Showing posts with label Sarah Shannon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah Shannon. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Leavitts Migrate To The United States

Finally, with their preparations complete, the Leavitt family left Hatley on July 20, 1837. Juanita Brooks reports that the train of seven wagons pulled out in good order; all agreed that they might not stay together long. This was really a tremendously difficult undertaking. The trip would take them from Quebec, Canada, through the states of Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and then to Twelve Mile Grove, Illinois. A distance of about 650 miles to Kirtland, Ohio, and an additional 350 miles to Twelve-Mile Grove. They determined that each would manage as best they could and strive to gather as a family at their final destination.



The first wagon included Rebecca Leavitt and her husband, Frank Chamberlain, and their family. Mother Sarah Shannon Leavitt rode in this wagon because it was the best outfit on the road. The second held Betsey Leavitt and her husband, James Adams, and their children. The third wagon contained Hannah Leavitt and her husband, Horace Fish, and their family. The fourth belonged to John Leavitt and his wife, Lucy Rowell, and their family. The fifth wagon included Nathaniel Leavitt and his wife, Deborah Delano, and their family. The sixth wagon had Jeremiah II and his wife, Sarah Sturtevant, and their family. The seventh wagon belonged to Weare Leavitt and his family. Weare was the eldest son in the Sarah Shannon Leavitt family. He was now fifty-two years old. Weare's family consisted of his three older children from his first marriage, Jeremiah now twenty one, Charlotte now nineteen, and Anna almost seventeen. (Anna's situation at this time is not clearly known. She was reported to have married Nathan Rowell. She was not identified as accompanying her parents.) Weare's second wife, Phoebe Cowles, now forty one, and their four living children, Charles, now eleven, George, now eight, Emeline, now five, and two-year old Louisa were included in Weare's wagon. In all the wagon train included about fifty Leavitt family members.


The Leavitt Family traveled together during this first leg of their journey and arrived in Kirtland, Ohio, probably in August or early September, 1837. Sarah Sturtevant Leavitt reports that she had had no opportunity to be baptized as yet. She and her husband, Jeremiah II, and their family were baptized while the family was at Kirtland. One of their children's baptismal date was reported to have occurred on August 22, 1837. There may have been others in the Leavitt family who were also baptized at this time.


Sarah Sturtevant Leavitt reports that they stayed in Kirtland only about a week and heard the Prophet Joseph Smith speak in the Kirtland Temple. This unique temple is still standing and was constructed in response to a command f rom God. It was constructed by members of the church at great sacrifice and represents their overwhelming testimonies and faith in the Prophet Joseph Smith and the restored gospel. This temple was the scene of an overwhelming outpouring of spiritual events during its construction and particularly during its dedication on March 27, 1836. Hundreds reported that they heard the voices of heavenly hosts, and angels appeared to many. The temple seemed to shine throughout the night in a marvelous manifestation of Heavenly Father's spirit. The Prophet Joseph Smith received a number of key revelations in this temple including heavenly visits f rom Jesus Christ, Moses, Elias and Elijah. The family's visit to this temple eighteen months after its dedication must have been very impressive.
 
Sarah also reports that the family was allowed to visit the upper rooms in the temple and saw the Egyptian mummies and the scrolls that were translated by the Prophet Joseph Smith into the Book of Abraham. Weare's oldest daughter, Charlotte, also reports that her family gathered with the saints at Kirtland, Ohio. Betsey Leavitt Adams' daughter, Sallie, reports that during their stay in Kirtland they visited with the mother of the Prophet Joseph Smith. She indicates that it was then perilous times for Joseph and his people and that he was in hiding. However, while they were there, he appeared and preached to the assembled saints on Sunday.


At this time in Kirtland, members of the church were under tremendous persecution and much of it was directed at the Prophet Joseph Smith. He was being hounded by mobs and finally had to leave Kirtland for his own safety. He left in January 1838 for Mormon communities in western Missouri. Charlotte also reports that the persecutions of the saints in Kirtland had become unbearable so the Leavitt family left and went into the eastern part of Illinois. This would seem to indicate that their desire was to remain in Kirtland but persecutions against members of the church changed their minds. By 1840, in response to this persecution most faithful members of the church left Kirtland to join other Mormon communities in the west.


