.....Whiting-GLOBAL

The global center for research on the Whiting surname

LIVING

Male


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  LIVING (son of Whiting, Melvin L and LIVING).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Whiting, Melvin L was born on 15 May 1925 in Mapleton, Utah County, Utah, USA (son of Hatfield, William Henry, son of Hatfield, William Henry and Hill, Leila); died on 30 Jul 2002 in Grand Island, Hall County, Nebraska, USA; was buried on 3 Aug 2002 in Springville, Utah County, Utah, USA.

    Notes:



    GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Melvin Leo

    Melvin married LIVING. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  LIVING
    Children:
    1. LIVING
    2. LIVING
    3. LIVING
    4. 1. LIVING


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Hatfield, William Henry was born in Oct 1893 in Utah, United States (son of Whiting, Oscar Newell and Tuckett, Lelia); died on 7 Jan 1970 in Mapleton, Utah, UT; was buried on 9 Jan 1970 in Springville, Utah, Utah Evergreen Cemetery.

    Other Events:

    • Adopted: Provo, Utah, Utah, United States

    Notes:

    1900
    William H Hatfield
    in the 1900 United States Federal Census
    Name: William H Hatfield
    Age: 6
    Birth Date: Oct 1893
    Birthplace: Utah
    Home in 1900: Mapleton, Utah, Utah
    Race: White
    Gender: Male
    Relation to Head of House: Son
    Marital Status: Single
    Father's name: Oscar Whiting
    Father's Birthplace: Utah
    Mother's name: Lelia Whiting
    Mother's Birthplace: Utah
    Occupation: View on Image
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Oscar Whiting 52
    Lelia Whiting 29
    Belva Hatfield 8
    William H Hatfield 6
    Charles E Hatfield 4
    Source Citation
    Year: 1900; Census Place: Mapleton, Utah, Utah; Roll: 1687; Page: 9B; Enumeration District: 0157; FHL microfilm: 1241687
    Source Information
    Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
    Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1854 rolls.
    Description
    This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1900 United States Federal Census, the Twelfth Census of the United States. Census takers recorded many details including each person's name, address, relationship to the head of household, color or race, sex, month and year of birth, age at last birthday, marital status, number of years married, the total number of children born of the mother, the number of those children living, birthplace, birthplace of father and mother, if the individual was foreign born, the year of immigration and the number of years in the United States, the citizenship status of foreign-born individuals over age twenty-one, occupation, and more. Additionally, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to actual images of the 1900 Federal Census. Learn more...
    © 2016, Ancestry.com

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    William Henry Hatfield was adopted by the Whitings

    William married Hill, Leila on 22 Oct 1917 in Provo, Utah, Utah, United States. Leila was born on 14 Oct 1896 in Burrville, Sevier, Utah; died on 20 Jun 1940 in Provo, Utah, Utah; was buried on 23 Jun 1940 in (Evergreen Cemetery) Springvil, Utah, UT. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Hill, Leila was born on 14 Oct 1896 in Burrville, Sevier, Utah; died on 20 Jun 1940 in Provo, Utah, Utah; was buried on 23 Jun 1940 in (Evergreen Cemetery) Springvil, Utah, UT.
    Children:
    1. Whiting, Virla was born on 21 Jan 1919 in Mapleton, Utah, Utah; died on 18 Jan 2005 in Provo, Utah, Utah, United States; was buried in Springville, Utah, Utah, United States.
    2. Whiting, Harold Hill was born on 11 Mar 1921 in Mapleton, Utah County, Utah, USA; died on 3 Sep 2011 in South Jordan, Salt Lake County, Utah, USA; was buried on 9 Sep 2011 in Springville, Utah County, Utah, USA.
    3. Feess, Elna May Whiting Perry was born on 15 Mar 1923 in Mapleton, Utah, Utah; died on 16 Dec 1996 in Provo, Utah, Utah, USA; was buried on 19 Dec 1996 in Springville, Utah, Utah, USA.
    4. 2. Whiting, Melvin L was born on 15 May 1925 in Mapleton, Utah County, Utah, USA; died on 30 Jul 2002 in Grand Island, Hall County, Nebraska, USA; was buried on 3 Aug 2002 in Springville, Utah County, Utah, USA.
    5. Whiting, Norma Leila was born on 27 Feb 1927 in Mapleton, Utah; was christened on 15 Mar 1927 in Mapleton, Utah, UT; died on 11 Feb 2014 in Provo, Utah County, Utah, USA; was buried in 2014 in Springville, Utah, Utah, United States of America.
    6. Whiting, Don Ivan was born on 20 Jan 1929 in Mapleton, Utah, Utah, United States; died on 26 Dec 2008 in Spanish Fork, Utah, Utah, United States; was buried in 2008 in Spanish Fork City Cemetery, Spanish Fork, Utah, Utah, United States.
    7. Whiting, Ned Allison was born on 9 Jan 1932 in Mapleton, Utah County, Utah, USA; died on 21 Jul 2015 in Bountiful, Davis, Utah, United States; was buried on 31 Jul 2015 in Springville, Utah County, Utah, USA.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Whiting, Oscar Newell was born on 13 Jan 1848 in Mt.Pisgah, Union, Iowa (son of Whiting, Edwin and Tillotson, Elizabeth Partridge); died on 19 Feb 1903; was buried in Nov 1903 in Evergreen Cemetery, Springville, Utah, UT.

