Thursday, February 12, 2026

 











Our friend, David R. Gunderson, has just published a book entitled “Erick and Caroline Gunderson’s Journey of Faith from Norway to Sanpete”. He has been assisted by a cousin, Betty Gunderson Woodbury. Both are contributors to our Mt. Pleasant Pioneer Blog. David has been working on this book for a long time. His research and personal knowledge of, not only the Gunderson family, but also of Mt. Pleasant history is extensive. Betty has been working on the family genealogy and collecting items of Utah family history all of her life.





With David’s permission we post January’s Pioneers of the Month: Erick and Caroline Gunderson, excerpts taken from the book.



In times of crisis, the fate of peoples and nations is often described as "hanging on a thread".  In fact the fate of our Gunderson family did hang by the threads that held a big black button on the foul weather smock that Erick was wearing during a storm on the North Sea.  During this storm, a huge wave crashed over his small fishing boat and washed him overboard.  He was able to get back to his boat, and save his life (and that of our family), because this button caught on a line or a piece of netting that was trailing out from his boat and the button's threads held.



Erick brought this button with him when he came to Utah and my Uncles Doug, Shy, and Glen recalled of playing with it when they were children.  It would be nice to have this button now but it has been lost.  But it must have looked like the one shown here.





















The families of both Erick and Caroline lived in Riser, Aust-Agder (East-Agder) Provence, Norway, which is a small fishing and resort village located about 125 miles south of Oslo. It borders the North sea and Oslofjord. Risor was known from Viking days for its strong ships and expert seamen. Like all Norse communities , it had a tradition of Viking raids on England, France and other parts of Europe. In the early 19th Century, Risor, though small, had become an important shipping center in Norway and roughly 100 sailing ships made it their home port. It was in this small community on August 27, 1830, that Erick Gunderson, a son of Gunder Ericksen and Annie Jensen, was born into the world.



At this time Norway was actually a part of Sweden, having been annexed in 1815 from Denmark at the close of the Napoleonic wars, after nearly 400 years of Danish rule. Opportunity for education above elementary school was not readily available to the people of Norway, unless they were a member of the clergy or of the aristocracy. The family had always been close-knit and must have had the means to allow the children to receive a little better than the average education and training. (At this time, Norway was still using patronymic names so Erick Gunderson’s father’s name was Gunder Ericksen) Not much is known about Erick’s growing up years, but he was a fisherman by trade and probably went to sea with every fishing expedition available to him in order to help meet the family’s needs.


















The Aurora Borealis as seen from Norway.  Erick and the other members of the family would have been familiar with these spactacular sights.








The family must have enjoyed all of the wonderful Norwegian festivals. They would have especially enjoyed the Yuletide celebration with rice pudding, and small prizes, and coins hidden in the Yule cake. They must also have looked forward to the Midsummer Festivals with all of its traditions as well.



In about 1851, when Erick was 20 or 21 years old, he went to Scotland (Glasgow) to learn the trade of shipbuilding. It is not known how long he apprenticed in Scotland, but it was probably for a period of about one year. Since English is the common language among the sailors of the North Sea, Erick must have had some command of the English language before he went to Scotland. While there, his English skills probably improved markedly. This must have aided him greatly when he came to America.









The first Mormon missionary to Norway was Elder Hans F. Petersen. He was brought to Norway by a Norwegian sea captain, Svend Larsen, of Osterrisor (Risor), who had become interested in the message of the church, while delivering a load of lumber at Aalborg, Denmark. Elder Petersen arrived on 11 September 1851 and with the help of Captain Larsen began to lay the foundation for the work on the next day. In Norway the missionaries received a mixed welcome. Some Norwegians readily accepted them and embraced the Gospel, while others tried to have them jailed or expelled.



It was to this situation that Erick returned to Norway from Scotland. Some members of his family had heeded and accepted the Gospel. Other family members were bitterly opposed. As a result, Erick withdrew from the family, decided to just ignore the Mormon problem and married his childhood sweetheart, Inger Elizabeth Evensen on 13 January 1853. Some of her family members had also accepted the missionary’s message and joined the new Church but she apparently remained indifferent.



