 1896 I left for a mission to the Southern States. I traveled without purse or script and had many wonderful and faith promoting experiences happen to me. I’ve always cherished these experiences and have told many of them to my children over and over!
When I left home for the mission field we had a family of seven children. When I was set apart I was promised that when I should return when my mission was finished and the number in our family should not be broken. The summer after I left home the children all had typhoid fever and were extremely ill but they recovered.
While I was still there Emma bought a farm in Benson, Utah and my brother Lyman moved the family out there in my absence. I returned home in 1898 and immediately began farming. I planted many fruit trees, also raspberries.
On July 7, 1905 a baby boy John was born but he didn’t live. Not long after that we sold the farm in Benson and moved to North Logan, Utah where we lived about a year. The farm was not very prolific and we had the bad luck to lose several of our thoroughbred horses.
We left that place and bought a farm in Weston, Idaho. But the water rights were not sufficient so we sold the place for a large herd of mules, and for a short time lived on a dry farm north of St. Anthony, Idaho. About that time I had the opportunity to get some state land from James Stewart and with our mules we did very well.
About 1913 we bought a nice large home in St. Anthony, Idaho which was located in the 2nd Ward. I was called as a counselor in the Bishopric where I labored 15 years.
In 1935 Mother and I left our home in St. Anthony and came to Logan, Utah where we have been doing temple work since.
In May of 1939 Mother suffered a paralytic stroke. She passed away May 9, 1939 at Rexburg at the home of our daughter Susan and William Chantrill. She was buried in the cemetery here in Logan.
On May 31, 1943 I was married to Mrs. Evelyn Holman Taylor and we have lived here in Logan since that time.
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Father served as a missionary in the Northwest States with Portland as headquarters for six months. He did endowment work in the Logan Temple until his health became such that he was forced to stop.
In the latter part of December, 1950 he had a serious sick spell, and on February 26, 1951 he passed away at the home of his daughter Anita and her husband Lavell Schwendiman in Newdale, Idaho.
He suffered terribly with arthritis for a long time and never once did we hear him complain. He had a strong and enduring testimony of the gospel and lived all his life to the best of his ability. He was a noble man.
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(Written 4 February 1933)
I recall my early childhood, thinking it might be of interest in my life story. I remember Indians coming into town to get beef which was cut up into 20 or 30-pound pieces and given to them.
We boys used to go down to the willows below the hill and if we saw a chance, to go inside the teepee. We saw them at their work, making gloves, tanning deerhide or cooking on their small file. It was a sport to go down to their camp and wrestle their young boys or trade them out of some buckskin strings. I have watched them bend some willows over a hole near the bank and chew up some raw minnows, spit them in the water and watch the fish eat them. Then with a spear they would have a small opening in the bushes so they could pull them out. Old Chief Arimo lived below the hill.
Many a hot summer day I spent swimming in the hole by the Thatcher gristmill.
I saw a big fight in our schoolroom one day between teacher and pupil. I think the school was on the side of the pupil.
Just as soon as the snow was off we used to go digging segos. Our implement was a sharp stick about two feet long and many times we took some home to Mother, who really enjoyed them.
My father was away from home quite often, surveying for the railroad and villages.
The first reaper, a little machine to cut wheat and push it out of the way in a bundle, came to Logan. I slipped away from home and followed into the field some distance and after watching it cut for some time, I started for home. On the way I saw three small boys laying down by the road. Now I being a small boy and had heard the folks talk about gorillas, I thought these boys might be some. So I was afraid at first to go past them. But finally I took courage and passed them with the speed of a deer. I knew all the time that they were boys.
At eight years old I was baptized in the canal close by. I was later ordained a deacon and a teacher, at which time I was invited to sing alto in the choir with some other boys my age.
I had to go to the canyon along with Moroni. We had a span of mules, one of which would balk in the river every time we crossed with a load; an old wagon that had come across the plains with the emigrants, and one of the wheels had been made on the plains and the tires were loose. I had to sit and watch the rear ones and see if they were coming off.
