John S. Humphries: Difference between revisions

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During the 1850s, Humphries lived in Cedar City, where he farmed and labored at the Iron Works. Iron Works records reflect that at some time Humphries worked as a filler, keeping the charge in the blast furnace. He owned lots for a home and garden plot in Cedar City. In 1855, he married Hannah Baugh of Shropshire, England, the daughter of John and Rachel Bailey Baugh.
During the 1850s, Humphries lived in Cedar City, where he farmed and labored at the Iron Works. Iron Works records reflect that at some time Humphries worked as a filler, keeping the charge in the blast furnace. He owned lots for a home and garden plot in Cedar City. In 1855, he married Hannah Baugh of Shropshire, England, the daughter of John and Rachel Bailey Baugh.


In moving to Cedar City, Humphries was settling in an area dominated by the Deseret Iron Company, known more familiarly as the Ironworks. Here is a brief summary of its development. After iron ore and coal deposits were discovered in the region, Cedar City was founded. In the first years of 1851-52, they investigated whether the region had the necessary raw materials – iron ore, limestone, wood, coal, and waterpower – to support smelting on a large scale.  After confirming the presence of the necessary materials and relying heavily on the British Isles immigrants who had worked in iron-related industries in Great Britain, they set to building an iron manufacturing plant. They sited the ironworks at the mouth of Coal Creek near the present location of Cedar City. They mined the coal up canyon and transported it by team and wagon to the furnace located on the stream bank below the mouth of the canyon. The iron ore was transported from nearby Iron Springs by wagon. In 1852, after a small test furnace produced a low quality pig iron, they set about building a full-scale blast furnace.
In moving to Cedar City, Humphries was settling in an area dominated by the Deseret Iron Company, known more familiarly as the Ironworks. See [[Summary of Deseret Iron Company]] for a brief summary of its early development.


Progress was impeded, however, in 1853-54 during the Walker War. They shifted their energies from iron making to “forting up” to increase their safety. After a peace treaty was reached with the Ute chief Wakara in 1854, they returned to improving the ironworks. By 1855, they had achieved their greatest success with a sustained run of the furnace producing several tons of pig iron. But most of the runs both before and after failed to achieve a sustained run producing good quality iron. One problem was the fickle nature of Coal Creek, which continued to alternate between flooding and droughts. They determined to develop a more dependable source of power.
In April 1857, the delivery of a new steam engine from Great Salt Lake City seemed to breathe new life for the Ironworks. After its arrival, they built a new room to house the engine, connected its boiler to a steady water supply and modified the furnace to accommodate the engine. In early June they started an iron run using the steam engine. However, the new machinery created its own set of problems. Through the end of July, they experimented with different configurations of furnace, engine and piping, attempting to optimize the blast furnace.  
 
In April 1857, the delivery of a new steam engine from Great Salt Lake City seemed to provide the answer. After its arrival, they built a new room to house the engine, connected its boiler to a steady water supply and modified the furnace to accommodate the engine. In early June they started an iron run using the steam engine. However, the new machinery created its own set of problems. Through the end of July, they experimented with different configurations of furnace, engine and piping, attempting to optimize the blast furnace.  


