In 1870, Something Happened Here

Preface to The Second Wife’s Story (a biography) There is a sign hanging in my mother’s laundry room. It says, “On this site in 1897 nothing happened.” But who knows if that’s actually true? Who’s to say nothing happened on that site. Right there. You know, on that very spot right next to the washing…

Preface to The Second Wife’s Story (a biography)

There is a sign hanging in my mother’s laundry room. It says, “On this site in 1897 nothing happened.” But who knows if that’s actually true? Who’s to say nothing happened on that site. Right there. You know, on that very spot right next to the washing machine? If there’s no evidence of schoolchildren following a path to an old schoolhouse just down the road, a young woman milking cows, an old farmer stooping to clear a clogged ditch, or a native woman searching for firewood to warm her hearth, who’s to say nothing actually happened right there, on that very spot?  If something did not happen on that very site next to my mother’s washer in 1897, I’m betting that there were a whole lot of somethings going on not too far away, and every time I see that silly sign in Mom’s laundry room, I wonder exactly what those somethings were.

Of course, I might be exaggerating a little, but the first log cabin was built in the area in 1877, so something could have happened there. Mom’s bathroom memorial makes me think. We post memorials for all sorts of historical events–things like battles, negotiations, inventions, catastrophes, births of historical figures, and of course, deaths (to name a few). Those memorials can tell us a lot. And although I could probably visit the local museum to find out if anything happened in the general vicinity of my mother’s bathroom sink in 1897, I could also look for memorials in the cemetery.

I love cemeteries. In fact, I still need to get myself that bumper sticker with the warning, “Caution, I brake for Cemeteries.” In 1997, when Utah was celebrating it’s sesquicentennial of the arrival of the Brigham Young and his followers, someone at the headquarters of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints came up with a reason to make me love cemeteries even more: A plaque to adorn every tombstone belonging to Utah pioneers who came before the arrival of the transcontinental railroad in 1869. I was raised in Utah as a member of that church. I wasn’t born there, and I had absolutely no pioneer ancestors, but I still remember the stories of courage, struggle, heartache and triumph that accompanied the many families who crossed the American plains mostly by foot. It was an unfathomable journey taking about three months. I tried it last summer by car with my daughter and granddaughter from Kentucky to Utah. It took us four days. Of course, it was a round-trip ride, which meant a total of eight days in an air conditioned car. By the time we arrived back home, we discovered that we’d picked up stowaways in the form of bed bugs along the way. I am in no hurry to try that trip again any time soon.

But I digress.

faith in every footstep. Sons of Utah Pioneers
Utah pioneer grave marker image courtesy of Sons of Utah Pioneers

The metal plaque, emblazoned with the phrase, “Faith in every footstep,” soon began appearing on tombstones throughout the state. By 2001, the pioneer plaques had been placed on nearly every known pioneer tombstone. By that time, my interest in graveyards had fully matured, and the histories known, and the mysteries unknown, called to me like ghosts in a romantic novel.  So when I stepped into the Cemetery in Plain City Utah, I was hoping those ghosts would lead me to a story.

And they did.

Inscriptions on tombstones are not usually put there to make you laugh (even though some do); they are there to make you think. The family memorial I found that day left me thinking for years. Names and dates are inscribed on all four sides of the tombstone. I could tell just by looking at birth dates, that this was the grave site of pioneer settlers, but that’s not what got me thinking. It was the birth and death dates accompanying nine other names. All children. In the Fall of 1870, and into January of the next year, eight of those children died. Now I knew there had been an epidemic of some sort. I  could see that there was a mystery begging to be solved.

I was in college on that initial visit, and a single mom at that. I didn’t have time to look for clues and answers, but that story stuck with me enough that I knew I had to write about it. I used an essay assignment from one of my English classes as an excuse to put my conjectures into writing. The essay won second place in a department contest at Weber State University, and I kept it over the years.

When I finished school and became an empty-nester, I finally started digging for the tombstone’s story. My first foray came up with some answers–enough to help me see that I could easily build a history around that grave marker. I went back to Plain City and took pictures of all four sides of the tombstone. What I found, shocked me. On the backside of the tombstone are the names of three of the children who died during the epidemic, and one more who was born and died in the following years. It wasn’t those children that surprised me, though. It was the inscription I had missed in my first visit at the bottom of the back side of the tombstone, “Children of William and Mary Skeen.” I stepped back around to the front and looked at the bottom. It said, “Children of William and Caroline Skeen.” There were two different mothers and one father. This was a polygamous family.

 

I grew up in Utah, and I am very familiar with polygamy, even though I have no Utah Pioneer roots. Many Utah pioneers practiced polygamy, and I had friends who were descendants of polygamous marriages. There was even a handful of families in my neighborhood who still practiced it, even though it was disavowed by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints in the late 18th century and church members who currently enter into such unions are excommunicated. Today, they call themselves Fundamentalist Mormons. Knowing what I know about Utah and polygamy, I can’t pass judgment on the pioneer families who still practice it despite laws and church condemnation. I’ve seen happy children and wives who claim to share equally in marital bliss. Neither am I blind to the fact that some sects have taken the practice much too far by forcing children into unwanted marriages. It’s because of that second marriage that I decided to focus on Mary Davis, the second wife of William Dolby Skeen.

