William John Rawson

Male 1873 - 1958  (84 years)


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  • Name William John Rawson 
    Born 21 Aug 1873  Harrisville, Weber, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Buried May 1958  Taylorsville, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Died 17 May 1958  Taylorsville, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I3811  Wagner-Thomas | Hallmark
    Last Modified 11 Jan 2014 

    Father Arthur Morrison Rawson,   b. 17 Jun 1840, Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois, United States Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 28 Feb 1923, Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 82 years) 
    Mother Margaret Angeline Pace,   b. 14 Sep 1842, Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois, United States Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 18 Feb 1929, Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 86 years) 
    Married 3 Feb 1859  Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Family ID F614  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Nancy Ett Southwick,   b. 18 Jan 1877, Lehi, Utah, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 9 Nov 1962, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 85 years) 
    Married 18 Dec 1895  Logan, Cache, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Ida May Rawson,   b. 30 Sep 1896, Ammon, Bonneville, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     2. Iva Ninetta Rawson,   b. 20 Dec 1897, Ammon, Bonneville, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     3. Nancy Pearl Rawson,   b. 14 May 1899, Ammon, Bonneville, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 9 Feb 1900  (Age 0 years)
     4. James Arthur Rawson,   b. 16 Nov 1900, Nibley, Union, Oregon Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     5. Myrtle Rawson,   b. 11 May 1902, Nibley, Union, Oregon Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     6. Elverie Rawson,   b. 30 Jan 1904, Nibley, Union, Oregon Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     7. William Floyd Rawson,   b. 18 Jun 1907, Joseph, Wallowa, Oregon, United States Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     8. Erma Belle Rawson,   b. 25 Aug 1909, Nampa, Canyon, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. Yes, date unknown
     9. Living
     10. Living
     11. Living
    Last Modified 22 Nov 2014 
    Family ID F2316  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - 21 Aug 1873 - Harrisville, Weber, Utah, United States Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarried - 18 Dec 1895 - Logan, Cache, Utah, United States Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBuried - May 1958 - Taylorsville, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDied - 17 May 1958 - Taylorsville, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Notes 
    • 1873 BIR,1895 MG,1958 DTH,BUR,ORD: Family Group Sheet, rep: Lucy Rawson Harmon, niece,submitted by Ida Rawson Russell, and Family records of Arthur Morrison Rawson, submit, in Rawson-Coffin Family book, cc poss of Pam Hallmark Wagner, pg 154.
      Rawson-Coffin Family book, cc poss of Pam Hallmark Wagner, pg 143: Submitted by Lucy Rawson Harman show endowed on 18 Dec 1893.

      1900 CENSUS: ID,Bingham Co-Ammon: Anc Img 6, pg 17B, June 1900, Dw 292,293:
      RAWSON, William-head 26/UT bn Aug 1873 (unk,unk)md 4yrs-farm laborer own
      home, farm; Nancy-wife 23/UT bnJan 1877 (Eng,UT)md 4yrs 2/3 children
      living; Ida M-dau 3/ID bn Sep 1896; Iva V-dau 2/ID bn Dec 1897

      NOTES: "A Biography of William John Rawson" compiled by Ida Rawson Russell, dau, page 155 of Rawson Family Genealogy Book, copy of Pam Hallmark Wagner:

      My father, Wm John Rawson, born Aug 21 1873 at Harrisville,Weber Co,Utah, son of Arthur Morrison & Margaret Angeline (Pace) Rawson. The summer he was born his father bought some land in Harrisville and moved his family there from Ogden. They built a house on the bank of the creek. It was made of logs and the windows were small openings with cloth tacked over them and a quilt tacked over the door frame for a door. 2 yrs later his father built an adobe house with board floors, doors and windows. They were very happy in this new home. His father was a carpenter by trade and was away from home so much of the time, so a great deal of responsibilities of the farm work fell on father, as he was the oldest son.
      In 1886 when father was 13, his father's family, with several other families, moved from Harrisville on up to Idaho and settled near the little town of Iona, not far from Idaho Falls. This was a new country, sparsely settled and covered with sage brush. It had to be cleared and irrigation ditches made before any crops could be planted. They worked hard and spent many long hours pioneering this country. Their homes were made of logs they hauled from the canyons, with dirt floors and roofs and small openings for windows.
      They went to Church at a branch of the church at Iona until one was organized, with Grandfather as presiding Elder at the ward called South Iona. The next yr they built a church house and Grandfather was ordained a High Priest and Bishop by Heber J Grant, on Nov 15 1891. He was given the privilege of naming the new ward, and he named it Ammon, honoring the son of King Mosiah in the Book of Mormon. Father was sustained as Sec of Sunday School.
      The young people there had to make their own recreation which consisted mostly of parties, dances and buggy rides in the summer, skating and sleigh riding the usual dances and parties in the winter. Father was always fond of horses and boasted of having the fastest team in town and he seldom lost a race. In the winter the snow was so high they raced over the fences.
      Father was chosen to go to Logan to take a course in the MIA work. He was there one term. Before going there he was Ward Clerk and Pres of the YMMIA and after he returned, he was made First Assistant to the Pres of the Stake Board, a position he held as long as lived in Ammon.
      Father and Mother grew up together there in Ammon. Mother was Nancy Ett Southwick. She was sec of YWMIA when Father was Pres of the YMMIA. They were married Dec 18, 1895 in the Logan Temple and their first home was in two rooms of his father's house, living their for 5 yrs. Their first three children were born there, 3 girls, the third girl died of croup when 9 months old.
      In 1900, a group of Latter-day Saints from around Idaho Falls decided to go to Oregon, near LaGrande, and settle on a large tract of land there. 23 families, including Grandfather Rawson's family, Father and Mother, and several of Father's brothers and sisters with their families. There was a branch of the Church at LaGrande and on June 9, 1901, Father was ordained a High Priest and Bishop by Mathias F Cowley and set apart as Bishop of a new ward. The town was called Nibley, in honor of Charles W Nibley, who was at that time a Counselor to the Stake Pres.
      Our home there was on a 5-acre plot and we had a nice frame house, a large barn, well house, granery and a fruit and vegetable cellar. We had fruit trees, a garden plot, plasture and flowers and shrubs were everywhere. Everything grew so fast in this nice climate. Our happiness here was not to last. The families had been promised that the land would belong to them after they had farmed their alloted land 5 yrs, but through a breach of contract, they were all ordered to move. Their houses were all torn down, with the exception of our house, which was moved down to the river bottom and was there yrs later.
      The spring of 1905, Father rented a 700 acre farm at Wallow, Oregon. The crops were good there, but there was a money panic, and it was necessary to give up this farm. We then moved to Nampa, Idaho, but that venture proved unsatisfactory.
      In 1910 Father moved his family to Odgen, Utah to 537-29th St, in the 9th Ward. His first position there was Ward Teacher, then teacher in the Parent's class in Sunday School, and then as Superintendant of Sunday School, holding this position for 7 yrs, at which time the ward was divided.
      Our home was in the new ward and Father was released from Sunday School and set apart as Counselor to the Bishop of the new ward, the 18th Ward. He held that position for 2 yrs. He was in the weatherstripping business at this time, and many of his jobs were in Salt Laake, so he decided, in Nov of 1927, to move his family there.
      He rented a house on 17th South, in the Waterloo Ward. It was while living here that they started doing work for the dead. The next yr they bough a home on 9th East and 13th South, in the HawthorneWard. Father and Mother were called on a 6-month mission to do endownment work for the dead and did one name each week, never missing an assignment. About this time, Father was chosen as chairman of the Genealogical Committee for the Ward.
      Father took a class in research and spent many hours in the Genealogical Library. He also helped the ward members with their research work. He has a typewritten list in his Book of Remembrance of 346 names that he and Mother did the endownment work for while they were living in the HawthorneWard.
      After Father retired they moved out to Taylorsville, where they could have a small acreage and farm animals. He was appointed to the Genealogical Committee and in a short time had a fine group doing Temple Work. They had the honor of doing more ordinance work than any other group had ever done in that ward. He was asked to work on the Stake Genealogical Board. He took care of the Sealings for the Stake.
      He was called to be a Temple Officiator, to work 3 nights each week. Sometimes he worked 5 nights in a week. He also spent several days a week at the Genealogical Libraary, and was also responsible for seeing the work was done for all names sent in from the Family Organization, and was Pres of the Rawson Fam Org as long as he lived. Estella Rawson Christensen was the Secretary.
      After Father had worked 4 yrs at night in the Temple, he was asked to work days, his official calling being of helping the brethren get ready to receive their first Endownments as Missionaries or their wedding day or when they came with their family to receive the greatest blessing ever to come to them, their Temple Marriage. It was a wonderful feeling Father had, knowing he had a small part in helping members to take this step forward on their way to Eternal Life. Father would talk for hours about this experience in the Temple and the friends he had made through this work.
      He often spoke of his friendship with President David O McKay, which began during this assignment. He worked in the Temple 11 yrs and asked to be released when his health became so bad that he could not be depended upon to be there every day. He was honorably released as a Temple Ordinance worker in the Salt Lake Temple on April 18, 1957. He always said that he could not have held so many church positions if Mother had not been willing for him to away from home so much.
      They had 11 children, one died as an infant. The other 10 are all living in Utah, except the oldest son, James. Father said that Mother did most of the raising of the family. She was such an understanding mother and regardless of our age, she seemed to make us feel our problems were important.
      When I was small, I was always so proud of Father sitting on the stand, to the best looking one. On Dec 18, 1955 was their 60th wedding anniversary. On May 17 1958, he passed away and the family took part at the services as much as possible. He was buried in the Taylorsville Cemetery.

      1873 BIR: LDS Biographical Encyclopedia, Andrew Jensen, Vol 4, p 655:

      William John RAWSON, Bishop of the Nibley Ward, Union Stake, Oregon, from 1901 to 1906, was bn 21 Aug 1873 in Harrisville,Weber,UT, a son of Arthur (says Archer) Morrison RAWSON and Margaret Angeline PACE. He was baptized 4 Aug 1881, ordained High Priest and Bishop 9 Jun 1901 by Mathias F COWLEY.

      Heart Throbs of the West, V8 pg 186:

      In 1900 Charles W Nibley and George Stoddard purchases an 8,000 acre tract of land in the Grand Rhonde Valley...made a settlement on it....Arthur M Rawson was the first permanent settler. There were 9 LDS families located there when a townsite was surveyed and named "Nibley" in honor of Charles W. A frame building, a meeting house, was constructed in 1901. The branch was organized Mar 17, 1901. Samuel Southwick was president of the branch. When Union Stake was org pm 9 Jun 1901, William J. Rawson was chosen as bishop of Nibley Ward.
      By 1902 Nibley was a thriving Mormon settlement and many more families moved in. Among these were the Rawsons, Sargents, Roundye, Dewell, Wm David Hanks, Joel H Orton, HJ Neilson, Reuben Hiatt, Francis Hiatt, Gjettrup, Southwick... Joe Lae GROW (??) ...and other families.

  • Sources 
    1. [S340] Internet: International Genealogical Index, 0445110.
      Margaret Angeline Pace; Spouse: Arthur Morrison Rawson; Marriage: 03 FEB 1857 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
      Record submitted by a member of the LDS Church; Search performed using PAF Insight on 27 Jul 2004