Genesis 1:10 || Meditate the Scripture daily verse by verse
Edward Gabbott & Sarah Rigby
1. Edward Gabbott (1803 – 1876) &
Sarah Rigby (1828 – 1846)
Liverpool to New Orleans on the Sheffield (7 Feb 1841 - 30 Mar 1841)
Nauvoo, Illinois 1841 – 1846 - Wagon Train 1846 -1848
Edward Gabbott
Birth: Feb. 28, 1803 Leyland Lancashire, England
Death: Jul. 22, 1876 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co,
Utah
MARRIAGE: 24 Nov 1833 St Michael, Hoole, Lancashire,
Sarah Rigby,
Born: abt 1811 Leyland, Lancashire, England.
Died 30 Oct 1846, Little Pedgeon, Iowa.
England
Marriages recorded in the Register for the years 1813 - 1836
http://www.lan-opc.org.uk/Hoole/stmichael/marriages_1813-1836.html
About ¾ way down this page, go to 1833
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/NXFT-282
Children –
William (Born 1834 England, Died: 1837 England)
Edward (Born 1836 England, Died: 1837 England)
Mary (Born: 1838 England, Died: 1842 Nauvoo, Ill.)
Susanna (Born: 1840 England, Died 1842 Nauvoo, Ill.)
John (Born: 1842 Nauvoo, Ill., Died: 1926 SLC, Utah)
Sarah Ann (Born: 1845 Nauvoo, Ill., Died: 1851 SLC, Utah)
======================================================================
2.
3. Leyland Lancashire, England
POPULATION
1801 2088
1811 2646
1821 3173
1831 3404
1841 3569
Up to about 1840, most houses and farms in Leyland had one person who did hand-loom weaving. Some
rows of ‘step-houses’ were built, where looms were worked in the basement. Without industries like
mining, ironworks, shipbuilding, etc available, weaving was something that could be easily learnt and
carried out at home. Despite this, the arrival of cotton mills in Leyland may at first seem surprising as
they depended on a power source, such as a fast flowing river, or a coal supply for a steam engine.
Leyland lacked both, and was not a canal or major road centre.
AT WORK IN THE MILL
Workers in the cotton industry had to work very long hours, in unhealthy and dangerous conditions, and
were poorly paid. By 1870, a typical working day at the mill started at 6 o’clock in the morning and
finished at 6 o’clock at night. There would be a break from 8 til 8:45 for breakfast, and from 12:30 to
1:30 for dinner. On Saturdays, the working day finished at 12:30. There were strictly enforced “Rules
and Conditions of Employment”, any breach of which led to fines being deducted from workers’ wages.
BLEACHING
As the cotton industry grew, bleaching also became an important industrial process. From early
beginnings as a crofters, making use of springs in the Northbrook area, the Leyland Bleachworks grew
into one of the largest works of its kind in the country.
This section of an Ordnance Survey map shows the extent of the bleachworks.
4. http://www.lightplanet.com/mormons/daily/history/1831_1844/nauvoo_eom.htm
Nauvoo, Illinois, headquarters of the Church and home for many of its members from 1839 to 1846,
began and ended as a community in exile. In 1838-1839 Latter-day Saints fled from Missouri seeking
religious refuge from mob persecution. They found shelter in eastern Iowa and western Illinois, where
they established new communities. Joseph Smith named the principal city Nauvoo, meaning, he said, "a
beautiful location, a place of rest." When the Saints left Nauvoo for the Rocky Mountains seven years
later, they were again religious exiles in search of a home.
As exiled Latter-day Saints from Missouri and Ohio gathered to their new stake of Zion, missionaries in
the United States and Great Britain baptized many new converts (see Missions of the Twelve to the
British Isles). [ … ] Beginning in 1840, thousands sailed the Atlantic from Liverpool, England, and took
steamboats up the Mississippi from New Orleans. [ … ], aided by Church emigration agents in Liverpool,
who organized companies and appointed shepherds for those fleeing to Zion
http://www.lightplanet.com/mormons/daily/history/1831_1844/twelve_british_eom.htm
Missions of the Twelve to the British Isles by David J. Whittaker and James R. Moss
Between 1837 and 1841 there were two apostolic missions to the British Isles. In 1837-1838 Heber C.