I have sat on a load of wood coming home in every kind of storm. Mother would walk out some distance to meet us. The road was narrow and many of the dugways were dangerous. Some nights we would camp in an old milkhouse and what scanty clothes I had were far from comfortable.
Moroni took me up to lead the horse while snaking out the wood. One night after work we were all preparing supper when I had to poke in the fire. I moved a stick which flipped into Mark Fletcher’s soup. He was an apostate and the language he used, I never forgot. I should have been more careful.
That winter I visited a few weeks with my sister Elvira and husband to Springlake, three miles south of Payson, Utah. I got a pair of boots for Christmas. A heavy snow two feet deep came. We took an old white horse and plenty of string and went out in the sagebrush to hunt rabbits. We came back with all the horse could carry. We tied the hind legs of two rabbits and hung them over his back.
Another Uncle David LeBaron took me west to Utah Lake with him. He had cut 200 holes in the ice and put a small stick across with a baited line. The next morning we would go out with a small hand sleigh and take the nice white trout with but few dark spots on them. We might get 50 or 60 of them, which he shipped to market.
When Moroni and I were up Logan Canyon with a crew to get cattle, we came upon a black bear about two years old. We were on horseback. He finally climbed up a quaking aspen about four inches thick at the bottom. After trying to get the rope over his head we succeeded and pulled him but he clung tight. Moroni sawed the tree down at the butt and we had some meat. We took him to camp and had a chance to test out scones and bear meat which all pronounced good.
It was about this time Moroni and I helped drive cattle to southern Utah.
We lived at Hillsdale, named after my grandfather Joel Hills Johnson who, by the way, composed the words to the hymn, “High On a Mountain Top.” But he had moved away and his son, my Uncle Seth Johnson, had me carry the mail. They clothed me up as best they could and let me go down the line 65 miles on horseback, having generally only one mail bag. I was able to make the trip twice a week and got $18.00 for the week. Some of the time the weather became real cold, but through this job we were able to buy what things we were in need of.
A man named Wilson made some small ox yokes, small enough to be used on yearling steers, so I and some other boys spent our time catching and yoking up steers. We got them so they could be driven alone. Ox bows were made by putting small oak saplings in the hot ashes and when warm through, we would bend them around a pole and leave them until they would stay bent.
At Hillsdale everyone was rebaptized for the renewing of their covenants, so I went into the water also.
Reminiscing some more about my early life and mission:
Returning to Johnson, the land of ancient lore, a hill standing out on the level covering about three acres proved to be sandstone and the only way to get on top of it was to go up a narrow ridge, near the top, crawl through a hole just large enough to let the body through. The top is flat and there on top were two mounds of clay from which potteryware with spades and other things had been taken.
Nearby was a large smooth space on a sand rock where could be seen the outline of many animals and on another stone were the tracks of birds and beasts. Not far away was a large grotto capable of housing 50 people. On ahead on a sloping place were the prints of feet in the sandstone. A person had walked across there when the sandstone was soft enough underfoot to give away and leave the imprints of a foot on the rock.
My father James H. Martineau secured a contract to do government surveying about six townships east of Cache Valley and extending into the Bear Lake Valley. In the company were Ed Hansen, George Lewis, Fred Benson, Jesse Martineau, and others. While camping in the tops of the mountains we ran out of meat. We killed a porcupine and I cooked him in a bake oven and all in camp pronounced it just fine. I spent three summers with the surveying party.
My next work was in the Logan Canyon, hauling logs down from where they were cut to the sawmill to be made into railroad ties. It was so steep I could put one-third of the load tied behind to drag as a snarler.
I later found a job haying for an Aaron Farr.
I also drove a delivery wagon for the U.O. Lumber Company and that is where I first saw Emma Knowles, to notice her. She worked for Hyrum Hayball at the millyard. I attended singing practice, she and Addie also, and from that time on I never lost sight of her. My labors continued in the area and I was 21 in March.
So on June 14th myself and Emma went to Salt Lake city to get married. We wanted to start out right. I can never forget how we went through the Temple block where many men were busy cutting the stones for the Temple. We thought all eyes were on us and were nearly frightened stiff.