    Other Events:

    • FamilySearch Id: KWJB-FWH
    • Census: 1880, Springville, Utah, Utah

    Notes:

    1850; Census Place: , Sanpete, Utah Territory; Roll: M432_919; Page: 113A; Image: 233.
    13/13 Edwin Whiting 41 male chairmaker $100 Mass
    Elizabeth 37 fem Mass
    Mary 23 fem New York
    William 16 male farmer Ohio
    Amelia 14 fem Ohio
    Sarah 11 fem Ohio
    Almon 10 male Illinois
    Lucius 05 male Illinois
    Albert 03 male Iowa twin
    Oscar 03 male Iowa twin
    Emeline 02 fem Deseret
    Harriet 01 fem Deseret
    Almira M Wd 27 fem New York
    Edward 05 male Illinois
    Ellen 03 fem Iowa
    Loisa 01 fem Deseret
    http://search.ancestry.com/iexec?htx=View&r=an&dbid=8054&iid=4181033-00233&fn=William&ln=Whiting&st=r&ssrc=&pid=1099849
    ============================
    1860
    Osher N Whiting
    in the 1860 United States Federal Census
    Name: Osher N Whiting
    Age: 12
    Birth Year: abt 1848
    Gender: Male
    Birth Place: Illinois
    Home in 1860: Manti, Sanpete, Utah Territory
    Post Office: Manti
    Family Number: 124
    Value of real estate: View image
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Edwin Whiting 51
    Elizth P Whiting 46
    Edwin L Whiting 14
    Osher N Whiting 12
    Louisa M Whiting 10
    Caroline P Whiting 6
    Source Citation
    Year: 1860; Census Place: Manti, Sanpete, Utah Territory; Roll: M653_1314; Page: 653; Image: 115; Family History Library Film: 805314

    Source Information
    Ancestry.com. 1860 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
    Original data: 1860 U.S. census, population schedule. NARA microfilm publication M653, 1,438 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.
    Description
    This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1860 United States Federal Census, the Eighth Census of the United States. Census takers recorded many details including each person's name, age as of the census day, sex, color; birthplace, occupation of males over age fifteen, and more. No relationships were shown between members of a household. Additionally, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to actual images of the 1860 Federal Census. Learn more...
    © 2016, Ancestry.com

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    =========
    1860
    Oscar Whiting
    in the 1870 United States Federal Census
    Name: Oscar Whiting
    Age in 1870: 22
    Birth Year: abt 1848
    Birthplace: Iowa
    Home in 1870: Springville, Utah, Utah Territory
    Race: White
    Gender: Male
    Post Office: Springville
    Value of real estate: View image
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Edwin Whiting 60
    Elizabeth Whiting 57
    Lucius Whiting 24
    Oscar Whiting 22
    Louisa Whiting 20
    Caroline Whiting 16
    Source Citation
    Year: 1870; Census Place: Springville, Utah, Utah Territory; Image: 392155
    Source Information
    Ancestry.com. 1870 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.
    Original data:
    1870 U.S. census, population schedules. NARA microfilm publication M593, 1,761 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.
    Minnesota census schedules for 1870. NARA microfilm publication T132, 13 rolls. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.
    Description
    This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1870 United States Federal Census, the Ninth Census of the United States. Census takers recorded many details including each person's name, age at last birthday, sex, color; birthplace, occupation, and more. No relationships were shown between members of a household. Additionally, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to actual images of the 1870 Federal Census. Learn more...
    © 2016, Ancestry.com