Saddened by his lack of interest in this new religion, his younger sister, Torbor, pled with Erick and Inger to just listen to the Elders and then decide. Finally, they agreed. He and Inger soon accepted the message and were baptized on 23 April 1853. He was the 35th member and she the 36th member added to the Church rolls in Norway according to the records. His father, Gunder Ericksen; his mother, Anne Jensen; his sister, and other family members preceded them as members. His parents joined the Church 19 September 1852. The first baptisms in Norway were on 23 September 1851. (Note that Erick’s future wife, Caroline and her blind mother Maria became the 7th and 8th members of the church in Norway on 25 June 1852.)



Svend Larsen, the ship captain who brought the first missionaries to Norway was baptized 23 September 1851 in Aalborg, Denmark. He immigrated to Utah in 1854.



About one year after they joined the LDS Church, Erick and Inger were blessed with a beautiful baby girl who they named Anne Torine. She must have been a wonderful and welcome addition to their home.



Erick, along with other family members, heeded the call to gather to Zion. In mid-November 1854, Erick (age 24), Inger Elizabeth (23), their daughter, Anne Torine (nearly a year old), his father, Gunder (50), his mother, Anne (48), his sister, Torbor (18), his brother Jens (22), Jens’ wife Anne (22), Erick’s Uncle and Aunt Henrik (36) and Ingeborg (35) Erickson and their family, Erick Bertel (13), Torborg (10), John Andreas (5) and Ingeborg (6 months), departed their beloved Norway together. However, due to a problem with ships in Liverpool, Jens and his family had to cross the Atlantic on the next ship, the Charles Buck. Karen Dorthea, and her husband Niels Johannes Petersen probably stayed in Norway to settle up the estate and to care for their grandparents Erick and Torborg, who died in 1857 and 1858 respectively. The Petersons emigrated in 1863.



One cannot help but wonder how the family members felt as the familiar scene of the Risorflekken, the large white stone, that marks Risor harbor, faded into the distance for the last time, as they sailed out into the North Sea. This would be the last sight they would ever have of their beloved home town, Risor.



The first leg of this trip was from Norway to England. This passage was carried out on a 132-ton Danish paddlewheel steamship called the Cimbria. This voyage has been clearly described in the book “Saints on the Sea”. “There is no other body of water quite like the North Sea. It is often unpredictable, violent and treacherous - - and particularly so during the winter monts. Of all the North Sea passages made by Mormon emigrants, probably none was as terrifying as that of the small Danish steamer Cimbria. It left Copenhagen on 24 November 1854. Some 300 Scandinavian Saints were crowded on board when the 132-ton paddle-wheeler sailed out of the harbor. Although the sea was very rough, the Cimbria reached Fredrikshavn on the east coast of Jutland the following morning. There 149 additional emigrants from Aalborg and Vendsyssel joined the company, further crowding the 160-foot ship. (Our Gunderson family members probably crossed to Denmark to join this company of emigrants at Fredrikshaven.)







On 26 November the steamer resumed her voyage and the weather was fair until the next afternoon. Then a strong wind came up, and its rising fury forced the captain to seek haven in the nearest Norwegian port. He put into Mandal (formerly known as Vesterrisor), an excellent harbor sheltered by high and steep granite cliffs. Here the Norwegians offered the Saints accommodations on shore for several days until the wind diminished. The elders preached to some of the villagers, and several were later converted.



On 7 December the Cimbria once again put to sea, but the improved weather soon changed for the worse. Before the end of the day a violent storm struck. The waves became mountainous, and the wind shrieked through the rigging. Tons of water crashed over the bow, shattering the bulwarks and some boxes on deck. The captain once more sought safety in Mandal’s harbor, but the strong currents and winds made it too dangerous to head toward Norway. The vessel returned to Fredrikshavn, where she anchored on the ninth. During this storm the emigrants huddled below decks, suffering from the cold, the pitching of the ship, and seasickness. Once on shore again, a few of the less hardy refused to travel farther, but most of the Saints recovered their courage and even held public meetings.



