- Born: 31 Aug 1833, Crowland,
Lincolnshire, England
- Christened: 4 Sep 1833,
Crowland Abby, Crowland, Lincolnshire, England
- Married (1): 25 Dec 1855,
Parowan, Iron, Utah, USA
- Married (2): 3 Oct 1863, Salt
Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA
- Died: 3 Mar 1920, Panguitch,
Garfield, Utah, USA [viii]
- Buried: 5 Mar 1920, Spry,
(Clevland), Garfield, Utah, USA
Ancestral File
Number: 18DB-VN.
General Notes:
Conquerors
of the West: Stalwart Mormon Pioneers, volume 2
Copied from Ancestry.com 4/26/2002
Name: William Le Fevre
Birth Date: 31 Aug 1833
Birth Place: Crowland, Lincoln, England
Parents: John and Ann Dalton LeFevre
Death Date: 03 Mar 1920
Death Place: Panguitch, Garfield, Utah
Arrival: 17 Sep 1850, Orson Spencer
Spouse: Hannah Holyoak
Marriage Date: 25 Dec 1855
Marriage Place: Parowan, Iron, Utah
Spouse's Birth Date: 25 Mar 1841
Spouse's Birth Place: Mosley Ware on Green Common, near Birmingham, England
Spouse's Death Date: 02 Aug 1920
Spouse's Death Place: Panguitch, Garfield, Utah
Married 2nd: Frances Banks Rowley Date: 3 Oct 1863 , Salt Lake City, Utah
Born: 4 Nov 1844 , South Creek, Sidney, Australia Died: 30 Jul 1911 , Spry,
Garfield, Utah
William was the
son of a grocery store owner. All of his brothers and sisters died in their
childhood, except one sister and himself. His parents were baptized into the
Church in 1848 and immediately began preparations to leave for America. His
father died in Liverpool before they boarded the ship in 1849. He and his mother
and sister arrived in St. Louis, where his sister, Sarah, died of cholera in
1850. While there, he worked in a cake and candy store. Sarah did dressmaking
until her death. He and his mother arrived in Council Bluffs where they lived
and worked until 1852. They left for the Valley. They were sent to Parowan to
live. William spent the winter logging and caring for oxen. At one time he
was a member of the School of the Prophets. He was a farmer, a member of the
Nauvoo Legion in the valley, and was a guard in Little Creek Canyon for a
time. He took charge for a while at Rush Lake of the cattle that belonged to
farmers in several towns. For 20 years he was a minuteman and cavalry soldier
in Parowan, Panguitch, Dixie, and Beaver, and he was involved in the Black
Hawk Indian War. In 1875 he moved his family north of Panguitch and, a short
time later, he moved to Bear Creek (Spry), where they remained for 30 years.
He and his wife, Hannah, served a two-year mission as ordinance workers in
the St. George Temple and also spent a winter in Manti doing temple work.
They were industrious and prosperous and active members of the church.
Children of 1st wife: Rachel Ann, (Paheed Indian, adopted), b. 27 Nov 1851.
Md. Mr. Williams. D. 4 Mar 1871. Rebecca, (Paheed Indian, adopted), b. Oct 1854.
D. 10 Feb 1866. William Dame, b. 10 Sep 1857. D. 22 Jan 1925. Sarah Ann, b.
20 Sep 1860. Md. Mr. Houston. D. 14 Sep 1950. John Henry, b. 2 May 1862. D.
19 Mar 1946. Hannah Eliza, b. 5 Mar 1865. Md. Mr. McEwen. D. 6 Jan 1936. Daniel
James, b. 29 Oct 1867. D. 6 Jan 1936. Amy Elizabeth, b. 28 Aug 1870. Md. Mr. Haycock.
D. 7 Aug 1933. Martha Jane, b. 12 Sep 1872. Md. Mr. Steele. D. 18 Sep 1933. Jesse
Holyoak, b. 11 Nov 1874. D. 9 Feb 1965. Mary Ellen, b. 7 Mar 1877. Md. Mr. Orton.
D. 26 Sep 1920. Clara Parthenia, b. 22 Jun 1879. Md. Mr. Chatwin. D. 6 Mar 1904.
Esther Alice, b. 3 Sep 1883. Md. Mr. Jones. D. 18 Dec 1941. Children of 2nd
wife: Susanna Delfina, b. 15 Aug 1864. Md. Mr. Lloyd. D. 21 Mar 1920. George Edwin,
b. 13 Mar 1866. D. 22 Dec 1950. Luke Dalton, b. 11 Nov 1867. D. 7 Apr 1942. Ellen
Lovina, b. 5 Sep 1869. Md. Mr. McEwen. D. 13 Aug 1941. Joseph Ellis, b. 10
Apr 1871. D. 23 Apr 1871. Charlotte Moore, b. 24 Mar 1873. Md. Mr. Steele. D.