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    =========
    1880
    Oscar Whiting
    in the 1880 United States Federal Census
    Name: Oscar Whiting
    Age: 32
    Birth Year: abt 1848
    Birthplace: Iowa
    Home in 1880: Springville, Utah, Utah
    Race: White
    Gender: Male
    Relation to Head of House: Son
    Marital Status: Single
    Spouse's Name: Hannah Whiting
    Father's name: Edwin Whiting
    Father's Birthplace: Massachusetts
    Mother's name: Elizabeth P. Whiting
    Mother's Birthplace: Massachusetts
    Neighbors: View others on page
    Occupation: Freighter
    Cannot read/write:

    Blind:

    Deaf and dumb:

    Otherwise disabled:

    Idiotic or insane:

    View image
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Edwin Whiting 70
    Elizabeth P. Whiting 66
    Oscar Whiting 32
    Hannah Whiting 45
    Lorenzo Whiting 20
    Source Citation
    Year: 1880; Census Place: Springville, Utah, Utah; Roll: 1338; Family History Film: 1255338; Page: 173C; Enumeration District: 082

    Source Information
    Ancestry.com and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. 1880 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2010. 1880 U.S. Census Index provided by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints © Copyright 1999 Intellectual Reserve, Inc. All rights reserved. All use is subject to the limited use license and other terms and conditions applicable to this site.
    Original data: Tenth Census of the United States, 1880. (NARA microfilm publication T9, 1,454 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C.
    Description
    This database is an index to 50 million individuals enumerated in the 1880 United States Federal Census. Census takers recorded many details including each person's name, address, occupation, relationship to the head of household, race, sex, age at last birthday, marital status, place of birth, parents’ place of birth. Additionally, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to actual images of the 1880 Federal Census. Learn more...
    © 2016, Ancestry.com

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    =========
    1899
    Oscar N Whiting
    in the Utah, Select Marriage Index, 1887-1985
    Name: Oscar N Whiting
    Gender: Male
    Marriage Date: 13 Dec 1899
    Marriage Place: Utah, UT, USA
    Spouse: Lelia Tuckett
    Spouse Gender: Female
    Certificate Number: 03\414T
    Source Information
    Ancestry.com. Utah, Select Marriage Index, 1887-1985 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2015.
    Original data: Marriage Index. Various Utah State Public Record Offices.
    Description
    This database is an index to more than 400 thousand marriages registered in Utah from 1887-1985. Learn more...
    © 2016, Ancestry.com

    http://search.ancestry.com/search/collections/ArchUTMarriages/543527/printer-friendly?tid=&pid=&usePUB=true&usePUBJs=true&rhSource=7602
    =========




    =========
    1900
    Oscar Whiting
    in the 1900 United States Federal Census
    Name: Oscar Whiting
    Age: 52
    Birth Date: Jan 1848
    Birthplace: Iowa
    Home in 1900: Mapleton, Utah, Utah
    Race: White
    Gender: Male
    Relation to Head of House: Head
    Marital Status: Married
    Spouse's Name: Lelia Whiting
    Marriage Year: 1900
    Years Married: 6/12
    Father's Birthplace: Massachusetts
    Mother's Birthplace: Massachusetts
    Occupation: View on Image
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Oscar Whiting 52
    Lelia Whiting 29
    Belva Hatfield 8
    William H Hatfield 6
    Charles E Hatfield 4
    Source Citation
    Year: 1900; Census Place: Mapleton, Utah, Utah; Roll: 1687; Page: 9B; Enumeration District: 0157; FHL microfilm: 1241687

