Showing posts with label Elizabeth Ashton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Elizabeth Ashton. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2015

The Family of William Ashton

William Ashton and his wife Sarah Ann Barlow Ashton must have had some second thoughts as the approached the handcart trek.  Sarah Ann was pregnant with their sixth child.  Their other children were all girls.  Betsy the oldest, about eleven, the second Esther had passed away as an infant, then followed Sarah, Mary and Elizabeth.
Tragedy would strike the family again, while in Boston harbor, little Elizabeth would succumb to the measles.  This only allowed the family a few hours to grieve before they had to continue their journey. Their next leg was by wagon to the train station to  take them North to Albany where they would cross the Hudson River on the journey to Iowa.
This family's tragedy was not over.  Shortly after the pioneers had regrouped at Florence Nebraska and were traveling close to Winter Quarters, Sarah Ann would go into labor, and deliver another baby girl.  However she would pass away in child birth.  William was left with four girls, one of them a baby.  Of course wet nurses from the company would help tend the baby, keeping her alive for two weeks.  Baby Sarah Ann would be buried along the plains.
When the company reached Fort Laramie, rations were being reduced to minimal amounts of food.  There would be a struggle to get over the mountains and into Salt Lake.  William Ashton left the company at Fort Laramie, leaving his three daughters to the care of others.   He was able to use his signing bonus to support his girls, but he left them on the plains to carry on alone.
The oldest daughter, Betsy, must have felt a great responsibility.  When the company reached the last crossing of the Platte, near present day Casper Wyoming, Betsy froze her feet.  She would succumb afterwards, someplace between Red Buttes and Martin's Cove.  Her death was not recorded.  The two children Sarah, seven and Mary five were cared for by others, and they actually survived and made it to Salt Lake.  Mary is my great great grandmother.  She would die in child birth some years later, giving birth to her only son, William Haston Wardle.  However hers is a great posterity, as that son was the father of eleven.
For more details and a view of a picture entitled orphans depicting Mary and Sarah after Betsy's death.
http://www.tellmystorytoo.com/fine-arts/julie-rogers/orphans

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Your Heart Will Burn: Act 1 Scene 8

This scene is where Elizabeth Ashton passes away.  I have discovered since we did the musical that her death was different, actually on board ship but after they had docked at Constitution Wharf, Boston. For more detail please see this previous post:
http://billywardlegen.blogspot.com/2010/10/deaths-of-elizabeth-betsey-baby-sarah.html
I like the funeral scene, the spirit dancing.  I believe spirits go on after death and try to portray this in this scene and other death scenes in the musical.  There is another historical error in this scene with the playing of Taps.  Taps was not written for another five years or more as it was written by General Dan Butterfield during the Civil War.  This is the scene.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mbx9iYLL4SU&feature=plcp

Monday, April 25, 2011

Boston Funeral Records

Elizabeth Ashton passed away going through Boston with her family late June of 1856.  She was with the group that became the Martin Handcart Company.  She was on the Ship Horizon when she died, but in the harbor.  She died the day the company disembarked and headed to start their train journey.  The family had to leave just a few hours after her passing.  I assume she was buried in a pauper's grave.  I would like confirmation of this.  Does anyone know how to search funeral records for Boston?  I would very much like to find documentation of her burial.