Sie ist verheiratet mit Jedediah Grant Casper.
Sie haben geheiratet am 1. Januar 1880 in Salt Lake, Salt Lake, Utah, United States, sie war 17 Jahre alt.
Kind(er):
Annie Almira Merrill | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1880 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Annie Almira Merrill<br>Gender: Female<br>Birth: Oct 4 1862 - Millcreek,Salt Lake,UT<br>Marriage: Spouse: Jedediah Grant Casper - Jan 1 1880 - Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah<br>Death: Mar 13 1922 - Bluffdale, Salt Lake, UT, United States<br>Burial: Mar 16 1922 - Bluffdale,Salt Lake,UT<br>Father: Willaim Wallace Merrill<br>Mother: Lucy Maria Merrill (born Williams)<br>Husband: Jedediah Grant Casper<br>Siblings: <a>Mary Lovina Merrill, Lucy Eudora Bills (born Merrill), Emily Jane Miller (born Merrill), Benjamin Wallace Merrill, George Justin Merrill, Harrit Josephine Merrill, Julia Elinor Merrill, Harriet Josephine Merrill, Martha Ellen MerrillNellie May Merrill, Alice Irene Merrill, Zina Elizabeth Merrill, Manchester Merrill
The Geni World Family Tree is found on http://www.geni.com" target="_blank">www.Geni.com. Geni is owned and operated by MyHeritage.
Annie Almira Casper (born Merrill)<br>Gender: Female<br>Birth: Oct 4 1862 - Millcreek, Salt Lake, Utah Territory, United States<br>Marriage: Jan 1 1880 - Millcreek, Salt Lake, Utah, United States<br>Residence: 1870 - Millcreek, Salt Lake, Utah Territory, United States<br>Residence: 1880 - South Jordan, Salt Lake, Utah, United States<br>Residence: 1900 - ED 60 Bluffdale, Draper, Granite Precincts, Salt Lake, Utah, United States<br>Residence: 1910 - Naples, , Utah<br>Residence: 1920 - Precinct 9, Salt Lake, Utah, United States<br>Death: Mar 13 1922 - Bluffdale, Salt Lake, Utah, United States<br>Burial: Mar 16 1922 - Bluffdale City Cemetery, Bluffdale, Salt Lake, Utah, United States<br>Occupation: 1880 - Keeping House<br>Parents: William Wallace Merrill, Lucy Maria Merrill (born Williams)Jedediah Grant Casper<br>Children: William Wallace Casper, Clarence Eugene Casper, Annie May Anderson (born Casper), Grace Eudora Bingham (born Casper), Jedediah Grant Casper, Julia Ellen Miller (born Casper), Reynold Dermont Casper, Goldie Isabelle Hatt (born Casper), Richard Farley Casper, Warren O'Dell Casper<br>Siblings: <a>Benjamin Wallace Merrill, Mary Lovina Green (born Merrill), Lucy Eudora Bills (born Merrill), Emily Jane Miller (born Merrill), George Justin Merrill, Harriet Josephine Merrill, Julia May Merrill, Martha Ellen Merrill, Nellie May Merrill, Alice Irene Merrill, Sarah Phoebe Fullmer (born Merrill), Zina Elisabeth Crump Jr. (born Merrill), Manchester Merrill;<br> Additional information:
LifeSketch: History of Annie Almira Merrill Caspers she was always called, was born 4 October 1862 at Millcreek, Salt Lake County, Utah, the third child of William Wallace Merrill and Lucy Maria Williams. Her father was born in Shelby, Norman, Michigan, 10 December 1835 and her mother was born in Herefordshire, England on 2 September 1840.r teens she participated in most of the church and community activities.en children and wife to Bluffdale into a house made of adobe. This was a real treat for the family to have four large rooms. Annie being one of the eldest of the family learned to cook, sew and care for the younger children in a motherly fashion.t Lake City.e. They were married on 1 January 1880 in the Endowment House in Salt Lake City. Following their marriage, Annie’s husband took up a homestead in Bluffdale. About eight years later, They sold this farm and Jed, Annie and four children moved to Lewisville Idaho, where another son was born, Jedediah Grant Jr. The family lived there only one year then decided to return to the Salt Lake Valley where they homesteaded again. This was hard on Annie but never a word of complaint was heard from her. Her husband help build the canal to their homestead. He also worked in the church a lot, leaving Annie to care for the family. She was a very faithful mother, teaching her children to pray always. My mother, May Casper Anderson, said she loved to hear her mother pray.band was called on an LDS mission to New Zealand and Australia. Annie was left with a family of seven and the eighth was born two months after her husband left. This was a very trying time for Annie, but with the help of her son, William, age 15, friends, relatives, neighbors, and most of all, the help of the Lord, she came through with “flying colors”. Her husband came home from his mission in 1898. About one year later he was urged to go to the Uintah Basin, or Ashley Valley as it was called then, to help settle that part of Utah. So against Annie’s will, they moved to Ashley Valley.r drive over ledges and rough places. Their son, Clarence, rode a pony and drove their cows. They were ten days on the road.Ward, now Naples Ward. The place consisted of eighty acres. The house they moved into still stands today.itis and died 5 December 1901. Soon after, her son, Clarence, came down with typhoid and died just one week after she had lost her baby. The whole family except Jed and the eldest son, William, came down with typhoid. Annie became very sick at this time, but through her faith and administration and the help of Dr. Coe Hullinger, her life was saved. This was such a long, hard, cold winter they nearly lost all their livestock.d. The new brick school house had just been completed. 2nd counselor and Eden Powell as secretary. While they were in the Relief Society Presidency, they tore rags and sewed them together to make carpets for the aisles in the Uintah Stake Tabernacle.ne of Annie’s daughters told of going with her mother to visit the sick. They travelled in a buggy hitched to a horse named Ike (name after the man he was bought from) and the Relief Society Presidency would visit all the members of their ward.e also bought a grain binder which he used to cut grain for the public to help provide for his family.ful wedding dress and cooked a delicious wedding supper for her and her husband, Charles Anderson, when they were married.al of ten children.le roof, one of the few that was shingled then. Living here for three or four years, Annie then contracted rheumatism or arthritis as it is now know. Jed decided to take his wife and family back to Bluffdale where the weather wasn’t so cold. Annie was in a wheelchair for the rest of her life, was in a lot of pain, but never complained., “Even though she was an invalid for many years, I don’t think there was a finer, more gracious woman ever lived upon the earth than Sister Annie Casper.” He also said, “There was never a finer family existed than Brother Jed Casper and Annie Merrill Casper’s family. They were pioneers of the finest stock that ever came to this valley. Annie was not rich in temporal wealth, but where could you find another woman who was more rich in spiritual wealth than she?” my mother would receive from her. Her handwriting was so pale you could hardly see it. She was always concerned over how mother and her family were getting along.r children to Bluffdale one fall in a covered wagon, so she could help care for her mother that winter. I was only about seven years old, but I remember how sweet and kind she was to us children, always having so much patience and love for us even though she must have been in a lot of pain. She endured to the very end. loved ones who had gone on before. She was buried in the Bluffdale Cemetery.
The FamilySearch Family Tree is published by MyHeritage under license from FamilySearch International, the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormon Church).