Oscar Hamblin: Difference between revisions

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== Biographical Sketch ==
== Biographical Sketch ==


A native of rural Ross County in south-central Ohio, Oscar Hamblin was a westering New Englander whose family had pioneered in Ohio and Wisconsin before moving to western Illinois, then to frontier Utah where he pioneered in southern Utah. He was an American frontiersman and Indian interpreter.  
A native of rural Ross County in south-central Ohio, Oscar Hamblin was a westering New Englander whose family had pioneered in Ohio and Wisconsin before moving to western Illinois, then to frontier Utah where he pioneered in southern Utah. He was an American frontiersman and Indian interpreter.  


=== Early Years: From Ohio Westward ===
=== Early Years: From Ohio Westward ===


Hamblin was born in Bainbridge in rural Ross County in south-central Ohio, the eighth of eleven children born to Isaiah Hamblin (1790-1856) and Daphne Haynes (1797-1847). His Puritan forebears settled in Massachusetts, later in Connecticut before moving to Grand Isle County in Lake Champlain in northwestern Vermont.  
Hamblin was born in Bainbridge in rural Ross County in south-central Ohio, the eighth of eleven children born to Isaiah Hamblin (1790-1856) and Daphne Haynes (1797-1847). His Puritan forebears settled in Massachusetts, later in Connecticut before moving to Grand Isle County in Lake Champlain in northwestern Vermont.  
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Jacob Hamblin, Oscar's older brother, was converted to Mormonism and visited Nauvoo, Illinois, the main center of Mormonism in the early 1840s. In 1843, Jacob Hamblin returned to Wisconsin and convinced many in his family to resettle in western Illinois among the Mormons. In 1844, the Mormon leader Joseph Smith was assassinated and in 1845, unrest continued between Mormons and the original settlers in western Illinois.  
Jacob Hamblin, Oscar's older brother, was converted to Mormonism and visited Nauvoo, Illinois, the main center of Mormonism in the early 1840s. In 1843, Jacob Hamblin returned to Wisconsin and convinced many in his family to resettle in western Illinois among the Mormons. In 1844, the Mormon leader Joseph Smith was assassinated and in 1845, unrest continued between Mormons and the original settlers in western Illinois.  


=== Migration to Utah ===
=== Migration to Utah ===


In 1846, under the leadership of Brigham Young, the Mormons began abandoning their city on the Mississippi River and rolling across the prairies of Iowa Territory. The Hamblins were part of that exodus. For several years, they remained in the area of what would later become Council Bluffs, Iowa. In 1850, they immigrated to the valley of the Great Salt Lake and settled in Tooele, southwest of Great Salt Lake City.  
In 1846, under the leadership of Brigham Young, the Mormons began abandoning their city on the Mississippi River and rolling across the prairies of Iowa Territory. The Hamblins were part of that exodus. For several years, they remained in the area of what would later become Council Bluffs, Iowa. In 1850, they immigrated to the valley of the Great Salt Lake and settled in Tooele, southwest of Great Salt Lake City.  
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In February, 1854, 21-year-old Oscar Hamblin married 18-year-old Mary Ann Corbridge (1836-1916), the daughter of James and Elizabeth Walmsley Corbridge. She and her family were natives of Lancashire, England. Following their conversion to the Mormon Church in the 1840s, they had immigrated to America to join the Mormons.  
In February, 1854, 21-year-old Oscar Hamblin married 18-year-old Mary Ann Corbridge (1836-1916), the daughter of James and Elizabeth Walmsley Corbridge. She and her family were natives of Lancashire, England. Following their conversion to the Mormon Church in the 1840s, they had immigrated to America to join the Mormons.  


[[Image:Fort Clara, sketch, 1855-1862.jpg|thumb|right|350px|Fort Clara, 1855-1862]]===To the Southern Indian Mission ===
=== [[Image:Fort Clara, sketch, 1855-1862.jpg|thumb|right|350px]]To the Southern Indian Mission ===


In 1855, the Hamblin and Corbridge families followed Jacob Hamblin (1819-1886) to Fort Clara on the Santa Clara River in southwestern Utah. Shortly after arriving, Isaiah Hamblin, father to Oscar and Jacob, died. Soon, Jacob Hamblin became a leader of the Indian interpreters sent by Brigham Young to found the Southern Indian Mission and Oscar Hamblin served as one of the Indian interpreter.  
In 1855, the Hamblin and Corbridge families followed Jacob Hamblin (1819-1886) to Fort Clara on the Santa Clara River in southwestern Utah. Shortly after arriving, Isaiah Hamblin, father to Oscar and Jacob, died. Soon, Jacob Hamblin became a leader of the Indian interpreters sent by Brigham Young to found the Southern Indian Mission and Oscar Hamblin served as one of the Indian interpreter.  