It was not until 20 December that the captain felt the weather would permit setting out again for England. For a day the sea was favorable, but the following night the storm returned with the appalling savagery of a mindless beast. Great masses of water threatened to capsize the little steamer, and the twisting troughs between waves seemed designed to break her back. For hours the Cimbria battled the ferocity of the winds and the high seas, while the miserable passengers were too cold and sick and too busy holding on to their bunks, tables, or anything secure to think of much else but prayer and survival. The vessel, shuddering and quivering with each wave, tried to turn back for a third time. Then, in the afternoon of the twenty second, the wind veered to the north. The captain changed course and continued on to Hull. On 24 December the battered steamer with her exhausted crew and thankful passengers anchored in the River Humber. The following day-Christmas-the Scandinavian Saints traveled by rail from Hull to Liverpool, where most boarded the Yankee square rigger James Nesmith bound for New Orleans.”



The Cimbria passengers arrived a day or two too late for the ship they had been scheduled to use, and the Church Immigration Agency hurriedly located the ship James Nesmith. It was quickly equipped for passengers and on 7 January 1855, with 440 Scandinavian Saints, and one English Saint, it sailed for America. (The ship being too small for the whole company, 24 people were left to come later. Jens and his family were probably among these.) The company leader of the Saints on board both the Cimbria and the James Nesmith was Peter O. Hansen, a returning missionary. The voyage began with the ship being towed out of the Liverpool harbor down the river Mersey, past the light house and into the open sea where the sails were unfurled and a course was set for the new world.



During the winter, the prevailing winds in the North Atlantic are westerlies, and emigrant ships had to tack (sail into the wind) for most of their crossings. This results in a fairly rough and long voyage. However, crossing the Atlantic in the winter made it possible to cross the plains in the summer and this was crucial.



Many of the Mormon emigrant ships had wonderful choirs which performed during the dedication and prayer for safe journey services which were always held at the outset of each emigration voyage. One of the great gathering hymns, “Ye Elders of Israel” with its inspiring message, “O Babylon O Babylon we bid thee farewell, we’re going to the mountains of Ephraim to dwell” was one of the favorites. Both the emigrants and many of the ships officers and seamen took courage from these dedication ceremonies and the continued prayers for safe voyage. Over the 30 years of emigration by sail only one vessel, in 176 was lost.













After a 47 day passage, the James Nesmith arrived in New Orleans on 23 February 1855. The passenger list that was presented to the New Orleans Customs Office shows that the family had all arrived safely, except for Anne Torine who had died on 20 January.



The 1850s travel on the rivers was fraught with many dangers. Among these were diseases, especially cholera, exploitation by unscrupulous gamblers and boat personnel, running aground or being caught on a snag, sinking, falling overboard and being ignored, thievery, etc. However, until 1856, when the railheads were extended to Iowa, it was the best means of transportation available. The Charles Buck, on which Erick’s brother, Jens traveled, was the last Mormon emigrant ship to land at New Orleans. It departed from Liverpool on 17 January and arrived at New Orleans on March 14, 1855, after a 53 day passage.



Within a day or two after their arrival the Gunderson/Ericksen family began their voyage up river. Two steamboats, the Moses Greenwood and the Oceana, carried James Nesmith travelers to St. Louis, where they arrived March 7. Those who could not immediately afford passage to Salt Lake City took the steamboat Polar Star to Weston, where they sought employment.



On March 12, 1855, about 175 of the Mormon emigrants from the ship James Nesmith resumed their passage from St. Louis to Atchison, Kansas aboard the steamboat Clara. It was a trip bedeviled by delay and disease. At Leavenworth low water compelled the steamer to lay up for a time during which another Mormon company arrived. There twenty Saints died of cholera and on the way to Atchison nine more deaths were recorded. This 351 ton sidewheeler was skippered and partly owned by Joshua Cheever. A year later the Clara was sunk by ice at St. Louis.









