Sunday, July 8, 2012

Jonathan Smith was a strong young man who knew that the missionaries had an important message and he was determined to listen to them.  His mother, Abigail DeMont Smith, told him in no uncertain terms that he was not to go to the missionaries.  Jonathan decided that despite his mother's objections he would see the missionaries and attend their meeting as soon as he did all of his chores.  So in the morning he got up and did the work that he needed to do.  When he finished his work he went to the house to change into his Sunday best.  His mother had taken his clothes and hidden them where he couldn't find them.

Not to be deterred, Jonathan went down to the lake, took off his overalls and shirts and washed them thoroughly in the cold water.  He laid them over the bushes and waited patiently in the bushes for them to dry in the sun.  When they were nearly dry he smoothed them as best he could with his hands and put on his clean but only nearly dry work clothes and went to the meeting.

When he came home he found Abigail as mad as could be.  She was angry that her efforts hiding his clothes just didn't work.  Jonathan was patient with her though, and he prophesied to her that if she would only listen to the missionaries that inside of five weeks she would also want to join the Church.  And that is exactly what happened.  The coming years would find Abigail and Jonathan moving to Nauvoo and eventually moving west with the Saints.

Friday, February 3, 2012

At Grandma Olsen's Knee


TUESDAY, AUGUST 11, 2009

Traveling is really so easy!

When I was a little girl I remember standing by Great Grandma Olsen's rocking chair looking at the calendar with all the Church pictures on it. Do you remember those? Some business in the community (usually a mortuary) would sponsor the calendar and the bishop would give every family one when they came to tithing settlement. It had pictures of the temples and a couple of pioneer pictures or maybe one or two of prophets past and current. I loved those calendars.

Standing by Grandma Olsen was the best. She told me about her mother, Nancy Jane Taylor Smith and how she crossed the plains at such a young age. (Nancy was only 14 when she married Jonathan Smith in Council Bluffs, Iowa July 11, 1847.) While looking at a picture of wagons driving near a cliff, Grandma told me about how they might have crossed that great divide. She said the sometimes they came to a place where they had to cross and there was no way down the cliff. So they took apart their wagons and lowered them with ropes down to the men waiting below. Those men had to reassemble the wagons there and the whole process would start again for the next one.

Is it any wonder that at the beginning of their journey out of Nauvoo it too 131 days to travel 300 miles? One time Nancy Jane was driving the wagon and Jonathan was going back and forth assisting others. They came to what was described as a great river and it was her turn to cross. She drove the team of oxen into the current and suddenly, for no apparent reason the team turned and they were all being washed downstream. Nancy knew this was dangerous and her instinct was to call on the Lord to save her. As she began to gain control Jonathan came and helped and they brought the wagon to safety on the other bank. She knew it was the Lord's hand that guided her, the team and Jonathan successfully.

What a plucky little thing Nancy Jane must have been. I know, plucky is such an antique word. But really, what else fits? She was 5'2" tall and so young. She drove that wagon with those big old oxen into a river, for heaven's sake. And in fact, it was for heaven's sake. She had promised her father she would stay with the Saints and honor the priesthood....but that's a tale for another post.

As I get older and older and realize that I may not be around for a lot more years...ohhh my! I think about Mother and the excitement she displayed when she knew she was dying. She had no doubt that she would be seeing her mother and dad very soon (and she was such a baby...both a momma's and a daddy's girl). I look forward to meeting Nancy Jane Taylor Smith and hearing more about her love story, her pioneer adventure, and what she thinks of her posterity. I imagine Mom has had a nice visit or two with her as well.