Monday, March 30, 2015

Heywood, Leland 1892 Scrapbbok




Leland Heywood

Birth:  17 April 1892
Marriage:  18 August 1921, Salt Lake City Utah
Death:  6 December 1976, Mesa, Arizona


See Also Leland Heywood Documents for additional images.
      US Census:  1900, 1910, 1930, 1940
      1917 Draft Registration
      1917 Mission Call (Letter)
      1926 Index to Register of Voters (Los Angeles)
      1928 Index to Register of Voters (Los Angeles)
      1928 Certificate of Dentistry, Alameda County
      1976 Death Certificate

      
1892 Birth  17 April 1892
Dilapidated Remains of His Birth Home



About 1898 Student in Thatcher.  His mother is the teacher.





1917, May 4 1917  Departure for Mission, Hawaii 

Dated 31 May 1917















Rainbow Falls Hawaii




Mission Release, 20 Dec 1919






     Leland Heywood

     Arrival 27 Dec 1919

     Age 27
     Birth Date:  Abt 1892
     Birthplace:  Alpine, Arizona, United States
     Ship Name:  Manoa
     Port of Departure:  Honolulu, Hawaii
     Port of Arrival:  San Francisco.



1921 Marriage
Marriage LicenseLeland Heywood and Margaret Eleanor Smurthwaite.  Salt Lake City.  Dated date 15 Aug 1921MarriageSalt Lake City.  Date:  18 Aug 1921.  Signed by Hyrum G. Smith, an Elder of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints; Groom and Bride and witnesses, Duncan M McAllister and Samuel Roland Lindsay.

1922 Membership Record, St. Johns, Arizona



1921 Board of Pharmacy









In their younger days
Personal and Family Photos
Up a Cactus
                                                  

Alfred, Margaret, Leland and Richard

Alfred, Margaret, Leland, Richard
About 1941



Family Living on 1st Street 
About 1941

Leland and Margaret


About 1948

In Hawaii


Home on Macdonald Street, Mesa

(This house was moved from Sirrine Street in Mesa to Grand Street in Mesa where Barbara Price later made her home.)



About 1971

About 1971
Cemetery Crowd 



Family


About 1940


Carol Jayne Heywood (French)
About 1958
Relatives



Heywood Brothers— May 14, 1960
Left to Right:  Leland, Neal, Spence, Yates, David.    
Not present:  Ella, Velma, Robert.
Occasion:  Uncle John Coleman funeral of Eagar.
 The four drove to Show Low, picked up Yates, ate a wonderful chicken dinner prepared by Yates’ daughter, Velma Stratton, and then on to Eagar.

Brother, Joseph Neal and
Sons, Charles, Bernard, Junius, and Max
Daughter, Pearl

About 1936
Friends 


Leland and Belle LeMon and Alfred Smurthwaite

Grant and Mabel Macdonald



Abt 1960 Dentist in Mesa

Mesa Dentists about 1960




Saturday, March 7, 2015

Thursday, February 26, 2015

Niu, Paul (1945-2015) - Obituary

Paul Niu (1945-2015) – Obituary


Paul Terresco Niu passed away on February 15, 2015 of complications of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). 

Paul was born on September 29, 1945 in Nukunuku, Tonga to Tevita Maile Niu and Malie Wolfgram Niu. 

Paul is survived by his wife of 38 years, Suzie Niu and his children, Leland (Whitney), Isaac (Kristi), Devin (Taylor), Philip (Melissa), Maikeli (Brynn), Dustin (April), Rachel, Luisa Pear (Buck) Maggie and many loving grandchildren, nieces, nephews, brothers, sisters and extended relatives. Paul was a loving father, grandfather and a friend to all.

Paul's viewing will be held at Meldrum Funeral Home, 52 North McDonald Street, Mesa Arizona 85201 from 6pm to 8pm, Thursday February 26.

A celebration of life will be held at the LDS Stake Center in Scottsdale Arizona, 2202 North 74 Street Scottsdale Arizona, 85257 at 12pm.

