SARAH ANN ROBINSON
WRIGLEY
Sarah Ann
Robinson Wrigley was born 16 September 1864 to Sarah Eckersley and William
Walker Robinson in American Fork, Utah.
She was the oldest of four children born to Sarah, but she had several
half brothers and sisters as her father was a polygamist. W. W. Robinson
married two women, with Sarah's mother being the second wife, who actually
raised all of the children as the first wife died young. It is interesting to note that Sarah's mother
was deaf.
Her early
childhood was spent in American Fork.
Her father, being a farmer, she learned to work and help on the
farm. She learned to milk cows and feed
stock.
At
a very early age, she learned to sew, and became a fine dressmaker. She said her father had stock in Provo Woolen
Mills and he would bring home a bolt of wool material and she would help her
mother make dresses and shirts for all the family. They would all be made of the same bolt of
material. Because of this training, she
became the leading dressmaker where ever she lived.
Sarah attended
school in American Fork and often talked of Brother Forbes as one of her
teachers.
She lived for a
time with her Aunt Ellie Steel who learned to love her as she would her own
daughter.
Sarah went to
Salt Lake City and hired out as a maid to Rudger Clawson and a family by the
name of Pierpont. She also went to
Bingham Canyon and worked for her Aunt Rachel Main who ran the railroad
boarding house. With all this
experience, she became a very good cook and housekeeper.
On May 15, 1888,
she married Edward Charles Wrigley (Ed Steel).
They made their home in American Fork for about one year, then moved to
Salt Lake City. Edward was a carpenter
by trade. His Uncle Richard Chamberlain
in Salt Lake was a contractor and when Edward could not find work in American
Fork, he would go to Salt Lake and work for his uncle.
About the year
1893-4, Edward's father, Joseph Wrigley, who lived in Ferron, Emery County, Got
him to move down there and homestead a farm.
They lived on the farm three years but Edward was not a farmer. He loved his trade, carpentry, so they moved
back to Lehi, Utah, where his mother lived.
They bought a lot and he built a house on it. He would still go to Salt Lake to work when
there was no work in Lehi so about 1909 (when Sarah was 45), they moved to Salt
Lake again. (For more details of this experience, see the history of Edward
Charles Wrigley.)
Sarah was a
Relief Society visiting teacher and was always called on when there was a
banquet to be served or cooking in any form as she was a splendid cook and
manager. Sarah loved to make quilts and
did all kinds of handwork: crocheting,
knitting, tatting, embroidery. Her home
and the houses of her children were adorned with her handiwork.
Sarah loved
flowers and always had a beautiful yard and garden. He children always dressed well as she was a
good dressmaker and had good taste. She
could make over articles and decorate them with her handiwork, and they would
be beautiful. At one time in Lehi, she
gave dressmaking lessons, and taught how to cut patters from a cardboard model.
Soon after they
moved to Salt Lake, she discovered she had creeping paralysis. She gradually lost the use of her legs and
for seven years (beginning when she was 50 years of age) was confined to a wheel
chair. She never gave up. Until shortly before she died, she was able
to do her own house work and cooking and care for her two small children, Helen
and Robin. She had a chair on casters
which she would push around from one room to another. Her son, Charles, lived across the street and
his wife, Syrena, would help when she needed help. Finally, toward the end, her daughter Nona,
and her husband moved in to keep house.
Shortly before
her death, she bore a strong testimony of the gospel to her bishop. Sarah passed away 13 November, 1925 at the
age of 57 of broncho pneumonia, and was by then, flat on her back from
paralysis. She died in Salt Lake City, and
was buried in Lehi Cemetery. When she
died, her oldest daughter was 37 years old, and her youngest child was 10 years
old. Her husband died four years later
in December of 1929.
The Following is taken from the history of Sarah's husband, Edward
Charles Wrigley, also written by Sarah Adelaide Wrigley Kirkham.
When Ed and
Sarah had been married for about six years and had three children, Charley,
Adah and I (Sarah), his father (Joseph Wrigley) came to American Fork to see
him and convinced the family to move to Castle Valley in Emery County,
Utah. They homesteaded a farm between
Ferron and Castledale.
Mother and Dad
had a hard time in Castle Valley. Father
knew very little about farming. They lived so far from the railroad that local
produce was very cheap and food that had to be shipped in was so high it was
not within their reach. Mother said she
had to trade three dozen eggs for a spool of thread. Sugar was fifty cents a pound, a luxury they
could not afford. They used honey for
sweetening until mother could hardly stand the smell of it. I was only five years old, but I can remember
what a grand occasion it was when we got a box from Grandpa Robinson in
American Fork. He would send shoes and
pieces of cloth for dresses. In one box
he put in a note that said, "If you don't like these things, send them
back."
We lived like
this for three years. In that time it
seems like mother said we made five trips to American Fork. Each trip was made over a different route,
and during all seasons of the year. I
remember my parents made a fire to melt the snow so they could make their bed
by the fire. Then they made a bed in the
corner of the wagon for us kids. The
horses would be tied to the wagon and we could hear them eating all night. It took from five to eleven days to make the
trip.
One time we were
caught in a sand storm. Father had to
get out and dig the sand away from the wheels so the horses could move the
wagon. It seems like that was near
Orangeville.
When I was eight
years old, we moved to Lehi in the cottage back of the Union Hotel, which
Grandma Stoddart (Edward's birth mother) ran.
From here, we moved into a one room house in the Locust Grove. Willie
was born in the Locust Grove. Soon after that, father bought a lot and built a
house. Then when we moved into the new
house, Nona, Menta, and Velma were born.
Willie had died
in December, five months after his eighth birthday when his mother was six
months pregnant with Velma. (That story
is told in the history of Sarah Adelaide Wrigley Kirkham.) Velma was born three months after Willie's
death, but died of scarlet fever when she was four years old. At that time of Velma's death, Helen was very young.
When Velma died,
mother(Sarah) was on the verge of a nervous breakdown so we moved to Salt Lake
so she would not have to be alone while father was working in Salt Lake. Robin (Bob) was born in Salt Lake in 1915.
(It is interesting to note that Sarah was 27 years old when her youngest
brother was born. Edward would have been
51 years old and his wife, Sarah was 47 at the time of Bob's birth.)