5 Sep 1941. Franklin Banks, b. 24 Apr 1875. D. 4 Aug 1900. Sarah Alice, b. 14
Feb 1877. D. 6 Oct 1878. Child. William, b. 19 Oct 1879. D. 19 May 1943. Claudia
Pernetta, b. 10 Jan 1882. D. 24 Jul 1883. Child. Fannie May, b. 9 Oct 1883,
Md. Mr. Davenport. D. 2 Apr 1922. Leon, b. 15 Feb 1886. D. 31 Dec 1954. V.
Gubler
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP
Copied from Ancestry.com 4/26/2002
William Lefevre Born 31 August 1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England
Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20 October 1852 when he settled in Parowan,
Iron County, Utah William LeFevre and his sister Sarah were the surviving
children past early childhood of seven born to John and Ann Dalton LeFevre. They
lived in a small thatched roof house part of which was used as a grocery and
notion store owned and operated by John and Ann.
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah John and Ann were
baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on 22 December
1847. William says that his father had not previously joined any religious
organization because their doctrines did not appeal to him.
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah William and Sarah
were baptized on 13 February 1848 by Elder William Cook Mitchel of Parowan,
Utah. The family, John, Ann, William, Sarah, and Tom, a nephew living with
them, began preparations immediately to join the Saints in America. During
such preparations John dreamed that he should start for America but his body
would never reach the United States. In the dream he reached the ship but was
taken sick and described parts of the boat so clearly that all recognized it
when later they took passage on that very ship.
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah A neighbor, Brother
Tooley, loaned the LeFevres a dray to take them and their belongings to the
railway station at Peterborough and a farm hand to return it and team of
horses to him. When they reached Liverpool and boarded the ship Zeland, they
recognized parts of the ship before described as John pointed them out.
During the night following their arrival on board John was taken ill, but
afterward was able to pass the ship's health officer's examination. He paid
for their passage and settled all business affairs but the ship could not
sail immediately because of heavy head winds in the Irish Channel nor did it
sail for several days. During that waiting time John became so ill that he
was compelled to leave the ship for medical aid. He told the family that his
body would not go with them but that his spirit would. He died 26 January
1849 at 9:00 a.m., was buried at noon in St. Martins Church Yard. The ship
sailed the same evening with the rest of his family aboard.
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah William says that
nothing unusual happened during the nine-week passage except a small fire in
the cooking galley which was extinguished soon. The ship docked at New
Orleans 4 April 1849. After several days the family boarded the river steamboat
Iowa bound for St. Louis arriving on 13 April 1849. They rented a house on
Green Street, between 3rd and 4th South Streets. While there a steam ship
fire on the river spread to 40 other boats and several blocks of the
wholesale business area. Their home in the midst of it all escaped injury.
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah During the 1849
cholera epidemic, mother Ann became seriously ill with the disease as did
sister Sarah and cousin Tom. Sarah died and was buried before Ann regained
consciousness. William escaped the disease and after recovery of his mother
and Tom was employed as a waiter in the home of a French family working there
through the winter. William, Ann and Tom left St. Louis for Council Bluffs on
7 May, 1850,arriving on May twentieth. Brother William Carpenter took them in
his home and helped them secure a piece of land on which was a good house, a
cow barn, corn crib and a crop of corn growing for $40.00. Tom and William
traded the place for a yoke of oxen. They used the oxen to farm a small piece
of land nearby. In the spring of 1851 the family returned to Bluff where
Jacob Morris, having a good wagon, a yoke of oxen and two cows joined them in
fitting out a comfortable outfit and started with them for the Salt Lake
Valley. Mr. Morris located in Ogden while the LeFevres were persuaded by
Elder Mitchell to locate in Parowan. They arrived there 20 October 1852.
Captain Woods had charge of their company (#26) of about 100 wagons. The
LeFevres had a yoke of oxen when they reached the Salt Lake Valley.
