

PERSONAL DIARY OF MARIAH PULSIPHER BURGESS
Mariah Pulsipher Burgess, born March 17, 1822 in Susquehanna County, Pennsylvania. I moved with my parents, Zerah and Mary Brown Pulsipher to Onondaga County, New York, when I was a small girl.
Jared Carter came to New York preaching the gospel. Father, mother and sisters, Almira and Sarah and I were baptized in January of 1832. My father disposed of his property and we made our way westward. In 1835, there was a stake organized in Kirtland. We moved there and helped build the Temple. Soon after it was dedicated the mob started persecuting the Saints. My father, being one of the first seven Presidents over the Seventies, had to leave. They bound themselves under a covenant to put their means together and not leave one Saint behind. They left Kirtland with 500 Saints.
We traveled to Dayton, Ohio, there we had to stop and each work to get means to go on. The camp was divided into 9 divisions. We lived all alike, and a Commissary to give out provisions. We held evening and Sunday meetings. We enjoyed a stay of nine weeks and obtained the necessities and moved on. We had not gone far before we were met by Mobcrats, telling us we had better stop because we would be driven out. Joseph and Hyrum Smith met us at Far West, Missouri. They greatly rejoiced to see us. They preached to us that night and told us to settle in Di-amond, Davis County.
The next day we started on our journey of about 30 miles, as we arrived, a mob was riding around threatening to kill us. Father was taken prisoner with about 30 others, but later released. I have been on the spot, a large pile of rocks where Joseph Smith says it was Adam’s Alter in Di-amond about 1/2 mile from our place.
We lived there about six weeks before being compelled to leave. My grandmother, now 86 years old, said she had come to Zion to lay her bones down and now had to be driven on. She went to Far West with us and spent the winter. About a month before we had to leave, she died.
In the spring we moved again, crossed the Mississippi River and went up the river to a little town called Lima. We went three miles from any settlement in the woods, east of Lima. There we camped and got some ground cleared off to build a log house and plant a garden. About a mile away the Saints made the “Morley Settlement”. We much rejoiced to find a place where we could live without being molested. There I formed an acquaintance with William Burgess and about a year later, September, 184O, I married him. Soon after my marriage, we settled in Nauvoo Illinois and helped build a city in spite of much sickness.
The mobcrats were continually seeking Joseph Smith’s life. He and Hyrum were finally slain, what a time of trouble.
That fall I was so ‘low’ I told my husband to pray for me. Before he returned to bed he prayed for me. I prayed too, asking the Lord to show me whether I should live. I lay free from pain for about one hour thinking of the situation of the Church, having to leave in the spring. I was not asleep. The room shone bright, all of a sudden I saw evil spirits; I was scared and was just going to call my husband when a voice spoke. “I am your Ministering Spirit.” It immediately came into my mind that I had heard the Prophet Joseph say while preaching that Angels had appeared to him. He said the third time they always answered. I spoke the third time. The spirit then spoke, “If you were to see me it would scare you. You would not know the things I am going to tell you. You shall be well in the morning; from this time you shall have more faith. You shall have a dream that shall comfort you. When you have a dream that troubles you, you may know it is from the evil spirit. Be careful of your health, and do not do too much hard work. Obtain your Patriarchal blessing, this shall be a blessing to you.”
I asked if Joseph Smith died a ‘true prophet. He spoke, “He died a true Prophet, Brigham Young is now the man to lead the Church. If you will covenant with me not to reveal it to the world there shall be things revealed to you that shall be greatly to your benefit.” I then saw in a vision the beauty and glory of plurality of wives. It said, “Your mother and your sister, Sarah, do not believe in plurality. Almira knows it is right, tell them what you know and they will all believe you.”
I got up well. I had been three weeks confined to my bed with chills and fever. We received our endowments in the Nauvoo Temple. There was the spirit of the Lord present until we felt we had been paid for building it, even though we had been driven out and had no further use of it.
We started west in the spring with an old wagon, one yoke of oxen, one cow and all the things we could load in the wagon. We felt to rejoice that we escaped with our lives. We traveled on with a small company through mud and storm, stopping along the way as the men could find work. We stayed at Winter Quarters, the men all worked in companies to cut hay and erect houses for the winter.
I was living in a leaky log cabin without a floor in November when a daughter (Juliett) was born. I was never able to leave my bed. The baby had to be weaned at three months. I was very sick, but my father and husband would not give me up because I had two other little children, Mary Harriet and Carnelia to look after and care for. They said I should live, so I gradually got better but was very weak. Hundreds of the Saints laid their bodies down there.
President Young started with some more of the brethren in the spring to find a place for the Saints to settle. Some of the companies stayed and put in some corn and garden. I was sick all the first winter we lived at Winter Quarters. One of our oxen and cow died. In the spring my health was very poor, but my husband had to leave me and go to work to buy another oxen and get provisions to take us over the plains to the Valley.