Kimball and Orson Hyde established the first mission, concentrating in the area of Preston and the
Ribble Valley. Their efforts saw about 1,500 people baptized into the Church. From 1839 to 1841, nine
members of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles labored in Britain and added another 4,000 converts to
the Church. These missions were extremely important. In a relatively short time, the Twelve Apostles
established the foundation for the most successful missionary program of the Church in the nineteenth
century, organized an extensive emigration program, and established a major publication program. In
these activities, they also shared experiences that welded them together as a quorum. The spiritual and
administrative dimensions of these missionary experiences prepared the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles
to assume their key role in the leadership of the Church following their return to Nauvoo, and especially
after the death of the Prophet Joseph Smith in 1844.
Elders Kimball and Hyde were in England from July 1837 to April 1838. Landing at Liverpool, they
traveled north to Preston, where relatives of the Canadian converts provided various assistance,
including a place to preach. Finding ready acceptance of their message, they baptized more than 140
people by October 1837. They moved up the Ribble Valley, finding other audiences, particularly among
the textile workers throughout Lancanshire. By the time they returned home in April 1838, Church
membership had grown to about 1,500 people in Britain, in spite of growing opposition, particularly from
local clergy.
[ … ] the expanding British Mission, which saw an additional 4,000 converts join the Church by 1841,
Edward Gabbott and family were among the early English LDS converts.
Edward and Sarah Ann Rigby Gabbott were baptized by Heber C. Kimball during his first mission to
England (1837 – 1838).
Edward Gabbott was in poor circumstances, employed in a bleaching works in England and Sarah Ann
Rigby Gabbott as weaver. Along with their daughters, Mary & Susan, they emigrated from Leyland,
Lancashire, England to Liverpool, England to Nauvoo, Illinois during 1841.
5. http://mormonmigration.lib.byu.edu/Search/showDetails/db:MM_MII/t:voyage/id:331
Liverpool to New Orleans on the Sheffield (7 Feb 1841 - 30 Mar 1841)
Ship Name: Sheffield
Departure: 7 Feb 1841 from Liverpool
Arrival: 30 Mar 1841 at New Orleans
Arrived: at Nauvoo April 18, 1841. Autobiographical Sketch of Hyrum Smith Neibaur
Source Customs #149 (FHL #200,149); NSHP; AF
PASSENGER LIST
Cabbott, Edward , Cabbott, Mary , Cabbott, Sarah , Cabbott, Susan
Name spelled with C instead of G – Correct spelling “GABBOTT”
Cabbott, Edward (Age: 38)
Last Name CABBOTT First Name Edward
Age 38 (1803) Origin Leyland, England
Occupation Bla----
Cabbott, Sarah (Age: 30)
Last Name CABBOTT First Name Sarah
Age 30 Origin Leyland, England, Occupation Weaver
Cabbott, Mary (Age: 2)
Last Name CABBOTT First Name Mary
Age 2 Origin Leyland, England
Cabbott, Susan (Age: infant)
Last Name CABBOTT First Name Susan
Age infant Origin Leyland, England
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADDITIONALLY Sarah Rigby Gabbott’s PARENTS, Edward and Susannah Rigby plus ten (10)
addition members of the Rigby family were passengers aboard “Sheffield”
http://mormonmigration.lib.byu.edu/Search/showDetails/db:MM_MII/t:voyage/id:331
Mormon Immigration
Passengers aboard “Sheffield” Liverpool to New Orleans (7 Feb 1841 - 30 Mar 1841)
Rigby, Edward Age 51 – Husband – Died 1846 traveling to SLC at Council Bluff, IA
Rigby, Susannah Age 49 – Wife – Died 1859 SLC
Rigby, Seth Age 20 - Son of Edward & Susannah
Rigby, Edward Age 15 - Son of Edward & Susannah - Died Nauvoo August 1841
Rigby, William Age 2 - Son of Edward & Susannah
Rigby, Bernard (Barnett) Age 25 Son of Edward & Susannah
Rigby, Ann Weaver Age 24 Wife of Bernard (Barnett)
Rigby, George Age 1 Son of Bernard (Barnett) and Ann – Died at Nauvoo 1841
Rigby, John Age 23 Son of Edward & Susannah – Died Iowa 1850
Rigby, Elizabeth Moon Age 22 Wife of John – No known record of her going to Utah
Rigby, Edward Infant Son of John and Elizabeth - Died traveling to SLC
Rigby, Ralph Infant Son of John and Elizabeth – Seems to have stayed in Iowa
6. Liverpool to New Orleans on the Sheffield (7 Feb 1841 - 30 Mar 1841)
Ship Name Sheffield
Departure 7 Feb 1841 from Liverpool
Arrival 30 Mar 1841 at New Orleans
Arrived 18 April 1841 at Nauvoo, Ill.