On 25 March 1855 while the family was at Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas, Erick’s younger sister Tobor Kristine (18) married Simon Fredrick Halversen (26) from Brekke Osnoy Ostfold, Norway.



Erick’s parents, and his Aunt and Uncle, Henrik and Ingeborg Ericksen, and the rest of their family members that came on the James Nesmith, reached Mormon Grove at Atchison, Kansas in early June. There they began preparations to cross the plains and with the exception of Erick and his family, they continued west with the Secrist-Guyman Wagon Company which left from Mormon Grove on 13 June and entered the Salt Lake Valley on 7 September 1855 after a 57 day crossing. They settled in Spanish Fork and prepared for the arrival of the rest of the family.



Erick remained in Mormon Grove at Atchison, Kansas until 1856. Family records say that Inger, who was pregnant, contracted cholera. The baby, a boy who they called Earl Even, was born on 25 October and soon passed away. Inger died two days later and they were both buried at Mormon Grove. The rest of the family had left in June and it was too late for Erick to find and join a company and follow his family to Utah in 1855, so he worked to prepare to go on to Utah during the next immigration season. In 1856 he arrived in Utah during the week of the 16th of September 1856, after an 81-88 day crossing and joined the family in Spanish Fork.



A Wife for Erick Comes from Norway



Erick left Norway in late 1854 with his parents, his sisters, a brother-in-law and a small child and other family members. In 1857, two years later he was a single widower in Utah probably living with his parents. How lonely he must have been. However, things were about to get better.



As the Gundersons and other families, one by one left Risor to go to Zion, another member of the Risor Branch of the Church, Caroline Johnson, longed to go to Zion also, but she just couldn’t leave her widowed and blind mother alone in Norway. Recognizing the strong desire of her daughter to join the Saints in Zion, Maria encouraged her to go. However, Caroline always replied that she could never leave her mother alone in Norway. Finally, Maria said, “If you won’t go without me, I will have to go with you.” When Caroline asked how they could do that her mother said that “they would just face the problems, one at a time. “ In the spring of 1857, they did just that.



Maria (age 54) and Caroline (age 22) departed Norway on Saturday, 11 April 1857, with a group of saints from Christiania (Oslo), Norway and sailed to Copenhagen aboard the Norwegian steamship Viken. In a calm sea, the vessel arrived at the Danish port the following day. After a five-day delay this company-about 540 emigrants under the direction of Hector C. Haight, President of the Scandinavian Mission, boarded the Danish screw steamer L.N. Hvidt and traveled to Grimsby (just south of Hull). From that English port they traveled by train to Liverpool. Soon after they arrived in Liverpool, they boarded the ship Westmoreland.



The Westmoreland left Liverpool on Saturday, 25 April 1857 and arrived at Philiadelphia, Pa on Pentecost Sunday, Sunday, 31 May 1857 after a 36 day passage. The emigrants then boarded the train to go to the trail head in Iowa City, passing through Baltimore and Wheeling along the way.



At Iowa City, they joined the Seventh Handcart or Christian Christiansen Handcart Company which departed on 12 June and, traveling over the Mormon Trail, arrived in the Valley on Sunday, 13 Sep 1857.



One of the other passengers on the Westmoreland was C.C.A. Christensen who was a convert to the LDS faith in Denmark and had served a mission in both Denmark and Norway. Before his mission, he had studied painting and illustration in Copenhagen for several years. It is interesting to note that he lived for a time in Mt. Pleasant and took an active roll in the early developments of that community.



The Arrival of the Christiansen Handcart Company in the Sale Lake Valley



“Along the way lay the skeletons of worn out oxen, but these heroes and heroines endured …With their lips half eaten up by saleratus dust, and clothed in rags, with almost bottomless shoes on their feet, yet they greeted with songs of delight the rising sun which let them see Salt Lake City for the first time.”