From late April through July, those working up the canyon in mining or hauling wood, coal, limestone, rock, sand or “adobies” to the ironworks were Isaac C. Haight, James Williamson, George Hunter, Joseph H. Smith, Ira Allen, Ellott Wilden, Swen Jacobs, Alex Loveridge, Joel White, Ezra Curtis, Samuel McMurdie, Samuel Pollock, John Jacobs, John M. Higbee, John M. Macfarlane, Samuel Jewkes, Nephi Johnson, Thomas Cartwright, William Bateman, Elias Morris, Benjamin Arthur, Joseph H. Smith, Robert Wiley, and Philip Klingensmith. Those working at the ironworks on the furnace, engine, coke ovens or blacksmith shop included Elias Morris, John Humphries, Ira Allen, John Urie, Benjamin Arthur, James Williamson, Joseph H. Smith, Samuel Jewkes, Joseph Clews, Richard Harrison, William C. Stewart, William Bateman, John M Macfarlane, John M. Higbee, John Jacobs, George Hunter, Samuel Pollock, William S. Riggs, Alex Loveridge, Ellott Wilden, Ezra Curtis, Eliezar Edwards, Swen Jacobs, Joel White, and Thomas Cartwright. (The two lists overlap because some worked both in the canyon and at the Ironworks.) Other prominent figures at the ironworks who were not later involved at Mountain Meadows were Samuel Leigh, George Horton, James H. Haslem, Laban Morrell, John Chatterley, Thomas Gower, Thomas Crowther and others.
From late April through July, those working up the canyon in mining or hauling wood, coal, limestone, rock, sand or “adobies” to the ironworks were Isaac C. Haight, James Williamson, George Hunter, Joseph H. Smith, Ira Allen, Ellott Wilden, Swen Jacobs, Alex Loveridge, Joel White, Ezra Curtis, Samuel McMurdie, Samuel Pollock, John Jacobs, John M. Higbee, John M. Macfarlane, Samuel Jewkes, Nephi Johnson, Thomas Cartwright, William Bateman, Elias Morris, Benjamin Arthur, Joseph H. Smith, Robert Wiley, and Philip Klingensmith. Those working at the ironworks on the furnace, engine, coke ovens or blacksmith shop included Elias Morris, John Humphries, Ira Allen, John Urie, Benjamin Arthur, James Williamson, Joseph H. Smith, Samuel Jewkes, Joseph Clews, Richard Harrison, William C. Stewart, William Bateman, John M Macfarlane, John M. Higbee, John Jacobs, George Hunter, Samuel Pollock, William S. Riggs, Alex Loveridge, Ellott Wilden, Ezra Curtis, Eliezar Edwards, Swen Jacobs, Joel White, and Thomas Cartwright. (The two lists overlap because some worked both in the canyon and at the Ironworks.) Other prominent figures at the ironworks who were not later involved at Mountain Meadows were Samuel Leigh, George Horton, James H. Haslem, Laban Morrell, John Chatterley, Thomas Gower, Thomas Crowther and others.

Revision as of 20:55, 25 January 2012

John Samuel Humphries, his personal and family background, and his alleged involvement in the Mountain Meadows Massacre


John S. Humphries

1826-1903


Biographical Sketch

Early Years in the East Midlands of England

John Samuel Humphries was born in 1826 in Gosberton, Lincolnshire, England, the oldest son of Samuel Humphries and Rebecca Thompson. After contact with Mormon missionaries, he converted to Mormonism.

Immigration to America and onto Utah

In the late 1840s, Humphries immigrated to America. In 1849, the 23-year-old Humphries crossed the plains to Utah Territory.

To Cedar City and the Ironworks

The Early Ironworks in Cedar City.

During the 1850s, Humphries lived in Cedar City, where he farmed and labored at the Iron Works. Iron Works records reflect that at some time Humphries worked as a filler, keeping the charge in the blast furnace. He owned lots for a home and garden plot in Cedar City. In 1855, he married Hannah Baugh of Shropshire, England, the daughter of John and Rachel Bailey Baugh.

In moving to Cedar City, Humphries was settling in an area dominated by the Deseret Iron Company, known more familiarly as the Ironworks. See Summary of Deseret Iron Company for a brief summary of its early development.

In April 1857, the delivery of a new steam engine from Great Salt Lake City seemed to breathe new life for the Ironworks. After its arrival, they built a new room to house the engine, connected its boiler to a steady water supply and modified the furnace to accommodate the engine. In early June they started an iron run using the steam engine. However, the new machinery created its own set of problems. Through the end of July, they experimented with different configurations of furnace, engine and piping, attempting to optimize the blast furnace.

From late April through July, those working up the canyon in mining or hauling wood, coal, limestone, rock, sand or “adobies” to the ironworks were Isaac C. Haight, James Williamson, George Hunter, Joseph H. Smith, Ira Allen, Ellott Wilden, Swen Jacobs, Alex Loveridge, Joel White, Ezra Curtis, Samuel McMurdie, Samuel Pollock, John Jacobs, John M. Higbee, John M. Macfarlane, Samuel Jewkes, Nephi Johnson, Thomas Cartwright, William Bateman, Elias Morris, Benjamin Arthur, Joseph H. Smith, Robert Wiley, and Philip Klingensmith. Those working at the ironworks on the furnace, engine, coke ovens or blacksmith shop included Elias Morris, John Humphries, Ira Allen, John Urie, Benjamin Arthur, James Williamson, Joseph H. Smith, Samuel Jewkes, Joseph Clews, Richard Harrison, William C. Stewart, William Bateman, John M Macfarlane, John M. Higbee, John Jacobs, George Hunter, Samuel Pollock, William S. Riggs, Alex Loveridge, Ellott Wilden, Ezra Curtis, Eliezar Edwards, Swen Jacobs, Joel White, and Thomas Cartwright. (The two lists overlap because some worked both in the canyon and at the Ironworks.) Other prominent figures at the ironworks who were not later involved at Mountain Meadows were Samuel Leigh, George Horton, James H. Haslem, Laban Morrell, John Chatterley, Thomas Gower, Thomas Crowther and others.

