John Godfrey
30 October 1825 – 19 February 1893
Thomas and Elizabeth Ainge Godfrey were of peasant stock whose families had
lived in Hanbury, Worcestershire, England for several generations.
Thomas was a farm laborer and must have had some difficulty in
supporting his family, as those were difficult times for the laborer.
Farm prices had fallen disastrously, for example, cows were worth
fifteen pounds (British currency) in 1813 but only three pounds in
1826.
It was in these circumstances
that Thomas and Elizabeth were married on August 23,
1824 in Claines,
Worcestershire, England. Their first child, John was born October 30,
1825 in Hanbury, Worcestershire, England. This is his story.
John's
siblings were George Ainge (21 Oct 1827), Joseph (17 Dec 1829), Ann
Ainge (28 Nov 1832), Richard (11 Mar 1835), Samuel (1 Mar 1838),
Sarah Jane (3 Oct 1851), and Fanny (15 Mar 1852). As John and his
brothers and sisters were growing up, the circumstances of the family
began to improve.
When
a reform bill was passed in 1832 some quarter of a million new voters
were added to the rolls and one out of six adult males now had the
right to vote. More such acts were passed, extending the individual's
civil rights. The poor laborer came closer to gaining his freedom, or
at least that probably was his thoughts. The Godfrey's must have felt
that they gained something from this Act.
The
Factory Act and others during this time widened the scope of earlier
legislation. No one under the age of eighteen was allowed to work for
more than sixty-nine hours a week. Inspectors were allowed to enter
factories at all times to see that regulations were observed. This
did concern the Godfreys for all the children of the family would be
sent to work at a very young age.
| Thomas Godfrey |
Bad harvests prevailed for two years and severe trade depression led to
hunger, unemployment, and general unrest, The Hungry Forties, was the
term applied to those lean years.
A
grain drill was invented which planted the grain evenly in rows
instead of having it broadcast haphazardly by hand as it had been
done previously. By about 1825 the complete iron plow made its
appearance. It would seem a good guess that John was familiar with
the older type of machinery, for he would demonstrate proficiency
with such machinery later in his life in Utah.
There
was little room in the laborer's life for education, which probably
meant farm workers must have been, at least to a degree, illiterate.
It was a matter of chance whether a country child could get to school
at all and if there was any compulsion it was the other way, for
schooling had to take second place to earning a living.
Since
the Godfreys were poor laborers it is not surprising that John would
begin working at a young age. Horses played a large part on every
farm. They were used for all kinds of farm work, including plowing,
harrowing, and roadwork. John worked at driving horses and he drove
from three to five teams at a time. He seemed to have the ability to
get them to do what he wanted. It is part of the Godfrey heritage to
love fine horses.
John
married Mary Pittaway in the Dodderhill Parish Church on September
15, 1843. Mary Pittaway was born May 1, 1822 in Droitwich,
Worcestershire, England. Her parents were John Pittaway and Ann
Willis. Not much of Mary's life has been preserved as a young girl.
Mary was nineteen years old when she had her first child, Letitia
Pittaway. Letita was born out of wedlock on September 22, 1841. Her
father was Abraham Louis.
Since
John and Mary spent much of their life in the village of Wichbold,
reputedly the ancestral home of the Pittaways, it seems logical that
they might have met there. John worked in this community on a large
farm for about four years after their marriage and it would seem to
be a reasonable conclusion that he might have been working there
prior to their marriage, thus being in the vicinity of the home of
his future bride and giving the couple an opportunity to meet and
become acquainted.
Farm
laborers had one outstanding characteristic - they were all poor. The
cash wage had fallen and with wages being low, so were the costs of
living. Cottage rents were about one shilling a week and for this a
tenant had a garden where he grew his own vegetables. Sometimes
farmers would allow their help extra ground for growing potatoes.
Most cottages kept a pig or chickens and some kept a rabbit. Skim
milk was often available from the farm dairy at very slight cost, and
the family food supply was further supplemented by grain gleaned at
harvest time.
The
man for whom John worked required one of his hired hands to give the
text of the previous Sunday's sermon, or the entire crew went without
dinner. One day, as noon approached, the boys who had not attended
church the previous Sunday wondered what they were going to do.