As the Leavitt family left Kirtland, circumstances demanded that they separate in order to care for their individual needs. Sarah Sturtevant Leavitt reports that her family's resources were all spent and they had to settle about ten miles from Kirtland for about a year while most of the family continued on to Twelve-Mile Grove. Nathaniel Leavitt and his family stopped near Lake Michigan in St. Joseph County, Indiana. Unfortunately, Nathaniel grew ill and died while there, and his wife and younger children returned to Canada. Nathaniel's three older children from his first marriage had also become ill and were left in the care of neighbors. These older children were eventually reunited with the family when Jeremiah II and his family continued their westward trek in 1838. Weare and Phoebeand their children, along with the rest of the Leavitt families continued their westward trek and arrived at Twelve-Mile Grove in the fall of 1837. This stop was evidently intended be temporary on their journey to join with the community of other members of the church.


Since 1831, the Prophet Joseph Smith had designated Independence, Missouri, as a gathering place for members of the church. Missouri and the border town of Independence was on the edge of the western frontier of the United States. As Mormon communities in Missouri began to grow and flourish, troubles erupted between old settlers and the emigrating Mormons. There were many reasons for this conflict, but they centered around economic, political, and religious differences. By 1834, Mormon families living near Independence were driven from their homes by mobs. They eventually settled in the sparsely inhabited neighboring countiesof Caldwell and Daviess. Their main headquarters was established in Far West, Caldwell County, Missouri. Far West and the surrounding area became a major gathering place for Mormons during the mid-1830s. As many as 10,000 members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints eventually settled in this and surrounding areas. The Leavitt families were probably heading for this gathering place as well.
Unfortunately, by 1837/38, the Mormons in and around Far West were under tremendous persecution by mobs intent on driving them out of the state. In October, 1838, false accusation by members of the mob to Missouri's Governor Boggs instigated his infamous order that the Mormons "Be driven from the state or face extermination." By the fall of 1839, members of the church in these Mormon communities were driven from Missouri. Most fled to Illinois where they valiantly established their next gathering place at Nauvoo, Illinois.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Jeremiah Leavitt 1796-1846

Jeremiah Leavitt was born 

30 May 1796 in Exeter, Rockingham, 

New Hampshire



Parents





Jeremiah married Sarah Sturdevant 

in 1648 in Hampton, Rockingham, 

New Hampshire








Jeremiah and Sarah's Children


Mary Ann Leavitt
B: 13 Feb 1818
D: 13 Feb 1818 
(Hatley, Stanstead, Quebec, Canada)


Clarissa Leavitt
B: Jan 1819
M: Horance Sturdevant
D: 29 Mar 1891


Louisa Leavitt
B: 20 Jan 1820
M: William Ellis Jones
D: 29 Mar 1855


Jeremiah Leavitt
B: 10 Feb 1822
M: Eliza Harrover
D: 12 Apr 1878




Lydia Leavitt
B: 4 Jul 1823
M: William Snow
D: 9 Jan 1847




Weare Leavitt
B: 1825
M: Lydia Savage
D: Aug 1847




Lemuel Sturdevant Leavitt
B: 3 Nov 1827
M: Mary Ann Morgan
D: 13 Oct 1916




Dudley Leavitt
B: 29 Aug 1830
M: Thirza Hale Riding
D: 15 Oct 1908




Mary Amelia Leavitt
B: 10 Feb 1832
M: William Haynes Hamblin
D: 12 Aug 1893




Thomas Rowell Leavitt
B: 30 Jun 1834
M: Antoinette Devenport
M: Ann Eliza Jenkins
D: 21 May 1891




Betsey Jane Leavitt
B: 12 May 1839
M: William Haynes Hamblin
D: 16 Oct 1917




Sarah Priscilla Leavitt
B: 8 May 1841
M: Jacob Vernon Hamblin
D: 23 Jul 1927

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Jeremiah Leavitt 1760-1846

Jeremiah Leavitt was born 

10 Jul 1760 in Exeter, Rockingham, 

New Hampshire


Parents 





Jeremiah married 

Sarah Shannon about 1768






Jeremiah and Sarah's Children



Weare Leavitt
B:1785
M: Abigail Cowles
D: 3 Mar 1839
 Twelve Mile Grove, Adams, Illinois
 



Nathanial Leavitt
B:  1790
M: Betsy Bean
D: 1838
Sturgess, Prarie, Michigan, USA
 



Josiah Leavitt
B: 1792
D: 1838
Sturgess, Prarie, Michigan, USA
 


Lydia Leavitt
B: 1794
M: Thomas Rowell Jr.
D: 4 Aug 1846
Lawrence, St Lawrence, New York, United States



Sally (Sarah) Leavitt
B: 10 Aug 1795
M: William Rowell
M: Mr. Sturdevant
D: 4 Sep 1873
Hatley, Stanstead, Quebec, Canada



Jeremiah Leavitt
B: 30 May 1796
M: Sarah Studevant
D: 4 Aug 1846
Bonaparte, Van Buren, Iowa, USA