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah Elder Mitchell
bought a truck wagon to which he hitched William's two cows and drove to
Parowan. They lived for a while at the Mitchell's home and did such work as
was to be done there. Brother Simon Howd than furnished William employment
and taught him how to work in a new country, letting him and mother Ann live
in a log house and a half lot in the fort. He also looked after them seeing
that neither they nor their animals suffered. William spent the winter
logging, thus employing himself and his oxen. Brother Howd, William said,
proved to be more than a friend. He was William's teacher, “father," and
employer.
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah William was
ordained an Elder on 31 October 1852, "under the hands of President John
C. L. Smith, Hon Steel, John D. Lee, James J. Little and James Louis. He
served as ward teacher with E. D. Whitney for a number of years. On 27
November 1855 he bought a 4-year old Paheed Indian girl, paying a 2-year old
filley for her. The Indians, the year before, went on a big hunt and not
caring to be bothered with her, left her with the LeFevres, who became
attached to her. When they returned, preferring pay to the child, William
bought her. Some time later they returned wanting more pay for her. "I
gave them, “William says, "all they asked, even taking off my shirt and
giving it to them. We named her Rachel Ann."
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah William was
married to Hanna Holyoak, daughter of George Holyoak on 25 December, 1855
with Elder Erastus Snow officiating. The following October he bought another
Indian girl, 2 years old, for a good rifle, because the Indians acted as if
they would kill her. Her name was Rebecca.
Pioneer Ancestors, Salt Lake City Chapter SUP William Lefevre Born 31 August
1833 at Chroland, Lincoln Shire, England Entered Salt Lake Valley prior to 20
October 1852 when he settled in Parowan, Iron County, Utah Eleven children
were born by Hanna. On 3 October 1862 William married Francis Banks, daughter
of William E. Banks, in polygamy. They were sealed in the SLC Endowment House
by Elder Wilford Woodruff. He and Hanna had previously been sealed in the
Endowment House. Francis also bore to him 11 children.
Utah, Our Pioneer Heritage
Copied from Ancestry.com 4/26/2002
Wm. LeFevre. My father, John LeFevre was a widower with eight children when
he married my mother Ann Dalton. We lived at Crowland, Lincolnshire, England
in a small thatched-roof house a part of which was used as a grocery and
notion store, owned and operated by my father and mother. Seven children were
born to them. All except my sister and me died in childhood. My parents were
baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on December 22,
1847.
As soon as we were baptized we began to prepare to come to America to join
the body of the Saints. During our preparation my father had a dream in which
it was revealed to him that he should start, yet his body would never reach
the United States. He dreamed he reached the ship but was taken sick. He had
never seen a ship, but so clear was his dream that he described most
accurately the ship in which he afterward took passage.
Brother Tooley let us take his dray with which to take our belongings to the
railway station at Peterborough and a hand to return the same to him. We
reached Liverpool all right and as we sought our berths on the ship Zetland,
father pointed out parts of the ship which he had before described to us. In
the night following our arrival on board he was taken sick, but was
afterwards able to pass the ship's health officers, so determined was he to
come. He paid our passage on the ship and settled all business matters, but
as the ship could not sail on account of the high headwinds in the Irish
Channel, we didn't start for several days. Father became so ill that he was
compelled to leave the ship to seek medical aid. He told those who were with
him that his body could not go on but that his spirit would. He died January
26, 1849, was buried at noon in St. Martins church yard and our ship sailed
the same evening with the rest of us on board.
We arrived at New Orleans April 1, 1849 and after three or four days started
on the steamship Iowa for St. Louis where we arrived April 13th, rented a
house on Green Street between Third and Fourth South Street. While there a
steamboat caught fire and before it could be removed or the fire
extinguished, forty other boats and several blocks of the wholesale business
houses of the city were burned. While we were in the midst of it our house
escaped injury.
My mother kept house and worked at any kind of work she could get to do. My
sister Sarah did dressmaking and millinery and as her services were in great demand,
she earned considerable money. I secured a job in a cake and candy
establishment at a small wage, where I worked for two months. My nephew Tom
became errand boy for hotels and offices and thus, among us, we were able to
rent more comfortable quarters, near the courthouse. Mrs. King and Mrs.
Woodhead lived with us, each doing such work as she could get to do. This was
during the epidemic of cholera which raged for so long with unrelenting
fierceness in St. Louis; its victims numbered thousands. Tom was the first in
our family to contract it. At his recovery my mother was taken down, and
while she was yet unconscious, my sister, Sarah, was stricken that night and
died next morning. She was buried before mother regained consciousness.