After our ceremony a kindly lady approached us and said, “Would you like me to say a few words to you?” I said, “Yes,” of course. Her words were “Never but one of you get mad at once. Neither one of you will always be right, but either one may be wrong some of the time” - - kind words which helped us on our way through life.
We bought a home in Westfield while I was working on the Church Farm as foreman for seven years. We had many happy times there with our folks, Aunt Aurelia and Uncle Henry Nibley, who lived there.
Our next venture was at Clarkston, Utah where we bought 160 acres of land for 20 young steers and two big mares. Joseph Dalley jumped it and we had a lawsuit and it was finally decided in my favor. Mother had a dream about it being jumped before it came out exactly as she dreamed.
She also dreamed about Lucy Lavery being taken by her mother who had passed away. This also came true. Mother’s twin sister Addie married Luke Lavery who was a strong Catholic. She or they had this little girl and Aunt Adeline passed away. When Lucy was about six years old he intended to place her in a Catholic convent. Her mother came and took her as mother had dreamed and she died.
I had just bought 300 head of cattle but had to be gone from the farm most of the time, but Mother stayed there with her four little kids, and it was there that Mabel was born.
One of our large horses got out in the wire and cut very severe, but Mother stopped the flow of blood and saved the horse.
We raised good crops of grain and it was at that time I was called on a mission. We sold 40 acres of the 160 so that I could go.
I got ready in the fall of 1896 and spring of 1897. I set out for Salt Lake City and the Southern States. Cattle prices were down and I had to sell at a sacrifice, but wanted to go and do as I was asked. I left Logan, and reaching Salt Lake City with my companion William Anderson of Logan decided as we were on our way, that we would call on the Presiding Bishop of the Church, W. B. Preston, who received us kindly and gave us some fatherly advice and each some money in our hands and “God Bless You.”
We arrived in Kansas City and went out to Independence, Missouri and were highly impressed with the location.
Our next stop was at Chattanooga, Tennessee. We stayed at the Rosmeyer Hotel, received our instructions from the mission president, and left for Glassow, Kentucky, where I met Elder D. J. Blake from Provo.
After laboring three months and getting broke in, and having many experiences of value to me, and getting acquainted with the way of the Lord and rejoicing in the same. The people were mostly Catholics and although we were traveling without purse or script, they did their part in finding us entertainment. I got a good chance to study the people and their religion.
In this and many countries were many large distilleries where whiskey was made. We met many who said they could not read our tracts.
Along some time in June we were to Buffert, Ohio County to our conference where we had the privilege of meeting all the Elders of out District. We met President Elias Kimball and we had a meeting long to be remembered. We were given instructions which enabled us to go forth with greater zeal and energy.
At our Priesthood meeting I was given a new companion, Junius J. Tanner of Tooele, Utah. We walked to our county seat, started tracting and holding meetings. We were not united in spirit so weren’t in exact harmony. When one wanted to go one road the other would want to go another way.
After working about three weeks I said to him one morning, “We are not united, are we?” He said no. I said, “Let’s see if we can get closer together.” So we had our prayer together, then stepped aside in the small brush and each had a private prayer, after which we sat down on a log, suddenly embraced in love through the kindness of the Lord, and from that time on we were as one. I learned to love him and we from then on could see alike in our work. We went forth in the spirit of our calling and held more meetings in a given time than any of the Elders.
Many kindnesses were shown me of the Lord, how He cared for us. I had my shoes half-soled on one occasion. My shoes were about gone and had been told to trust in the Lord for that which we might need. I went out in a cornfield and told the Lord I needed shoes and I received the assurance that I would get them. Aunt Aurelia Nibley lived in Oregon and she got a $1 greenback. The thought came to her to send it to me in Kentucky. The Lord put it in her heart to send it to me.