Finally they elected John to give their boss the required text. When
the employer made his request John replied: “The Lord above sends
down his love, sharp edged swords, and sickles, to cut the throat of
all such folk, that begrudge their servants victuals.”
It
is supposed that the hired hand's request for food was granted that
day even though the required text had not been furnished.
Mary
and John had three children when they heard the gospel from the
missionaries. In addition to Letitia, their first child, George was
born on January 24, 1845 in Droitwich, Worcestershire and Thomas was
born on November 25, 1846 in Wychbold, Worcestershire.
Elizabeth Ainge Godfrey> | |
John was twenty-three when he was baptized a member of The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints April 2, 1848 by Charles Knight, and
confirmed by Joseph Westergard. Mary was baptized September 3, 1848,
in Dodderhill by Joseph Westwood. Their son, George, was baptized
August 18, 1850, and John's mother Elizabeth Ainge Godfrey was
baptized September 28, 1850. His Father, Thomas Godfrey, was also
baptized in 1850. Many of John's brothers and sisters also joined the
church in the years that followed.
As
soon as they joined the church, most of his friends and neighbors
turned against him. John was baptized into his new faith on Sunday
and on Monday morning his foreman asked him to report to the office
at the end of the day. Opposition to the Mormon Church was very high
at the time and John anticipated that he would be told that his
services would be no longer required, so he was not surprised when
Mr. Bladden, the farm owner, said that he understood that John had
joined the Mormon Church, and gave him the choice of giving up his
church, or his job.
John
gave up his job, and then had to search for another one. He was
unsuccessful in his first attempts because he was well known in his
district, and word had been sent around that John Godfrey had joined
the hated Mormons, and none of the farmers would hire him.
Since
no work meant no food for his family, he went to work on the railroad
where he injured his ankle and is said to have laid among strangers
for some time, and then returned to his old neighborhood and worked
in the salt mines. While there he served as the presiding elder in
the district. While holding this position he organized two or three
additional branches of the Church.
However,
his former employer requested his return to work on his large farm,
and was rehired. Over the next several years they had six more
children: Joseph, born February 18, 1849 at Wychbold; Mary Ann on
June 8, 1852; Lucy on March 10, 1853; John Ezekiel on March 10, 1854;
Emma Elizabeth on April 6, 1856; and Sarah on July 22, 1859. The last
five were all born in Stoke Prior, Worcestershire.
A
woman wanted to buy their son Thomas, and Mary and John of course
refused the offer. They suffered greatly when the same woman
kidnapped their three-year-old. He was only returned when she was
threatened with the law.
Like
most Mormons, after joining the church, John received impressions
that he and his family should leave England and join the Saints in
Utah. His Brother Richard immigrated in 1856 and his sitser Ann in
1859. John was encouraged to send his oldest son George to America to
prepare the way for the rest of the family to follow a year later.
Charles
W. Penrose, a native of London and afterward an apostle and counselor
in the first presidency of the Mormon Church, often visited the
Godfrey home and made it his headquarters whenever he was in their
part of England. It was probably no accident that when George
immigrated, he went on the ship Monarch of the Sea in 1861 with
President Penrose in charge of the group.
After
George had left England John spoke in tongues in a church meeting, it
frightened him, as he did not know what he was saying. A sister
interpreted and said that through his faithfulness, a way would be
provided and money furnished and they could go to America within a
year's time. This spiritual experience was something John never
forgot.
| The William Topscott |
It looked for a while that it would be impossible for the rest of the
Godfreys to follow, but the way was provided. They were among some
eight hundred Mormons who left Liverpool on the sailing vessel The
William Tapscott May 14, 1862, under the leadership of Elder William
Gibson. After six weeks and three days on the ship, they landed in
New York. Mary's daughter Letitia never joined the church and
remained in England with her grandmother.
