John Solomon Fullmer, 1807–1883 (aged 76 years)
- Name
- John Solomon /Fullmer/
- Surname
- Fullmer
- Given names
- John Solomon
Birth | July 21, 1807
33
33 |
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Birth of a sister | Desdemona Wadsworth Fullmer October 6, 1809 (aged 2 years) |
Birth of a sister | Charlotte Fullmer January 21, 1812 (aged 4 years) |
Birth of a sister | Louisiana Fullmer about June 25, 1814 (aged 6 years) |
Birth of a brother | Almon Linus Fullmer September 7, 1816 (aged 9 years) |
Death of a paternal grandfather | Johann George Fullmer (John) about March 14, 1817 (aged 9 years) |
Death of a paternal grandmother | Julianna Kessler January 17, 1820 (aged 12 years) |
Marriage | Mary Ann Price — View this family May 24, 1837 (aged 29 years) |
Birth of a daughter | Lavinia Elizabeth Fullmer March 5, 1838 (aged 30 years) |
Burial of a father | Peter Fullmer |
LDS baptism | July 29, 1839 (aged 32 years) |
Birth of a daughter | Johanna Price Fullmer December 13, 1839 (aged 32 years) |
Birth of a daughter | Ann Adelaide Fullmer October 25, 1841 (aged 34 years) |
Ordination | High Priest March 3, 1844 (aged 36 years) |
Birth of a daughter | Mary Ann Francis Fullmer Bates May 19, 1844 (aged 36 years) |
LDS endowment | December 15, 1845 (aged 38 years) LDS temple: NAU |
LDS spouse sealing | Mary Ann Price — View this family January 15, 1846 (aged 38 years) |
Marriage | Olive Amanda Smith — View this family January 21, 1846 (aged 38 years) |
Birth of a son | John Solomon Fullmer Jr. April 12, 1846 (aged 38 years) |
Birth of a son | William Price Fullmer May 27, 1849 (aged 41 years) |
Birth of a son | Don Carlos Fullmer November 7, 1851 (aged 44 years) |
Death of a daughter | Mary Ann Francis Fullmer Bates November 7, 1853 (aged 46 years) |
Marriage of a child | James Lawrence Bess — Johanna Price Fullmer — View this family 1854 (aged 46 years) |
Marriage of a child | William Coats — Lavinia Elizabeth Fullmer — View this family 1855 (aged 47 years) |
Birth of a granddaughter | Joanna Elizabeth Coats February 6, 1856 (aged 48 years) |
Birth of a grandson | James Lawrence Bess Jr. June 11, 1856 (aged 48 years) |
Marriage | Sarah Ann Stevenson — View this family October 12, 1856 (aged 49 years) |
Birth of a son | Samuel David Fullmer November 4, 1856 (aged 49 years) |
Death of a mother | Susannah Zerfass November 11, 1856 (aged 49 years) |
Burial of a mother | Susannah Zerfass November 1856 (aged 49 years) |
Death of a father | Peter Fullmer January 6, 1857 (aged 49 years) |
Marriage of a child | Zebedee Cotrin — Lavinia Elizabeth Fullmer — View this family February 25, 1857 (aged 49 years) |
Marriage of a child | William Taylor Dennis — Ann Adelaide Fullmer — View this family September 6, 1857 (aged 50 years) |
Marriage of a child | James Eli Ashcraft — Lavinia Elizabeth Fullmer — View this family January 23, 1859 (aged 51 years) |
Birth of a grandson | Benjamin Eli Ashcraft November 3, 1859 (aged 52 years) |
Birth of a grandson | William Henry Ashcraft January 8, 1862 (aged 54 years) |
Birth of a granddaughter | Nancy Ashcraft January 1, 1864 (aged 56 years) |
Death of a granddaughter | Nancy Ashcraft January 1, 1864 (aged 56 years) |
Birth of a granddaughter | Ann Adalaide Ashcraft September 15, 1865 (aged 58 years) |
Birth of a grandson | Wallance Eugene Ashcraft July 28, 1868 (aged 61 years) |
Birth of a granddaughter | Lou Lillian Ashcraft April 15, 1870 (aged 62 years) |
Death of a sister | Louisiana Fullmer April 18, 1870 (aged 62 years) |
Christening of a son | William Price Fullmer January 2, 1871 (aged 63 years) |
Death of a sister | Charlotte Fullmer March 5, 1871 (aged 63 years) |
Birth of a grandson | Francis Marion Ashcraft April 17, 1872 (aged 64 years) |
Marriage of a granddaughter | Parker Adelbert Childs — Joanna Elizabeth Coats — View this family March 5, 1873 (aged 65 years) |
Birth of a grandson | Don Orean Ashcraft August 18, 1874 (aged 67 years) |
Death of a sister | Mary M. Fullmer December 16, 1874 (aged 67 years) |
Birth of a grandson | John Wesley Ashcraft November 21, 1876 (aged 69 years) |
Birth of a grandson | Lester Ashcraft January 24, 1879 (aged 71 years) |
Death of a brother | David Fullmer October 21, 1879 (aged 72 years) |
Birth of a grandson | Clarence Ashcraft December 5, 1880 (aged 73 years) |
Death | October 8, 1883 (aged 76 years) |
Burial | October 10, 1883 (2 days after death) |
LDS child sealing | May 23, 1945 (61 years after death) LDS temple: Salt Lake City, Utah, United States Family: Peter Fullmer + Susannah Zerfass |
father |
1774–1857
Birth: February 27, 1774
27
30 — Reading, Berks, Pennsylvania Death: January 6, 1857 — Salt Lake, Salt Lake City, Utah |
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mother |
1773–1856
Birth: September 17, 1773
31
27 — Whitehall, Northampton, Pennsylvania Death: November 11, 1856 — Salt Lake, Salt Lake City, Utah |
Marriage |
Marriage: March 2, 1802 — Schuylkill Co., Pennsylvania |
16 months
elder brother |
1803–1879
Birth: July 7, 1803
29
29 — Chillisquaque, Nrthmb, Pennsylvania Death: October 21, 1879 |
2 years
elder sister |
1805–1874
Birth: July 17, 1805
31
31 — Chillisquaque, Nrthmb, Pennsylvania Death: December 16, 1874 |
2 years
himself |
1807–1883
Birth: July 21, 1807
33
33 — Huntington, Luzerne, Pennsylvania Death: October 8, 1883 — Springville, Utah, Utah |
2 years
younger sister |
1809–1886
Birth: October 6, 1809
35
36 — Huntington, Luzerne, Pennsylvania Death: February 9, 1886 |
2 years
younger sister |
1812–1871
Birth: January 21, 1812
37
38 — Huntington, Luzerne, Pennsylvania Death: March 5, 1871 |
3 years
younger sister |
1814–1870
Birth: about June 25, 1814
40
40 — Huntington, Luzerne, Pennsylvania Death: April 18, 1870 |
2 years
younger brother |
1816–1890
Birth: September 7, 1816
42
42 — Huntington, Luzerne, Pennsylvania Death: October 2, 1890 |
himself |
1807–1883
Birth: July 21, 1807
33
33 — Huntington, Luzerne, Pennsylvania Death: October 8, 1883 — Springville, Utah, Utah |
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wife |
1815–1897
Birth: September 16, 1815
24
19 — Nashville, Davison, Tn Death: November 29, 1897 — Marysvale, Piute, Utah |
Marriage |
Marriage: May 24, 1837 — Nashville, Davison, Tennessee |
10 months
daughter |
1838–1907
Birth: March 5, 1838
30
22 — Nashville, Davison, Tennessee Death: July 21, 1907 — Mapleton, Utah, Utah |
22 months
daughter |
1839–1915
Birth: December 13, 1839
32
24 — Murfreesboro, Ruth, Tennessee Death: November 15, 1915 — Provo, Utah |
23 months
daughter |
1841–1899
Birth: October 25, 1841
34
26 — Nauvoo, Hnck, Illinois Death: April 10, 1899 — Marysvale, Piute, Utah |
3 years
daughter |
1844–1853
Birth: May 19, 1844
36
28 — Nauvoo, Hnck, Illinois Death: November 7, 1853 — Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah |
23 months
son |
1846–1898
Birth: April 12, 1846
38
30 — Nauvoo, Hnck, Illinois Death: July 13, 1898 — Mammoth, Juab, Utah |
3 years
son |
1849–1926
Birth: May 27, 1849
41
33 — Salt Lake, Salt Lake, Utah Death: June 19, 1926 — Mapleton, Utah, Utah |
3 years
son |
1851–1925
Birth: November 7, 1851
44
36 — Farmington, Davis, Utah Death: April 10, 1925 — Springville, Utah, Utah |
5 years
son |
1856–1921
Birth: November 4, 1856
49
41 — Salt Lake, Salt Lake, Utah Death: July 29, 1921 — Salem, Madison, Idaho |
himself |
1807–1883
Birth: July 21, 1807
33
33 — Huntington, Luzerne, Pennsylvania Death: October 8, 1883 — Springville, Utah, Utah |
---|---|
wife |
1825–1885
Birth: September 18, 1825 — West Fabius, Onandago, New York Death: March 17, 1885 — Orangeville, Emery, Utah |
Marriage |
Marriage: January 21, 1846 — Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois |
himself |
1807–1883
Birth: July 21, 1807
33
33 — Huntington, Luzerne, Pennsylvania Death: October 8, 1883 — Springville, Utah, Utah |
---|---|
wife |
1835–1901
Birth: July 31, 1835 — Loughborough, Leicester, England Death: September 7, 1901 — Orangeville, Emery, Utah |
Marriage |
Marriage: October 12, 1856 — Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah |
Source | Ancestral File (R) |
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Media object | |
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Media object | Property John paid taxes on. He was elected city treasure. |