Source Customs #149 (FHL #200,149); NSHP; AF
A Compilation of General Voyage Notes
"EMIGRATION. -- We feel truly thankful that amidst the general distresses, poverty, and famine which
prevails throughout this country, several hundred of our brethren and sisters have just been enabled to
embark for the country which God has provided for a refuge for all nations. Upwards of two hundred
and forty of the Saints were to sail from Liverpool, for New Orleans on Sunday last. They were from
Preston, Manchester, and various other towns in England, and were destined for the colonies of the
Saints in the state of Illinois, and in the Territory of Iowa.
Among this company was a large proportion of the
industrious poor, who were upon the point of
starvation in this land, or who were working like
slaves to procure a very scanty subsistence. By the
kindness of their brethren they were enabled to
escape from worse than Egyptian bondage, and go
to a country where they can by their industry
obtain an inheritance, and enjoy plenty for
themselves and their children. May the Almighty
preserve them upon the waters. And bring them to
Zion with songs of everlasting joy. May they obtain
'joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing flee
away.'
We sincerely hope that the Saints will continue to
cultivate that spirit of love and union which will
work a full and complete deliverance of the rich and
poor of his people, that they may all be gathered in one; that 'there may be one fold and one shepherd...”
"FOURTH COMPANY. -- Sheffield, 235 souls. The following is culled from the History of Joseph Smith:
Saturday, February 6th, 1841, a council meeting was held at Brother Richard Harrison's, seventy-two
Burlington Street, Liverpool, for the purpose of organizing a company of Saints going to New Orleans on
the ship Sheffield. Captain Porter, Apostles Brigham Young, John Taylor and Willard Richards and
other officers were present. Elder Hiram Clark was chosen president, and Thomas Walmsley, Miles
Romney, Edward Martin, John Taylor, Francis Clark and John Riley, counselors to President Clark.
Edward Martin was appointed clerk and historian of the company. President Clark and his counselors
were blessed and set apart for their mission.
7. . . . After a passage of fifty-
one days the company landed
in New Orleans; three deaths
and two births having
occurred on the voyage. On
arriving at New Orleans, 30
Mar 1841,
Elder Clark made a contract
with a steamer to carry the
company to St. Louis for two
dollars and fifty cents each,
including baggage.
=================
By artist J. Bachman in
1851. The seafaring sailing
ships are at the right of
the picture, and just a few
hundred yards along the
riverbank are the
riverboats, some of which are setting off upstream along the Mississippi
From St. Louis to Nauvoo they secured a
passage on the Goddess of Liberty for one
dollar each. About thirty of the emigrants
who had become disaffected through false
reports, tarried at St. Louis. The bulk of
the company landed in Nauvoo, April 18th,
1841, about eleven o'clock in the evening.
Notwithstanding the late hour, quite a
number of the brethren stood on the shore
to welcome these new arrivals from the old
world."
ARRIVAL AT NAUVOO, ILLINOIS 1841
Edward Gabbot & family ARRIVED
at Nauvoo, Illinois April 1841
The year after arriving at Nauvoo,
1842, both daughters died (Mary &
Susan).
