Alexander G. Ingram
Alexander G. Ingram, his personal and family background, and his involvement in the Mountain Meadows Massacre.
Alexander G. Ingram (1802 or 1822-?)
Biographical Sketch
Alexander G. Ingram was born in Scotland. His middle name may have been either Gordon or Graham. The 1860 census lists Alexander Ingram's age as 58, suggesting he was born around 1802. However, genealogical records list his date of birth as 1822. If the genealogical records are correct, he married Agnes Rankin, also a Scot, in 1847 and converted to Mormonism in 1851. It is uncertain when the Ingrams immigrated to America or arrived in Utah. However, by the mid-1850s, they were in southern Utah in the small settlement of New Harmony where John D. Lee was a prominent figure.
The Iron County militia muster rolls for June 1857 list "Alex. G. Ingram" and "Alex J. Ingram" but they are probably the same man. Ingram is listed as a 2nd Lt. in one of the Iron County militia platoons. During the militia reorganization during summer 1857, Ingram was promoted to Captain of Company H headquartered in Harmony, one of two companies in Major John D. Lee's 4th Battalion. Whether he was a Mountain Meadows and, if so, what his role was is not known with certainty.
Ingram was listed in Judge John Cradlebaugh's 1859 arrest warrant and also in T.B.H. Stenhouse's 1873 Rocky Mountain Saints (which followed the arrest warrant). However, he was not mentioned in the trials of John D. Lee, 1875-76, in Lee's Mormonism Unveiled, or in the list of the accused prepared by Lee's attorney, William Bishop.
In Massacre at Mountain Meadows, Walker, Turley and Leonard do not mention Ingram in their list of men associated with the massacre. In a footnote they state: "Alexander Ingram was another man who had one of the surviving children in 1859 and shortly thereafter [Judge John] Cradlebaugh issued an arrest warrant for him. . . . Ingram, a Harmony resident, was recorded speaking in a Church meeting after John D. Lee had left Harmony and was not identified by any of the witnesses at Mountain Meadows."
The 1860 federal census for Virgin City, Washington County, Utah, lists Alex'r Ingram and his wife, Agnes R., both 58 and natives of Scotland. In 1863, Ingram was listed as one of seven presidents of Seventy, a church quorum, in Cedar City. John M. Macfarlane and Christopher J. Arthur were also members of this same quorum. However, the Ingrams apparently left a short time later. In the mid-1860s, "Alex G. Ingram" was captain of the guard in Panguitch and among the "Minutemen" organized to provide security during the Black Hawk War. In 1869, after the formation of the Beaver Stake, Ingram's wife was noted to be an officer in the church women's organization, the Relief Society, in the Beaver Third Ward which comprised Adamsville and Greenville. In 1873, an Alexander Ingram was listed as a postmaster in Adamsville, Beaver County.
In 1874, an Alexander Ingram was called to serve a church mission in Great Britain. He departed Utah in November and is said to have visited his relatives in Pennsylvania, New Jersey and New York. He departed for England early in February 1875 and he arrived in Liverpool two weeks later. His arrival was noted in the Latter-day Saints' Millennial Star. The date of his death is unknown.
Further information on Alexander Ingram is needed.
References: 1860 federal census; Jenson, Church Chronology, 62; Latter-day Saints' Millennial Star, 37 (1875), 122; Lee, Mormonism Unveiled; Lee Trial transcripts; Merkley, ed., Monuments to Courage: A History of Beaver County, 33, 34; Newell and Talbot, History of Garfield County, 64; Official Register of the United States, 1873, 932; Walker, et al, Massacre at Mountain Meadows, Appendix C; Webster, Diary of Francis Webster, April 17, 1863.
Further information and confirmation needed.
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