Note | John Solomon Fullmer was baptized 29 jul 1839, in Nauvoo, by the Prophet Joseph Smith. He had traveled from his home in Nashville, Tennessee to visit with his parents and others of his family who were then living in Nauvoo and was basptized before returning home. It was customary in the early days of the Church to perform rebaptisms, however these dates are usally used only whern the original date cannot be found. John Solomon Fullmer, Mary Ann Price and Olive Amanda Smith all received their Second Anointings in the Nauvoo temple, 3 February, 1846 at 5:50 p.m. (F Utah S 1 A page 625) +++ The Life of John Solomon Fullmer Born July 21 Jul 1807 Huntington, Luzern , Pennsylvania Sources: The following history [i] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> was drawn from histories complied by Iona Jarvis Belka, who was, for many years, the historian of the Peter Fullmer family organization. This history is now found in the Peter Fullmer Family History and “John Solomon, Fullmer, the Man and His Writings” available from the Fullmer Family organization. Additional edits from W.K. Williams <http://www.williamsfamilyhome.org/williams0202/aqwg18.htm>are also included. Pennsylvania Germans The story of the Life of John Solomon Fullmer is most interesting. His was a life of devotion to his religious beliefs and he never faltered in his faith. He possessed a great dignity and great pride in doing everything as nearly perfect as possible. John Solomon Fullmer, Sr. (hereafter referred to as John S.) was born in Huntington, Luzern County, Pennsylvania on 21 July 1807, the third of seven children born to Peter Fullmer and Susannah Zerfass. He came from a good, religious family whose means of livelihood for many years was that of farming. He spent his youth and early manhood on his father’s farm in Pennsylvania. His ancestors were among the very early settlers of Pennsylvania, those of the Fullmer family coming from Germany on board the ship "Friendship", in 1738, <http://www.palproject.org/pa/1738friend.htm> and those of the Zerfass family also emigrating from Germany. He was reared in Huntington until he was an adult and spent his youth and early manhood on his father's farm there. Nashville, Tennessee He received what was considered an "average" education. In those days, an education considered as "liberal" would be to us but a grade school education. However, John S. possessed a driving ambition to better himself in every way and never ceased to study to improve himself. He acquired knowledge of the law by taking a correspondence course while working in a newspaper office in Nashville, Tennessee and, although he never practiced as a lawyer, this knowledge served him greatly throughout his life. In 1830, his father's family moved from Pennsylvania to Ohio. Two years later, John S. left the family to go to Nashville where he intended to study for the ministry of the Baptist Church. He later changed his mind about becoming a Minister as he felt that he was incapable of filling such a position. When he arrived in Nashville, he had barely five dollars in his pocket, was without friends or acquaintances, and had no training in a trade. He obtained a job at the "Banner" newspaper office and, within five years time, had become so well known and highly regarded that he received the financial backing of a wealthy merchant to enter the mercantile business with a partner. The firm was known as Fullmer and Mitchell. Mary Ann Price It was while in Nashville that he met and fell in love with Mary Ann Price, a daughter of a wealthy planter. Mary Ann had known none of the hardships of life and had her own maid and a private tutor. Her father was very much opposed to her association with John S. and she was forbidden to see him. Describing their romance to his parents, John S. said, "I always thought I would be better pleased for having a little romance in my courtship. In this I was fully gratified. She was prevented from having any association with me for a long time, and when we did have any, it was clandestinely conducted. She was not permitted to visit a neighbor's house alone, or even go to church without someone to attend her, lest I should intrude and take advantage of the circumstances. We at length, however, corresponded daily: and when we thought we were about to be discovered, we consummated the business to our liking, and the utter astonishment and surprise of everybody. On the morning of the 24th of May, 1837, she put on her morning gown as usual and, instead of walking among the flowers in the garden, as usual, she skipped across the street, through an alley, and met me at the place of appointment. At 9 o'clock, we were at the Parson's house and had the ceremony completed, and wrote a joint note to her mother (her father being at the time in Texas), informing her of what was done, and hoped also that it was well done." After the marriage, her father did become reconciled to their marriage in that he was friendly toward the newlyweds. However, he disinherited Mary Ann. Some years later, after her parent's died and their estate was probated, Mary Ann finally received some settlement, but this was after they had come to Utah. Fullmer Family Embrace Mormonism It was while living in Nashville that his parents heard the gospel preached and accepted it. He was bitterly opposed to them joining what he called some "new fangled" religion when it meant moving from their home to a new place and the breaking up of the family unit. The Fullmers had been a closely knit family and John S. had been the only one to leave home up to that time. His three sisters[ii] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> had not joined this new church and were to be left behind in Ohio when the rest of the family moved to Missouri. John S. asked "Wasn't the old religion they had lived for so many years satisfactory anymore?" In a letter to his brother David, he says, "And as regards your religion, I have not another word to say in opposition, for I don't think you so lost in foolishness as to advocate any cause so zealously, without, to say the least, the appearance of some reason for it. I shall therefore cease the effort to laugh you out of your belief; neither will I debate the question, but will at once become your pupil, and will hear what you have to say, and if you can, by deed or doctrine, command my reason, I will make the acknowledgment." Thus began the conversion of John S. Fullmer. At the end of two years, he decided to go to Nauvoo to visit with the portion of his family living there and to see for himself the Prophet Joseph Smith. He made the journey from Nashville to Nauvoo, Illinois <http://www.lds.org/gospellibrary/pioneer/02_Nauvoo.html>on horseback in the Spring of 1839 and, before returning to Nashville, was baptized into the Church by the Prophet Joseph Smith on 29 July 1839. He then returned to Nashville and prepared to move his family to Nauvoo. He and Mary Ann and their two daughters moved into their first real home, in Nauvoo, in the Spring of 1840. Here, they were as John S. said, "comfortably but not splendidly situated." Mary Ann, who knew nothing about the religious beliefs of his family at the time of their marriage, was baptized after their arrival in Nauvoo; however, the exact date of her baptism is unknown. Nauvoo, the Beautiful From the time of their arrival in Nauvoo until the death of the Prophet Joseph Smith, the Fullmer family was closely associated with him and his brother Hyrum, and their families. Being a neighbor for a time to the Prophet, they saw a lot of each other. Stories are told in the family how, in the evenings, the rugs of the Prophet's home would be rolled up and the time spent in dancing, and in the wrestling matches that John S. and the Prophet would engage in. In the Fullmer family, there is a sword and a watch which were given to John S. by the Prophet as tokens of his love and affection. John S. later wrote that he had been with Joseph Smith "a great deal since my first acquaintance with him; was in his company and employ, in his office and in his store over a year; and acted as his private secretary." John S. was active in all his Church activities and, in some of his letters, he relates the struggles required of the Saints in building the Nauvoo temple, and many other of their hardships. He received his patriarchal blessing May 29, 1841, at the hands of Hyrum Smith. In this blessing he was promised that he would never lose his clearness of mind, even