John Leavitt
B: 27 Jul 1798
M: Lucy Rowell
D: 17 Feb 1852
Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire, USA





Rebecca Leavitt
B: 27 Sep 1802
M: Franklain Chamberlain
D: 27 Feb 1892
Illinois



Betsey Leavitt
B: 23 Nov 1804
M: James Adams
D: Dec 1847
Council Bluffs, Pottawattamie, Iowa, USA




Hannah Leavitt
B: 26 Dec 1805
M: Horace Fish
D: 5 Nov 1876
Parowan, Iron, Utah, USA

Sarah Shannon 1765-1840

Sarah Shannon was born 1765

 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hamshire


Parents 


Mother: Anne Rand



Sarah married Jeremiah Leavitt about 1768









Jeremiah and Sarah's Children



Weare Leavitt
B:1785
M: Abigail Cowles
D: 3 Mar 1839
 Twelve Mile Grove, Adams, Illinois
 



Nathanial Leavitt
B:  1790
M: Betsy Bean
D: 1838
Sturgess, Prarie, Michigan, USA
 



Josiah Leavitt
B: 1792
D: 1838
Sturgess, Prarie, Michigan, USA
 



Lydia Leavitt
B: 1794
M: Thomas Rowell Jr.
D: 4 Aug 1846
Lawrence, St Lawrence, New York, United States

Saturday, July 10, 2010

Jeremiah Leavitt I and Sarah Shannon - Tribute by Faye Leavitt

September 12, 2000

As we begin this historic ancestral journey into the past, we have gathered this beautiful morning of September 12, 2000, at the Old North Cemetery in Hatley, Quebec, Canada, to dedicate a memorial in remem-brance of Jeremiah Leavitt and his wife, Sarah Shannon.

It’s a privilege for me to represent their descendants-both those descending by blood and by marriage- in paying tribute to them and I do so with a humble heart.   

Jeremiah was born July 10, 1760 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire, to Nathaniel and Lydia Sanborn Leavitt.  At the young age of 19, Jeremiah, as well as many of his kin, exhibited their patriotism as they served their country in the Revolutionary War. 

Records relate that in 1785,  at age 24, Jeremiah married Sarah Shannon, age 18, daughter of Thomas Shannon and Anne Rand.  According to researchers, both Jeremiah and Sarah’s lines can be traced back to Royalty.  The Revolutionary War had just ended and the spirit of new beginning was abundant.  Being apparently blessed with a sense of adventure,  and courage to blaze new trails, Jeremiah and Sarah began looking Northward in the late 1780's toward Hatley, Quebec, Canada. 
These two were pioneers in every sense of the word.  They must have struggled making the decision to leave so many of their family, as both their roots ran deep in the New England area.

This was barely-charted territory at the time they traversed the granite mountains and the deep woods.  The rich farmland that Jeremiah invested in would have to be cleared and plowed for the first time.

By 1805, they had ten children, ranging from an infant to age 15.  Hardships were inherent in colonizing a wilderness, and were they here they could  relate to us many tales of pioneering as they struggled to carve out an existence here in this land.

They undoubtedly rejoiced when Jeremiah’s younger brother Jonathan, wife Rebecca and children joined them in Quebec sometime prior to 1814. 

In the year 1817,as things began to prosper for the Leavitt family-Jeremiah died  at age 57.  Sarah was 51.   For the next 20 years, the large family remained close and continued to build their lives in Hatley and Compton. 

History of events in the family of Jeremiah and Sarah tells us that faith in God mattered much more than economic security.  After learning about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and after subsequent reading, studying, and discussing the Book of Mormon that had been left with one of the Leavitt girls by a missionary, most of the family acknowledged it as truth.  Urged on by their faith, in 1837, close to 60 of the family left Hatley to begin the long 800 mile journey westward to Kirtland, Ohio to gather with the Saints and be baptized.

This departure meant leaving their farms, their homes, neighbors, friends and families.  In Anne Leavitt’s words, “Perhaps on Sarah Shannon’s last day she made one final visit to this cemetery on the hill behind the Old North Church.  It had been Jeremiah’s resting place for 20 years.  She was now 71.  She had stood as matriarch of this family and would until 1840 when the rigors of the pilgrimage finally overcame her, and the prairie of Twelve Mile Grove, Illinois would become HER resting place.  In addition to Sarah, 1 daughter, her 5 sons, and many of their wives and children died before they reached their destination in the west.

The posterity of Jeremiah and Sarah, possessing the same unfaltering courage, helped to colonize much of the great American West and added strength to the building up of Zion.