The
family made the trip from New York to St. Joseph, Missouri by train
and from St. Joseph to Florence, Nebraska by steamboat. The family
stayed at Florence from July 8th to August 10th when the journey
across the plains was begun. They traveled by means of ox carts that
had been previously driven from Salt Lake City to Florence. There
were six hundred and sixty five persons, with a hundred wagons and
eight hundred oxen; this being enough oxen to allow for four oxen per
wagon, plus enough additional oxen to permit changing of the teams
from time to time. John and Mary's wagon had 19 people and John
walked all the way.
After
they had traveled a few days they passed a Trading Post where some
soldiers were stationed. The soldiers were killing a steer and
because the family had always been told that in America people did
not eat the head of anything, Thomas, the second son of John, asked
the soldiers if they were not going to use the head if he might have
it. They said, yes, and gave him a good big piece of it for soup.
Every bit that could be used was used and enjoyed very much by the
company.
This
company was under the leadership of Henry W. Miller, who was an
experienced frontiersman and had served previously as a missionary to
the Indians. During the trip each night there were six men posted as
guards to prevent Indians from stampeding the oxen. There were
twenty-eight who died during the trip and were buried along the way.
John
brought quantities of sewing needles to this country for friends in
England who were sending them to others who had come earlier. He also
had two buffalo robes, which was the only bedding Thomas, Joseph and
John had while crossing the plains. These Mormons, who traveled form
Europe to Salt Lake Valley were not left on their own entirely, but
were on the contrary, very well organized. They were shepherded from
their localities to the seaport where they would board ships
chartered for ocean crossing. On the ships they were organized into
temporary groups with experienced members taking charge.
The
Godfreys arrived in Salt Lake Valley October 10, 1862, over five
months after leaving their homeland. The oldest son George, who had
come one year earlier, welcomed them. George had been living with
John's brother, Richard and his family
George
had purchased a lot and had built a one-room log cabin with furniture
and had it ready for the family when they arrived. George had worked
hauling gravel and rock for the Salt Lake temple and had done
excavating work for the Salt Lake Theater, one of the big public
works projects of the time. John and his second son, Thomas, worked
that winter sawing wood to provide for the family.
Upon
arriving in Salt Lake the family found themselves in debt for about
$1400 and that John went to work with great determination and paid it
all off, with interest.
In
May of 1863 the family moved to "Chalk Creek," located to
the east of the Weber River near Coalville, Utah. John ran a farm for
Ira Hinckley, planting wheat, barley, and oats, crops they had raised
in England. Their youngest child, Catherine was born on August 10,
1863 in Chalk Creek.
A
severe frost came in late August or early September and killed their
entire crop, so the family moved to Wellsville in Cache Valley,
staying there only two months, then moving on to Mendon, a
neighboring community. They farmed that year in Mendon on a rented
farm.
After
living in a dugout for the winter, the Godfreys built a log house,
fourteen feet square, with a dirt roof and floor, which they traded,
along with the city lot on which it stood, for a yoke of oxen when
the family decided to move to Clarkston that next spring. John
Godfrey went to Clarkston in the early spring of 1865 and planted a
crop of grain and a garden. He is credited with being the first man
in that settlement to plow the ground. In May 1865 John moved his
family to Clarkston, where they camped in the open for a few weeks
until he built a small house.
After
moving to Clarkston, his mother and father immigrated to America and
settled in Clarkston. His brother Richard also settled in Clarkston.
His oldest son George and his family also moved to Clarkston. Other
family members settled elsewhere in Cache Valley as well.
The
year 1866 brought trouble with the Shoshone Indians. These Indians
claimed all of the land west of Bear River as theirs, so they came to
assert their rights. The pioneers followed counsel previously given
by President Brigham Young that it was better to feed the Indians
than to fight them. But their supplies dwindled and they did not have
enough food to feed themselves, even without considering the Indians.
The Indians finally began to kill the settlers' cows and with this
they were advised to move to Smithfield, another small settlement
some twelve miles to the east.
The
men spent many tedious hours traveling back and forth in their
efforts to gain a harvest from the crops that they had planted the
previous spring. In the fall President Brigham Young came to Logan,
the county seat, and told the Clarkston settlers that they could
return to their homes, provided that they would build a fort to
protect themselves. With that the small band proceeded to move.