He had not been gone long until my baby took very sick. No one thought she could live. I prayed to the Lord to spare her life and she commenced to get better. I did not write to my husband to tell him how low she was, I did not worry him, when he came and saw her he asked, “Do you think she can live?” I said, “Yes, she is better and will live.” There was only about one in six of the children who lived from these illnesses. Hundreds died.
In the spring we got ready and left Winter Quarters. Most all the Saints left that spring. President Young and the “Twelve” all started. They organized in companies of hundreds. My father, Zerah Pulsipher was Captain of our Hundred.
We enjoyed ourselves although I was not able to leave my wagon much. We camped one night on a sand hill without feed and water. I was taken sick. As soon as daylight came we went about six miles, found water and feed and stopped. There my first son was born, after dinner we traveled on. I kept in bed about two weeks, then was able to get around. I felt able and willing to go through suffering to find a resting place where the Saints could worship the Lord with none to molest.
When we got to Salt Lake we camped out. My baby lived out of doors until he was three months old. We got a house and put up a little mill to grind corn. The next summer we lived in a dugout. My baby took whooping cough and was very sick. We called President Young to administer to him. He looked at him and said, “He is a noble spirit.” He blessed him and said, “He shall have the Priesthood whether he lives or dies.” But we had to part with him - John William.
That was a great trial to have my only son taken from me. I was sitting alone a few days after my baby’s death reflecting on its death, the Spirit returned and said to me, “You shall have a son and he shall live” In about 9 or 10 months I had another son - Wilmer. He did live and is over 30 years old and is a good man.
My baby, John William, died in the spring up canyon creek. He was taken down to the city to be buried, the third to be buried there. We soon moved to the city. It was laid out in lots, a few houses were built. We lived in the 16th Ward. We built a house with three rooms.
(Just a few items added by Nora Lund, Family Historian)
Mariah’s husband, William,Jr., was the son of William Burgess and Vilate Stockwell Burgess. He was born March 1, 1822, in (the township of) Putman, Washington County, New York. The children born to this worthy couple and who they married, are:
Mary Harriet, born May 22, 1842, Nauvoo, Illinois; Married Ezra Nelson Bullard
Carnelia, born January 9, 1844, Nauvoo, Illinois; Married James Hughes
Juliett, born November 15, 1846, Winter Quarters; Married Joshua Chidester
John Williams, born 1848 on way to Salt Lake City, Died in infancy
Wilmer, born April 1, 1850, Salt Lake City, Utah; Married Tresa Jane Heath
James Calmer, born April 15, 1852, Salt Lake City, Utah; Married Mary Louisa Heath
Vilate, born 185?, Salt Lake City, Utah; Married Joseph Meeks
William H., born January 20, 1860, Salt Lake City, Utah; Married Mary Ann Davis
Anettia, born 186-, Salt Lake City, Utah; Married Orson Robins
The family was called to the Dixie Cotton Mission in the fall of 1862, arriving in St. George on New Year’s Days, traveling with the rest of the Pulsipher family.I would like to include a little item in the book “Under The Dixie Sun” in the Pine Valley write up which refers to William and his brothers.
“In l863, the three Burgess brothers, Harrison, William, Jr., and Horace, and their father, William, Sr., moved in from St. George and set up a sawmill in the canyon about a mile and a half above the Riddle Mill. It was located under the steep bank north of Birch Flat at the junction of the road to the lake and the main highway.”
Another item in the same book says that the general exodus took place from Pine Valley in l880, some going to Emery County and other places. This is, no doubt the time that Mariah and William and their family moved to help settle Huntington in Emery County.This good woman died in Huntington in l893, at the age of 71 years. Her husband lived on until March, l906, and died at the age of 84 in Huntington.
(A short history compiled and written by David Kenison, Orem, Utah, dkenison@xmission.com)
Mariah Pulsipher was born in New York in 1822. She joined the Church with her parents, Zera and Mary Ann Pulsipher, when she was 10 years old. Mariah married William Burgess in 1840 near Nauvoo, and they later received ordinances in the temple there. Mariah records:
"We started west in the spring [1846] with an old wagon, one yoke of oxen, one cow and all the things we could load in the wagon. We felt to rejoice that we escaped with our lives. We traveled on with a small company through mud and storm, stopping along the way as the men could find work. We stayed at Winter Quarters. The men all worked in companies to cut hay and erect houses for the winter. I was living in a leaky log cabin without a floor in November when a daughter, Juliett, was born. I was never able to leave my bed. The baby had to be weaned at three months. I was very sick, but my father and husband would not give me up because I had two other little children, Mary Harriet and Cornelia, to look after and care for. They said I should live, so I gradually got better, but was very weak. Hundreds of the saints laid their bodies down there. President Young started with some more of the brethren in the spring to find a place for the Saints to settle. Some of the companies stayed and put in some corn and garden. I was sick all the first winter we lived at Winter Quarters. One of our oxen and the cow died. In the spring my health was very poor, but my husband had to leave me and go to work to buy another ox and get provisions to take us over the plains to the valley.