While living at Nauvoo two addition
children were born into this family,
son: John (1842) and daughter:
Sarah Ann (1845).
8. In 1844 Joseph Smith, and his brother Hyrum Smith were murdered by a mob while in custody in the
city of Carthage, Illinois. In 1846, religious tensions reached their peak, and in 1848 mobs burned the
Latter-day Saint temple in Nauvoo.
Carthage Jail,
Hancock Co., Ill.,
June 27, 1844
C. C. A. Christensen (1831–1912)
Oil on canvas, between 1882–1884
The body of Joseph Smith, dressed in white,
lies in the center of the picture. From a
second floor window Willard Richards looks
down at the martyred prophet. After the
murder, the mob fled, fearing the arrival of
a Mormon posse that never came.
During 1846, Brigham Young abandoned Nauvoo
and began leading 1,600 Mormons west across the
frozen Mississippi in subzero temperatures to a
temporary refuge at Sugar Grove, Iowa.
Young planned to make the westward trek in
stages, and he determined the first major
stopping point would be along the Missouri River
opposite Council Bluffs.
He sent out a reconnaissance team to plan the
route across Iowa, dig wells at camping spots, and
in some cases, plant corn to provide food for the
hungry emigrants. The mass of Mormons made
the journey to the Missouri River, and by the fall
of 1846, the Winter Quarters were home to 12,000
Mormons
-------------------------
Departure from Nauvoo
By 1845 Brigham Young made plans that Latter Day Saints could prepare to abandon the city. In early
1846, the majority of the Latter Day Saints left the city, including Edward Gabbott and family.
Many moved on to Winter Quarter near Omaha, Neb.
On the journey across Iowa, wife/mother, Sarah, was attempting to get into the wagon and fell
backwards frightening the team and she was run over and died. This was on October 30, 1846 at a place
called Little Pigeon Creek, Iowa near the Missouri River, about 40 Miles from Winter Quarters, Neb.
They remained there one year. In the spring of 1848 the family (Father Edward, son John and daughter
Sarah Ann,) moved with a 1848 unidentified wagon company to Salt Lake City Utah.
http://history.lds.org/overlandtravels/searchPage?lang=eng
Family reports show they traveled with Heber C. Kimball’s Company to Salt Lake City arriving on
September 22, 1848
9. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mormon_Trail
The historic Mormon Trail developed in two stages: (1) from Sugar Creek, Iowa across Iowa to Council
Bluffs in the winter and spring of 1846, and (2) from Winter Quarters near Council Bluffs to the Rocky
Mountains in the summer of 1847
http://www.lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?vgnextoid=2354fccf2b7db010VgnVCM1000004d82620aRCRD&locale=
0&sourceId=20df307e3584b010VgnVCM1000004d82620a____&hideNav=1
http://www.lds.org/gospellibrary/pioneer/02_Nauvoo.html
Of the entire trek to the Valley of the Great Salt Lake, it was the first 300 miles across Iowa that most
tried the stamina and courage of the Latter-day Saint pioneers. Mere weeks into the journey—through
sleet, blizzard, and mud—it became apparent to Brigham Young that his people would never reach the
Rocky Mountains in the time or in the manner that most had hoped for. So throughout the spring of
1846, thousands of refugees trudged across the windswept Iowa prairies, preparing the way for those yet
to come: building bridges, erecting cabins, planting and fencing crops. By mid-June, nearly 12,000 Saints
were still scattered across Iowa. The Rocky Mountain entry would be postponed.
10. After crossing the Mississippi River, the Mormons followed primitive territorial roads and Indian trails
across Iowa. Their early departure exposed the pioneers to the worst winter elements. Heavy rains
turned the rolling plains of
southern Iowa into axle-deep
mud. Furthermore, few
pioneers carried adequate
provisions for the trip.
The weather, general
unpreparedness, and lack of
experience in moving such a
large group of people, all
contributed to the difficulties
they endured. The Mormon
migration came to be known for
its preparedness, orderliness,
discipline, safety, and effective
organization, but that was later.