In about three days it came. I went to the store and asked the price. At that time shoes were cheap. The merchant said the only pair that would fit me cost $1.75 but, said he, “I will let you have them for $1.35.” So I handed him the dollar. He said, “I think you can get the balance.” We were going to leave Thursday night after meeting for another neighborhood. On Thursday afternoon a man came up to me and said, “Here’s 35 cents. You may need it.” I paid the merchant and went on my way rejoicing.
There was one family converted out of that neighborhood, the Richardsons, who later moved to Utah. Another companion was J. J. Tanner of Utah, a man full of faith and energy and was one who really got me started out good. Our monthly reports were among the leading ones in our state.
Another incident happened in that county. We were visiting in a home in Campbellsville and a mother stood just inside the door with her tiny child in her arms about four years old. Her eyes were sunken and her body so thin and puny. She had chills and fever. As I passed I clasped her hand and uttered a prayer in silence to the Lord. I also rebuked the disease and asked the Lord to bless her.
We did not call back for a month or more when we did come, the mother said that an Elder had touched the child and it was well and strong from that moment. We never told her that a prayer was offered in her behalf.
I want to mention here Elder Tanner. He was a younger Elder than I, but he was a noble man. I learned later that he and his family were drowned somewhere in the Big Horn, Wyoming country by his car going over the bank into a deep pond.
I need to mention, too, William E. Shaffner, an old Civil War soldier who took us in. He mended my shoes, did my washing and ironing, gave us money and applied for baptism. But my companion and I hesitated. May he some day come into the fold. One night say why didn’t we baptize William Shaffner, but we were traveling, tracting out the county and I have thought since that we should have done it.
November 17, 1896 I got a new companion, Elder T. G. Ballam, of Hyde Park, Utah. We were asked to go to Lebanon, Marion County, and work with Elder J. C. Cutler of Salt Lake City. But he was homesick and asked to be released to return home.
So I returned to Campbellsville and found Elder Junius J. Tanner, my old companion for three months. Our field of labor was in a Catholic county, but our joy was full while we labored together. He was a kind-hearted noble Elder, full of faith, and many were our experiences together.
A Mrs. Bricken invited us for Christmas dinner at her hotel, said she felt impressed that we were good men, engaged in good work, and a long way from home. She cooked a good dinner but we were so busy 20 miles away holding meetings, that we could not come.
Later we held a meeting in the courthouse every night for about a week. Every night her some came to us after the meeting and took us home with him.
We used to get our washing done “gratus” whenever we were working. “The labor is worth the hire,” or so the saying goes.
On one occasion I stayed at a Catholic home. I left my shirt to be washed and a spirit whispered, “Don’t leave it as you may not get back to it before you need it.” But I went contrary and when I got it, it was so blue it was spoiled. I always tried to listen to the whisperings after that.
Elder Woodmansee had the spirit of discernment and prophecy, and I was surprised at times to see how his predictions came true.
While traveling along the road one morning I made two marks in t he path and prayed to the Lord to lead Elder to make a mark alongside my marks the way we should go. When he came up I said to make a mark alongside one of these. He did and the direction led us to the home of a widow who had received a tract and after studying it, prayed to the Lord, “If it is true, send some Elders to my home again.” We were on the way in answer to her prayer. Her name was Jane Ables. We called on her. She had been bed-ridden for four years she said.
Elder Woodmansee promised her she would be baptized and walk out of the water after having been carried into the same. The promise was fulfilled and she was healed. Quite a number of people came out to witness her baptism.
I have learned to put me trust in the Lord wherein he says, “Prove me herewith and see if I will not open you the windows of Heaven and pour you out a blessing that there will not be room to contain it” (Malachi, last chapter).
It seemed as though the Spirit of the Lord was with us to give us faith and courage to do what was asked to do day by day. How often it seemed that people were waiting meals for some cause, and we must have been the cause as the Lord says in the 84th Section of the Doctrine and Covenants, “My angels shall go before you to prepare the hearts of the people to receive you,” and so it was.
I cannot say I ever went hungry, although I postponed meals, not having any money in my pocket but traveling entirely without purse or script. I tried to feel my responsibility of my calling, tried to weigh my thoughts before I spoke so as not to mislead anyone.