 Jeremiah and Sarah are much more than names on a Pedigree Chart.  Behind their names lies a lifetime of experiences.  The scant knowledge we have of their lives doesn’t begin to chronicle their many trials and sacrifices, their joys and their sorrows, but we do know they raised a stalwart and close-knit family that has endured generations.  Their valuable contributions to our country, to the Leavitt family, and to society as a whole are beyond measure.  They laid the foundation for those who are assembled here today, as well as countless others.
    
As they were, we too, can be catalysts... to unify the present day Leavitt family.  We are the link between the past and the present.  We cherish the legacy they have left, revere them for the unfailing beacon they set forth for their descendants.  They smoothed the bumps and cleared the way.
 We ponder the choices Jeremiah and Sarah made, choices whose influence has spanned the generations.  They will never be forgotten-these grandparents- who clung fiercely to their dreams.  Their faith has been handed down from generation to generation, to the next and the next.   We are part of their eternal chain.

A part of the Mission Statement of the Western Association of Leavitt Families reads, quote: “to honor our dead and strengthen the sense of heritage”. End quote
We, who share the Leavitt heritage,  have been given much to live up to.  Preserving and sharing the legacy they have left for us is one way we can honor them.  Upon our shoulders rests the responsibility to keep the Leavitt name honorable, and seek out and gather in the far-flung descendants of Jeremiah and Sarah.

  It’s my prayer, we will carry on and not become weary in fulfilling this responsibility.
This tribute I leave with you in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

Jeremiah Leavitt I (1760-1817) and Sarah Shanon - Tribute by Faye Leavitt

September 12, 2000

As we begin this historic ancestral journey into the past, we have gathered this beautiful morning of September 12, 2000, at the Old North Cemetery in Hatley, Quebec, Canada, to dedicate a memorial in remem-brance of Jeremiah Leavitt and his wife, Sarah Shannon.

It’s a privilege for me to represent their descendants-both those descending by blood and by marriage- in paying tribute to them and I do so with a humble heart.   

Jeremiah was born July 10, 1760 in Exeter, Rockingham, New Hampshire, to Nathaniel and Lydia Sanborn Leavitt.  At the young age of 19, Jeremiah, as well as many of his kin, exhibited their patriotism as they served their country in the Revolutionary War. 

Records relate that in 1785,  at age 24, Jeremiah married Sarah Shannon, age 18, daughter of Thomas Shannon and Anne Rand.  According to researchers, both Jeremiah and Sarah’s lines can be traced back to Royalty.  The Revolutionary War had just ended and the spirit of new beginning was abundant.  Being apparently blessed with a sense of adventure,  and courage to blaze new trails, Jeremiah and Sarah began looking Northward in the late 1780's toward Hatley, Quebec, Canada.  
These two were pioneers in every sense of the word.  They must have struggled making the decision to leave so many of their family, as both their roots ran deep in the New England area.

This was barely-charted territory at the time they traversed the granite mountains and the deep woods.  The rich farmland that Jeremiah invested in would have to be cleared and plowed for the first time.

By 1805, they had ten children, ranging from an infant to age 15.  Hardships were inherent in colonizing a wilderness, and were they here they could  relate to us many tales of pioneering as they struggled to carve out an existence here in this land.

They undoubtedly rejoiced when Jeremiah’s younger brother Jonathan, wife Rebecca and children joined them in Quebec sometime prior to 1814. 

In the year 1817,as things began to prosper for the Leavitt family-Jeremiah died  at age 57.  Sarah was 51.   For the next 20 years, the large family remained close and continued to build their lives in Hatley and Compton. 

History of events in the family of Jeremiah and Sarah tells us that faith in God mattered much more than economic security.  After learning about the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, and after subsequent reading, studying, and discussing the Book of Mormon that had been left with one of the Leavitt girls by a missionary, most of the family acknowledged it as truth.  Urged on by their faith, in 1837, close to 60 of the family left Hatley to begin the long 800 mile journey westward to Kirtland, Ohio to gather with the Saints and be baptized.

This departure meant leaving their farms, their homes, neighbors, friends and families.  In Anne Leavitt’s words, “Perhaps on Sarah Shannon’s last day she made one final visit to this cemetery on the hill behind the Old North Church.  It had been Jeremiah’s resting place for 20 years.  She was now 71.  She had stood as matriarch of this family and would until 1840 when the rigors of the pilgrimage finally overcame her, and the prairie of Twelve Mile Grove, Illinois would become HER resting place.  In addition to Sarah, 1 daughter, her 5 sons, and many of their wives and children died before they reached their destination in the west.

The posterity of Jeremiah and Sarah, possessing the same unfaltering courage, helped to colonize much of the great American West and added strength to the building up of Zion.

