Sie ist verheiratet mit Charles Albert Moore.
Sie haben geheiratet am 30. Juli 1910 in Cody, Park, Wyoming, United States, sie war 19 Jahre alt.
Kind(er):
Eva Jane Jones | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1910 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Charles Albert Moore |
Eva Jane Moore (born Jones)<br>Birth name: Eva Jane Jones<br>Married name: Eva Jane Moore<br>Gender: Female<br>Birth: Dec 18 1890 - Springville, Utah, Utah, United States<br>Marriage: July 30 1910 - Cody, Park, Wyoming, United States<br>Residence: 1920 - School District 52, Stillwater, Montana, United States<br>Residence: 1930 - Carbon, Montana<br>Residence: 1930 - School District 34, Carbon, Montana, United States Of America<br>Death: Apr 4 1976 - Cody, Park, Wyoming, United States<br>Burial: Apr 7 1976 - Belfry, Carbon, Montana, United States<br>Parents: Thomas Foy Jones, Olive Madora Jones (born Lemmon)<br>Husband: Charles Albert Moore<br>Children: Thomas Albert Moore, Loraine Eleanor Fillerup (born Moore), <;a>Gail Patrick Moore, Olive Lucy Jones (born Moore), Charles William Moore, Ruth Ina Moore, Iver Cecil Moore, Eva Rose Duffield (born Moore), Fay Lilly Duffield (born Moore), George Arlington Moore, Elsie Geneva Moore, Heber Grant Moore, Madora Jane Liles (born Moore)<br>Siblings: Elsie Ellen Jones, Jesse Arlington Jones, Thomas Wilkin Jones, Vernon Leroy Jones, Olive Virginia Shaffer (born Jones), Grover Dewey Jones, Phillip Sheridan Jones, <;a>Mary Madalean Jones, Iver Earl Jones, Robin Ivan Jones<br> Additional information:
LifeSketch: Eva Jane Jones Moore father was the oldest child of Thomas Wilkins Jones and Sarah Jane Foy. Thomas Wilkins Jones is written in Utah history as the first merchant tailor in the west. He also served a number of assignments for Brigham Young, two or three missions to the Lamanites. Chief Washakie was a great friend. Sarah Jones’ father, Thomas Burke Foy, who performed the ceremony uniting T. W. Jones and Sarah Jane Foy, was bishop of his ward. My mother’s grandfather is written in Church history as a martyr to the cause, James Lemmon, having given his life during persecution of the Church in Iowa. Her parents, Peter Lemmon and Ellen Virginia Steele, came to Utah in the early days and farmed at Glen-wood.to St. George, Utah, went to the temple July 19, 1880. Their eleven children were born: One in Nevada, two in Arizona, four in Utah, all different localities, and four after we came to Wyoming where they homesteaded. I was born at Springville on a farm north of town. In January, two years later, my brother, Grover, was born at Vernal.some families of us, and stopped on the fifteenth of June at a great horseshoe bend in the Greybull River (which has been known since as Mormon Bend) where we lived for a year while the men dug a long canal to carry water to cover the great sagebrush flat for many miles. That was the second big ditch taken out of the Greybull River. you of our wagon, which I have always thought to be the first real existing extension bed wagon ever guilt. A heavy farm wagon with two boards high, then a wide extension on each side, then another narrower side board over which the canvas cover was put. Then Mama put blankets between the canvas and bows which made it cooler in sun and warmer when it was cold, while Papa also bolted the little cast iron four-holed stove to the floor near the swinging door. They also put bedsprings in the back end. Nobody else had a bedsprings, nor did anyone else have a stove to cook on or a room to stay in if it stormed. Mama’s great leather covered trunk and innumerable other items were stored under the bed. Yes, a table was built in and many other conveniences, with great extension on back, outside water barrel and other things on the side. He hired another man to haul his blacksmith tools. He was Cap. Taylor. Being a blacksmith of great talents, he could do anything and was an expert at horseshoeing. But he fell ill on the trip. Mother also could do anything with horses, so she, with her seven children, just took over: driving, harnessing, hook-up and all, besides caring for Papa. Mama’s sewing machine also came along. I remember the wagon so well because we used it for one room of our house for several years after we moved to the homestead. This homestead was a mile north of Burlington, Wyoming.n, and Mrs. R. L. (Margerite) Crater, tried to get Mama to call him Burlington. n the majority. In 1906 we went to Corbet where Papa blacksmithed for the construction company building or digging the three mile tunnel that takes the water out of the Powell flat. This is in Powell, Wyoming. That fall we would move to Cody canyon in