It is now 40 years since I was called February 14, 1896 and now it is February 2, 1936. So many beautiful thoughts have left my mind. But my testimony has increased as time goes by. I love the Gospel with all my heart and hope to be able to continue to the end.
While laboring with Elder John Woodmansee we held a funeral of a small girl. We had many good dinners cooked for us and enjoyed each other’s companionship. And when he passed away in Salt Lake City I spoke at his funeral. I will ever bless his memory. He passed away in 1935 and I went from St. Anthony, Idaho to attend the funeral. Other speakers were J. Golden Kimball and John M. Knight of Salt Lake City.
Another companion I worked with was this Fred T. Ballam of Hyde Park, already spoken of. We left Marion County and went down to Wayne County. We fasted two days as usual and called upon the county officials and told them our object in the county. We were bid God-speed.
We were laboring in an area where a battle had been fought and there were signs of it. We had an experience and were holding our first meeting. We sang the “Children’s Prayer Song.” There seemed to be a stillness prevail in the house and all assembled after the closing prayer. Silence prevailed. One woman arose and said, “Here is water. What does hinder me from being baptized?” I told her we would have to teach her the gospel and she would have to get consent of her husband. Later this was done.
Elder Ballam and I labored together three months and became great friends. We went into homes and sang for the sick people. I loved him as a great speaker and singer. We enjoyed each other and were able to get into many homes.

My Recollections of Grandpa Martineau

By Annis Leatham

To me Grandpa Martineau was sweet, kind, honest and brave. When I was small I would crawl all over him, play with his mustache and comb his hair by the hour. He had the patience of Job and I loved to be around him.
I remember my mother telling of his honesty and I know how brave he was, because when our two families took homesteads at Tetonia the land we settled was open government range and had been used by a certain family to graze their cattle. One day they came with guns and loud voices to tell Grandpa he had to move or they would shoot him. Grandpa picked up a stick and held it behind his back while he explained to them that he didn’t want any trouble, but he was there legally and had as much right to the land as they did. Paying no attention to their shouting and swearing, he spoke quietly and politely and after awhile they went away and left him alone. I’m sure he sought the Lord’s help at this critical time.
He loved music and had a beautiful bass voice. He loved to put on pageants for the boys and girls at the Industrial School for Flag Day. I remember hearing about two of them. One had an Indian theme and one was Hawaiian.
He was a loving husband and father. He used to tell Grandma how beautiful she was. No sacrifice was too great for his family. I am very proud that I had the privilege of being his granddaughter. (16)

Susan Ellen Johnson Martineau

Susan Ellen Johnson Martineau
Brief Sketch - Edited
My father, Patriarch Joel Hills Johson, was baptized into the Church of Later-day Saints June 1, 1831, at the age of 39 years. I was born in Kirtland, Ohio July 11, 1836 and when 2 years old our people were driven from Kirtland, and so we started for Missouri with the Kirtland camp.
When we reached Springfield, Illinois, there was considerable sickness in the camp. My father’s family was among the number compelled or counseled to stay there until all was well. While tarrying there, the people were driven out of Missouri, so my father did not go there, but waited in a small town where there was a large family named Merrill. Father baptized Samuel Merrill and several members of his family — among them being Phillemon Merrill, now a Patriarch. We stayed at this place, Father preaching and baptizing until his work was done.
Then we went to Carthage, where my brother Seth was born March 9, 1839. We lived near the jail where the prophet Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum were in later days slain and sealed their testimonies to the truth of the Gospel they preached. At this time our family consisted of seven souls. We moved from Carthage to Crooked Creek to Denarts Mill on Crooked Creek.
We bought an interest in the Denarts Mill. The house was built of logs consisting of two rooms connected by a shed room, open to the front. There was where my mother died September 15, 1840, age 40 years, a kind and indulgent mother, a good faithful Latter-day Saint. She was buried in a cemetery of a small town called Macedonia. (Other sources say Ramus or Webster.)