The diaries written in those cold wagons during February and March yield a picture of confusion,
disorder, and severe hardship. On March 27, 1846, Brigham Young issued instructions to organize the
group into companies of 100s, 50s, and 10s
http://historytogo.utah.gov/utah_chapters/pioneers_and_cowboys/photo_exhibit/4.html
The Mormon Trail:
Approaching
Chimney Rock
along the North Platte
River in Nebraska.
------------------------------
11. Unidentified Companies... Year 1848
Surname: Gabbott
Unidentified Companies (1848)
Gabbott, Edward (45) Gabbott, John (5) Gabbott, Sarah Ann (3)
Gabbott, Edward
Birth Date: 28 Feb. 1803 Leyland, Lancashire, England
Death Date: 22 July 1876 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Gender: Male Age: 45
Pioneer Information: Possibly came to Utah with the Kimball company
Source of Trail Excerpt: "John Gabbott Rites Sunday", Deseret News, 12 Nov. 1926, sec. 2, 4.
Source of Trail Excerpt:
[List of those filing for lots, 1848], in Salt Lake Recorder's Office, Land records [ca. 1847-1860].
CHILDREN
Gabbott, John
Birth Date: 4 Oct. 1842 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Death Date: 10 Nov. 1926 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Gender: Male Age: 5
Gabbott, Sarah Ann
Birth Date: 28 Feb. 1845 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Death Date: 12 Apr. 1851 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Gender: Female Age: 3
======================================================
Rigby family members who are also recorded with 1848 Unidentified Company
NAME AGE BIRTH DEATH
Rigby, Susannah Hartley 56 23 December 1791 1 February 1859
Rigby, Barnett 32 10 August 1815 9 March 1871
Rigby, Ann Weaver 32 4 June 1816 19 February 1853
Rigby, William 9 8 August 1838 24 December 1903
Rigby, Enoch 7 20 January 1841 20 May 1854
Rigby, Susanna 4 5 November 1843 17 December 1933
====================================================
http://www.lds.org/churchhistory/library/pioneercompany/1,15797,4017-1-179,00.html
Mormon Pioneer Overland Travel, 1847–1868
COMPANY : Heber C. Kimball
View a list of individuals known to have traveled in this company.
View a list of sources to learn more about this company.
1848 Heber C. Kimball Company
Departure: 7 June 1848 Winter Quarters, Nebraska
Arrival: 24 September 1848 Salt Lake City, Utah
Company Information:
662 individuals were in the company when it began its journey from the
outfitting post at Winter Quarters, Nebraska.
SOME REPORTS INDICATED THE GABBOTT’S WAS WITH THIS
WAGON COMPANY
Omaha, Nebraska to Salt Lake City, Utah: Distance about 930 Miles.
Today could be comfortably driven in about 15 hours.
12. At once the settlers began
building their new empire. They
diverted water from City Creek,
planted crops, planned and laid
out their city, and built homes.
Brigham Young immediately set
aside several acres for the
Mormon Temple. Many early
visitors were impressed with the
layout of the city and commented
on its clean, neat appearance. By
1850 there were 11,380 people
living in Utah, and one visitor
described Salt Lake in 1850 as "a
large garden laid out in regular
squares." Mark Twain noted the
clean streams that trickled
through town. Mormons
continued to arrive during the
remaining weeks of summer and fall, and approximately 1,650 people spent that first winter in the valley.
After organizing the settlement, Brigham Young and many members of the pioneer party made the
return trip to Winter Quarters to be with their families and to help organize the next spring's migration
to the valley.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Salt_lake_city_1850.jpg
Salt Lake City 1850
Fort at Salt Lake City
13. Arriving during 1848, Edward Gabbott and family are among the earliest settlers of Salt
Lake City Utah. At first they lived in the Fort, where Father Gabbott built an adobe house
of one room, covered with poles, canes and earth, but having no floor. In that humble
domicile they spent the first two winters.
About 1850 they settled in the Seventh Ward. Edward purchased lot 18, block 5
containing five acres in the 7th ward Salt Lake City, he also had a farm in Sugar house
ward.