 Jeremiah and Sarah are much more than names on a Pedigree Chart.  Behind their names lies a lifetime of experiences.  The scant knowledge we have of their lives doesn’t begin to chronicle their many trials and sacrifices, their joys and their sorrows, but we do know they raised a stalwart and close-knit family that has endured generations.  Their valuable contributions to our country, to the Leavitt family, and to society as a whole are beyond measure.  They laid the foundation for those who are assembled here today, as well as countless others.
    
As they were, we too, can be catalysts... to unify the present day Leavitt family.  We are the link between the past and the present.  We cherish the legacy they have left, revere them for the unfailing beacon they set forth for their descendants.  They smoothed the bumps and cleared the way.

We ponder the choices Jeremiah and Sarah made, choices whose influence has spanned the generations.  They will never be forgotten-these grandparents- who clung fiercely to their dreams.  Their faith has been handed down from generation to generation, to the next and the next.   We are part of their eternal chain.

A part of the Mission Statement of the Western Association of Leavitt Families reads, quote: “to honor our dead and strengthen the sense of heritage”. End quote
We, who share the Leavitt heritage,  have been given much to live up to.  Preserving and sharing the legacy they have left for us is one way we can honor them.  Upon our shoulders rests the responsibility to keep the Leavitt name honorable, and seek out and gather in the far-flung descendants of Jeremiah and Sarah.

It’s my prayer, we will carry on and not become weary in fulfilling this responsibility.
This tribute I leave with you in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.

Sarah Shannon - Dedication of Graves and Monuments

Sarah Shannon, Weare and Jeremiah Leavitt 
and Benjamin Fletcher
by Lyman Platt
Wilton Center Cemetery, Wilton Center, Illinois
Wednesday, September 17, 2003


Before I give the dedicatory prayer this morning, I would like to say a few words as part of the dedicatory process.

We are here today to honor grandmother Sarah Shannon Leavitt, Weare Leavitt, and his son Jeremiah Leavitt, who died at 12-Mile Grove.

Grandmother Sarah was one of the great matriarchs of this dispensation, along with grandmother Smith, and grandmother Knight, who gave their lives in bringing their children to Zion. It is a wonderful honor, worthy of her sacrifice, that we have each been allowed to gather here to dedicate for the first time her resting place by the power of the holy Melchizedek priesthood.

It was my privilege to attend the first session of the dedication of the Mexico City temple a few years ago. My father, stepmother, wife and I were seated behind the wives of the General Authorities in the Celestial Room. As President Hinckley arose to address the assembly, he began by looking around the room, and with prophetic eyes and great emotion said: “Do you feel them? They are here! Father Lehi, Nephi, Alma, Helaman, his sons Lehi and Nephi, Mormon and Moroni. They are all here! Do you feel them?” I ask you the same question today---do you feel them?

The following poem was written yesterday, in preparation for this occasion:

Sacred places where loved ones rest
The glorious morn awaits them there.
Sacred groves; reverenced history,
Hallowed now through priesthood prayer.

Sacred hills, undaunted courage,
Death was sweet to young and old.
Precious memories, loved-ones departed,
Now recalled in stones first cold

Then warmed by words of love and spirit
Imbued with life: the resurrection;
Called forth in arms of love so tender,
To live eternal: Oh, sweet perfection!

Please join me as we dedicate this monument.
Father in Heaven,
We are gathered here this morning at this sacred grove to dedicate this monument. By the power of the holy Melchizedek priesthood which I bear, I so do, that it may stand as a symbol of the faith and courage of grandmother Sarah Shannon Leavitt, her son Weir Leavitt and her grandson Jeremiah Leavitt, who gave their lives in pursuit of the truth; who died while en route to join the Saints. I dedicate it in remembrance of their lives and those who, with them, left Canada to follow their convictions and testimonies. May our own life be sanctified as we remember this occasion; as we remember their sacrifices as the forerunners of this dispensation and of this family. May we be worthy of their trust as we gather the now extensive posterity into a united, sealed, and exemplary branch of the House of Israel and of the kingdom of our God. In the name of Jesus Christ, Amen.


Sarah Shannon - Tribute by William P. Leavitt

William P. Leavitt
Georgios Stairview Room, Tinley Park, Illinois
September 16, 2003

Here was a seventy-two year old woman, a widow, who had been left a productive farm in a lush green valley near Hatley. She was surrounded by good and valiant friends. Certainly, she sat in her rocker and reflected on the day when she would be laid to rest beside her beloved sweetheart.

But, because of her testimony of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ, she left all her comforts and solace behind and became one of the Lord's nomads.