in his old age. He never did. Desdemona, a sister of John S., was one of the first women to enter into the order of Celestial marriage. She became a wife to Joseph Smith in 1842. John S. and his brother David also accepted this new order. Carthage Jail John S. had been living on a farm four miles from Nauvoo when, on June 25, 1844, Joseph and Hyrum were arrested. As an officer in the Nauvoo Legion, he had been on duty during the time the city was under martial law. Because of his great friendship with the two brothers, he was one of those who accompanied Joseph and Hyrum Smith to Carthage Jail. <http://www.lds.org/placestovisit/location/0,10634,1844-1-1-1,00.html> He spent the day and night before the martyrdom with them there. On the morning of the day they were assassinated, June 26th, when he was sent on an errand by the Prophet, he left his gun with the Prophet. It was this gun that Hyrum used to defend himself with later that day. The story is told that all those who were wounded with the gun that day died a horrible death. John S. wrote[iii] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> the when Joseph and Hyrum had first been jailed, they had been incarcerated on a riot charge and bail had been set at $500 each, which was about two and one half times as much as normal bail. "It was evident,” said John S. ” that the magistrate intended to outreach the pile of the brethren, so as to imprison those on trial for want of bail; but it happened that there was strength to cover the demand. I went to the full extent of my worth; so did others - and the prisoners were all released. But Joseph and Hyrum having been arrested in the first instance on two charges, one for riot, the other for treason, were now not suffered to enjoy their liberty after the first examination and release; and were almost immediately taken in charge by a constable." John S. told of lying on the floor next to the Prophet during the night before the assassination. "He laid his right arm out for me to lay my head upon it..... After the brethren were all quiet and seemed asleep, excepting myself, he talked with me a little about the prospects of his deliverance. He did not say he knew that he had to die, but he inferred as much, and finally said he 'would like to see his family again,” and he 'would to God that he could preach to the saints once more in Nauvoo' ". The next morning, Joseph sent John S. to Nauvoo to assist in obtaining witnesses for the treason hearing scheduled for June 29th. While there he obtained a change of clothes so that he could be dressed properly when attending the hearing. Upon returning to the jail later that day, he was refused admission by the guards and, as a result, missed the mob's attack on the jailhouse. John S. later stated that but for this, he would, a hundred chances to one, have shared the same fate that they did. John S. had a great love and respect for the Prophet and his brother Hyrum and often stated so in his letters to family and friends. In a letter to his Uncle John on September 27th 1844, he wrote. "Thus fell two men who had no superior, I will venture the assertion, since the days of Dawn. You may think me too enthusiastic, and some may think me fanatic, but this generation will not pass away before these words will be fully accredited. I will venture another assertion, and that is that the earth never produced two as great men at the same time. You do not know what you have lost in never seeing and becoming acquainted with these men. I value the privilege I had with them, more than I do all else that my eyes have ever beheld. I ask what would you not give for the privilege, if it could be had, of seeing and conversing with the Apostles Peter, James and John, or Paul, and receiving instructions from them? Now I say unto you that greater than these have been slain in the jail of Carthage." Olive Amanda Smith Cook In May, 1844, at the birth of his fourth daughter, John S. hired a girl to work as a housekeeper. Her name was Olive Amanda Smith Cook. After she had been working in the Fullmer home for about nine months, Mary Ann, the first wife, asked Olive if she would consent to become her husband's second wife. Thinking she would not find a better man, she consented when he asked her several months later. They were sealed January 21, 1846, in the Nauvoo Temple. In August, 1845, John S. and Henry G. Sherwood were sent on a mission to Vermillion, about 700 miles from Nauvoo. The journey was made on horseback through wild, dangerous country. Several times on this mission their lives were spared by the hand of the Lord. They returned to Nauvoo in October, 1845. (See Vol. 7, Documentary History of the Church, for details.) The Expulsion of the Saints from Nauvoo By early 1846, it was evident to the leaders of the Church that the Saints would not be permitted to live much longer in Nauvoo, and preparations were made for their departure. In a council meeting held by Brigham Young in the Temple, in January 1846, John S. Fullmer was appointed as one of the three Trustees-in-Trust to care for and dispose of Church property after the Saints had departed Nauvoo. Previously, John S. had been paymaster of the Nauvoo Legion and had held the rank of Colonel. Accordingly, he became a member of the "Spartan Band" that defended Nauvoo against the mob in September 1846. He signed, much against his will, a peace treaty with the mob, in order to spare the lives of the remaining Saints, and to save the Temple. He described the treaty as "ignoble and cruel" in all its features. His wife, Mary Ann, and her children, remained with him in Nauvoo throughout the struggles there. His wife, Olive Amanda, left [iv] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm>with the first Saints and lived in Council Bluffs where her daughter, Mary Ann Smith Fullmer, was born in the wagon box she called home. Trustee After a year and one half of trying to dispose of the Church property and, seeing that it was a useless task, the Trustees were told to leave what property was left and move from Nauvoo. And so it was that in the spring of 1848, John S. left Nauvoo on the journey that was to take him to the valley in the mountains. At Council Bluffs, he joined Olive Amanda and others of his parent's family and started on the journey west. John S. served as a captain of 10 in the Willard Richards Company. They arrived in the valley in October of 1848 and settled in what is now Davis County, Utah. Settling in Utah For the next few years, John S. was involved in assisting with the political aspects of the new settlements, helping to draft a constitution for, first, the Territory of Deseret and, later, the Territory of Utah. He was elected to the House of Representatives from Davis County and his brother, David, was elected to the House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. While living in Davis County, he served as Postmaster. Mission to England In the fall of 1852, he was called to fulfill a mission to England. He left his wives, who between them had twelve children - all under fourteen years of age - and journeyed to England. Mary Ann taught school to help with their livelihood while he was away and the 6th Ward records show that they received some help from the Ward storehouse. It was a difficult time for these women and their children. Mary Ann had the added sorrow of losing, Mary Ann Francis who died while John S. was away. While on his mission, John S. presided over three large conferences in England: the Liverpool, Manchester, and Preston conferences. While in laboring at Rochdale, England, on 29 March 1853, he and his companion administered[v] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> to an 18 year old boy by the name of Halsden Marsden, who had been born deaf and dumb. As they finished administering to him, the boy spoke and indicated that he could also hear. On the 27th of February 1855, upon completion of his mission, he sailed for home on the ship "Siddons", during which time he served as president of a company of 430 Saints who were emigrating to the Salt Lake Valley. After seeing this company of Saints to Philidephia, PA, he returned to New York to meet two more ship loads of Saints (the Juventa and Chimborozo to their outfitting place and boarding boats for St. Louis. Feeling a “little weary” he went to Iowa to visit his two sisters, Mary Elizabeth