Susan Bryant (or Brient) then came to live with us as housekeeper. Father married her, as his children needed a mother’s care. Soon after we moved to Remus. Father built a house there for a family residence. He afterwards built a room on for a store.
My Aunt Almira Lived with us at that time and taught school. She was sealed to the Prophet Joseph as his first plural wife. After several years our home was sold to A. W. Babbitt, who named it the Macedonian Cottage.
My Uncle George Johnson went to Nauvoo in February, 1848 and I went to with him to live with my grandma who was quite old and feeble.
On May 8, 1848 my father with his family came to Nauvoo on his way across the plains. The family consisted of eight persons. On the 10th of May they crossed the Mississippi River. I went one day’s journey and returned to Nauvoo the next day. It was very hard to see them go and leave me behind, but I felt that it must be and I must make the b st of it. My dear gradmother was good and kind to me, or I could not have borne the parting from brothers and sisters. But I have found that life is not all sunshine. In the June following (1849), my grandmother, lmyself, David LeBaron and family, David Wilson, William Johnson adn wife, and also Uncle Joseph J. Johnson sent a wagon with goods to Aunt Delcina and family. We arrived at Council Bluffs on July 11, my 13th birthday.
We then moved to Plum Hollow. We got there in July and remained there during the summer. During the winter I aqttended school. In tghe early spring, Uncle Joseph and Grandma moved to Kanesville. In June (of 1850) my mothers’s sister, Sarah Johnson, came for me to go to California (as Utah was then called).
We left Kanesville June 25th and camped by the Missouri River. We waited there several days for more company and on the 27th crossed the river and found some emigrants waiting for us. There were not 28 wagons with Stephen Markham as Captain. Our company was divided into tens with Artemus Millet as Captain of the first ten, Thomas Forsythe as Captain of the second ten. In the morning a woman died with cholera and was buried in the bank of the river. She wasa stranger, having just arrived from England on her way to Utah.
From that time until July 15, someone was buried almost every day. My Aunt Sarah’s husband George G. Johnston, his mother and his sister died July 11, on my 14th birthday, and were buried when we stopped at noon the next day, July 12th.
I also had cholera but was healed by the administration of the Elders. When I felt the disease coming on I went into a tent by myself and prayed to the Lord that I might be spared to wait upon the others. I had a testimony that I would be spared. There were 14 who died in our company.
We passed hundreds of graves. Many an evening we saw thousands of buffalo in herds. We passed Independence Rock. It was probably 200 yards wide and 10 or 12 yards high, rising out of the level plain. In the smooth side of the rock were carved or written hundreds of names of those that had passed.
On October 3, 1850 we arrived in Salt Lake City, tired, weary and footsore. I had walked a great deal of the way bar-footed, but I never faltered. Many others were in the same condition.
My father was called to go with George A. Smith and a company of about 50 others to settle Iron County. He fitted out his two oldest sons and sent them down. He prepared to go down in the spring. He sold out his home and farm to Phillemon Merrill for a log house of two rooms in the city, the teams to go with them. In November, my step-mother gave birth to twins, a boy and a girl. Soon my father was ready to start. He moved his family to Salt Lake City. We heard that George A. Smith and Company had arrived at their destination on Christmas day and held a celebration.
In March, 1851 my father took his fifth wife, Janet, and family to Iron County. My brother Seth, Age 12 years, went with them.
I attended school taught by Mrs. A. H. Goodrich Blair, a lovely woman and a good teacher. When my brother came to get married, Father sent word that he ws to sell our home and get ready to move to Iron County by September 1, which we did in company with Peter Shirts and Family. DarwinShirts drove our team of oxen. The next day we came up to the rest of our company of three families with plenty of boys and girls to make it pleasant at camping time. We would forget all about being tired and have a good time together. After a trip of two weeks we reached Parowan, Utah, our destination, on September 1, 1851.
(This was written by Susan Ellen Johnson Martineau)
See full version on SEJM History Index.The following was written by her Grandaughter, Elzada MartineauHurst.It is also edited. See full version on SEJM History Index.