“What changes have taken place since that time in less than one week our emigrants are now brought here from the Atlantic coast, where they disembark after a few days pleasant ocean voyage by steamship, while we in those days were tumbled about by sailing ships for several weeks , uncertain of the time when we could expect to see the promised land. And then the journey by land over the great, empty plains and high mountains on foot, poorly supplied with food and clothing- in short, subjected to almost every deprivation that people could bear and endure, and that for all of thirteen weeks.” (taken from Nebraska History p. 344 “By Handcart to Utah, the Account of C.C.A Christensen, translated by Richard L. Jensen)



Caroline and Erick Meet, for the second Time, and Start Life Together



On his arrival in Utah on 16 September 1856, Erick joined his parents in Spanish Fork and began to work to further establish the family in Utah. He probably worked as a carpenter and also at farming, but nothing else is known about this first year in Utah, except that we guess he was very lonely.



Caroline and her mother arrived in Utah on 13 September 1857, about one year after Erick’s arrival. As noted, they had traveled in the Christiansen Handcart Company which crossed the plains together with the Cowley Ox Cart Company in which Erick’s brother Jens Gunderson traveled. While crossing the plains, Jens and his family surely would have become acquainted with their Norwegian friends. Caroline and her mother, Maria that they had probably known for many years, maybe even from childhood, and associated with the Osterrisor Branch of the LDS Church in Norway.



Since they were friends from “home” and had crossed the plains together, it would only be natural for Jens and his family to invite Caroline and her mother to join them in Spanish Fork. Communication between family members in Utah and family members in the Midwest may have been difficult in those days, but some information must have been exchanged, if only by word of mouth. In any case it is likely that Jens knew or was able to find out where the rest of the Gunderson family was located.



How happy the Gundersons in Spanish Fork must have been to have Jens and his family safely in Utah, and to greet friends from “home”, and to get all the latest news about their friends and family back in Norway. They all must have had a wonderful reunion.



Quickly, Caroline and Erick became interested in each other and on Monday, 12 October 1857, only about four weeks after Caroline’s arrival; they were married (sealed) by none other than President Brigham Young in the President’s Office in Salt Lake City at 12:30 p.m. They were late endowed in the Salt Lake Endowment House on 22 November 1861 with B. Young, W. Woodruff, and S.L. Sprague officiating.



Imagine finding a partner from “home” in far off Utah. One that spoke your native tongue, and who remembered the Risorflekken, the midsummer festivals, the picturesque Risor Harbor, the beautiful church by the sea. One who loved all the special Norwegian foods and songs, one who knew all the old friends from “home”, and one who remembered all the other special things that you remembered from your past. Then you will know how blessed Erick and Caroline must have felt to have found each other.



On 6 September 1858, Erick and Caroline had a daughter who they named Lurine Elizabeth Gunderson. She was born in Spanish Fork and died on 28 December 1861 in Mt. Pleasant.













Erick and Caroline Gunderson Relocate to Mt. Pleasant



Considering many factors, we believe that Erick came to Mt. Pleasant in the spring of 1859. It is likely that Caroline came a bit later after the birth of her second daughter, Maria Elizabeth, which occurred on 17 Feb 1860. Therefore, Erick would have been in Mt. Pleasant to assist in building the first and second forts, to divide up the land, and to clear it for planting. They would also have participated in the defenses mounted during the Black Hawk War, probably joined the United Order and played a major role in the erection of the first Mormon Church in Mt. Pleasant. They would have participated in the building of the first plants and mills and obtaining new farm equipment.



Being a carpenter by trade, his services were greatly in demand as he helped build many of the early and later homes, churches and school houses in Central Utah. He worked on every temple that was erected in Utah during his lifetime as well as the Salt Lake Tabernacle, and for the most part, he volunteered his services.















Monday, February 9, 2026

TIDWELL FAMILY

We have many Tidwells amongst us.  I found this article on Family Search dating back to 1635. 