Fellows and Charlotte Ferris before returning to the Salt Lake Valley in the fall of 1855. Back in Utah Also traveling on the Ship "Siddons" was a young woman by the name of Sarah Ann Stevenson, who had been very helpful to the Elders in distributing tracts and singing with them the songs of Zion. She had promised John S. to become his third wife upon arriving in Utah. Due to the poor circumstances of the families of John S., however, she postponed the marriage for one year and nearly married John Taylor, instead. She and John S. were finally married on 12 October 1856 in the Endowment House. After arriving in Salt Lake City, John S. had moved his families to Springville, Utah, where he continued to live for the rest of his life. For six years, Sarah Ann maintained a home in Spanish Fork, Utah, and then moved to Springville near his other families. John S. and Mary Ann taught school in Springville and Provo. Sarah Ann, who was an excellent seamstress, worked in her father's tailoring shop inasmuch as he had, by this time, brought his family to the valley. Apparently, Olive Amanda cared for the several families while they were working. In 1881, a new settlement called Orangeville was established, and Sarah Ann and her family moved there to live. It was located about 40 miles west of Price, Utah, and was a desolate place. Nevertheless, she remained there until her death on 7 September 1901. Olive Amanda and some of her children later moved to Orangeville, where she died 17 November 1885. John Solomon Blesses His Family <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.jpg> In 1885, John S. suffered a stroke and paralysis of his left arm and leg. Two other strokes followed and he never regained the use of his arm and leg. However, as was promised in his patriarchal blessing, his mind remained clear until the time of his death, which came peacefully. In all his illness, he had no bodily pain. A year after the stroke, when he knew his end was approaching, he called all his family that were present together and blessed them. He admonished them to be true to their covenants and to stand firm in the Church and kingdom of God. Among his last words to them were, "I cannot remain any longer with you. I am going on a great mission." He died 8 October 1883 at Springville, Utah, at the age of 76, and is buried in the Springville Evergreen Cemetery with his first wife, Mary Ann, who died 29 November 1897. John S. and Mary Ann were the parents of 8 children, seven of whom grew to maturity. He and Olive Amanda were the parents of 10 children, nine of whom grew to maturity. And, he and Sarah Ann were the parents of 12 children, all of whom lived to maturity. Mary Ann PRICE was born 16 Sep 1815 in Nashville, Davison, TN. She died 29 Nov 1897 in Marysvale, Piute, Utah and was buried 2 Dec 1897 in Springville, Utah, Utah. Mary was baptized 2 Aug 1877. She was endowed 15 Dec 1845 in the Nauvoo (original). Mary married John Solomon FULLMER on 24 May 1837 in Nashville, Davison, TN. They were sealed 15 Jan 1846 in the Nauvoo (original). The Children of Mary Ann Price and John Solomon Fullmer: · Lavina Elizabeth FULLMER was born 5 Mar 1838 and died 21 Jul 1907. · Johanna Price FULLMER was born 13 Dec 1839 and died 15 Nov 1915. · Ann Adelaide FULLMER was born 25 Oct 1841 and died 10 Apr 1899. · Mary Ann Frances FULLMER was born 19 May 1844 in Nauvoo, Hancock, IL. She died 7 Nov 1853 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah · John Solomon Jr. FULLMER Jr. was born 12 Apr 1846 and died 13 Jul 1898. · William Price FULLMER was born 27 May 1849 and died 19 Jun 1926. · Don Carlos FULLMER was born 7 Nov 1851 and died 10 Apr 1925. · Samuel David FULLMER was born 4 Nov 1856 and died 29 Jul 1921. End Notes: [i] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> Copied from a typescript Iona published for the Peter Fullmer family in August 1957 [ii] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> John S. had four sisters: the elders, Mary, had some years previous married Erastus Fellow; Desdemona joined the Mormon Church together with her family; but Charlotte and Louisiana, while they may have been baptized, did not remain active in the church. It is fairly certain that their husbands did not join. About that same time, Charlotte married Jonathan Farris and Louisiana married John Hiskey. Both eventually moved to Iowa, near to where their sister Mary lived with her husband. [iii] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> The months after the murder of the Joseph and Hyrum, John S, wrote a long detailed letter to his Uncle John regarding the events of that month. Ten years later, while a missionary in England, he published a 40 page booklet entitled, “ Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith, the Prophet and the Patriarch of the Church of Latter-day Saints. Also a Condensed History of the Expulsion of the Saints from Nauvoo by Elder John S. Fullmer (of Utah, U. S. A.), Pastor of the Manchester, Liverpool, and Preston Conferences. Liverpool and London, 1855.” This pamphlet has been described as “the best narrative, and indeed the only one that enters circumstantially into all the details of the expulsion from Nauvoo. The work is written from a Mormon standpoint, but including as it does copies of the dispatches of Illinois officers and officials, of the stipulations between the belligerents, and of some comments made by the Quincy Whig, appears in the main reliable.“ [iv] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> Recent discoveries have revealed that Olive probably did not leave Nauvoo in February, as previously thought, since it was know that she was in the company with Colonel Stephen Markham. It now appears more likely that she remained in Nauvoo, with her husband and his other family until Col. Markham returned that summer for another load of Saints. Hence, she probably did not have to suffer the terrible winter months crossing the plains of Iowa. [v] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> The act of “administering to the sick” is an ordinance conducted by priesthood authority for the blessing and healing of the sick. It is conducted by anointing the head and invoking a blessing the sick person by the authority of the priesthood of God and the faith of those present. Return to top of page <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> John S. wrote[iii] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> the when Joseph and Hyrum had first been jailed, they had been incarcerated on a riot charge and bail had been set at $500 each, which was about two and one half times as much as normal bail. "It was evident,” said John S. ” that the magistrate intended to outreach the pile of the brethren, so as to imprison those on trial for want of bail; but it happened that there was strength to cover the demand. I went to the full extent of my worth; so did others - and the prisoners were all released. But Joseph and Hyrum having been arrested in the first instance on two charges, one for riot, the other for treason, were now not suffered to enjoy their liberty after the first examination and release; and were almost immediately taken in charge by a constable." John S. told of lying on the floor next to the Prophet during the night before the assassination. "He laid his right arm out for me to lay my head upon it..... After the brethren were all quiet and seemed asleep, excepting myself, he talked with me a little about the prospects of his deliverance. He did not say he knew that he had to die, but he inferred as much, and finally said he 'would like to see his family again,” and he 'would to God that he could preach to the saints once more in Nauvoo' ". The next morning, Joseph sent John S. to Nauvoo to assist in obtaining witnesses for the treason hearing scheduled for June 29th. While there he obtained a change of clothes so that he could be dressed properly when attending the hearing. Upon returning to the jail later that day, he was refused admission by the guards and, as a result, missed the mob's attack on the jailhouse. John S. later stated that but for this, he would, a hundred chances to one, have shared the same fate that they did. John S. had a great love and respect for the Prophet and his brother Hyrum and often stated so in his letters to family and friends. In a letter to his Uncle John on September 