- Daughter Sarah Ann Died: 12 April 1851 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
- Edward Gabbott Married Jane Schofield Smith, 30 Jul 1854, Salt Lake City, Utah
Son - Amos Smith Gabbott, (1856 – 1939)
- Edward Gabbott Married Elizabeth Haslam, 24 Jul 1859, Salt Lake City, Utah
- Son, John Gabbott Married Emma Twigg 2 May 1868 at Salt Lake City, Utah
- Edward Gabbott died 22 July1876 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., Utah
14. Over the 28 years in Salt Lake Valley Edward Gabbott witnessed a big transformation of
Salt Lake City, Utah
http://segonku.unl.edu/~brogers/utahexpedition/visualizations/imagegallery.html
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/705325580/Building-block-Salt-Lake-City-was-a-model-of-urban-planning-from-the-
start.html?pg=all
15. http://www.telegraph-history.org/transcontinental-telegraph/index.html
The site where the east and west sections of the transcontinental telegraph were joined.
East side of Main Street, Salt Lake City, Utah with telegraph office, ca. 1862.
Courtesy of the Church Archives, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Salt Lake City, Utah.
17. SOURCES
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/JWJB-3MQ
Edwd Gabbot, "England, Births and Christenings, 1538-1975"
name: Edwd Gabbot , gender: Male
baptism/christening date: 11 Mar 1803
baptism/christening place: LEYLAND, LANCASHIRE, ENGLAND
father's name: Willm Gabbot mother's name: Mary
=============================================================
The Church of St Michael, Hoole - Marriages at St Michael,
in the Parish of Hoole in the County of -- Lancashire --
Marriages recorded in the Register for the years 1813 - 1836
http://www.lan-opc.org.uk/Hoole/stmichael/marriages_1813-1836.html
Marriage: 24 Nov 1833 St Michael, Hoole, Lancashire, England
Edward Gabbot - Labourer of this Parish
Sarah Rigby - Spinster of the Parish of Leyland
Witness: Wm. Cottam; Christopher Sumner
Married by Banns by: Miles Barton Rector
Register: Marriages 1813 - 1836, Page 42, Entry 124, Source: LDS Film 1471151
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/LAN/Hoole/StMichael.shtml
St Michael, Liverpool Old Road, Hoole, Lancashire - Founded in 1628
http://user.xmission.com/~research/family/familyg.htm
Nauvoo Temple Endowment Name Index
Last Name, First Name Birth Date Endowment Date
Gabbot, Edward __ Feb 1802 7 Feb 1846
Gabbot, Sarah 7 Feb 1811 7 Feb 1846
18. https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MCS6-RG3
1850 Edward Gabbut in household of Edward Gabbut, "United States Census"
name: Edward Gabbut
event place: Great Salt Lake county, Great Salt Lake, Utah Territory, United States
gender: Male , age: 48 , birthplace: England , estimated birth year: 1802
Household Gender Age Birthplace
Edward Gabbut M 48 England
Mary O Gabbut F 26 Illinois
John Gabbut M 8 Illinois
Sarah Ann Gabbut F 6 Illinois
Sarah Elizabeth Gabbut F 2 Mexico
==================================================================
SEVENTH WARD CHAPEL Location: 116 West Fifth South Street, Salt Lake City, Utah
Salt Lake City 7th Ward, Pioneer Stake, consisted area bounded on the north by 3rd South St,
east by East Temple St., south by 6th South St. and west by 2nd West St.
