Since posting the materials I received from Jeanne Dunn concerning the Wrigley Gum Family, I have received the following interesting e-mails with additional information from Jeanne. I am always glad when anyone has any material that can be added to this blog. Thank you, Jeanne.
Hi Carolyn,
I’ve done the William Wilkerson Wrigley line ....... I think I have his line back to Oldham, Lancashire to a Joel Wrigley and wife Hannah…probably doing the same thing you did, Ancestry and family search. There is another website you might be interested in although it isn’t Yorkshire…it’s Lancashire. It’s called Lancashire Clerks Online. They are putting all the extant church registers online….. St. Chad Rochdale is on it…and that’s where my Wrigleys went before the “new” St Chad in Saddleworth was built.
Here’s the “gum” line:
Edmund
Wrigley and Jane Milnes > Edward
Wrigley came to Philadelphia 1826 and married and Susan Paxson > William
Wrigley and Mary Ann Ladley -> William Wrigley (chewing gum)> Edmund Wrigley > John Eveleth
Wrigley > Hugh Tamony Wrigley >
Genevieve A. Wrigley > à moi (Jeanne Dunn)
An additional e-mail was sent from Jeanne.
"I just looked at what I sent you and I am not sure I was clear….
The William Wrigley who married Mary Ann Ladley and produced William the “gum king” was brother to Edmund Wrigley who married Alma Eveleth Wrigley and was my ggfather. Another fun fact is that William who eventually became very rich on gum had been tossed out of Abington Friends School for bad behavior. According to an article I received from Bill Wrigley (my fourth cousin and the current owner who just sold the family business) William Wrigley was frequently in trouble in school and finally got expelled when the threw a pie at the school sign. His father, William Wrigley senior can’t have been happy and put his son to work in his soap factory probably doing the nastiest kinds of jobs. When he was old enough he became a traveling salesman for Wrigley Soap (his father’s product). He was somewhat of an advertizing genius. ….and the rest is history!"
Jeanne Dunn
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Monday, July 30, 2012
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Wrigley Gum Comments
I received the following email about the Wrigley Gum line. I have added it as a comment on the material about Wrigley Gum, but wanted to add it here to make it more noticeable. I love getting additional information.
Hi Carolyn,
I am a Wrigley researcher. I have done a lot on the Philadelphia Wrigleys (my line) who include the Chicago (gum) Wrigleys. The current Bill Wrigley is my 4th cousin.
I ran across your blog when I was researching a Wrigley line that so far is not connected to my line. I have been researching my family so long (20+ years) that I now correspond with a lot of Wrigley researchers all over the world. First, kudos on your extensive work. I have been thinking about doing a blog but have never gotten around to it. When I started, I depended on family stories and got side tracked a number of times. I am afraid your “Grandma Sarah” was mistaken about where the Philadelphia Wrigleys came from. My 3 rd great grandfather, Edward, came from Saddleworth, Yorkshire, England to Philadelphia and his grandson went to Chicago on business and founded the gum empire. His line dates first to ould tame back in the mid 17th century (as far back as I could get) and gradually moved eastward to Broadhead and Knowl to the early 19th century. This area is east of Manchester near the villages of Uppermill and Delph in Yorkshire. I have visited there several times
I am very interested in your Wrigley line and am going to read all your notes with great interest….as I have three different people whom I am helping. Maybe they are connected to you. (Probably you and I are connected too, although it would have to be back around the 1300’s I think.
I would be pleased to correspond!
Jeanne Dunn
Hi Carolyn,
I am a Wrigley researcher. I have done a lot on the Philadelphia Wrigleys (my line) who include the Chicago (gum) Wrigleys. The current Bill Wrigley is my 4th cousin.
I ran across your blog when I was researching a Wrigley line that so far is not connected to my line. I have been researching my family so long (20+ years) that I now correspond with a lot of Wrigley researchers all over the world. First, kudos on your extensive work. I have been thinking about doing a blog but have never gotten around to it. When I started, I depended on family stories and got side tracked a number of times. I am afraid your “Grandma Sarah” was mistaken about where the Philadelphia Wrigleys came from. My 3 rd great grandfather, Edward, came from Saddleworth, Yorkshire, England to Philadelphia and his grandson went to Chicago on business and founded the gum empire. His line dates first to ould tame back in the mid 17th century (as far back as I could get) and gradually moved eastward to Broadhead and Knowl to the early 19th century. This area is east of Manchester near the villages of Uppermill and Delph in Yorkshire. I have visited there several times
I am very interested in your Wrigley line and am going to read all your notes with great interest….as I have three different people whom I am helping. Maybe they are connected to you. (Probably you and I are connected too, although it would have to be back around the 1300’s I think.
I would be pleased to correspond!
Jeanne Dunn
Friday, July 6, 2012
HANNAH HARDY
ECKERSLEY CROMPTON
Hannah Hardy
Eckersly Crompton was born June 10, 1815 in the city of Oldham, Lancashire,
England. She was the daughter of James
and Mally Hardy. Her people were good,
honest hard-working people. All of them
belonged to the Methodist Church and were very devout and sincere. They persuaded her to go to church with them,
but she came away unsatisfied with their way of teaching the gospel. One night when she was returning home, she
said, "Father, I am a stranger here."