Wyoming to work on the Shoshone dam where Daddy dressed tools for construction there. In the fall of 1909 we moved to Cody where I worked as a housekeeper part-time and as waitress.f the Cody Cowboy Band (played the snare drum), also Company E of the National Guard. They went on a field trip to Wheatland, Wyoming in July, returned the 31st of July. After supper that night he, Bert, walked into the café, straight to the proprietor and said, “I am going to take your waitress away from you.” That was the first I knew about it. I had not any preparation for marriage, nor had he. I don’t even know how he got a marriage license. Well, yes, this much I learned later. A woman I had worked for in the country twenty-five miles out of Cody got hold of him soon as he got in town that day. She engineered things, he had too much aboard. While I rushed around and bought some clothes and we were married at the said woman’s, Mrs. H. A. Luce, apartment at 10:00 o’clock that night.hree months and quit. When I asked for my pay she said, “Well, I don’t know if Bert told you or not, but he has been drawing your pay when he made the trips to town.” I said, “Oh, no he hasnât. I never authorized Mrs. Luce or Bert to take the money. Just write me a check for three months work.â Which she did and said, âBert will have to stay and work it out.â I said, âThatâs between him and you.â I went to town, rented a small house, bought second hand furniture, where we lived till after we had our first child on the 15 of May 1911.ing. Bert worked on farms till March 1912. We moved to Belfry, Montana, worked that summer on a farm, moved to town. He worked for a hardware store awhile, then started work with Mont., Wyo., and Southern Railroad. While there, two more were added to our family. Left Belfry April 1, 1915. Got snowed in at Red Lodge, Montana for three days with two or three feet of snow. Then on to Fishtail, Montana awhile, then to a farm job out of Absarokee that summer. Filed on homestead, moved to Midnight Canyon in October. Another baby girl came to us in March 1916. Just farm life, 1918. Another baby boy. Just normal life to fall, 1919 when he moved us out of the canyon because there was another baby due in March. Bert thought I should be moved nearer to a doctor. Another girl March 17. Bert sold the place and I never saw it again till after he was done (he died). We moved back to Bearcreek in 1921. Another dear little son came to us there Feb. 18, 1922. Bert went to work again for Mont., Wyo., and Southern Railroad. We moved back to Belfry the 15th of June 1923. On the 1st of July twin girls were born to us. Five babies were born to us in that house and one on a farm there. We finally got a place of our own in Belfry where I still live. March 28, baby born, lived three days and was buried on Billy’s birthday, 4/3/1927.s in 1940 when I took my father to Tacoma, Wash. to be with my brothers for the winter. I had the pleasure of seeing much of the state of Wash. and the sea for the first time.in Oct. of 1923. My father lived until 1942, Nov. 7, age 86. My mother was age 60 when she died. They taught us the gospel.es was going to Sunday school in the Mormon Bend, Brother Tommy Jones leading me across an icy spot of the river. I fell and bloodied my nose. And Sister Henry Griffin had an organ, which she brought most Sundays. How wonderful. In Burlington Sunday school I thought my papa was the smartest man in the country. He taught the old folks class. Mama taught younger ones. I was baptized at the age of ten, my brother Grover the same day, in Joseph I. Reed’s reservoir by Bishop J. S. McNiven, Sr. and confirmed by J. I. Reed, both of us, that is Grover and myself. Attended all church duties till we left Burlington in 1907. Then I never saw another L.D.S. church for about fifteen years.appy. Sunday school was first organized I believe it was in 1925. I taught the younger children. We struggled along, no books. Then I taught in MIA sometime later. Then in Nov. 1927, Relief Society was organized, I was secretary about four years, then first counselor for over twenty years. In 1936 received a Relief Society pin for one year’s perfect visiting teaching, with Mary Yost every month. Taught in Sunday school, MIA, and Relief Society almost constantly until about three years ago. The years began to tell on me. I am now 82 years old. I am still very strong and healthy for my age and ask the family how I keep them busy in vacation time. Had a wonderful weekend two weeks ago in the Stillwater country and mountains with the Fillerups and Iver Moore. Then a lovely trip to Utah. I am still on the go.
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