The last year of her life was spent traveling through savage weather and sleeping on the ground. Her only comfort was those family members who traveled with her. She became sick and soon died amongst a stand of trees on the prairie. Certainly she had given meaning to the phrase, “endure to the end.” Her testimony stands as an indelible witness and example before every member of her posterity through the eternities.

Sarah Shannon - Tribute by Dane Leavitt

by Dane Leavitt 
Wilton Center Cemetery, Wilton Center, Illinois 
Wednesday, September 17, 2003

I think of a mother, seeking to shepherd seven children ages one to fourteen, on their 170 mile migration from New Hampshire to Hatley.  The year was 1800.  Sarah was one, Lydia three, Jeremiah II five, Josiah seven, John eight, Nathanial ten, and Mariah fourteen.  I think of the ease with which we today travel.  Sarah and her charges had no Suburban. The plodding pace and physical burdens would have required much more patience than our pulling off the interstate for diaper changes.  I envision the hardship and difficultly of that trek, and of Sarah’s later hardships in travel.


After arriving in Hatley, Sarah gave birth to Rebecca in 1802, Betsy in 1804 and Hannah in 1805.  She had 10 children in 19 years, during which period they changed locales, left the root of their family, and essentially entered on a physical and spiritual adventure that has affected all of our lives.


Bill [Leavitt] related last night about how the Church of Jesus Christ was introduced into our family in the mid-1830s, and how in 1837, seeking to join the main body of the Church, Sarah Shannon Leavitt, her husband Jeremiah, and much of their family, traveled to find the Church in Kirtland.  It was in a place not far from here, at Twelve Mile Grove, where Sarah Shannon Leavitt died at about age 71, sometime between September of 1837 and Jeremiah II’s arrival here in November of 1838.  Hence we gather here today to place this monument.


The balance of my thoughts will seek to juxtapose looking back and looking forward.  In our time together we have spent much time looking back.  That is part of the process of the hearts of sons being turned to fathers.  We look back and our hearts are filled with gratitude for the sacrifices that have enabled us to live as we live, to know as we know, to see as we see, and to feel as we feel.


I also enjoy looking forward, and pondering that which is to come.  As a father, about to be blessed with our first grandchild, I ponder the joy of posterity and the interest that we naturally have in the welfare and happiness of our children.  I ponder Sarah Shannon Leavitt and those that are with her – the “great majority” as they say – as they look upon us and upon our lives, and as they ponder their sacrifice in mortality, and the impact their choices made on literally thousands of lives.  I ponder how theirs has been not only a physical adventure – as they left the eastern Leavitts and came west, spreading posterity, from Alberta, Canada to Pima, Arizona – but also a spiritual odyssey that shapes the lives of a vast posterity.  Looking upon us, Sarah knows her mortal sacrifice and faithfulness has blessed our lives with a spiritual endowment and perspective of incalculable worth.


I am grateful, as are you, to count myself among Sarah’s posterity.  I look forward to the day – though I’m not eager for it to happen too soon – but I look forward to the day when we will meet.  I anticipate that my father will introduce me.  He knows them all.  He will outline their relationships, and tie in who is whose son and who is whose daughter, and who married who when and where.  I believe that time will come, when just as our hearts as sons are drawn to our fathers, and just as our father’s hearts are drawn to us, we will be united in another time and in another place.  The reunion will be joyous, and spirit will be wonderful.  It will be a reunion to which we can look forward, just as we today look back.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Nathanial and Josiah Leavitt, sons of Jeremiah and Sarah Shannon Leavitt


Disciple of Jesus named Nathanael, a man of Cana in Galilee and often associated with the apostles. Jesus
said of Nathanael, “Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile!” The Leavitts were a religious
people who loved Biblical names: Jeremiah, Joseph, Moses, John. Nathaniel Leavitt, the subject of this
tribute, was undoubtedly a namesake for his grandfather, Nathaniel Leavitt. With a scarcity of records
available, this tribute will include just a few vignettes, little glimpses into Nathaniel’s life.


Vignette 1
The first glimpse allows us to look back through more than two hundred years to see Nathaniel in an early time of his life. It is believed that he was born about 1790 in Chester, Rockingham Co., New Hampshire, the son of Jeremiah and Sarah Shannon Leavitt. The 1790 U.S. Census of Chester lists Jeremiah with a wife and two young sons. These sons were Wiear and our Nathaniel. Jeremiah had been a soldier in the Revolutionary War. Now he and Sarah were starting their family, and their thoughts turned to find a way to support the large family they planned. This meant land: a place to make a prosperous living on a farm. So about 1792 Nathaniel’s father moved his family north to Hatley, Quebec, Canada where the government was just opening up land for settlement. Other Leavitt families followed, and all were engaged in clearing land and establishing farms,

Vignette 2
We now find Nathaniel at age 22. The town records of Irasburg, a village in northern Vermont, tell us the following information: In 1812 Nathaniel took the Freeman’s Oath. In the Freeman’s Oath a person is shown to be free of debt to anyone, and is sworn to defend the commonwealth and to not conspire to overthrow the government. The oath also enabled a man to vote for representatives. Nathaniel cast his votes every year between 1812 and 1817. In 1815 Nathaniel bought land in Irasburg paying $150 for it.