During Sarah's illness Tom and I sent for the Elders. We were unsuccessful in
getting them. We were stopped three times by police because it was after
curfew hours. Each time we told them of the condition at home and invited
them to accompany us there to 'see for themselves, and so each time were
permitted to go on. Mother recovered and I, fortunately, did not get it.
On account of my sister's death I missed a day at the candy shop, and when I
returned to work found that my employer had a "boy wanted" sign in
his window. I next secured work as a waiter in the home of a French family,
Von Poole, where I stayed the remainder of the summer and following winter.
Mother also was furnished quite a lot of employment by this family and we
became greatly attached to each other. The wife, though a staunch Catholic,
would read our literature without prejudice, for she was quite broad-minded.
After our arrival at Parowan she sent mother enough calico to make a dress.
On May 7, 1850, we left St. Louis for Council Bluffs where we arrived May
20th. We went first to the log meetinghouse in Kanesville, which was then
called the Mormon Tabernacle. We became acquainted with a brother Wm.
Carpenter who took us to his house. A short time after he was instrumental in
helping to secure a piece of land, a good house, a cow house, corn crib, and
a crop of corn already planted and growing for the sum of $40.00. Tom and I
cared for the crop during the summer and by fall had cows, pigs, plenty of
feed and a comfortable home to live in. I traded my place for a yoke of oxen
and lived the winter and the next summer in a house owned by John R. Robinson
and used my oxen and farmed a small piece of land nearby.
The next winter I returned to St. Louis and found employment with Mr. Kidd, a
bachelor. In the spring I returned to the Bluffs where Jacob Morris, a lone
man having a good wagon, a yoke of oxen and two cows joined us and we fitted
ourselves up comfortably and started for the Salt Lake Valley. Mr. Morris
went to Ogden to locate, while we were persuaded by Elder W. C. Mitchell to
go to Parowan, where we arrived October 20, 1852. Captain Wood had charge of
our company. I had a yoke of oxen and two cows when we reached Salt Lake.
John and Susannah Long Hurst were the parents of two children, the eldest, a
daughter named Elizabeth, and William, who was born 25 July, 1813 in
Peckenham, Worcester County, England. When his son was a year old Mr. Hurst
passed away leaving his wife to support and bring up the family. During his
young manhood William learned the contracting business. On the 14th of March,
1830 he was married to Susannah Webley, a daughter of Richard Webley and Jane
Danby, and while living in England seven children were born to them. Mrs.
Webley was a devout woman and it was through her efforts that William was
baptized a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Accompanied by his sister Elizabeth, William, Susannah and their children
embarked on the ship Ashland leaving Liverpool February 6, 1849. They arrived
in New Orleans in April, Elder John Johnson being in charge of the 187 Saints
aboard the vessel.
-----
Conquerors of the West: Stalwart Mormon Pioneers, Vols. 1-2, copied from
Ancestry.com 4/26/2002
Name: William Le Fevre
Birth Date: 31 Aug 1833
Birth Place: Crowland, Lincoln, England
Parents: John and Ann Dalton LeFevre
Death Date: 03 Mar 1920
Death Place: Panguitch, Garfield, Utah
Arrival: 17 Sep 1850, Orson Spencer
Spouse: Hannah Holyoak
Marriage Date: 25 Dec 1855
Marriage Place: Parowan, Iron, Utah
Spouse's Birth Date: 25 Mar 1841
Spouse's Birth Place: Mosley Ware on Green Common, near Birmingham, England
Spouse's Death Date: 02 Aug 1920
Spouse's Death Place: Panguitch, Garfield, Utah
Married 2nd: Frances Banks Rowley Date: 3 Oct 1863 , Salt Lake City, Utah
Born: 4 Nov 1844 , South Creek, Sidney, Australia Died: 30 Jul 1911 , Spry,
Garfield, Utah William was the son of a grocery store owner. All of his
brothers and sisters died in their childhood, except one sister and himself.
His parents were baptized into the Church in 1848 and immediately began
preparations to leave for America. His father died in Liverpool before they
boarded the ship in 1849. He and his mother and sister arrived in St. Louis,
where his sister, Sarah, died of cholera in 1850. While there, he worked in a
cake and candy store. Sarah did dressmaking until her death. He and his
mother arrived in Council Bluffs where they lived and worked until 1852. They
left for the Valley. They were sent to Parowan to live. William spent the
winter logging and caring for oxen. At one time he was a member of the School
of the Prophets. He was a farmer, a member of the Nauvoo Legion in the
valley, and was a guard in Little Creek Canyon for a time. He took charge for
a while at Rush Lake of the cattle that belonged to farmers in several towns.