27th 1844, he wrote. "Thus fell two men who had no superior, I will venture the assertion, since the days of Dawn. You may think me too enthusiastic, and some may think me fanatic, but this generation will not pass away before these words will be fully accredited. I will venture another assertion, and that is that the earth never produced two as great men at the same time. You do not know what you have lost in never seeing and becoming acquainted with these men. I value the privilege I had with them, more than I do all else that my eyes have ever beheld. I ask what would you not give for the privilege, if it could be had, of seeing and conversing with the Apostles Peter, James and John, or Paul, and receiving instructions from them? Now I say unto you that greater than these have been slain in the jail of Carthage." Olive Amanda Smith Cook In May, 1844, at the birth of his fourth daughter, John S. hired a girl to work as a housekeeper. Her name was Olive Amanda Smith Cook. After she had been working in the Fullmer home for about nine months, Mary Ann, the first wife, asked Olive if she would consent to become her husband's second wife. Thinking she would not find a better man, she consented when he asked her several months later. They were sealed January 21, 1846, in the Nauvoo Temple. In August, 1845, John S. and Henry G. Sherwood were sent on a mission to Vermillion, about 700 miles from Nauvoo. The journey was made on horseback through wild, dangerous country. Several times on this mission their lives were spared by the hand of the Lord. They returned to Nauvoo in October, 1845. (See Vol. 7, Documentary History of the Church, for details.) The Expulsion of the Saints from Nauvoo By early 1846, it was evident to the leaders of the Church that the Saints would not be permitted to live much longer in Nauvoo, and preparations were made for their departure. In a council meeting held by Brigham Young in the Temple, in January 1846, John S. Fullmer was appointed as one of the three Trustees-in-Trust to care for and dispose of Church property after the Saints had departed Nauvoo. Previously, John S. had been paymaster of the Nauvoo Legion and had held the rank of Colonel. Accordingly, he became a member of the "Spartan Band" that defended Nauvoo against the mob in September 1846. He signed, much against his will, a peace treaty with the mob, in order to spare the lives of the remaining Saints, and to save the Temple. He described the treaty as "ignoble and cruel" in all its features. His wife, Mary Ann, and her children, remained with him in Nauvoo throughout the struggles there. His wife, Olive Amanda, left [iv] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm>with the first Saints and lived in Council Bluffs where her daughter, Mary Ann Smith Fullmer, was born in the wagon box she called home. Trustee After a year and one half of trying to dispose of the Church property and, seeing that it was a useless task, the Trustees were told to leave what property was left and move from Nauvoo. And so it was that in the spring of 1848, John S. left Nauvoo on the journey that was to take him to the valley in the mountains. At Council Bluffs, he joined Olive Amanda and others of his parent's family and started on the journey west. John S. served as a captain of 10 in the Willard Richards Company. They arrived in the valley in October of 1848 and settled in what is now Davis County, Utah. Settling in Utah For the next few years, John S. was involved in assisting with the political aspects of the new settlements, helping to draft a constitution for, first, the Territory of Deseret and, later, the Territory of Utah. He was elected to the House of Representatives from Davis County and his brother, David, was elected to the House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. While living in Davis County, he served as Postmaster. Mission to England In the fall of 1852, he was called to fulfill a mission to England. He left his wives, who between them had twelve children - all under fourteen years of age - and journeyed to England. Mary Ann taught school to help with their livelihood while he was away and the 6th Ward records show that they received some help from the Ward storehouse. It was a difficult time for these women and their children. Mary Ann had the added sorrow of losing, Mary Ann Francis who died while John S. was away. While on his mission, John S. presided over three large conferences in England: the Liverpool, Manchester, and Preston conferences. While in laboring at Rochdale, England, on 29 March 1853, he and his companion administered[v] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> to an 18 year old boy by the name of Halsden Marsden, who had been born deaf and dumb. As they finished administering to him, the boy spoke and indicated that he could also hear. On the 27th of February 1855, upon completion of his mission, he sailed for home on the ship "Siddons", during which time he served as president of a company of 430 Saints who were emigrating to the Salt Lake Valley. After seeing this company of Saints to Philidephia, PA, he returned to New York to meet two more ship loads of Saints (the Juventa and Chimborozo to their outfitting place and boarding boats for St. Louis. Feeling a “little weary” he went to Iowa to visit his two sisters, Mary Elizabeth Fellows and Charlotte Ferris before returning to the Salt Lake Valley in the fall of 1855. Back in Utah Also traveling on the Ship "Siddons" was a young woman by the name of Sarah Ann Stevenson, who had been very helpful to the Elders in distributing tracts and singing with them the songs of Zion. She had promised John S. to become his third wife upon arriving in Utah. Due to the poor circumstances of the families of John S., however, she postponed the marriage for one year and nearly married John Taylor, instead. She and John S. were finally married on 12 October 1856 in the Endowment House. After arriving in Salt Lake City, John S. had moved his families to Springville, Utah, where he continued to live for the rest of his life. For six years, Sarah Ann maintained a home in Spanish Fork, Utah, and then moved to Springville near his other families. John S. and Mary Ann taught school in Springville and Provo. Sarah Ann, who was an excellent seamstress, worked in her father's tailoring shop inasmuch as he had, by this time, brought his family to the valley. Apparently, Olive Amanda cared for the several families while they were working. In 1881, a new settlement called Orangeville was established, and Sarah Ann and her family moved there to live. It was located about 40 miles west of Price, Utah, and was a desolate place. Nevertheless, she remained there until her death on 7 September 1901. Olive Amanda and some of her children later moved to Orangeville, where she died 17 November 1885. John Solomon Blesses His Family <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.jpg> In 1885, John S. suffered a stroke and paralysis of his left arm and leg. Two other strokes followed and he never regained the use of his arm and leg. However, as was promised in his patriarchal blessing, his mind remained clear until the time of his death, which came peacefully. In all his illness, he had no bodily pain. A year after the stroke, when he knew his end was approaching, he called all his family that were present together and blessed them. He admonished them to be true to their covenants and to stand firm in the Church and kingdom of God. Among his last words to them were, "I cannot remain any longer with you. I am going on a great mission." He died 8 October 1883 at Springville, Utah, at the age of 76, and is buried in the Springville Evergreen Cemetery with his first wife, Mary Ann, who died 29 November 1897. John S. and Mary Ann were the parents of 8 children, seven of whom grew to maturity. He and Olive Amanda were the parents of 10 children, nine of whom grew to maturity. And, he and Sarah Ann were the parents of 12 children, all of whom lived to maturity. Mary Ann PRICE was born 16 Sep 1815 in Nashville, Davison, TN. She died 29 Nov 1897 in Marysvale, Piute, Utah and was buried 2 Dec 1897 in Springville, Utah, Utah. Mary was baptized 2 Aug 1877. She was endowed 15 Dec 1845 in the Nauvoo (original). Mary married John Solomon FULLMER on 24 May 1837 in Nashville, Davison, TN. They were sealed 15 Jan 1846 in the