Joseph Godfrey, third son of John and Mary was drowned while they
were crossing Bear River on the way back. He was seventeen years old
and it would seem that he had his best years ahead of him. This
tragedy must have been one of the most trying situations in a series
of difficult ones that the Godfreys encountered.
John and Mary Godfrey with their two youngest daughters, Catherine and Sarah sometime in the early 1870s.> | |
When the settlers moved back to Clarkston they built or arranged houses
already built in such a way as to form a fort. In the fort babies
were born, children went to school, animals were cared for, meals
were cooked: In other words life went on just as it would have if
they were not living in a fort. The settlers moved to higher ground
after staying in the fort for three or four years.
John
Godfrey was a good speaker and a very witty man. He must have had
some musical ability for he is listed as being one of the early
choristers of the Clarkston Ward. He was energetic, hopeful, and had
self-confidence, which were traits of the Victorian Englishman, and
which seem to be necessary attributes of a pioneer.
In
keeping with this common practice and belief of his people at the
time, John Godfrey had married Olina Thalseth as a plural wife, on
February 14, 1876. Olina was born on January 25, 1841 in
Frondhiem,
Norway. Their first child, Mary Olina, was born on December 13, 1876
in Clarkston. She died in March 1877 in Clarkston.
This
new arrangement was a difficult trial for Mary. They tried to live
together, but it was no use. Mary asked John to take his new wife and
leave. John moved with Olina to Mendon sometime in 1877. John and
Mary were divorced and after John moved to Mendon, Mary and her
youngest daughter, Catherine, were left to make her own way.
Four
more children were born to John and Olina: Maria Elizabeth on March
4, 1878; Moses Talseth on April 11, 1879 and died on November 19,
1879; James Andrew on 10 November 1880; and Samuel Talseth on
August 22, 1881. These children were all born in Mendon. In 1891,
John moved this family back to Clarkston where he homesteaded more
land.
John
Godfrey died on February 19, 1893, age sixty seven, in Clarkston.
Peter S. Barson wrote his obituary which included the following:
Brother John Godfrey was a
good honest Latter-day saint. Considering his limited means he gave
freely for all church purposes and we will all miss his good counsel.
The funeral services were
held in the Clarkston meeting house on Tuesday 21 of Feb. The
speakers were counselor Henry Yeates, counselor Andrew Heggie, David
Buttars, and Brother Samuel Perkins of Wellsville.
The closing remarks were made
by Bishop John Jardine. They were all personally acquainted with the
deceased and bore witness to his good character. The remains were
followed to the graveyard by 30 sleigh loads of relatives and
friends, who turned out in mass to pay the last tribute of respect to
one who was generally respected.
Mary
Pittaway Godfrey passed away on June 15, 1901 at the age of seventy
nine in Clarkston. Olina Talseth Godfrey died on June 5, 1914 in Salt
Lake City. All three are buried in the Clarkston Cemetery.
A
PATRIARCHAL BLESSING GIVEN TO JOHN GODFREY
A
Patriarchal Blessing by Charles H. Hyde, upon the head of John
Godfrey, son of Thomas and Elizabeth Godfrey; born 30 October 1825,
in England.
John,
I place my hands upon thy head and seal on thee a Patriarchal
Blessing. Thou will yet be called to proclaim this gospel to nation,
kindred, tongues and people. Thou shall have a voice like a trumpet
and do much good in this kingdom. The spirit of the Lord shall rest
upon thee and thou shall prophesy of many things. You shall hunt up
the names of your dead relatives and shall do a great and mighty work
for them. Thou shall be the means of bringing many souls into the
kingdom of God. No power shall stay thy hands. Thine enemies shall
flee before thee, some shall say that 'he' is the servant of the
living God. By thy preaching kings shall bow at thy feet.
Thou
art of Joseph, a right to the fullness of the Priesthood with wives
and a great kingdom on the earth. Thou shalt have houses, lands,
horses and chariots for thy comfort. You shall see the coming of the
son of God. You shall be crowned with glory and Eternal life with thy
Father's household, for ever and ever. Amen.
The source of this story comes from histories of John and Mary written by Richard S. Godfrey and Elinor Godfrey Hyde.
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