For 20 years he was a minuteman and cavalry soldier in Parowan, Panguitch, Dixie,
and Beaver, and he was involved in the Black Hawk Indian War. In 1875 he
moved his family north of Panguitch and, a short time later, he moved to Bear
Creek (Spry), where they remained for 30 years. He and his wife, Hannah,
served a two-year mission as ordinance workers in the St. George Temple and
also spent a winter in Manti doing temple work. They were industrious and prosperous
and active members of the church. Children of 1st wife: Rachel Ann, (Paheed
Indian, adopted), b. 27 Nov 1851. Md. Mr. Williams. D. 4 Mar 1871. Rebecca,
(Paheed Indian, adopted), b. Oct 1854. D. 10 Feb 1866. William Dame, b. 10
Sep 1857. D. 22 Jan 1925. Sarah Ann, b. 20 Sep 1860. Md. Mr. Houston. D. 14
Sep 1950. John Henry, b. 2 May 1862. D. 19 Mar 1946. Hannah Eliza, b. 5 Mar 1865.
Md. Mr. McEwen. D. 6 Jan 1936. Daniel James, b. 29 Oct 1867. D. 6 Jan 1936. Amy
Elizabeth, b. 28 Aug 1870. Md. Mr. Haycock. D. 7 Aug 1933. Martha Jane, b. 12
Sep 1872. Md. Mr. Steele. D. 18 Sep 1933. Jesse Holyoak, b. 11 Nov 1874. D. 9
Feb 1965. Mary Ellen, b. 7 Mar 1877. Md. Mr. Orton. D. 26 Sep 1920. Clara Parthenia,
b. 22 Jun 1879. Md. Mr. Chatwin. D. 6 Mar 1904. Esther Alice, b. 3 Sep 1883. Md.
Mr. Jones. D. 18 Dec 1941. Children of 2nd wife: Susanna Delfina, b. 15 Aug 1864.
Md. Mr. Lloyd. D. 21 Mar 1920. George Edwin, b. 13 Mar 1866. D. 22 Dec 1950. Luke
Dalton, b. 11 Nov 1867. D. 7 Apr 1942. Ellen Lovina, b. 5 Sep 1869. Md. Mr. McEwen.
D. 13 Aug 1941. Joseph Ellis, b. 10 Apr 1871. D. 23 Apr 1871. Charlotte Moore,
b. 24 Mar 1873. Md. Mr. Steele. D. 5 Sep 1941. Franklin Banks, b. 24 Apr 1875.
D. 4 Aug 1900. Sarah Alice, b. 14 Feb 1877. D. 6 Oct 1878. Child. William, b.
19 Oct 1879. D. 19 May 1943. Claudia Pernetta, b. 10 Jan 1882. D. 24 Jul 1883.
Child. Fannie May, b. 9 Oct 1883, Md. Mr. Davenport. D. 2 Apr 1922. Leon, b.
15 Feb 1886. D. 31 Dec 1954. V. Gubler
Research Notes:
SOURCES:
Where the following sources disagree, differences are listed below with the
specific event.
1.
2. "Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah" by Frank Esshom, p. 1003,
pub. 1913.
3.
4. Journal of William Le Fevre in possession of Minnie L. Carlile, Heber
City, Utah.
5. Temple Index Bureau, Salt lake City, Utah
6. Early church records of Crowland, film FHL film 086981.
7. Crowland, Lincoln, England parish records searched by correspondence.
8. Crowland 1841 census.
9. Shipping list of 1849, film FHL film 025690.
10. Panguitch Ward records, film FHL film 026,391.
11. Parowan cemetery records.
12. Garfield County courthouse records.
13. Utah vital records, film # 821,669.
14. Parowan Ward records, films # 026,412 and 179,951.
15. History of William Le Fevre.
16. Temple record book of William Le Fevre.
17. Carlile, Minnie LeFevre, by correspondence 18 Apr 1964, pedigree chart:
Endowment Cards, Parowan Cemetery records, Endowment of Luke Dalton by son-in-law
John Allen, Research in Lincolnshire by Rev. Pilling, Research in
Lincolnshire by R. G. Hamshaw.
19. Dotson, A. Lewis, 107 1st Ave. #13, Salt Lake City, UT, archive record
Wm. E. Banks and Ellen Eyre (Lowe, Alva J. Belgrade, MT, family records ( Banks,
Joseph, brother of William Ellis Banks (1819), family history, Parowan, Utah,
Ward Records).
