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Name | Carrie Claire Stringham | |
Born | 3 Nov 1874 | Prattsville, Sevier, Utah Territory, United States |
Gender | Female | |
Died | 22 Oct 1953 | Vernal, Uintah, Utah, United States |
Buried | 26 Oct 1953 | Maeser, Uintah, Utah, United States |
Person ID | I2294 | My Family Tree | Collett-Williams |
Last Modified | 21 Jul 2015 |
Father | Phillip Stringham, b. 14 Jul 1856, Salt Lake City, Great Salt Lake, Utah Territory, United States , d. 24 Aug 1940, Maeser, Uintah, Utah, United States (Age 84 years) | |
Mother | Caroline Ann Crouch, b. 7 Feb 1855, London, Middlesex, England, United Kingdom , d. 18 Dec 1905, Vernal, Uintah, Utah, United States (Age 50 years) | |
Married | 12 Feb 1873 | Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah Teritory, United States |
Family ID | F768 | Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family 1 | Rulon Stringham Hacking, b. 19 Dec 1903, Vernal, Uintah, Utah, United States , d. 13 Nov 1975 (Age 71 years) | |
Last Modified | 21 Jul 2015 | |
Family ID | F839 | Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family 2 | Joseph Pearson Hacking, b. 5 Feb 1874, Cedar Fort, Utah, Utah Territory, United States , d. 31 Dec 1944, Maeser, Uintah, Utah, United States (Age 70 years) | |
Married | 22 Jun 1898 | Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States |
Last Modified | 21 Jul 2015 | |
Family ID | F838 | Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Pin Legend | : Address : Location : City/Town : County/Shire : State/Province : Country : Not Set |
Photos | The Daughters of Phillip Stringham and Caroline Crouch Back Row, Left to Right: Zina, Grace, May, and Susan Front Row, Left to Right: Ethelwynne, Beatrice, and Claire | |
Philip Stringham and Children Photo taken before 1940 Back left to right: Claira, Ethelwynne, Grace, May, Susan, Zina, Bryant, William, Beatrice Philip is seated in the front. | ||
Carrie Claire Stringham Hacking in 1949 The first child of Phillip and Caroline Ann Stringham | ||
The Children of Phillip and Caroline Stringham Photo taken in 1949 Back row, Left to Right: Susan, William, Zina, Beatrice Front row, Left to Right: Ray, Ethelwynne, Claire, Grace, Bryant |
Documents | The Death Certificate for Carrie Claire (Stringham) Hacking Born November 3, 1874 and died October 22, 1953 Husband, Joseph P. Hacking, deceased |
Histories | A Tribute Philip Stringham and Caroline Ann Crouch Stories, Poems, and Tributes from their Children | |
Carrie Claire Stringham Hacking by Josephine H. Bird, her daughter An Excerpt: "I, Carrie Claire Stringham, was born 3 Nov. 1874. Whether by guess or scales, My mother said I weighed 14 lbs. at birth and was just skin and bones. Perhaps because of the caro she received at my birth, Mother lay in a coma for three days following, with my father despairing of her life. The November weather was cold, dark and stormy. The rain dripped through the mud roof and they had to hold pans over the bed to keep mother and me dry." | ||
Some of the Early Experiences of My Parents by Carrie Claire Stringham Hacking Excerpts from Personal History of Carrie. "Many times I have heard father tell of the time that Captain Day and Pardon (Pard) Dodds rode into our dooryard and said, 'Stringham, you'll have to move off. This is government land. Make arrangements to leave in 10 days. We will pay you for your corrals and buildings.' My father calmly let them have their say. He went into the house and took from the cupboard shelf his deed to the land and showed it to the man, who rode away with the decision that Stringham was not to be scared off his land for their own selfish purposes." | ||
A Tribute to my Father-in-Law, Philip Stringham by Ella Wimmer Stringham An Excerpt: "Grandfather's family, with others, lived in Ashley Valley during the winter of 1879, known as the "Hard Winter." The weather was so severe, it killed the livestock. They had no horses to use. They had their new farmland, which had to have water before they could grow crops. Grandfather (Philip Stringham), Robert Bodily and one other took their shovels and dug a canal that furnished the first irrigating stream of water. Each day they ate lunch of slap jacks made out of musty corn or wheat and dipped it in the cold water." | ||
Rembrances of my Childhood by Ethelwynne (Winnie) Stringham Collett An Excerpt: "I remember picking up sage brush after father had plowed and grabbed it. Father would then burn it at night. Then we three children, Claire, Grace and I would have a good time dancing and laughing in the firelight. Father was so patient with us, for we were lazy and got tired picking up the brush." | ||
Some of the Things I Remember about My Father Philip Stringham by Grace Stringham Colton An Excerpt: "I remember a sled he made for the family to ride in. It was made of large branches of trees. Two seats. One facing the horse and the other facing the back. We girls, Claire, Win and I, rode on the back seat; and more than once we were dumped in the snow as the horse would start quickly or stop suddenly." | ||
Appreciation of a Wonderful Father by Susan Stringham Shaffer An Excerpt: "I will never forget the way he used to sing to wake us up in the mornings. As he made the fire in the old cookstove, "Oh, What a Beautiful Morning," "Catch the Sunshine," and other Sunday School songs. The girls or mother would have the breakfast ready when all the chores were done. We would all be around the big table." | ||
"Don't Be Frightened" A story that William, the son of Philip, tells about his father being licked on his face while sleeping out under the stars. | ||
"The History of Carrie Claire Stringham Hacking" Compiled by Josephine Hacking Bird from letters, diaries, personal histories and notes that were kept by Carrie Claire Stringham. |