Two years later he sold it for $462. A considerable profit! Over 300%! An active young man in the
affairs of Irasburg, Nathaniel was chosen to be a Hayward and a Surveyor of Highways. A Hayward is an official of a township in charge of fences and enclosures. Also taking part in community affairs of Irasburg at that time were three other Leavitts. Their names were Weaire, John, and Jeremiah Leavitt, and they, also, took the Freeman’s Oath. These three were most likely Nathaniel’s brothers , although the records give no indication of relationships.

Vignette 3
Here we see Nathaniel as a young married man. Nathaniel’s marriage to Deborah Delano took place on March 6, 1817, the location not clear. Their children came in close succession with Salena being their first. She was born probably late in 1817 and more than likely in Irasburg. Next came Roxana who first saw the light of day in Irasburg on December 15, 1818. About this time the family moved from Irasburg over the border north to Hatley, Quebec. Their third child Caroline Elizabeth was born in 1819 in either Irasburg or Hatley. Three more little ones blessed their home in the Hatley area; Nathaniel, Jr., born November 17, 1823, Flavilla Lucy, born July 3, 1826, and John who came into this world on March 18, 1827. Six children in less than ten years creates a lively setting for a young farm family. What entertainment they had playing with baby animals and laughing at the simple foibles and joys of life on the edge of a frontier.

Vignette 4
Our fourth peek into Nathaniel’s life sadly finds him to be a widower. When their children were still very young, Deborah, had died in Hatley. This was a very difficult situation for Nathaniel and the children, so later in the same year, 1829, he married a second time. His new bride was Betsey Bean, a young teenage girl. An instant family of six stepchildren was a huge responsibility for Betsey. It is believed in order to lighten Betsey’s load, arrangements were made for Roxana and Caroline Elizabeth to go back over into Vermont to live with relatives. It wasn’t long before Betsey added three new little ones to the family: Rosilla, born July 27, 1830, Mary Jane, born January 15, 1832, and Wire, born March 17 1837.

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The fifth picture of Nathaniel’s life finds him in 1837 joining his relatives in preparing to leave Canada. Missionaries of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints had visited the area some time before and had instilled in these good people a desire to leave Canada and join with other members of the church in Missouri. Nathaniel’s father had died in 1817, and his mother, Sarah Shannon Leavitt, was the dignified matriarch of this clan on the move. She was much loved by all. What a sight it must have been: Covered wagons outfitted with what they would need for a long journey, horses and oxen hitched up and ready to head out, children excitedly running about and having the time of their lives, and the adults bidding tearful goodbyes to family members who were staying in Canada. We see Nathaniel with his wife, Betsey, and their three small children, and also his three youngest children from his first marriage, Nathaniel, Jr., Flavilla and John. The older sister, Roxana, was to travel with some of the other Leavitts families. The oldest daughter, Salena, had been married in 1834 to Joseph Kezar and had two children. She and her husband elected to remain in Canada. Caroline Elizabeth was living in Vermont and she remained there,
later marrying Enoch Rowell in 1846. Many tears were shed at this parting. Everyone felt that the
chance of ever seeing each other again was slim to zero. And, as it turned out, they were right!


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This episode finds Nathaniel’s group daring to strike out on its own. When the Leavitt families arrived at Buffalo, New York, Nathaniel decided to take an alternative route. Leaving the other Leavitts to travel by land, he put his family and belongings on a boat and went across Lake Erie to Detroit, Michigan. From there they went south to White Pigeon, Michigan where they found a farm to rent for a year. It might have been concern for the health and ease of his wife and young children that precipitated the decision to travel by boat. Also, he may have had more means than some of the others, since it seems that he may have been a successful businessman. Nathaniel’s younger brother, Josiah Leavitt, was with this group. He was a single man of forty four years and was an invaluable help to Nathaniel’s family.


