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=== In the Iron Military District: Private John Price, Company I, John D. Lee's 4th Battalion, Washington === | === In the Iron Military District: Private John Price, Company I, John D. Lee's 4th Battalion, Washington === | ||
In September 1857, Price, 42, was a private in the third Washington platoon in Captain Harrison Pearce’s Company I in Major John D. Lee’s 4th Battalion. | In September 1857, Price, 42, was a private in the third Washington platoon in Captain Harrison Pearce’s Company I in Major John D. Lee’s 4th Battalion. See [[A Basic Account]] for a full description of the massacre. | ||
The 1859 arrest warrant lists "James Price" but he is not mentioned in other lists of participants. His exact role in the massacre is unknown. | The 1859 arrest warrant lists "James Price" but he is not mentioned in other lists of participants. His exact role in the massacre is unknown. | ||
Revision as of 06:31, 24 January 2012
John Price, his personal and family background, and his involvement in the Mountain Meadows Massacre
John Price
1815-1893
Biographical Sketch
John Price was a native of Tennessee with other American forbears from backcountry Virginia. He moved from Tennessee to Mississippi, then to frontier Utah where he was a pioneer in southern Utah.
Early Years: From Tennessee to the Deep South
Price was born in Tennessee. His mother had been born in Tennessee; his father in Virginia. His earliest American forebears of which we know were in Westmoreland County, Virginia, and were from Scots-Irish descent.
Price married Eliza Ann Adair (1811-1892), a native of Tennessee whose parents were from South Carolina. Evidently, in the mid-1840s they were in Pickens County, Mississippi. Price’s wife was part of the large Adair clan which joined the Mormons.
Migration to Utah
During the late 1840s to early 1850s, the Adair clan and the Prices immigrated to Utah Territory. Price and his wife and family settled first in Salt Lake City.
Joining the Southerners in Washington County and the Cotton Mission

By early 1857, the Prices had joined the Adairs and other kin in the Southern colony in southwestern Utah. Price was among the original settlers in Washington, Washington County. The Adairs, Mangums and Prices were all interrelated by marriage. The mission of these Southerners was to establish cotton culture in Utah's "Dixie."
Although it eventually proved commercially unsuccessful, it did succeed in producing cotton goods for local use and export at an important stage in Utah Territory's economic development.
In the Iron Military District: Private John Price, Company I, John D. Lee's 4th Battalion, Washington
In September 1857, Price, 42, was a private in the third Washington platoon in Captain Harrison Pearce’s Company I in Major John D. Lee’s 4th Battalion. See A Basic Account for a full description of the massacre.
The 1859 arrest warrant lists "James Price" but he is not mentioned in other lists of participants. His exact role in the massacre is unknown.
Later Years
Price remained in Washington County. Among other things, he worked as a stone mason, cutting tombstones. According to the 1880 census, he also worked as a "bee raiser." He remained there until his death in 1893. He was survived by three children.
References
Larson, The Red Hills of November, 14, 170; Larson, "A Brief History of Washington," in Bradshaw, ed., Under Dixie Sun, 235; Larson, I Was Called to Dixie, 251; Lee, Mormonism Unveiled, ; Lee Trial transcripts; New.FamilySearch.org; Walker, et al, Massacre at Mountain Meadows, Appendix C.
For full bibliographic information see Bibliography.
External Links
For further information on John Price, see:
- http://mountainmeadowsmassacre.org/appendices/appendix-c-the-militiamen
- http://www.visitourfamilytree.net/showmedia.php?mediaID=74&medialinkID=211
Further information and confirmation needed. Please comment or contact 1857_militia@roadrunner.com.