 Westmoreland, Colony of Virginia

     The first known Tidwell in America was Richard Tidwell, the son of Robert and Marie Marsh Tidwell, born about 1635, from Staffordshire, England. The name of Tidwell is found in County Devon, England and is spelled Tidswell, Tidwell, Todwell, Tydswell, and Tyddeswell.  Richard came to Westmoreland County, Virginia as an indentured servant in 1657, between the ages of 14-21. He was indentured to a man by the name of Richard Nelms or Helms. Richard Nelms patented his land 25 November 25 1662, and renewed it 29 January 1663. In 18 March 1663, he granted Richard Tidwell and a Robert Jeffries, 350 acres of prime land on the Yeocomico River.  In about 1670, Robert sold his share of the land to Richard. The town of Kinsale now stands on the land once owned by Richard and his family. Also nearby, is the small town of Tidwells. 

     Land Records for Richard Tidwell and Robert Jefferies March 18, 1663: “Northumblerland Co. Records, 1652-1658, page 75: These are to certify that according to sufficient proofs made befoe this court there is due to Richard Nelmes 200 acres of land for Transportation of 4 persons into this colony (viz.t) Richard Langdell, Jno Philpott, Richard Tidewell, Alice Meredith - 21 November 1657. Richard Nelms patented the land which the town stands on November 25th, 1662. He sold to Riochard Tidwell and Robert Jefferies March 18th 1683. By an act of the Assembly in Oct. 1705 the town was founded (See Henning) on the land of Richard Tidwell, Tidwell and Jefferies had previously divided the land, Jefferies taking the part south of the road about as it now runs.”

     While living in Westmoreland, Richard met and married Ann Barnett, daughter of Peter and Maria Marsh Barnett, who was born 1 January 1650, in Westmoreland. The couple was married 9 May 1674, in Cople Parish, Westmoreland and had six known children born there: the 1st child, a daughter Martha 1 January 1675; the 2nd child, a son Richard 1 January 1679; the 3rd child, a daughter Ann 1 January 1683; the 4th child, a son John 1685; the 5th child, a son Peter 1688; and the 6th child, a son John 1 January 1690. Early Virginia records show that their sons were men of honor and trust, holding high office in social and religious affairs of the Colony, but no record exist for any family member holding a public office in the Colony.


Yeocomico Episcopal Church

     There’s a historic church with a churchyard cemetery in the original Cople parish and town of Kinsale, Westmoreland, Virginia called Yeocomico Episcopal Church, originally built in 1655. It was rebuilt in 1706, with locally fired bricks. As to the religion, this family adhered for many generations to the Church of England and the old Virginia records show that they were of the Episcopal Church. It’s likely that this building is the where the family attended church services. 

     In a Virginia Historical Magazine Mrs. McCall writes:“all three brothers all settled on the Potomac River in Westmoreland County, Virginia in about 1683, and the town of Yeocomico was establish on the lands of Richard Tidwell in 1705. She also writes that Richard’s son John Tidwell, “lived his life as a quiet planter, owning many acres of land, and was a wealthy and influential man. He resided on the Potomac River and belonged to the Church of England. His name and the names of his two sons, Robert and John, were on the Parish Register of the Yeocomico Church. The records also show that they were strong adherents of the King of England.”

     With a land ownership of over 350 acres, Richard Tidwell was a wealthy, Virginia plantation owner.  His children were raised learning the tobacco industry and married local families. The early Virginian’s grew Orinoco tobacco and the entire economy was based on it. Debts and taxes were charged in pounds of tobacco.  In the winter his farm would have grown wheat and rye as a secondary cash crop. The wheat and rye was sown in September, after most of the other crops are harvested. 

     The family’s diet was supplemented with cured pork and fish from the nearby Yeocomico River and vegetables from the kitchen garden. Corn was a primary food staple, planted in the spring, with squash and melons planted around the basse of the stalks. The kitchen garden was tended to by the women and daughters where beans, cabbages, onions, parsnips, peas, radishes, beets, carrots, cucumbers, okra and potatoes were grown. The family also had an herb garden for growing thyme, chives, sage and rosemary along with herbs like comfrey, elecampane, garlic, pennyroyal grown for family’s “medicine cabinet.”  Apple trees were grown for cider to drink year round and to make cider vinegar for pickling. The family would also eat fried apples, dumplings and fritters. 