Nauvoo (original). The Children of Mary Ann Price and John Solomon Fullmer: · Lavina Elizabeth FULLMER was born 5 Mar 1838 and died 21 Jul 1907. · Johanna Price FULLMER was born 13 Dec 1839 and died 15 Nov 1915. · Ann Adelaide FULLMER was born 25 Oct 1841 and died 10 Apr 1899. · Mary Ann Frances FULLMER was born 19 May 1844 in Nauvoo, Hancock, IL. She died 7 Nov 1853 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah · John Solomon Jr. FULLMER Jr. was born 12 Apr 1846 and died 13 Jul 1898. · William Price FULLMER was born 27 May 1849 and died 19 Jun 1926. · Don Carlos FULLMER was born 7 Nov 1851 and died 10 Apr 1925. · Samuel David FULLMER was born 4 Nov 1856 and died 29 Jul 1921. End Notes: [i] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> Copied from a typescript Iona published for the Peter Fullmer family in August 1957 [ii] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> John S. had four sisters: the elders, Mary, had some years previous married Erastus Fellow; Desdemona joined the Mormon Church together with her family; but Charlotte and Louisiana, while they may have been baptized, did not remain active in the church. It is fairly certain that their husbands did not join. About that same time, Charlotte married Jonathan Farris and Louisiana married John Hiskey. Both eventually moved to Iowa, near to where their sister Mary lived with her husband. [iii] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> The months after the murder of the Joseph and Hyrum, John S, wrote a long detailed letter to his Uncle John regarding the events of that month. Ten years later, while a missionary in England, he published a 40 page booklet entitled, “ Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith, the Prophet and the Patriarch of the Church of Latter-day Saints. Also a Condensed History of the Expulsion of the Saints from Nauvoo by Elder John S. Fullmer (of Utah, U. S. A.), Pastor of the Manchester, Liverpool, and Preston Conferences. Liverpool and London, 1855.” This pamphlet has been described as “the best narrative, and indeed the only one that enters circumstantially into all the details of the expulsion from Nauvoo. The work is written from a Mormon standpoint, but including as it does copies of the dispatches of Illinois officers and officials, of the stipulations between the belligerents, and of some comments made by the Quincy Whig, appears in the main reliable.“ [iv] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> Recent discoveries have revealed that Olive probably did not leave Nauvoo in February, as previously thought, since it was know that she was in the company with Colonel Stephen Markham. It now appears more likely that she remained in Nauvoo, with her husband and his other family until Col. Markham returned that summer for another load of Saints. Hence, she probably did not have to suffer the terrible winter months crossing the plains of Iowa. [v] <http://www.geocities.com/richardwinmill/john_s_fullmer.htm> The act of “administering to the sick” is an ordinance conducted by priesthood authority for the blessing and healing of the sick. It is conducted by anointing the head and invoking a blessing the sick person by the authority of the priesthood of God and the faith of those present. +++ When the Fullmer family lived in Nauvoo they were close neighbors and friends of the Prophet. Lavinia remembers sitting on the Prophets lap and listening to his big watch tick. In the evenings the rugs of the smith home would be rolled up and they would dance, or John S. Fullmer and the Prophet would engage in wrestling matches, or they would talk about the gospel. The Prophet gave John his sword and watch as tokens of his love. John was in the Cathage jail with the Prophet the night before the assassination. They were lying on a matress on the floor together and the Prophet ask John to sing his favorit songs to him. In the morning John went to subpoena witnesses for the approching trial. When he returned the guards refused to let him enter. This act was probably the means of his life being spared. John Solomon Fullmer came to Utah in October, 1848 with the Willard Richards Company, he being a captian of Ten. Died 8 Oct 1883 in Springville, Utah, Utah. He and Mary Ann were first buried on a lot on the old Fullmer Farm and then, some years later, were removed to the Evergreen cemetery where they are buried on a Fullmer plot. JOHN SOLOMON FULLMER John Solomon Fullmer was born July 21, 1807, in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. He was engaged in the mercantile business in Nashville, Tennessee, when his older brother, David corresponded with him regarding the Gospel that some of the family had accepted in Ohio. Numerous letters were exchanged between the two and are now in the Church Historian's Office in Salt Lake city. John S. married Mary Ann Price in Tennessee and moved from there to Nauvoo around 1840. His new bride also accepted the Gospel and became a staunch member. John Solomon Fullmer became an ardent member of the Church. He was elected Treasurer of the City of Nauvoo, and became a close friend of the Prophet Joseph Smith, and spent the night before the martyrdom in the Carthage Jail with the prophet and others. He is mentioned in this connection in most historical accounts of the martyrdom. John S. wrote an interesting account of the martyrdom on October 30, 1844, that he originally submitted to James Gordon Bennett, the Editor of the New York Herald, but due to its length was not published by this paper. This account was later privately printed and a copy s owned by the family organization. This account also includes a description of the "Battle of Nauvoo" that took place in the fall of 1846 and also covers the settlement that took place between the Mormons and the mob. John S. was one of the principals in this agreement as he was one of the Trustees for the Church in Nauvoo along with Almon W. Babbitt and Joseph L. Heywood. These three men had been appointed by President Brigham Young to look after ±e interests of the Church in Nauvoo after the departure of the main group in the early spring or 1846. They were authorized to dispose of property, etc., including the Temple as best they could. John S. came to Utah October 10,1848, in the Willard Richards Company. He took a mission to England in 1852 and has left a diary account of this mission which the family organization owns. They crossed the plains going east in a wagon and slept on the ground under the wagon for protection from the elements. He visited his sisters Charlotte and Elizabeth in Iowa on his way to his mission field. John S. had three wives, Mary Ann Price, Olive Amanda Smith and Sarah Ann Stevenson, and large families were raised by each wife. He settled in Springville in his later years. He held many Church offices and was a member of the early legislature and its various committees. He died October 8th, 1883. When the Prophet Joseph and his brother, Hyrum, were taken to Carthage, Illinois for trial in 1844, the Justice of the Peace by the name of Robert F. Smith set the bail at such a high figure that he didn't think it could be raised. However, John S. Fullmer and others came forward and raised the amount some of them pledging their homes as security. See Andrew Jensen's Historical Record, Volume 7, Page 563. For an account of the night in jail at Carthage when John S. and others were with the Prophet, see Historical Records, Vol. 7, Page 566. An extremely interesting and learned letter written to a friend in March 1840, and covering many principles of the Gospel, is to be found in Volume 4 of Times and Seasons, Page 17. This letter shows the complete understanding that John S. had this early in his Church career. Times and Seasons was the Church publication at Nauvoo, Illinois. (The Fullmer Family) By W.K. Williams: John Solomon Fullmer, Sr. (hereafter referred to as John S.) was born in Huntington, Luzern County, Pennsylvania on 21 July 1807. He was the third of seven children born to Peter Fullmer and Susannah Zerfass. He came from a good, religious family whose means of livelihood for many years was that of farming. His ancestors were among the very early settlers of Pennsylvania, those of the Fullmer family coming from Germany on board the ship "Friendship", in 1738, and those of the Zerfass family also emigrating from Germany. He was reared