I’ve lived outside of Utah for most of the time since I started my research, but that hasn’t stopped me.  Thanks to the internet, I have access to nearly everything I need to complete my research. Sometimes I think I have too much, and that I will need to pare down the story before it gets too unwieldy. It has become interesting to me that I could build a compelling biography of an utter stranger without ever having met her or having any access to written memoirs.

I nearly missed Mary, tucked away as she was at the bottom of the backside of the monument. When I found her, I realized that her story is far more important than the location on the tombstone suggests. At a first glance, it’s easy to think nothing happened here. But from surrounding names, places, and dates, I could see that something had happened, and that little name tucked away in the corner had been there and played an integral role in the town’s history. It’s not her death that’s important, it’s her life. I don’t want Mary Davis Skeen to be forgotten, and I feel compelled to commit her to the memory of others who would never have known her otherwise.  We are surrounded on a daily basis by people living what they feel are ordinary and unremarkable lives, but if we make an effort to get to know them, we can learn valuable lessons and come to see them as crucial members of our community. Mary’s tale unfolds in bits and pieces. Like a patchwork quilt, it is colorful, warm and inviting. Her story includes heartache, tragedy and tribulation along with faith, perseverance and promise. While Mary’s story reminds us that happily ever after never happens, it also tells us that happy endings do.

Please join me in my journey to tell Mary’s story. Your comments and helpful criticism are welcome and encouraged. Treat each post as rough drafts to Mary’s biography, as that is what they are intended to be. Mary’s story will be told one chapter at a time, and one month at a time, over the next year. My ultimate goal is to publish them together in a book. If you feel that you have information that may be helpful, or that will clarify ambiguities in Mary’s story, please leave a comment or contact me. And thank you in advance for your help!

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Responses to “In 1870, Something Happened Here”

  1. nwpaintedlady

    Bravo – again so happy I found you – this is an amazing post with an amazing story to tell and I will be following along and anxious for the journey to begin and the chance to get to know Mary. Sharon

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Marianne Kwiatkowski

      Oh. Thank you! I am equally as excited to tell the story. Although I’ve already put an enormous amount of research into it, I am still seeing an enormous amount of research as I flesh out characters an events in her life. I hope it doesn’t slow me down! First step is getting to know her parents. 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

    2. Marianne Kwiatkowski

      Me too! Thanks for stopping by!

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  2. Laura Hedgecock

    Looking forward to Mary’s story.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Marianne Kwiatkowski

      Thanks Laura, I am looking forward to telling it!

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  3. dezertsuz

    Oh, I’m going to love this! Thanks to Sharon above, for alerting me to your post. She knows I love genealogy. For 50 years, I thought I had no pioneer ancestors, too! (The first 20 years, I wasn’t thinking much about whether I did or not!) In the last year, I’ve found I do! One set followed the entire path from Colesville, NY, to the Salt Lake Valley. There’s a letter to Joseph Smith in the Joseph Smith Papers which details the family’s trials up through Nauvoo (they lived in Quincy).

    Another set spent several years in Winter Quarters, sending 2-3 on to the valley each year. I can find both families, and a few more strays, in the Pioneer Overland Trail site. All that to say, don’t give up on who you might find! I’m a convert (age 17) and have spent a lifetime looking, only now finding my pioneer ancestors.

    I’m so glad you happened on that tombstone, and that you are pursuing the information. Someone wants you to, and I want to read about it!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Marianne Kwiatkowski

      Thank you for your kind words! Both of my parents are converts who met at BYU. My mother is a first generation American (Check out my post titled “How my Mormon Mom Learned She Was a Jew.”), and my father is second generation on his Dad’s side, so my only possibility for pioneer ancestors comes from my paternal grandmother who fled New York from an abusive husband when my dad was just 11. When Dad and I first started doing our genealogy, we learned that I do have pioneer relatives, but no direct ancestors who actually crossed the plains. I am still gathering information for my own family stories, but Mary’s was the first to be fully fleshed out (see “What Happened to the Skeen Family?)”, and I don’t intend to give up on her. I am looking forward to telling her story.

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      1. dezertsuz

        Not unlike my story in some ways. The pioneers I’ve found are not straight back from my father, but children of uncles or great aunts. I count them anyway. =) That’s way closer than no one. =) I’m starting back at the beginning, as near as I can figure (2014?) and coming forward. I did read the Why I Tell Stories page.

        Liked by 1 person

  4. Amy

    Very intriguing! I will be following along.

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    1. Marianne Kwiatkowski

      Thanks Amy! I’m excited to share the story.

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  5. Liz Gauffreau

    As I neared the end of your post, I was thinking that Mary’s story should be a book–and it will be! I look forward to reading the chapters as they unfold.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Marianne Kwiatkowski

      That’s what I was thinking when I saw the tombstone–the first time! I’m so glad I took a second look. Thanks for following. I hope you won’t be disappointed!

      Liked by 1 person

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