     Richard Tidewell was mentioned for the last time, about 12 years before his death, in a Fauquier County, Virginia Deed Book 7, page 308, 17 October 1780. Richard and Ann lived their entire lives in Westmoreland, Virginia where they both died in Cople Parish: first Richard 25 May 1692 and four years later Ann in January 1696.  It’s probable that they were buried on their plantation in a Tidwell Family Cemetery or in the church yard cemetery of the local Yeocomico Episcopal Church. 

     By 1790, the name of Tidwell was extinct in Virginia and the name does not appear in the 1782 or 1783 Census. After the Revolutionary War, the continental government was economically destitute and in debt. At first money was printed, but as the economy depreciated the states were pressured to force people to accept an exchange for goods and services in payment for debts. Many original, wealthy land owners lost or sold what was left of their property. The Tidwell family drifted apart and established separate families in South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, and the Mississippi Territory.  


History of Westmoreland County, Virginia Land Deed Records, Eaton's Historical Atlas of Westmoreland County, page 73 for map of Richard Nelms, Founders of Early American Families-Emigrants from Europe 1607-1657, copyright 1985; McCall-Tidwell, 1931; Effie’s book-Virginia Genealogist, 17-3; Historical Accounts of 1700’s Plantations; Wikipedia for Kinsale City and  Yeocomico Episcopal Church; Ancestry and Family Search 


Compiled by Diane Buck Dalton-April 2017, 7th great granddaughter

Saturday, February 7, 2026

TESTIMONY OF THE THREE WITNESSES ~~~ OLIVER COWDERY, DAVID WHITMER, MARTIN HARRIS

This information is taken from "The Birth of Mormonism in Picture".

               Owned and Published by The Deseret Sunday School Union

     Salt Lake City, Utah 


 

Friday, February 6, 2026

SONIA KAY ROBERTSON

 

Sonia Kaye Robertson

January 12, 1938 — January 27, 2026

Moroni

Listen to Obituary

Sonia Kaye Robertson, our beloved mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, sister, aunt and friend was peacefully called to return home to her Father in Heaven on January 27, 2026 at the age of 88. Sonia, we will miss you dearly, but we know that through our Savior Jesus Christ we will be reunited with you again!

Funeral services for Sonia will be held Saturday, February 7, 2026, 11:00 a.m. at the Fountain Green 3rd Ward Chapel, 151 S. 200 W., Fountain Green, Utah, where friends and family may call from 9:00-10:30 a.m. Graveside services and interment will follow at the Fountain Green, Utah Cemetery under the care of Rasmussen Mortuary.

Sonia was born on January 12, 1938 in Fountain Green, Utah, the third of eight children born to Scott Cook and Euleda Bailey Cook. Sonia was taught the Gospel of Jesus Christ in a loving home by wonderful parents who loved their children and lived the principles of the Gospel. Sonia loved her parents and siblings and their families so much and cherished her relationships with them.

Sonia married Duane Floyd Taylor on January 10, 1958 in the Manti LDS Temple; later divorced. Sonia and Duane are the parents of three children: Brent (Linda) Taylor and Debra (Roger) Bailey and Katherine Ann Taylor; 10 grandchildren, Nicole (Brook) Rogers, Ashley (Mark) Parrish, Julia Jacobson, Tiffany (Collin) Christensen, Emily (Joey) Raymond and Shawn (Sidney) Taylor, Brandon (Elise) Bailey, Kevin (Tosha) Bailey, Mary Kaye Bailey, and Stephanie Bailey; and 27 great-grandchildren.

Sonia later married Carroll Bert Robertson on January 27, 1968; later divorced. They are the parents of three daughters, Michelle Robertson, Susan (Dan) Flint, and Dianne (Christopher) Shoff; the grandparents of 11 grandchildren, Kari, Bailey, Braiden, Bryson, Brenn, and Boen Flint; and Hayes (Savanna), Tyler, Scott, Caroline and Gemma Shoff.