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Alas, the seventh scene shows us a scene of calamity. We see Nathaniel’s family the next year at White Pigeon, Michigan where he and Josiah were working hard at farming. (Most of the other Leavitt families had gone on by land, visiting Kirtland, Ohio, and then on to Twelve Mile Grove, Illinois where they had purchased farms. News had reached them of the persecution of the Saints in Missouri, and they had decided to wait there until they could learn where the church would settle in a new location.) In that summer of 1838, tragedy struck the family. For some unknown reason, probably because of a communicable disease such as cholera, both Nathaniel and Josiah died there! The father and uncle, the breadwinners, were gone. What was Betsey to do with six children in her care? Her decision was to return with her three little ones to Canada. She offered to take Nathaniel, Jr., Flavilla and John with her, but Nathaniel, Jr. had a strong testimony of the Gospel and he persuaded his sister and brother to stay there with him. He wanted to try to find his relatives and the church.


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This view looks in on the family almost immediately after the death of Nathaniel and Josiah. About one month after Betsey had gone to Canada, a fortuitous thing happened! The children’s Uncle Jeremiah Leavitt and his family were traveling through White Pigeon on their way to join the other Leavitt families who had bought farms at Twelve Mile Grove, Will Co., Illinois. (Jeremiah’s family had stopped in Mayfield, Ohio the previous year and had been working to earn money needed to proceed on their way.) Jeremiah had the amazing good fortune to find Nathaniel’s three orphaned children, each in a different home, ill, and shabbily dressed. What propitious timing! Jeremiah was shocked to learn that Nathaniel and Josiah were dead, and that Betsey had sold everything and had gone back home to be with her relatives. Jeremiah and his wife, Sarah, added Nathaniel’s three to their eight children and proceeded on to Twelve Mile Grove where a joyous reunion took place. Nathaniel’s daughter, Roxana, had gone with
the main body of Leavitts by land to Kirtland, Ohio and then on to Illinois. When her little brothers and sister arrived in Twelve Mile Grove, she took them in, and made sure that they were cared for properly. The other Leavitt families were a great help in this respect. (It must be added here that Betsey died in 1844 and her children, Rosilla, Mary Jane and Wire, were raised by kind relatives in Canada. Rosilla married Oscar McConnell in 1848, Mary Jane married Ephraim Hodges in 1852, and Wire married twice; Harriet Dustin in 1861, and then her sister, Mary, in 1864.)


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With their father, Nathaniel, now gone, his children on the Leavitt trek ,which covered a trail from Quebec to Utah over a period of about fifteen years, went on courageously with their lives. Three of Nathaniel’s children married along the way. Roxana married Benjamin Fletcher in 1838 and John Huntsman in 1841, and then later in Salt Lake City married William Snow. Nathaniel Jr. was wed to Amanda Wilson in 1846 and then in Utah in 1857 to Mary Horrocks. Flavilla and Orrin Day Farlin were married in Iowa in 1847, and later she married William Lloyd in 1865 and Peter I. Mesick in 1867. John crossed the plains as a single young man and married Mary Ann Kittleman in Salt Lake City in 1856. After his demise, these four children of Nathaniel had resided in Twelve Mile Grove, moved on with the Leavitts to Nauvoo, Illinois and then later, because of the persecution, found refuge in the area of Council Bluffs, Iowa. After crossing the plains at different times, they all established fine homes and raised families in the American West, carrying on the traditions and true principles of their parents, who, no doubt, from their vantage point on high, were proud of their stalwart children. Of the fifty five people who left Quebec in 1837, twenty two died before they got to Utah and they were buried along the way. In recent years the Western Association of Leavitt Families (WALF) has erected at each burial place attractive tombstones with bronze plaques which tell the story of the individuals’ lives. A tall, dignified marker (see photo above) honoring Nathaniel and Josiah Leavitt stands proudly in the cemetery at White Pigeon, Michigan. At the top of the plaque is printed,
“TWO WEST WARD BOUND
PIONEER BROTHERS DIED NEAR HERE IN THE YEAR
1838. THEY WERE MEN OF COURAGE, HIGH PRINCIPLE AND FAITH.”

Nathaniel’s life was cut short. He was only about forty eight years old when his life on earth ended. What had he accomplished in his short lifetime? He courageously settled in wilderness country. He took part in community life by accepting civic responsibilities. He married twice and had nine children. He cared for his family. He was happy to give up his way of life in Canada and
bravely strike out for a faraway place. He set out on a quest with his family, striving for a
religious goal. He worked hard as a farmer to provide for his loved ones. When he left the main body of the Leavitts, he included his younger, single brother with his family. He left his children a legacy of the value of hard work, of determination, of love for family. Now in our modern time, as we read of the few details of his life which we know, we give tribute to Nathaniel Leavitt, our ancestor, a great man, one worthy of our admiration and emulation.