    Source Information
    Ancestry.com. 1900 United States Federal Census [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.
    Original data: United States of America, Bureau of the Census. Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1900. T623, 1854 rolls.
    Description
    This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1900 United States Federal Census, the Twelfth Census of the United States. Census takers recorded many details including each person's name, address, relationship to the head of household, color or race, sex, month and year of birth, age at last birthday, marital status, number of years married, the total number of children born of the mother, the number of those children living, birthplace, birthplace of father and mother, if the individual was foreign born, the year of immigration and the number of years in the United States, the citizenship status of foreign-born individuals over age twenty-one, occupation, and more. Additionally, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to actual images of the 1900 Federal Census. Learn more...
    © 2016, Ancestry.com

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    =========




    !BIRTH :
    MARRIAGE :
    DEATH :
    ORDINANCES :
    !BIRTH :
    MARRIAGE :
    DEATH :
    ORDINANCES :

    GIVEN NAMES: Also shown as Oscar Newell

    BIRTH: Also shown as Born Mount Pisgah, Union, Iowa, United States, United States.

    BIRTH: Also shown as Born 18 Jan 1848

    BIRTH: Also shown as Born Mount Pisgah, Union, Iowa, United States, United States.

    DEATH: Also shown as Died 19 Nov 1903

    BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Springville, Utah, Utah, United States.

    BURIAL: Also shown as Buried Springville, Utah, Utah, United States.

    Oscar married Tuckett, Lelia on 13 Dec 1899 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah. Lelia was born on 8 Jun 1871 in Springville, Utah, Utah; died on 10 Dec 1927 in Mapleton, Utah, Utah; was buried on 13 Dec 1927 in Evergreen Cemetery, Springville, Utah, Utah. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Tuckett, Lelia was born on 8 Jun 1871 in Springville, Utah, Utah; died on 10 Dec 1927 in Mapleton, Utah, Utah; was buried on 13 Dec 1927 in Evergreen Cemetery, Springville, Utah, Utah.

    Notes:

    !Record of Max B Whiting Oct 1989; Rec of Velma Simons 900 S Main #1
    Springville, UT 8-93: Other husband William Kendall PARSHALL of Hatfield
    !Record of Max B Whiting Oct 1989.
    Copied from a manuscript handwritten by her daughter Leora. There was a note at the end where Leora said to Ermel Morton, her brother. “I started writing this for mother about 20 years ago. I would like it back, as I don’t have another copy.” Ermel had a Xerox copy in his files, not the original.

    I, Belva Hatfield, daughter of William K. Hatfield and Lelia Tuckett, was born February 4, 1892 in Springville, Utah. My father’s parents came from New York and settle in Manti. My mother’s father came from London, England and her mother from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Annie Rosabelle was the name father picked for me, but mother wanted me named Belva after a little 4-year old girl in Pleasant Grove, Belva Ballantyne, who had such pretty curls.
    The house in which I was born now stands just east of the Springville 1st Ward. It was a 2-roomed brick house built by my father, who was a mason by trade.
    I was not a strong baby as I lacked sufficient blood. I was 21 months old when my brother, William Henry, was born (October 24, 1894). When he was about a year old, mother made us each a pink sunbonnet and when she took us visiting in the buggy together, some people took us for twins, as I was so small and he so large. Mother had a patch of strawberries, so she picked a cup of berries and put them on a chair with a cup of cream and some sugar, and I ate all that I wanted. After awhile the color began coming into my cheeks and my health improved.
    In December 1895, father left for a mission to Tennessee. Mother went to Salt Lake City to see him off. Two months later on February 13, 1896, my youngest brother, Charles Earnest was born. When he was 9 days old mother received word that father was coming home from his mission on account of illness. He was very sick and his mind became affected. After much praying and seeking counsel of those in authority, mother decided it would be best to rear her children alone. The church granted her a temple divorce.
    The next 3 years of my life were very unsettled—going from one place to another. My mother worked wherever she could to provide for us children. Sometimes she walked 2 or 3 miles and washed on the board all day while we stayed with Grandmother Tuckett in Springville.
    At one time mother went up to Alpine to Uncle Alma Iverson’s Saw Mill to cook for the workers. While she was there, her sister Carrie died from consumption. She and Carrie were very close and they had helped each other so much that mother missed her a lot. Mother came down from the Saw Mill and helped care for her sister’s children until Uncle Brig married again. Then mother went back to the Saw Mill and left me with Aunt Sadie Iverson in Manilla, a little town by Pleasant Grove.