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MH2W-TSJ
1860 Edward Gabbott in household of Edward Gabbott, "United States Census"
name: Edward Gabbott
residence: Great Salt Lake, Utah , ward: 7th Ward Great Salt Lake City
age: 50 years , estimated birth year: 1810 , birthplace: England
gender: Male
=====================================================================
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MH2W-TSV
1860 Jane Gabbott in household of Jane Gabbott, "United States Census"
name: Jane Gabbott - Jane Schofield Smith Gabbott
residence: , Great Salt Lake, Utah , ward: 7th Ward Great Salt Lake City
age: 46 years, estimated birth year: 1814 , birthplace: Pennsylvania gender: Female
=====================================================================
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MH2W-TSK
1860 Amos Gabbott in household of Amos Gabbott, "United States Census"
name: Amos Gabbott
residence: Great Salt Lake, Utah , ward: 7th Ward Great Salt Lake City
age: 4 years , estimated birth year: 1856 , birthplace: Utah gender: Male
===================================================================================
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MH2W-TS2
1860 John Gabbott in household of John Gabbott, "United States Census"
name: John Gabbott
residence: Great Salt Lake, Utah , ward: 7th Ward Great Salt Lake City
age: 17 years , estimated birth year: 1843 , birthplace: Illinois gender: Male
==========================================================================
https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MH2W-TSL
1860 Elizabeth Haslem in household of Elizabeth Haslem, "United States Census"
name: Elizabeth Haslem Death: 18 Jan, 1893
residence: Great Salt Lake, Utah , ward: 7th Ward Great Salt Lake City
age: 30 years estimated birth year: 1830 , birthplace: England gender: Female
=================================================================
19. https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/F85N-Z8K#
Edward Gabbott, "Utah, Deaths and Burials, 1888-1946"
name: Edward Gabbott
gender: Male death date: 22 Jul 1876 , death place: Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
birth date: 28 Feb 1803 birthplace: Lalond, Lancashire, England
father's name: William Gabbott
Your tombstone stands neglected and alone.
The name and date are chiseled out on polished, marbled stone.
It reaches out to all who care. It is too late to mourn.
You did not know that I exist. You died and I was born.
Yet each of us are cells of you in flesh, in blood, in bone.
Our heart contracts and beats a pulse entirely not our own.
Dear Ancestor, the place you filled so many years ago.
Spreads out among the ones you left who would have loved you so.
I wonder as you lived and loved, I wonder if you knew
That someday I would find this spot and come to visit you.
Author Unknown
20. FIND A GRAVE
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-
bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=69147257
Edward Gabbott
Birth: Feb. 28, 1803
Leyland Lancashire, England
Death: Jul. 22, 1876
Salt Lake City Salt Lake Co., Utah
Son of William Gabbott and Mary Pye
Married Sarah Rigby, abt 1828. She died 30 Oct
1846, Little Pedgeon, Iowa.
Children - Edward Gabbott, William Gabbott,
Susanna Gabbott, Mary Gabbott, John Gabbott,
Sarah Ann Gabbott
Burial: Salt Lake City Cemetery Salt Lake City, Salt
Lake County, Utah, USA
Plot: _17_1_2W
Sarah Rigby Gabbott Memorial# 11578172
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=115781724
Jane Schofield Smith Gabbott Memorial# 69147373
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=69147373
- Married Jane Schofield Smith, 30 Jul 1854, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., Utah
Son - Amos Smith Gabbott
Elizabeth Haslam Gabbott Memorial# 69147524
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=69147524
- Married Elizabeth Haslam, 24 Jul 1859, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., Utah
=================================================
21. http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=69147373
Jane Schofield Smith Gabbott
Birth: Feb. 25, 1814, Tinicum, Bucks Co., Pennsylvania
Death: Apr. 24, 1895, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., Utah
Daughter of Amos Smith and Charity Kitchen
Married John Rowe, 19 May 1934 [1834], Amwell,
Hunterdon, New Jersey
Children - Sarah Katherine Rowe, Josephine Augusta Rowe
Married Edward Gabbott, 30 Jul 1854, Salt Lake City, Salt
Lake, Utah
Children: Amos Smith Gabbott (1856 - 1939)*
Burial: Salt Lake City Cemetery , Salt Lake City, Salt Lake
Co., Utah Plot: I_17_1_2E
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=pv&GRid=69147524&PIpi=64231190
Elizabeth Haslam Gabbott
Birth: Feb. 7, 1816, Leyland, Lancashire, England
Death: Jan. 18, 1893, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., Utah
Spouse: Edward Gabbott (1803 - 1876)*
MARRIED: 24 Jul 1859, Salt Lake City, Utah
Burial: Salt Lake City Cemetery , Salt Lake City, Salt Lake
Co., Utah
Plot: I_17_1_3E