Four months after her arrival in Parowan and after a whirlwind courtship at age 15 1/2, Susan married James Henry Martineau, who was eight years her senior and the village schoolteacher, on January 8, 1852. Her wedding dress was made from material which she herself had woven, as were her other dresses. They started life together with little of this world’s goods. Cupboard, table, chairs and bedstead were homemade. The bed had strands of rope woven criss-cross on the bottom to hold the straw tick on which they slept, and she did her cooking on the fireplace.
Marriage is a challenge to any 15 1/2 year-old girl, but to Susan life had been one challenge after another and she was older and wiser than her years and able to do her part, be it milking a cow or doing any of the many tasks involved in poioneer life. Her husband was born and raised New York State and well educated. He had worked at various professions, but had little rural experience. Besides teaching, he was an excellent accountant or clerk and a trained surveyor.


Susan Julia Sherman Martineau
Brief Sketch - Edited
Susan Julia Sherman, the second wife of James Henry Martineau was born in Far West Missouri on 31 Oct 1838. She was one of seven (or eight?) children of Lyman Royal Sherman and Delcena Diadamia Johnson. Only three of them, Alby, Lyman and Susan, survived to adulthood and to have children of their own.
Her father, Lyman Royal Sherman, was born in 1804 and died in 1839. He joined the LDS churchin 1832 and was an early church leader whodied after vicious attacks and beatings by mobs, becoming one of theearly martyrs of the church.
Her mother, Delcena Johnson, was born 19 November 1806 at Westford, Vermont. She was also an early member of the LDS church. She was an invalid for years and was quite ill when she traveled across the plains in a hammock slung in a wagon bed. She died in 1854, shortly after arriving in the Salt Lake Valley, thus leaving Julia an orphan at age 16.
Julia went to live with her extended family who were helping to settle Iron County. In Parowan, she became close friends with Susan Ellen Johnson Martineau who was the daughter of Joel Hills Johnson, who was her uncle. (Her mother, Delcena Diadamia Johnson, was the third child in the family of Ezekiel Johnson and Julia HIlls –an thus asister to Joel Hills Johnson.) Susan Ellen was just two years older than her. Several years later, at age 18, Susan Ellen convinced her husband, James Henry Martineau to marry her as his second wife, which he did on 18 Jan 1857.
She and James Henry had eight children. They were:Delcena Diadamia, born 27 November 1857 at Parowan, Utah and died 23 October 1865 in Salt Lake City, who was buried at the side of her grandmother Delcena Diadamia Johnson Sherman.Lyman Royal, born 21 April 1859 at Parowan, Utah and died 4 January 1926 in Salt Lake city, Utah, who was buried in Logan, Utah.Charles Freeman, born 24 July 1861 in Logan, Utah and died 20 December 1935 in Logan, Utah, and was buried in Logan, Utah.Jesse Nathaniel, born 26 April 1863 in Logan, Utah and died in Chicago, Illinois 19 April 1928 of heart failure.Julia Henrietta, born 4 February 1865 in Logan, Utah and died 20 January 1885 in St. David, Arizona.Elizabeth, born 13 August 1867 in Logan, Utah, married Frank K. Nebeker.Virginia, born 16 July 1870, Married Edward Sudbury, and later married John Murphy.Joseph Herbert, born 23 April 1873 in Logan, Utah, died 10 May 1873 in Logan, Utah.
In 1860, when the move was made from Parowan, Utah to Logan, Utah, Susan Julia went with James Henry and Susan Ellen stayed in Manti with her brother until a place was prepared in Logan for all to live. The family grew quickly until Jan of 1874 when Susan Julia died of a ruptured appendix. Her grave is visible in the Logan cemetery. Susan Ellen then became mother to all the children and the family was preserved.Correspondence between James Henry and Susan Ellen and Susan Julia show the family unity which existed among the members of the family of James Henry Martineau. There is ample evidence that this family was blessed by the Lord for living the sacred principles of the gospel which they all subscribed to and which were such a powerful and integral part of their lives and a major influence on their histories.