Descendants of William Hascall of Fontmell Magna (1490-1542)

Notes


15599. John Haskell Woodbury


In 1867, John built a home on 1st West, between 5th and 6th South In Salt Lake City.  In October 1889, John went to Great Britain to fill a mission and spent two years laboring in the Leeds Conference. In 1893, he moved to a farm in Granger which he purchased in 1889.  He was ordained High Priest May 15, 1910. He served as President of the Woodbury Genealogical Society for 35 years.

.


Sarah Alexina Bray


Alexina served as a Relief Society Teacher at Granger Ward.


15601. Thomas Hobart Woodbury Jr.


Principal occupation was well drilling, he was responsible for over 400 wells in Salt Lake county. He was a member of the High Priest Quorum.


31757. Catherine Lambert Woodbury


Worked at the Lambert Paper Company as assistant bookkeeper. Filled a miis
ion in the Northwest from 1910 to 1912.  She worked for the H.J. Heinz Company for 14 years. She was Captain of the the Belvedere Camp of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers for 8 years.


Joseph Sellers Dixon


Joseph was an accountant and was still working at the age of eighty-tw
o. He was a Seventy in the church.


Joseph Hyrum Stay


Joseph worked as a florist and landscape gardner. He worked for Shaws Botanical Gardens in St. Louis. Circa 1876 he moved to Salt Lake City and went to work at the Pioneer Nursery Co., owned by Thomas H. Woodbury. He followed this line of work for twenty years, then he took up electrical engineering for the Utah Power and Light, he later worked as Hydrostatic Engineer.


15603. William Reynolds Haskell

History of Half a Century
Homer Norris
Bigraphical
William R. Haskell

No man who claimed Garden City as his home became more intimately connected with its history, or who had a greater interest in the future growth of the town and its permanence than Mr. Haskell. His loyalty to the town never faltered up to the time of his death. He came here in 1882, representing an eastern banking company that contemplated the establishment of a bank in Garden City. He looked the field over and came to the conclusion that the field was sufficiently covered by the banks then in existence. But on the other side he saw the possibilities that the town presented for private enterprise and decided to remain and take a hand in the work of development, a work he continued to the very last of his days. His first venture in business and perhaps the best investment he ever made came when Buffalo Jones, needing a little money, deeded him lots 16, 17, 18, 19 and 20 in Block B. Jones Addition for the small sum of $125. Upon this property in later years he erected a large swimming pool and skating rink, and still later built the modern and substatantial buildings occupied by the Traders and the Hughes Motor Company. The Jake Shoop building also occupies a part of the same property. Another of his enterprises was the erection of the big warehouse that until recently stood in the rear of the Dillon building. His venture in the building line was when he joined with Squire Pearce in the erection of the Grant block on Eighth street. From then on we find him building several residences and financing them in building homes. He was among the first to raise sweet clover in the county and to prove its many advantages to the farmer in restoring fertility to the soil as well as to provide a profitable crop. There was not a day during his long life in Garden City that he was not engaged in some enterprise that would benefit the community. In the stress of hard times and depressions if some of his enterprises faced failure, he never lost faith in thr future of Garden City. When his efforts proved successful he was satisfied and used any profits he made in future activity.

Mr. Haskell was born in Maine, the paradise of the true bellied Yankee and reared among a people noted for their parsimonious, grasping dispositions, intolerant of everything that did not meet their conceptions of how every affair of life should be conducted. The early years of his life were spent in Connecticut and Massachusetts in surroundings that might have made him a Yankee of the Yankees, but he was too broad minded, too unselfish in disposition, too liberal in his views to adopt the ways of people who surrounded him. The west broadened him and led him to recognize that others had rights the same as himself. There was never a more generous man and never failed to lend a helping hand to those who went to him for assistance. Often his confidence was betrayed, but he never lost faith in the inate honesty of people in general.
_____
Garden City Newspaper
January 7, 1935

William Reynolds Haskell, 83, for more than 50 years a resident of Garden City, passed away at 5 o'clock this morning at his home, 617 North Eleventh street, after a prolonged illness.

Interment will be made in Valley View cemetery.

The deceased came to Garden City in 1883 and had been active in the real estate and investment business.

He is survived by one son, Harold E. Haskell, Hartford, Conn., a daughter-in-law, Mrs. J. J. Haskell, two granddaughters, Miss Jacquelyn Haskell, and Mrs. William J. Braddock, Kansas City and a great granddaughter, Betsey Braddock


31775. Harold Everett Haskell

Connecticut, Military Questionnaires, 1919-1920
Name: Harold Everett Haskell
Gender:     Male
Race: White
Birth Date: 17 Oct 1886
Birth Place: Garden City, Finny, Kansas, USA
Residence Date: 1919-1920
Residence Place: Connecticut, USA
Father:     William R Haskell
Mother:     James G Blinn


Archibald Cattell Jr.