By the time reports reached them in early August of a threatened “invasion” of U.S. troops into Utah, they had decided on further changes to the ironworks. They determined that a reservoir was necessary so as to provide a steady supply of filtered water to the steam engine. Immediately, they set to work, digging, lining and filling the reservoir. From late August to early September, shortly before the crisis involving the passing Arkansas emigrant company, they began a new furnace run. But it, too, ended in failure, probably around the time that a dispute arose between some community members and several of those in the passing Arkansas wagon train.

During this period in 1857, John Humphries played various roles at the ironworks. In late April, he tended the masons as they worked on the new engine house. In late July, he spent several days filling the furnace. Around the start of August, he was in the large gang of more than 40 who constructed the reservoir to hold water for the steam engine.

The majority of the southern Utah militiamen at Mountain Meadows were from Cedar City. Of these, nearly all of them had worked at the Ironworks or supplied raw materials to it. Indeed, in the weeks before the Mountain Meadows Massacre, they had worked intensely together, hauling materials, building a new water reservoir, and making the latest run of the blast furnace. One perennial mystery of the massacre has been why the militiamen mustered to Mountain Meadows in “broken” militia units; that is, from different platoons and companies, none of which had a full compliment of its members. Perhaps the reason lies with the Ironworks. Those in the Ironworks knew each other and had worked alongside one another. Not only did John Humphries know those who mustered from Cedar City to Mountain Meadows, he had worked with them at the Ironworks. Perhaps the answer is that the men of the Ironworks were on hand and available and Isaac Haight, who himself had worked closely with them, assigned them to muster to Mountain Meadows.

In the Iron Military District: Fifer John Humphries, Company F, John Higbee's 3rd Battalion, Cedar City

In 1857, Humphries, 31, was a fifer in Company F, one of two companies in Major John M. Higbee's 3rd Battalion of the local militia. See A Basic Account for a full description of the massacre.

It is uncertain whether Humphries was actually at Mountain Meadows. He is not listed in Judge John Cradlebaugh's 1859 arrest warrant, which listed so many other Cedar City militiamen implicated in the massacre. Nor was he listed in the text of John D. Lee's Mormonism Unveiled or any other of Lee's statements. The only early source to identify him was William Bishop, John D. Lee's attorney, who listed "John Humphreys, of Cedar City". However, since Bishop's "list of assassins" appended to Mormonism Unveiled, virtually always follows Lee in identifying massacre participants, it may be that Bishop was mistaken in including Humphries in his list. On the other hand, Walker, Turley and Leonard list Humphries in their Appendix C, although they note that no source provides any specifics about his role.

At any rate, if he was at Mountain Meadows at the time of the massacre, he did not occupy a leadership position in either the militia or church. His role, if any, during the massacre is unknown.

Moving to Northern Utah

Judging from the fact that the Humphries's wife gave birth to a baby in Payson in late 1857 or early 1858, it appears that they were among the first families to abandon Cedar City after the disastrous massacre at Mountain Meadows and the many failures of the ironworks.

By the early 1862, the Humphries had moved farther north to Cache Valley where they settled in Wellsville and stayed for many years. In the early 1880s, they moved to Park City in Summit County.

Final Years

Over the years, the Humphries had 15 children. John S. Humpries died in 1903 in Salt Lake City, survived by his wife, Hannah, and twelve surviving children.

References

Carter, Heartthrobs of the West, 10:457; Lee, Mormonism Unveiled, 379; Lee Trial transcripts; New.FamilySearch.org; Shirts and Shirts, A Trial Furnace, 293, 394, 486, 492; Walker, et al, Massacre at Mountain Meadows, Appendix C.

For full bibliographic information see Bibliography.

External Links

For further information on John S. Humphries, see:

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