=== To Fort Las Vegas ===
=== To Fort Las Vegas ===


Later that year, Oscar Hamblin was among those sent to the Las Vegas valley in modern Nevada to found Las Vegas Fort there. In June 1857, back at Fort Clara in southern Utah, Oscar Hamblin and his wife attended Thales Haskell’s dying wife, Maria Woodbury Haskell, who was accidentally shot by an Indian boy inside the fort.  
Later that year, Oscar Hamblin was among those sent to the Las Vegas valley in modern Nevada to found Las Vegas Fort there. In June 1857, back at Fort Clara in southern Utah, Oscar Hamblin and his wife attended Thales Haskell’s dying wife, Maria Woodbury Haskell, who was accidentally shot by an Indian boy inside the fort.  


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=== In the Iron Military District: 2nd Lieutenant Oscar Hamblin, Company H, John D. Lee's 4th Battalion ===
 
=== In the Iron Military District: 2nd Lieutenant Oscar Hamblin, Company H, John D. Lee's 4th Battalion ===


In September 1857, 24-year-old Oscar Hamblin was 2nd Lieutenant of one of the two platoons at Fort Clara attached to John D. Lee’s 4th Battalion. On the evening of Monday, September 7, according to John D. Lee, Oscar Hamblin was among those from the southern settlements who Lee met some miles south of Mountain Meadows. They moved up to Mountain Meadows the following day. Militiaman William "Billy" Young from the southern settlement of Washington, also mentioned Hamblin among those he saw at Mountain Meadows. Following their arrival at the Meadows, Lee praised Hamblin for his skill in handling the Indians.  
In September 1857, 24-year-old Oscar Hamblin was 2nd Lieutenant of one of the two platoons at Fort Clara attached to John D. Lee’s 4th Battalion. On the evening of Monday, September 7, according to John D. Lee, Oscar Hamblin was among those from the southern settlements who Lee met some miles south of Mountain Meadows. They moved up to Mountain Meadows the following day. Militiaman William "Billy" Young from the southern settlement of Washington, also mentioned Hamblin among those he saw at Mountain Meadows. Following their arrival at the Meadows, Lee praised Hamblin for his skill in handling the Indians.  
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Oscar Hamblin was not among those listed in Judge John Cradlebaugh's 1859 arrest warrant. However, in the first trial of John D. Lee in 1875, witness William Young identified Hamblin as among those present at Mountain Meadows during the time of the siege. Lee and his attorney William Bishopalso refer to him in Lee's posthumously-published autobiography, ''Mormonism Unveiled.''  
Oscar Hamblin was not among those listed in Judge John Cradlebaugh's 1859 arrest warrant. However, in the first trial of John D. Lee in 1875, witness William Young identified Hamblin as among those present at Mountain Meadows during the time of the siege. Lee and his attorney William Bishopalso refer to him in Lee's posthumously-published autobiography, ''Mormonism Unveiled.''  


=== Later Years ===
=== Later Years ===


In the winter of 1858-59, Oscar accompanied his brother Jacob on his first expedition to the Hopi Mesas in eastern Arizona and endured the rigors of that trip. Oscar Hamblin, his wife and their children remained in Santa Clara until 1862.  
In the winter of 1858-59, Oscar accompanied his brother Jacob on his first expedition to the Hopi Mesas in eastern Arizona and endured the rigors of that trip. Oscar Hamblin, his wife and their children remained in Santa Clara until 1862.  
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In February 1862, the Great Flood on the Santa Clara River severely damaged Fort Clara and Oscar Hamblin and his family lost much of their property in the flood. Evidently, he was also suffering from "consumption" (pneumonia??). They moved to Minersville, Beaver County, for his health. However, Oscar Hamblin soon succumbed to his disease. Sometime in 1862, he died at the age of 29 and was buried there, survived by his wife and children. His wife survived him by more than 50 years.  
In February 1862, the Great Flood on the Santa Clara River severely damaged Fort Clara and Oscar Hamblin and his family lost much of their property in the flood. Evidently, he was also suffering from "consumption" (pneumonia??). They moved to Minersville, Beaver County, for his health. However, Oscar Hamblin soon succumbed to his disease. Sometime in 1862, he died at the age of 29 and was buried there, survived by his wife and children. His wife survived him by more than 50 years.  