Chicago Daily Tribune
October 5, 1940

Archibald Cattell, Thursday, at his residence, 5421 Cornell avenue, leaving surviving Rose H. Cattell, his wife, two daughters, Mrs. Herbert E. Gernet of Westfield, N.J., and Mrs. Maynard B. Barnes of Paris, France and Washington, D.C.; three grandchildren, Archibald Cattell Gernet, Herebert E. Gernet and Julia Maynard Barnes.


31788. Louis Clifford Haskell

Birth record shows name as Clarence Lewis Haskell


Marriage Notes for Madge L. Haskell and Jean Hubbard Sedgwick

MARRIAGE:
The Firchburg Sentinel
November 11, 1896

Divorce case No. 332, Madge L. Sedgwick vs. Jesse H. Sedgwick was tried. Madge L. Sedgwick testified that she was married Ocr. 31, 1901, at Athol, that she has a child four years old. The cause was adultery and there was little in the case of an elavating character. F. V. Wilson was libellant


15615. Eugenia Francella Pomeroy

The Arizona Republican
May 20, 1902

Mrs. Francelle Eugenia Robson, wife of the late Charles I. Robson, died at her home in Mesa Monday morning, and the entire community is in mourning, for it would be hard to find one who was so universly respected and loved as was "Aunt Cell," as she was lovingly called by nearly all of her acquaintances and especially the younger generation. Heart disease and dropsey trouble were the immediate cause of he death, but these were aggravated and brought into life through the death of he daughter Zula, whose sad death occured on the 21st day of January last. Mrs. Robson took her death to heart and grieved over her departure until she became sick herself, broken down in spirit and weakened in body, although she was naturally of a cheerful and happy disposition. On the 8th of March last she had an attack of lumbago, but partially recovered sufficently to move around the house and a couple of times to walk out and with assistance get into a buggy for a ride. But last Sunday she was attacked with asthma and dropsy, and from that time to the day of her death she was unable to help herself yet her mind was clear even up to the moment of her death. Although she evidently realized that the end was near, a cheerful smile and witty remark disarmed the fear of those waiting on her as to the nearness of her end. Her wonderful nerve sustained her to the end and when it came she passed peacefully away with a smile of farewell on her lips.

Mrs. Robson was a pioneer, both of Utah and of Mesa, Arizona. She was the daughter of Francis M. Pomeroy and Irene Haskell, and was born at Nauvoo, Ill., on the 24th day of September, 1846, the year of the exodus of the Mormons from that city. Soon after she was one year old her bright smile was seen in Salt Lake City where she had been brought with her parents with the first company of emigrants that crossed the plains following the pioneers, her father, Francis M. Pomeroy, having been one of the 143 pioneers that broke the road from the Missouri to Salt Lake City. The family settled in Salt Lake City where she lived until womanhood, when she married Charles Innes Robson, in the endowment house, on the 21st day of 1870. and settled in Sugar House ward, where she lived until 1877. With the pioneers of Mesa she moved to Mesa Arizona where she went through the hardships attending the opening of a new country and always did her full share of the public work of the community. After district No. 4 was organized she was the first teacher to take charge of the school, teaching in her own house, where she lived until the day of her death. She was secretary of the relief society of Mesa from its organization until called to act as secretary of the Stake Relief society which position she filled until called to act as as counselor in the Stake presidency of the Relief Society, which she held until her death. At the organization of the Woman Suffrage organizatiom she was unamously selected as president and being naturally a leader she took a pleasure in the work.

She attended the jubilee celebration of Pioneer day in 1897 as a guest of the committee; and was presented with the badges of the jubilee. She remained in Utah and Idaho the rest of the summer, coming home in October.

She was the mother of four children, two whom, Frank and Zula, preceded her to the beyond. Isabel Pomeroy and Mrs. Pearl Hill remain to mourn her loss. The sad news has been telegraphed to Mrs. Pearl Hill at Clitten, and she is on route to attend the funeral which will be held at tabernacle at 2 p.m., the date of which will be determined by her arrival.


15616. Francis Ashbel Pomeroy


Tacoma News Tribune
February 2, 1938

Dr. Francis Pomeroy, 89, of Cheney, a pioneer physician of Spokane county, died in a local hospital Monday. He had been a member of the staff of the Northern Pacific railway with the Idaho division until he retired. He was a charter member of the Spokane Medical society and had been a Mason since 1879, being affiliated with the Oriental lodge of Spokane.

He leaves a daughter, Mrs. A. B. Remington, in Seattle.