"He had not been gone long until my baby took very sick. No one thought she could live. I prayed to the Lord to spare her life and she commenced to get better. I did not write to my husband to tell him how low she was. I did not worry him. When he came and saw her, he asked, 'Do you think she can live?' I said, 'Yes, she is better and will live.' There was only about one in six of the children who lived from these illnesses. Hundreds died.
"In the spring we got ready and left Winter Quarters. Almost all the Saints left that spring. President Young and the Twelve all started. They organized in companies of hundreds. My father, Zerah Pulsipher, was captain of our hundred.
"We enjoyed ourselves, although I was not able to leave my wagon much. We camped one night on a sand hill without feed and water. As soon as daylight came we went about six miles, found water and feed and stopped. There my first son was born. After dinner we traveled on. I kept in bed about two weeks, then was able to get around. I felt able and willing to go through suffering to find a resting place where the Saints could worship the Lord with none to molest."
Sadly, that son died the following year in Salt Lake. Mariah eventually bore 9 children and lived until 1893.
(Quotations from Mariah Pulsipher autobiography, in Kenneth Hales, ed., _Windows: A Mormon Family_; see also _Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah_, p. 782)
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Copyright 1998, David Kenison and LDS-Gems, dkenison@xmission.com
Distributed on the Internet via the LDS-Gems listserver; for more
information, see: http://www.xmission.com/~dkenison/lds/ch_hist/
William Burgess, Jr. 1822-1904
Autobiography in Kenneth Glyn Hales, ed. and comp., Windows: A Mormon Family
Tucson, Arizona
Skyline Printing, 1985Source: Selections from the autobiography of William Burgess in Kenneth Glyn Hales, comp. and ed., Windows: A Mormon Family (Tucson, Arizona: Skyline Printing, 1985).
AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM BURGESS
[One of the children of John and Hannah Burgess was William Burgess who married Violate Stockwell and raised a large family in the Lake George, New York area. William was one of the chief carpenters in erecting the temple at Kirtland, Ohio and laid out the roofing timbers. This is a sketch of the life of one of his sons, William Burgess, Jr.]
I was born March 1, 1822 in the township of Putnam, Washington County, New York. When I was ten years old my father and most of his family joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This was December 2nd, 1832. The next August we started to move to Jackson County, Missouri. We arrived in Kirtland, Ohio the first part of September. The Prophet Joseph Smith advised us to stop there and help build the [Kirtland] temple. The walls were about four feet above the ground.
That fall (1833) the church was driven out of Jackson County by the mob. In February 1835 I was baptized by my brother Harrison Burgess and confirmed by the Prophet Joseph Smith, under the following circumstances. There had been about thirty-five baptized during the week and all went to church on Sunday to be confirmed. We sat on the three fronts rows of seats and I was on the third one. Jared Carter and Elder Cahoon were doing the confirming. After they had confirmed all on the first row, the Prophet held up his hand for them to stop, and came to where I was and confirmed me, then went back to the stand and told the brethren to go on with the confirming.
I lived in the Smith family for two years, and learned much of the gospel hearing the prophet talk. I helped build the Kirtland Temple and was at the dedication. We passed through the persecution with the saints and were driven out. We then moved to Caldwell County, Missouri in August of 1838. The prophet counseled us to go to Daviess County. We arrived at Adam-ondi-Ahman about the 20th of August, 1838. The mob spirit was raging and all the old settlers but two moved away in order to have their families safe while they were fighting. For about three months I didn't undress only to wash and change clothes, and no one except those that passed through it knows the tribulation and privations that we had to endure. As it was for the gospel's sake, we endured cheerfully. I was taken prisoner by the mob and abused terribly. But we depended on the Lord and He delivered us from them. We went to Caldwell County in December and in the spring we were put in prison and the church was driven from the state.
We next went to Adams County, Illinois. We were driven out of Missouri leaving our homes and all we had, but we were thankful for our lives that we were spared. On September 17, 1840, I married Mariah Pulsipher, daughter of Zerah Pulsipher and Mary Brown, near Lima, Adams County, Illinois. In the spring of 1841 we moved to Nauvoo, Illinois. I was elected captain of the Third Company, Fifth Regiment of the Nauvoo Legion. I passed through the trials and privations with the saints there and assisted in building the temple. On October 18, 1844 I was ordained a seventy by Daniel J. Mills. We completed the temple for ordinance work and on January 7, 1846 we received our endowments in the House of the Lord.
I left Nauvoo on February 10, 1846 with the pioneers, but came back the last of March, fixed up the best my wife and I could and started on May 23rd for Council Bluffs. I stopped in Iowa and worked. We arrived in Winter Quarters on September 16, 1846. We passed through that sickness that took so many lives and left Winter Quarters in May 1848 for the west. After four months we arrived in the Salt Lake valley on September 22, 1848.