in Huntington until he was an adult and spent his youth and early manhood on his father's farm there. While growing up, John S. received what was considered an "average" education. In those days, an education considered as "liberal" would be to us but a grade school education. However, John S. possessed a driving ambition to better himself in every way and never ceased to study to improve himself. He acquired a knowledge of law by taking a correspondence course while working in a newspaper office in Nashville, Tennessee and, although he never practiced as a lawyer, this knowledge served him greatly throughout his life. In 1830, his father's family moved from Pennsylvania to Ohio. Two years later, John S. left the family to go to Nashville where he intended to study for the ministry of the Baptist Church. He later changed his mind about becoming a Minister as he felt that he was incapable of filling such a position. When he arrived in Nashville, he had barely five dollars in his pocket, was without friends or acquaintances, and had no training in a trade. He obtained a job at the "Banner" newspaper office and, within five years time, had become so well known and highly regarded that he received the financial backing of a wealthy merchant to enter the mercantile business with a partner. The firm was known as Fullmer and Mitchell. It was while in Nashville that he met and fell in love with Mary Ann Price, a daughter of a wealthy planter. Mary Ann had known none of the hardships of life and had her own maid and a private tutor. Her father was very much opposed to her association with John S. and she was forbidden to see him. Describing their romance to his parents, John S. said, "I always thought I would be better pleased for having a little romance in my courtship. In this I was fully gratified. She was prevented from having any association with me for a long time, and when we did have any, it was clandestinely conducted. She was not permitted to visit a neighbor's house alone, or even go to church without someone to attend her, lest I should intrude and take advantage of the circumstances. We at length, however, corresponded daily: and when we thought we were about to be discovered, we consummated the business to our liking, and the utter astonishment and surprise of everybody. On the morning of the 24th of May, 1837, she put on her morning gown as usual and, instead of walking among the flowers in the garden, as usual, she skipped across the street, through an alley, and met me at the place of appointment. At 9 o'clock, we were at the Parson's house and had the ceremony completed, and wrote a joint note to her mother (her father being at the time in Texas), informing her of what was done, and hoped also that it was well done." After the marriage, her father did become reconciled to their marriage in that he was friendly toward the newlyweds. However, he disinherited Mary Ann. Some years later, after her parent's died and their estate was probated, Mary Ann finally received some settlement, but this was after they had come to Utah. It was while John S. was living in Nashville that his parents heard the gospel preached and accepted it. John S. was bitterly opposed to them joining what he called some "new fangled" religion when it meant moving from their home to a new place and the breaking up of the family unit. The Fullmers had been a closely knit family and John S. had been the only one to leave home up to that time. His three sisters had not joined this new church and were to be left behind in Ohio when the rest of the family moved to Missouri. John S. asked "Wasn't the old religion they had lived for so many years satisfactory anymore?" In a letter to his brother David, he says, "And as regards your religion, I have not another word to say in opposition, for I don't think you so lost in foolishness as to advocate any cause so zealously, without, to say the least, the appearance of some reason for it. I shall therefore cease the effort to laugh you out of your belief; neither will I debate the question, but will at once become your pupil, and will hear what you have to say, and if you can, by deed or doctrine, command my reason, I will make the acknowledgment." Thus began the conversion of John S. Fullmer. At the end of two years, he decided to go to Nauvoo to visit with the portion of his family living there and to see for himself the Prophet Joseph Smith. He made the journey from Nashville to Nauvoo on horseback in the Spring of 1839 and, before returning to Nashville, was baptized into the Church by the Prophet Joseph Smith on 29 July 1839. He then returned to Nashville and prepared to move his family to Nauvoo. He and Mary Ann and their two daughters moved into their first real home, in Nauvoo, in the Spring of 1840. Here, they were as John S. said, "comfortably but not splendidly situated." Mary Ann, who knew nothing about the religious beliefs of John S.'s family at the time of their marriage, was baptized after their arrival in Nauvoo; however, the exact date of her baptism is unknown. From the time of their arrival in Nauvoo until the death of the Prophet Joseph Smith, the Fullmer family was closely associated with him and his brother Hyrum, and their families. Being a neighbor for a time to the Prophet, they saw a lot of each other. Stories are told in the family how, in the evenings, the rugs of the Prophet's home would be rolled up and the time spent in dancing, and in the wrestling matches that John S. and the Prophet would engage in. In the Fullmer family, there is a sword and a watch which were given to John S. by the Prophet as tokens of his love and affection. John S. later wrote that he had been with Joseph Smith "a great deal since my first acquaintance with him; was in his company and employ, in his office and in his store over a year; and acted as his private secretary." John S. was active in all his Church activities and, in some of his letters, he relates the struggles required of the Saints in building the Nauvoo temple, and may other of their hardships. John S. received his patriarchal blessing May 29, 1841, at the hands of Hyrum Smith. In this blessing he was promised that he would never lose his clearness of mind, even in his old age. He never did. Desdemona, a sister of John S., was one of the first women to enter into the order of Celestial marriage. She became a wife to Joseph Smith in 1842. John S. and his brother David also accepted this new order. John S. had been living on a farm four miles from Nauvoo when, on June 25, 1844, Joseph and Hyrum were arrested. As an officer in the Nauvoo Legion, he had been on duty during the time the city was under martial law. Because of his great friendship with the two brothers, he was one of those who accompanied Joseph and Hyrum Smith to Carthage Jail. He spent the day and night before the martyrdom with them there. On the morning of the day they were assassinated, June 26th, when he was sent on an errand by the Prophet, he left his gun with the Prophet. It was this gun that Hyrum used to defend himself with later that day. An unverified story - one that is probably not be true - asserts that all those who were wounded with the gun that day died a horrible death. When Joseph and Hyrum had first been jailed, they had been incarcerated on a riot charge and bail had been set at $500 each, which was about two and one half times as much as normal bail. Fullmer later wrote, "It was evident that the magistrate intended to outreach the pile of the brethern, so as to imprison those on trial for want of bail; but it happened that there was strength to cover the demand. I went to the full extent of my worth; so did others - and the prisoners were all released. But Joseph and Hyrum having been arrested in the first instance on two charges, one for riot, the other for treason, were now not suffered to enjoy their liberty after the first examination and release; and were almost immediately taken in charge by a constable." John S. told of lying on the floor next to the Prophet during the night before the assassination. "He laid his right arm out for me to lay my head upon it..... After the brethern were all quiet and seemed asleep, excepting myself, he talked with me a little about the prospects of his deliverance. He did not say he knew that he had to die, but he inferred as much, and finally said he 'would