Sonia’s passions included music, dancing and reading. She loved listening to music and also encouraging others to sing. Her favorite Church calling, which she had numerous times, was that of chorister leading the music for the congregation. Sonia was dancing throughout her life from her earliest years as a little girl until her final days. Sonia loved to read and learn, a love which was also passed down to her children. She enjoyed discussing what she had learned with others and was an amazing conversationalist, able to strike up a friendly discussion with anyone, whether family, friend or stranger.

Sonia’s greatest love was for her children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren and she treasured spending time together with them, attending their activities and sporting events and eating together.

Sonia’s life was not easy and she endured many challenges, including the death of her infant daughter Katherine Ann, two divorces, raising a family as a single mother, and battling and beating Leukemia. Throughout these trials, Sonia was a devout member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints her entire life. Sonia deeply loved her family and her Savior Jesus Christ, and she was assertive and courageous in proclaiming her love for her family and sharing her testimony of the Gospel of Jesus Christ in almost any setting she found herself in.

Sonia is survived by her son Brent (Linda) Taylor; daughters Debra (Roger) Bailey, Michelle Robertson, Susan Flint and Dianne (Christopher) Shoff; brothers Frank (Beryl) Cook, Louis (Judy) Cook, Paul (Gaye) Cook and Lynn (Nora) Cook; sister Beatrice (Tom) Dyches; 18 grandchildren and 27 great-grandchildren.

Sonia was preceded in death by her daughter Katherine Ann Taylor; parents, Scott and Euleda Cook; sisters Carolyn (Clyde) Garrett, and Doris (Bob) Nielson; sister-in-law Dorothy Cook; son-in-law Dan Flint; and granddaughters Mary Kaye Bailey, Stephanie Bailey and Kari Flint.

Sonia's family wishes to thank the caring, competent health care professionals who assisted her so compassionately for the past several years at Laurel Groves in Nephi and Welcome Home Assisted Living of American Fork.

To Watch Funeral Services Live, Click Here. The Live Zoom Link will activate at 10:45 a.m. MST prior to services. 

To order memorial trees or send flowers to the family in memory of Sonia Kaye Robertson, please visit our flower sto

HOME OF HENRY FOWLES AND WIFE EMMA SORENSEN


 

Sunday, February 1, 2026

FERDINAND ERICKSEN AND CLEMENTINA MARION MORRISON ERICKSEN ~~~~PIONEERS OF THE MONTH ~~~FEBRUARY 2026

 








Ferdinand Ericksen, son of Lars and  Stena, was born in Mt.  Pleasant, September 30, 1863.  He attended the district schools and took a two year course at B.Y. Academy at Provo.

He taught school for four years in Mt. Pleasant and then entered the Ann Arbor Law College, studying one year.  He was admitted to the bar of Michigan, June 5, 1890 and opened an office in Mt. Pleasant.


He was elected County Prosecuting Attorney in August, 1890 and County Collector in 1892.  In 1897 he was elected mayorl.  He was cashier of the Mt. Pleasant Bank from January 1893 to July 1895, and was a member of the board of directors.  He also had an interest in the Ericksen Meat and Grocery Company.


In 1894, he was elected Major of the National Guard of Utah, and in 1896 was appointed Judge Advocate, with the rank of Major, on Brigadier-General Willard Young's staff.  He was appointed a school trustee in 1896, to fill a vacancy, and in 1897 was elected to that position.


"In 1898, during the time Ferdinand Ericksen was mayor of the city, the city purchased the north brick schoolhouse, (the now mortuary) corner First North and First West, and in due time, after remodeling it, placing in a heating plant, vaults and cells, suitable furniture, etc.,it became an up-to-date and creditable city hall, and was the first real home the Mt. Pleasant city council had ever known.

The north Public Square was cleared of the brush and burrs, and trees and grass were planted for a city park".  from Mt. Pleasant History pp 179-180 by Hilda Madsen Longsdorf





































Picture taken at the dedication of the Mt. Pleasant Pioneer Monument








Bon Accorde Cottage  Where Clementina Grew Up