20. Carlile, Minnie LeFevre, Heber City, Utah, Family records.
21. Family records of Martha Jane Le Fevre, Panguitch, Utah.
22. Reba Roundy Le Fevre, Panguitch, Utah.
23. Mary Stubbs, Parowan, Utah.
24. Boyter, Belle LeFeve, family records, received from Fern Steele Henrie,
Panguitch, UT, fgs William LeFevre and Hannah Holyoak.
25. Cox, Wanda Steele, fgs William LeFevre and Frances Banks (Esshom, Frank,
Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah, pub. 1913 p. 1003. Temple Index Bureau,
LeFevre, Reba S., Panguitch, Utah, family records Stubbs, Mrs. Mary, Parowan,
Utah, family records).
26.
1833 BIRTH: England, Lincoln, Crowland. Carlile p. chart: b. 31 Aug 1833, Crowland.
1848 BAPTISM: LeFevre book gives two dates: In descendant listing it is 13
Feb 1848, and in the Ancestry listing it is 13 Feb 1847. Boyter fgs: bap 13
Feb 1848.
1856 ENDOWMENT: UT, Salt Lake, Salt Lake City. Boyter fgs: end. 3 Nov 1856
EHOUS. LeFevre book has 3 Nov 1856 EH
1863 MARRIAGE: UT, Salt Lake, Salt Lake City. Carlile p. chart: m. Frances
Banks 3 Oct 1863, Salt Lake City EHOUS.
1920 DEATH: UT, Garfield, Panguitch. Carlile p. chart: d. 3 Mar 1920,
Panguitch. Boyter fgs: d. 5 Mar 1920. Boyter fgs: d. 5 Mar 1920.
SOURCE: Ancestral File Download Feb 2000.
!Crowland, Lincoln, England parish records searched by correspondence.
Shipping list of 1849, film GS 025690. Early church records of Crowland, film
GS 086981. Journal of William Le Fevre in possession of Minnie L. Carlile,
Heber City, Utah. Crowland 1841 census. History of William Le Fevre. Temple
record book of William Le Fevre. Family records of Martha Jane Le Fevre,
Panguitch, Utah. Panguitch Ward records, film GS 026,391. Garfield County
courthouse records. Utah vital records, film # 821,669. Parowan Ward records,
films # 026,412 and 179,951. Family records of Minnie Le Fevre Carlile, Heber
City Utah. Parowan cemetery records. Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah, by
Frank Esshom, pub 1913, p. 1003.
SOURCE: Ancestral File Download Feb 2000.
SOURCES:
George Minns, genealogist.
History of William LeFevre
Early Church Records F Engl. 1 pt 19
Birth certificate from Peterborough, England for Susanna LeFevre in
possession of Minnie Carlile.
Death cert for John LeFevre in possession of Minnie Carlile
Res in "England by Howard V. Green for Minnie Carlile
Res in England by R. G. Shaw for Minnie Carlile
Research in England by Orlo Kay McEwen while in U.S. Army
John and Ann Dalton LeFevre - End, Sealing, Bapt. in TIB
Death of John LeFevre from Journal of William LeFevre
Events:
1.
Alt Baptism, 13 Feb 1848.
2.
Alt Baptism, 13 Feb 1848.
3.
Alt Baptism, 13 Feb 1848.
William
married Hannah HOLYOAK-[826] [MRIN:281], daughter of George HOLYOAK-[3862]
and Sarah GREEN-[3863], on 25 Dec 1855 in Parowan, Iron, Utah, USA. (Hannah
HOLYOAK-[826] was born on 25 Mar 1841 in Mosley Wake, Yardley,
Worcestershire, England, christened on 25 Apr 1841 in Marston Chapel,
Yardley, Worcestershire, England, died on 2 Aug 1920 in Panguitch, Garfield,
Utah, USA [ix] and was
buried on 4 Aug 1920 in Spry, (Clevland), Garfield, Utah, USA.)
William
also married Frances BANKS-[96] [MRIN:37], daughter of William Ellis
BANKS-[823] and Ellen EYRE-[824], on 3 Oct 1863 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake,
Utah, USA. (Frances BANKS-[96] was born on 4 Nov 1844 in Sidney, New South
Wales, Australia, christened in 1845 in South Creek, Sidney, New South Wales,
Australia, died on 30 Jul 1911 in Spry, (Clevland), Garfield, Utah, USA and
was buried on 1 Aug 1911 in Spry, (Clevland), Garfield, Utah, USA.)
Marriage Notes:
2
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