About two weeks after, she heard a 'Mormon' elder preach and was soon
converted as it appealed to her hungry soul that was seeking for the
truth. She was baptized in December,
1841 (age 26), when the ice had to be broken and steps made to go down into a
pond of water. She was very hoarse with
a bad cold, but when she went home after being baptized, she said she was well
and the cold had left her. She was
baptized by William Schofield.
They emigrated
from England in 1845(age 30) on a sailing vessel known as
"Palmyra". They were six weeks
crossing the sea. She landed in St.
Louis, with her husband and four little girls, leaving a mother, two brothers
and five sisters in England. They all
felt very badly at parting with her and told her if she was not satisfied when
she reached America, to let them know and they would help her to return. She gave birth in 1846 to a little boy, who
lived six weeks and was buried in St. Louis.
Her husband died there in 1847 (Hannah, age 32), leaving her to support
herself and four girls.*(See below) She
worked at the Planter Hotel, which was up the river to Council Bluffs, where
she met John Crompton, married him in Council Bluffs in 1850 (age 35). In 1851, there was born to them a little girl
who lived one year, and was buried there.
They began to
prepare to follow the saints to Utah.
They left in the spring of 1853 in an independent company (age 38, 8
years after leaving England). Their
captain was Edward Pugh. When they
reached the North Platte River in the state of Nebraska, a baby girl was
born. They forded the Platte River the
next morning. The new baby was called
Margaret Emma. The mother was too sick
to nurse her baby. She was fed on milk
from the cows that had to help pull the load.
This milk did not agree with the baby and she was not well until their
arrival in Utah. They arrived in Utah in
September. They picked up potatoes on
shares and had enough to do them all winter. (See the attached story, In Covered
Wagon Days.)
John and Hanna
moved to Little Cottonwood, where they resided two years. A baby girl was born to them in 1856 (Hannah
age 41). They moved to Cedar Valley in
the spring of 1856. On account of the
Indians being on the war path, they moved to American Fork that same year.
Their first crop
was barley, which matured a little earlier than the wheat. This barley was ground in a coffee mill to
make bread. Their only sweets were beet
and carrot molasses, which they made themselves. Hannah sold feathers out of her bed for a
shawl to make her two little girls some dresses.
Hannah made a
trip to her native land when she was over 60 years old, to get genealogy of her
people, so she could do temple work for them.
She found one brother and a sister alive. None of them ever joined the 'Mormon' church,
but have come to her in dreams for her to do their work for them, which she did
willingly. She did considerable work in
the Logan, Manti, and Salt Lake Temple.
She was a
counselor to Sister Mary Handley in the American Fork Relief Society for
seventeen years, and was always faithful
to every trust. When she left American
Fork, the President of the Relief Society and members made her a present of a
$15.00 Bible. She was Sunday School
teacher under Brother William Paxman for a number of years.
Hannah and her husband
left American Fork in 1890(age 65) and went to Sanpete County to live with her
eldest daughter in part of her home; she, being left a widow, and they were
getting too old to care for themselves.
Hannah Hardy Eckersley Crompton passed away in March, 1901 age 86) in
Sanpete County and was buried there. Her
desire was to be buried in American Fork, where she had spent so many years and
had so many true friends. After she had
been buried fourteen years, her daughter, Mrs. Warren B. Smith went down to
Freedom, Sanpete County and had her remains removed to American Fork cemetery.
Of her
posterity, she left six daughters, eighty grand children and great grand
children, and one great-great grandchild.
She died as she had always lived, a faithful Latter-day Saint and in the
full hope of a glorious resurrection and her children called her blessed.
IN COVERED WAGON
DAYS
By Mrs. Mary E. Abel
(The story of the
birth of Margaret Emma Crompton Rushton, daughter of Hannah and John Crompton)
After the Saints
had been driven from Nauvoo, a brother by the name of Crompton went to St.
Louis to secure an outfit to go to the land of Zion to be with the Saints of
God. The arduous journey across the
plains was at length begun with one yoke of oxen and one of cows hitched to a
covered wagon containing their few necessary valuables and provisions for the
journey.
While in the
state of Nebraska, they camped on the Platte River. This night a terrible storm arose. The lightning flashed, the thunder
roared. It seemed as though the elements
were no longer under control. The wind
was so terrific that the wagons had to be chained to the ground.
At twelve
o'clock midnight, Mrs. Crompton gave birth to a little baby girl. Every sister in the company was anxious to
lend all the assistance they could to comfort this little mother, yet the care
she and the baby should have had was out of the question on this terrible
night. As a result, she was very ill; so
ill that she begged her husband to leave her by the wayside. She had no nurse for her new-born babe and so
its food was obtained by diluting the milk from one of the cows comprising
their team. This seemed to poison the
baby.
For two months,
the baby was carried on a pillow and her life was despaired of. In September of that year, 1853 they neared
the valley, the mother's health improved, and the baby began to thrive.
This little babe
grew to womanhood and has lived a wonderful life of service in the communities
in which she has lived, in her own home, and in her remembrance of her kindred
dead.
Surely Father
understood.
The following year (after the birth and death
of baby James Henry) William went into town, and some say he was mugged and
killed for the money he had hidden in his coat, because when he was found there
was no money. This left Hannah with four
small girls and no support. She took
employment at the largest hotel in St. Louis and earned enough money to get the
family to Council Bluffs, Iowa, the taking off place for Utah.
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