== References ==
== References ==


Alder and Brooks, ''A History of Washington County,'' 22; Bradshaw, ''Under Dixie Sun: A History of Washington County, ''32, 150; Carter, ''Our Pioneer Heritage,'' 3:459; Carter, ''Heart Throbs of the West,'' 6:430; Lee, ''Mormonism Unveiled,''&nbsp;; Lee Trial transcripts; Larson, ''I Was Called to Dixie,'' 40; New.FamilySearch.org.; Robinson, ''They Answered the Call: A History of Minersville, Utah,'' 13, 232, Appendix 38-39 (Elizabeth Wamsley Corbridge (mother-in-law)) 39-40 (Mary Ann Corbridge (wife)), 40-42 (William Corbridge (father-in-law); Thrapp, ''Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography,'' 2:609; Walker, et al, ''Massacre at Mountain Meadows,'' Appendix C; Whittaker, ed., ''History of Santa Clara, Utah,'' 32, 89.  
Alder and Brooks, ''A History of Washington County,'' 22; Bradshaw, ''Under Dixie Sun: A History of Washington County, ''32, 150; Carter, ''Our Pioneer Heritage,'' 3:459; Carter, ''Heart Throbs of the West,'' 6:430; Lee, ''Mormonism Unveiled,''&nbsp;; Lee Trial transcripts; Larson, ''I Was Called to Dixie,'' 40; New.FamilySearch.org.; Robinson, ''They Answered the Call: A History of Minersville, Utah,'' 13, 232, Appendix 38-39 (Elizabeth Wamsley Corbridge (mother-in-law)) 39-40 (Mary Ann Corbridge (wife)), 40-42 (William Corbridge (father-in-law); Thrapp, ''Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography,'' 2:609; Walker, et al, ''Massacre at Mountain Meadows,'' Appendix C; Whittaker, ed., ''History of Santa Clara, Utah,'' 32, 89.  


Further information and confirmation needed. Please comment below and contact editor@1857ironcountymilitia.com.
Further information and confirmation needed. Please comment below and contact editor@1857ironcountymilitia.com.  
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Revision as of 08:14, 23 June 2011

Oscar Hamblin, his personal and family background, and his involvement in the Mountain Meadows Massacre


Oscar Hamblin

1833-1862



Biographical Sketch

A native of rural Ross County in south-central Ohio, Oscar Hamblin was a westering New Englander whose family had pioneered in Ohio and Wisconsin before moving to western Illinois, then to frontier Utah where he pioneered in southern Utah. He was an American frontiersman and Indian interpreter.

Early Years: From Ohio Westward

Hamblin was born in Bainbridge in rural Ross County in south-central Ohio, the eighth of eleven children born to Isaiah Hamblin (1790-1856) and Daphne Haynes (1797-1847). His Puritan forebears settled in Massachusetts, later in Connecticut before moving to Grand Isle County in Lake Champlain in northwestern Vermont.

In the 1820s, the Hamblin family moved to Ashtabula County, then Geauga County in the northeastern Ohio. From there, they moved to Ross County in south-central Ohio. They were in Ohio until the mid-1830s, then moved to Spring Prairie, Wisconsin.

Jacob Hamblin, Oscar's older brother, was converted to Mormonism and visited Nauvoo, Illinois, the main center of Mormonism in the early 1840s. In 1843, Jacob Hamblin returned to Wisconsin and convinced many in his family to resettle in western Illinois among the Mormons. In 1844, the Mormon leader Joseph Smith was assassinated and in 1845, unrest continued between Mormons and the original settlers in western Illinois.

Migration to Utah

In 1846, under the leadership of Brigham Young, the Mormons began abandoning their city on the Mississippi River and rolling across the prairies of Iowa Territory. The Hamblins were part of that exodus. For several years, they remained in the area of what would later become Council Bluffs, Iowa. In 1850, they immigrated to the valley of the Great Salt Lake and settled in Tooele, southwest of Great Salt Lake City.