like to see his family again', and he 'would to God that he could preach to the saints once more in Nauvoo' ". The next morning, Joseph sent John S. to Nauvoo to assist in obtaining witnesses for the treason hearing scheduled for June 29th. While there he obtained a change of clothes so that he could be dressed properly when attending the hearing. Upon returning to the jail later that day, he was refused admission by the guards and, as a result, missed the mob's attack on the jailhouse. John S. later stated that but for this, he would, a hundred chances to one, have shared the same fate that they did. Later, while in England on a mission, John S. wrote a lengthy article covering the martyrdom of the Prophet and Hyrum. This was published in a forty page booklet titled, "The Assassination of Joseph and Hyrum Smith, the Prophet and Patriarch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints." He also wrote a condensed, "History of the Expulsion of the Saints from Nauvoo." John S. had a great love and respect for the Prophet and his brother Hyrum and often stated so in his letters to family and friends. In his journal he records, "Thus it fell two men who had no superior, I will venture the assertion, since the days of Dawn. You may think me too enthusiastic, and some may think me fanatic, but this generation will not pass away before these words will be fully accredited. I will venture another assertion, and that is that the earth never produced two as great men at the same time. You do not know what you have lost in never seeing and becoming acquainted with these men. I value the privilege I had with them, more than I do all else that my eyes have ever beheld. I ask what would you not give for the privilege, if it could be had, of seeing and conversing with the Apostles Peter, James and John, or Paul, and receiving instructions from them? Now I say unto you that greater than these have been slain in the jail of Carthage." In May, 1844, at the birth of his fourth daughter, John S. hired a girl to work as a housekeeper. Her name was Olive Amanda Smith Cook. After she had been working in the Fullmer home for about nine months, Mary Ann, the first wife, asked Olive if she would consent to become her husband's second wife. Thinking she would not find a better man, she consented when he asked her several months later. They were sealed January 21, 1846, in the Nauvoo Temple. In August, 1845, John S. and Henry G. Sherwood were sent on a mission to Vermillion, about 700 miles from Nauvoo. The journey was made on horseback through wild, dangerous country. Several times on this mission their lives were spared by the hand of the Lord. They returned to Nauvoo in October, 1845. (See Vol. 7, Documentary History of the Church, for details.) By early 1846, it was evident to the leaders of the Church that the Saints would not be permitted to live much longer in Nauvoo, and preparations were made for their departure. In a council meeting held by Brigham Young in the Temple, in January 1846, John S. Fullmer was appointed as one of the three Trustees-in-Trust to care for and dispose of Church property after the Saints had departed Nauvoo. Previously, John S. had been paymaster of the Nauvoo Legion and had held the rank of Colonel. Accordingly, he became a member of the "Spartan Band" that defended Nauvoo against the mob in September 1846. He signed, much against his will, a peace treaty with the mob, in order to spare the lives of the remaining Saints, and to save the Temple. He described the treaty as "ignoble and cruel" in all its features. His wife, Mary Ann, and her children, remained with him in Nauvoo throughout the struggles there. His wife, Olive Amanda, left with the first Saints and lived in Council Bluffs where her daughter, Mary Ann Smith Fullmer, was born in the wagon box she called home. After a year and one half of trying to dispose of the Church property and, seeing that it was a useless task, the Trustees were told to leave what property was left and move from Nauvoo. And so it was that in the Spring of 1848, John S. left Nauvoo on the journey that was to take him to the valley in the mountains. At council Bluffs, he joined Olive Amanda and others of his parent's family and started on the journey west. John S. served as a captain of 10 in the Willard Richards Company. They arrived in the valley in October of 1848 and settled in Davis County. For the next few years, John S. was involved in assisting with the political aspects of the new settlements, helping to draft a constitution for, first, the Territory of Deseret and, later, the Territory of Utah. He was elected to the House of Representatives from Davis County and his brother, David, was elected to the House of Representatives from Salt Lake County. While living in Davis County, he served as Postmaster. In the Fall of 1852, he was called to fulfill a mission to England. He left his wives, who between them had twelve children - all under fourteen years of age - and journeyed to England. Mary Ann taught school to help with their livelihood while he was away and the 6th Ward records show that they received some help from the Ward storehouse. One of the children, Mary Ann Francis, died while he was away. On his mission, John S. presided over three large conferences in England: the Liverpool, Manchester, and Preston conferences. While in laboring at Rochdale, England, on 29 March 1853, he and his companion administered to an 18 year old boy by the name of Halsden Marsden, who had been born deaf and dumb. As they finished administering to him, the boy spoke and indicated that he could also hear. On the 27th of February 1855, upon completion of his mission, he sailed for home on the ship "Siddons", during which time he served as president of a company of 430 Saints who were emigrating to the Salt Lake Valley. He arrived back in Salt Lake City in the Fall of 1855. Also traveling on the Ship "Siddons" was a young woman by the name of Sarah Ann Stevenson, who had been very helpful to the Elders in distributing tracts and singing with them the songs of Zion. She had promised John S. to become his third wife upon arriving in Utah. Due to the poor circumstances of the families of John S., however, she postponed the marriage for one year and nearly married John Taylor, instead. She and John S. were finally married on 12 October 1856 in the Endowment House. After arriving in Salt Lake City, John S. had moved his families to Springville, Utah, where he continued to live for the rest of his life. For six years, Sarah Ann maintained a home in Spanish Fork, Utah, and then moved to Springville near his other families. John S. and Mary Ann taught school in Springville and Provo. Sarah Ann, who was an excellent seamstress, worked in her father's tailoring shop inasmuch as he had, by this time, brought his family to the valley. Apparently, Olive Amanda cared for the several families while they were working. In 1881, a new settlement called Orangeville was established, and Sarah Ann and her family moved there to live. It was located about 40 miles west of Price, Utah, and was a desolate place. Nevertheless, she remained there until her death on 7 September 1901. Olive Amanda and some of her children later moved to Orangeville, where she died 17 November 1885. In 1885, John S. suffered a stroke and paralysis of his left arm and leg. Two other strokes followed and he never regained the use of his arm and leg. A year later, when he knew his end was approaching, he called all his family that were present together and blessed them. He admonished them to he true to their covenants and to stand firm in the Church and kingdom of God. Among his last words to them were, "I cannot remain any longer with you. I am going on a great mission." He died 8 October 1883 at Springville, Utah, at the age of 76, and is buried in the Springville Evergreen Cemetery with his first wife, Mary Ann, who died 29 November 1897. John S. and Mary Ann were the parents of 8 children, seven of whom grew to maturity. He and Olive Amanda were the parents of 10 children, nine of whom grew to maturity. And, he and Sarah Ann were the parents of 12 children, all of whom lived to maturity. |
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Media object | Note: Property John paid taxes on. He was elected city treasure.
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