    Schooling
    It was here that I started to school. My teacher was Geo. (?) Ramsay. There is one incident I remember very distinctly. One day I was out playing and running when I fell down on the gravel walk and skinned the palms of both hands. Mr. Ramsay came out and picked me up and carried me into the schoolhouse. The children gathered around, and I remember how kindly he talked to me.
    While I was with Aunt Sadie her children got scarlet fever and so did I. I was only 7 years old, and it left me with a bad leak in my heart.
    The next winter mother lived with her parents on their homestead in Mapleton. They had lost their lovely home in Springville. They lived so far from school that I was kept out that year because of the condition my health was left in after the scarlet fever.
    I had only 8 years of schooling. When I was 14, I graduated from the 8th grade in the Mapleton School on May 8, 1908. I was planning on going to high school with some money from our peach crop. We sold our peaches, but didn’t receive the money, so I had to stay home.
    Mother knew a bachelor, Oscar N. Whiting who was several years older than herself, and the year we stayed with Grandpa and Grandma Tuckett, she became better acquainted with him. He had just built a 5-room brick house in Mapleton. He had 21 acres of ground and quite a number of livestock. They were married when I was 7 years old. Mother sold her home in Springville and bought 5 acres of land from Will Binks. This land joined Uncle Oscar’s.
    Uncle Oscar was good to us children. We had a good home and after the three years of hardship and living here and there it seemed good to feel more settled and secure. The way was smooth again, but not for long. Within 4 years mother was a widow again.
    Before Uncle Oscar died he made mother promise to marry again. She had a comfortable home and the means to support her family but due to this promise on January 6, 1910, in the Salt Lake Temple she married Edgar P. Whiting, a half brother to Uncle Oscar. He was a widower with 8 children, but one was married.
    All 3 times mother was married in the temple, but she was sealed to Uncle Oscar.
    In March of 1910 our combined family moved to Sugar City, Idaho and lived there for 2 summers and 1 winter. Then we returned to Mapleton. (crossed out was—and had to live in Uncle Eck’s small home as they had rented mother’s home and land.)
    Mother then sold all her land but 3 ½ acres and her home. Uncle Eck sold his home and they bought 640 acres in Diamond Fork (in 1913) in Spanish Fork Canyon. It was the Davis Ranch.
    Mother divided the 5 acres of land she bought from Will Binks among myself and my 2 brothers.

    Courtship and Marriage
    On the 4th of July 1912, mother and I went to Lindon to my cousin Eda Dittmore’s. While there I met her husband’s chum Joseph Morton. After 6 months of courtship we became engaged and on January 8, 1913 we were married in the Salt Lake Temple.
    My husband’s youngest brother Robert and Harriet Newell were married the same day as we were. We four went up to Salt Lake the day before we were to be married. The train was late because its engine had frozen up coming from Eureka. Our wedding day was cold and bitter. In Salt Lake the city’s water works had frozen so there was no water or lights except where there was a private water and lighting system. The New Grand Hotel had private systems so we stayed there. We paid $2.00 for our room.
    Sadie Mendenhall and her husband from Canada and her sister Retta who was my friend and schoolmate happened to be going thru the temple the day we were married. Retta’s husband while on a mission was hit and killed by a train just one year to this our wedding day and she knew of no better place to spend the day than in the temple.
    That night I was very tired. Robert and Hattie went to the show, but my husband and I went to bed.
    Before we were married we rented two rooms from Willis Johnson in Mapleton. It was just across the road from mother. We had bought a new $150 stove and some other furniture and we were ready to start housekeeping. His mother and my mother gave us some bottled fruit to start out with.
    We surely were happy. I mention this because so many years of my life were filled with troubles and sickness and the struggles of life.
    Mother gave us a wedding supper, but because of my brother Will’s sickness it had to be postponed until a week after we were married. A big crowd came. We had so many relatives from out of town and they had to stay all night as those were horse and buggy days, that we had to make beds on the floors, put some in our two rooms, and send some to Aunt Frant’s and others to the neighbors.
    My husband’s father gave him 5 acres of land before we were married, but he sold it so he would have some money to get married on, and with the rest of it we started to build a 4-room house on the land just south of mother’s that she had given me. We started to build in March and by July we had finished 2 rooms enough so we could move into them. My husband Joe did most of the work. We lived here just 2 weeks when my husband got a job harvesting for my Uncle John Tuckett in Canyon Creek, Idaho. That winter we worked for Terry’s who ran a “half-way-house”. They had a store, a hotel, and a post-office all together. I helped Sister Terry in the house and my husband helped Brother Terry with the chores.
    While in Idaho we got the fever of homesteading so we took up 160 acres, built a log room with a dirt roof and dirt floor. We broke up 16 acres, planted it in barley, fenced 80 acres, and made us a garden. We had to build a high fence around the garden to keep out the neighbor’s pigs.
    In July mother came out to get me as I was going to have a baby and she could not stand to see me so far away and out in the wilderness, so to speak.

