Il est marié avec Hannah Whitcomb.
Ils se sont mariés le 2 juin 1822 à Wayne, DuPage County, IL, United States, il avait 21 ans.
Spouse: Hannah Haws (born Whitcomb)
Enfant(s):
Gilberth Haws | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Hannah Whitcomb |
Gilberth Haws<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Mar 10 1801 - Logan County, Kentucky, United States<br>Marriage: Spouse: Hannah Haws (born Whitcomb) - June 2 1822 - Wayne, DuPage County, IL, United States<br>Death: Mar 3 1877 - Provo, Utah County, Utah Territory, United States<br>Burial: Mar 5 1877 - Provo City Cemetery, Provo, Utah County, Utah, United States<br>Father: Jacob Haws<br>Mother: Hannah Haws (born Neill)<br>Wife: Hannah Haws (born Whitcomb)<br>Children: Caroline Barney (born Haws), Francis Marion Haws, Matilda Holdaway (born Haws), Lucinda Holdaway (born Haws), Eliza Holdaway (born Haws), Amos Whitcomb Haws, Albert W. Haws, William Wallace Haws, , George Washington Haws, Emma Smith York (born Haws), Mary Olive York (born Haws), John Madison Haws</a>, Gilberth Oliver Haws<br>Siblings: Benjamin Haws, William Neill Haws, James Haws, Archibald Haws, Rebecca Hargrave (born Haws), Clinton Haws, Mary Haws, Alfred Haws, Alney Haws, John Haws, Sr., Lucretia Sessions (born Haws), James Earlton Haws, Eliza Haws
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Gilberth Haws<br>Gender: Male<br>Birth: Mar 10 1801 - Logan, Kentucky, United States<br>Marriage: Spouse: Hannah Whitcomb - June 1 1822 - Carmi, White, Illinois, United States<br>Immigration: Between Sep 20 1848 and Sep 24 1848 - Utah, United States<br>Immigration: Sep 24 1848 - Utah, United States<br>Residence: 1840 - Wayne, Illinois, United States<br>Residence: 1850 - Utah, Utah Territory<br>Residence: June 1850 - Provo, Utah, Utah, United States<br>Residence: 1860 - Provo, Utah, Utah Territory, United States<br>Residence: Farmer - Sep 19 1860 - Provo, Utah, Utah, United States<br>Residence: 1870 - Provo Ward 3, Utah, Utah Territory, United States<br>Residence: Farmer - Aug 11 1870 - Provo, Utah, Utah, United States<br>Death: Mar 3 1877 - Provo, Utah, Utah, United States<br>Burial: Mar 5 1877 - Provo City Cemetery, Plot: Block 4, lot 18, Provo, Utah, Utah, United States<br>Parents: Jacob Haws, Hannah Haws (born Neill)<br>Wife: Hannah Haws (born Whitcomb)<br>Children: Caroline Barney (born Haws), Matilda Holdaway (born Haws), Lucinda Holdaway (born Haws), Eliza Haws, Francis Marion Haws, Amos Whitcomb Haws, William Wallace Haws, Albert W. Haws</a>, Caleb Willman Haws, George Washington Haws, Emma Smith Haws, Mary Olive York (born Haws), John Madison Haws, Gilbert Oliver Haws<br>Siblings: Benjamin Haws, William Neill Haws, Archibald Haws, Clinton Haws, Rebecca Hargrave (born Haws), Mary Haws, John Haws Sr, Lucretia Sessions (born Haws), James Haws, Alney McClain Haws, Alfred Haws, James Earlton Haws, Eliza Warren (born Haws)<br> &;nbsp;Additional information:
LifeSketch: Birth: Mar. 10, 1801, Logan County [now Butler County], Kentucky, USAaws and Hannah Neill. 9351065.ry 9, 1963. Also from "A Story of the Life of Gilberth Haws and Family Pioneer of 1848."]cob and Hannah Neill. He was of pioneer stock, his ancestors being among the early settlers of Augusta County, Virginia, and Towan County, North Carolina. Jacob Haws with his wife and two small sons left Burke County, North Carolina, before 1800 to make a home in Kentucky. They traveled by horseback with all their belongings going by way of the Wilderness Road, through the Cumberland Gap into Tennessee, entering Kentucky by the way of Nashville. remarried.)aws and Whitcomb families met. Two Haws brothers married two Whitcomb sisters; Benjamin Haws married Polly Whitcomb and Gilberth Haws married Hannah Whitcomb. They affiliated with no church until they were baptized in 1842 in Wayne County, Illinois. [Baptized in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.]rs came to tell us that the saints were being mobbed and driven from their homes and that we had better prepare to go west with the company. We remained in Wayne County until May 1847, when my father and family prepared to go west. We went as far as Iowa and stopped at a little place called Mount Pisgah for the winter. We remained there until the spring of 1848, then started for Winter Quarters so that we might be ready to go west with the first company." Young was General Superintendent of the companies and Gilberth and Hannah Haws were assigned to the 3rd Company under the supervision of Lorenzo Snow. This company consisted of 321 souls. Gilberth Haws had two wagons, one team of horses and five teams of oxen. Hannah drove the team of horses all the way across the Plains. The family consisted of father, mother, seven sons and six daughters.nda Haws Holdaway history quote:] "On September 23, 1848, we arrived in Salt Lake Valley. My father then bought one of the little adobe houses in the Old Fort which was built by the pioneers who came the year before."now stands. In June, 1849, their second daughter Matilda died and was buried on a little knoll near the river and afterwards moved to the Provo City Cemetery. On 8 October 1849 their fourteenth child was born, Gilbert Oliver Haws, the second child born in Provo.y of Provo, sharing all the privations and hardships incident to pioneer life.nd sons cultivated the soil, made ditches, roads and bricks, brought timber from the mountains for fuel and building purposes and the making of farm implements, tanned hides, made shoes for the family, laboring under the greatest difficulties with the crude implements in use at that time. Mother and daughters bore their share of the burdens as they converted the raw materials into food and clothing; cooking over a fireplace, grinding grains to make bread; spinning, weaving, knitting and sewing by hand for the family, gathering herbs, barks, bush and leaves for coloring yarns and cloth and making soap from wood ashes and grease scraps. e) Park is now located; then Gilberth took up the land known as the Tanner Farm, located west of the Provo River and just below the Carterville Road, on the north half of which the B.Y.U. Studio is now located, and moved there. During the time they lived on the farm, Provo City was laid out and when the Walker War broke out and with Indian troubles increasing, they moved into town in 1853 and located on 4th West and 1st North where they lived until their children were all married and scattered. as a Selectman. These positions he filled for several years. He owned an interest in the Provo Cooperative Mercantile Institution, the first of its kind in the Territory of Utah, and in the Provo Woolen Mills. He held many positions in the Church and was a High Priest at the time of his death 3 March 1877. His wife, Hannah, died 21 August 1880 and they are both buried in the Provo City Cemetery. Three sons were called on missions: William Wallace to Illinois; Caleb William to England where he died 20 November 1871 of smallpox; and John Madison to the Southern States.r Barney, Shedrick Holdaway and George Pickup were returned members of the Mormon Battalion.
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