In February, 1854, 21-year-old Oscar Hamblin married 18-year-old Mary Ann Corbridge (1836-1916), the daughter of James and Elizabeth Walmsley Corbridge. She and her family were natives of Lancashire, England. Following their conversion to the Mormon Church in the 1840s, they had immigrated to America to join the Mormons.

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To the Southern Indian Mission

In 1855, the Hamblin and Corbridge families followed Jacob Hamblin (1819-1886) to Fort Clara on the Santa Clara River in southwestern Utah. Shortly after arriving, Isaiah Hamblin, father to Oscar and Jacob, died. Soon, Jacob Hamblin became a leader of the Indian interpreters sent by Brigham Young to found the Southern Indian Mission and Oscar Hamblin served as one of the Indian interpreter.

To Fort Las Vegas

Later that year, Oscar Hamblin was among those sent to the Las Vegas valley in modern Nevada to found Las Vegas Fort there. In June 1857, back at Fort Clara in southern Utah, Oscar Hamblin and his wife attended Thales Haskell’s dying wife, Maria Woodbury Haskell, who was accidentally shot by an Indian boy inside the fort.



In the Iron Military District: 2nd Lieutenant Oscar Hamblin, Company H, John D. Lee's 4th Battalion

In September 1857, 24-year-old Oscar Hamblin was 2nd Lieutenant of one of the two platoons at Fort Clara attached to John D. Lee’s 4th Battalion. On the evening of Monday, September 7, according to John D. Lee, Oscar Hamblin was among those from the southern settlements who Lee met some miles south of Mountain Meadows. They moved up to Mountain Meadows the following day. Militiaman William "Billy" Young from the southern settlement of Washington, also mentioned Hamblin among those he saw at Mountain Meadows. Following their arrival at the Meadows, Lee praised Hamblin for his skill in handling the Indians.

Hamblin is not mentioned among those attending the war council on the evening of Thursday, the 10th, but presumably he was present at the massacre on Friday, the 11th. However, Oscar's brother Jacob maintained that Oscar recruited Paiutes along the Santa Clara river, brought them to Mountain Meadows on Tuesday, the 8th, and then left. If he was present on the day of the final massacre, it seems likely that he acted as an interpreter in dealing with the Indians.

Oscar Hamblin was not among those listed in Judge John Cradlebaugh's 1859 arrest warrant. However, in the first trial of John D. Lee in 1875, witness William Young identified Hamblin as among those present at Mountain Meadows during the time of the siege. Lee and his attorney William Bishopalso refer to him in Lee's posthumously-published autobiography, Mormonism Unveiled.

Later Years

In the winter of 1858-59, Oscar accompanied his brother Jacob on his first expedition to the Hopi Mesas in eastern Arizona and endured the rigors of that trip. Oscar Hamblin, his wife and their children remained in Santa Clara until 1862.

In February 1862, the Great Flood on the Santa Clara River severely damaged Fort Clara and Oscar Hamblin and his family lost much of their property in the flood. Evidently, he was also suffering from "consumption" (pneumonia??). They moved to Minersville, Beaver County, for his health. However, Oscar Hamblin soon succumbed to his disease. Sometime in 1862, he died at the age of 29 and was buried there, survived by his wife and children. His wife survived him by more than 50 years.

References

Alder and Brooks, A History of Washington County, 22; Bradshaw, Under Dixie Sun: A History of Washington County, 32, 150; Carter, Our Pioneer Heritage, 3:459; Carter, Heart Throbs of the West, 6:430; Lee, Mormonism Unveiled, ; Lee Trial transcripts; Larson, I Was Called to Dixie, 40; New.FamilySearch.org.; Robinson, They Answered the Call: A History of Minersville, Utah, 13, 232, Appendix 38-39 (Elizabeth Wamsley Corbridge (mother-in-law)) 39-40 (Mary Ann Corbridge (wife)), 40-42 (William Corbridge (father-in-law); Thrapp, Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography, 2:609; Walker, et al, Massacre at Mountain Meadows, Appendix C; Whittaker, ed., History of Santa Clara, Utah, 32, 89.

Further information and confirmation needed. Please comment below and contact editor@1857ironcountymilitia.com.