    My children
    Our first child, Ermel Joseph Morton was born October 1, 1914. When he was two weeks old I came close to dying. They sent a telegram to my husband and he dropped everything and came. Our folks fasted and prayed for me, and I gradually grew better. In December we moved back into our own home.
    On December 16, 1919 our daughter Leora was born, and on November 19, 1923 another baby girl was born to us, but she didn’t live.
    As I was sickly when a child no one expected me to live long. They thought I would never grow to be a woman and get married. And when I married some told me they didn’t think I would be able to have children. I have had 3 children, 1 boy and 2 girls, but my last one did not live. And, oh, the prayers and the pleading I have made unto my Heavenly Father that I might have my health and children. I feel the Lord has greatly blessed m. Altho I was not permitted to keep my last child, I feel it is better to have had and lost than never to have had at all.
    My husband was gifted as an artist. He painted many pictures for the pleasure of it, but he had the farm as a means of a livelihood. We bought us a 20 ½ acre farm 1 ½ miles south of our home. We farmed, raised chickens and berries—especially dewberries. We had the largest, and for many years, the only dewberry patch in Mapleton.
    On December 10, 1927 my mother died and about 2 ½ years later my husband passed away. In the spring of 1930 he planted the crops and then he went up to Salt Lake to see the Centennial Pageant Commemorating the one hundredth anniversary of the organization of our church. On April 30th he came home and went to bed to never get up again. He died on May 12, 1930.
    At the time of his death Mapleton was putting in the city water. They had dug a trench in front of our place, but they filled it up for the day of his funeral.
    Soon after the funeral my relatives, friends, and neighbors turned out to cultivate, block and thin our beets. Jim Wiscombe and his boys dug a trench and put the water in for me. I paid for some materials and they fixed my corral fences and did several other things, but they would take nothing for their labor.
    Our boy was only 15 when his father died, but with my brother Will’s help he ran our farm until his second year of college.

    Church Activities
    While I was still going to school I was a teacher in primary, and later I was assistant secretary for several years. In mutual I was librarian. After I was married and Ermel was a few months old, I did much work in the Relief Society. I was assistant secretary and a visiting teacher. Later I was made the first counselor to Nina Harmer. This was during the time of the World War [World War I] and how well I remember all the sewing we did for the Red Cross. We planned layettes, made shirts, children’s clothing, sterilized bandages, and many other things. At this time the Relief Society introduced a new way of gathering funds for relief, and it was no easy task to convert people to it.
    I was registered in the Daughters of Utah Pioneers for 8 years. I was 2nd lieutenant for awhile. Later, I registered again until in September 1933 I moved to Provo as my son Ermel was going to the B.Y.U. He was a sophomore. During his freshman year, he batched with some boys from salt Lake City.
    Some thought I should have my son stay in Mapleton and run the farm, but his heart wasn’t in farming. In his patriarchal blessing it said he would receive a goodly education, and I wanted to help to see he had it. President Harris was very kind to us. We had to raise the $30 tuition fee for the first quarter, but after that Ermel was able to work for his tuition. During his sophomore year he worked for his and his sister’s tuition. She was attending the B.Y. High. It was a wonderful opportunity for her. Reed Smoot’s grandson was in her class as well as the children of doctors and lawyers.
    In the spring of 1936 when Ermel was ready to graduate from college, he was asked to go on a mission.

    Children:
    1. Whiting, Belva was born in 1892 in Utah, United States.
    2. 4. Hatfield, William Henry was born in Oct 1893 in Utah, United States; died on 7 Jan 1970 in Mapleton, Utah, UT; was buried on 9 Jan 1970 in Springville, Utah, Utah Evergreen Cemetery.