Paul will be buried with military honors at the National Memorial Cemetery of Arizona, 23029 North Cave Creek Rd. Phoenix Arizona 85024 at 2:30pm.
- See more at: http://www.meldrummortuary.com/obituary/Paul-Terresco-Niu/Pasadena-MD/1483961#sthash.PD88QkW6.dpuf

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Coleman, Sarah Francelle (Heywood) 1860-1937


Traveling on Lee’s BackBone

My grandmother drove a covered wagon over Lee’s Backbone.  It wasn’t easy.

When the Mormon Pioneers first came to Arizona from Utah, many of them crossed the Colorado River close to the Grand Canyon at a place called Lee’s Ferry.  They put their wagons and themselves on rafts that carried them across the river.  It was scary.  But worse than Lee’s Ferry was what came next--Lee’s Backbone, a steep, narrow, rocky trail with rocks and drop-offs along the way.  Wilford Woodruff, the fourth president of the Church said, “It was one of the worst hill ridge or mountain that I ever attempted to cross with a team and wagon.”

My grandmother, ‘Lell Coleman, drove a team of “fiery, high-strung horses” and a wagon over Lee’s Backbone.  She had two boys by her side, my Uncle Neal age 4 and his little brother, Spence, age 2.  It wasn’t easy.

She was scared.  Later she said “it was a most shattering experience.  The driving to the Colorado was not so bad, and being ferried across the river was interesting; but the driving over Lee’s Backbone was the most terrifying, grueling experience of my life.  Actually, there was no well-marked road.  It was a trail perilously narrow in places, wider in others, but always steep hills or dangerous dug ways or curves.  Sometimes I wonder how I did it. . . . The road was so narrow and winding, and (a) ribbon-like river below, I hugged so close to the hill side that the hubs of the wheels scraped the sand and rock.  I tried to keep my eyes on the hill but an occasional glance below made me feel that the wagon might go rolling over and over down to the river with me and my two boys.  I stopped the team and waited until Mr. Heywood came up and changed.  I then mounted the horse and drove the cattle and he drove the team.”

                        ‘Lell Heywood drove a wagon something like this.




Look at the steep cliff alongside the trail.





In Arizona she became a teacher 


My grandmother and her class in St. Johns, Arizona.  
My father, Leland Heywood, is on the front row, second from the left.

Richard Neal Heywood


Monday, February 2, 2015

Smurthwaite, Margaret Eleanor (Heywood) (1895) What Can a Grandmother Do?

What Can Grandmothers Do?
Margaret S. Heywood[1] at age 87

As the matriarch of the Leland Heywood family, just what can I do to help that family?

Well, I have written for them and for my brothers and sisters the life stories[2] of my parents, Alfred Smurthwaite and Margaret Ellen Brown, both estimable, talented, wonderful people.

I am planning my life story and that of my husband[3], hoping that our influence with our extended family might prove beneficial and inspirational in their lives.  In fact, I hope that we shall never be forgotten.

As an old woman, lonely and frail in health, I can still do some constructive things if I will to do so; and I so will it!

I can be cheerful, not complaining or bitter, not, as my father would have phrased it “forever belly-aching!”  Yes I can smile and be cheerful.

I desire the approval of my grandchildren.  I can turn on the charm for them.  I can still talk of optimism and courage with a pair of shining eyes and an optimistic giggle.  Over and above that, I can give them assurance of my approval of them, of my acceptance of them as they are, no matter what.  I might find it difficult to refrain from pointing out faults and weaknesses; but always, on closer view, I can find something to praise, to stimulate faith and to awaken courage.

Then we settle down to a discussion of material needs.  Somehow we manage to meet the semester fees and book needs.  We see that those ever-recurring repair problems with the car are paid for when need arises.  Yes, somehow, they must manage to get to and from.  Above all, they must have a scholastic, technical or mechanical education sufficient to insure fair and equal competition in our industrial world.

I can keep my home a pleasant place for my grandchildren to enjoy.  They seem to relax here where they find quiet and order.  I can work in the yards keeping the walks swept, the weeds pulled and flowers planted.  I enjoy work.  “Work”, you know, “is love made visible.”

I can make my small contribution to the Church and the community.  I try to support civic projects such as the Community Chest, the Mesa Symphony and the Mesa Little Theater.  I desire my grandchildren to grow up in a town furnishing much in cultural advantages.  Surely they should know that I do my bit towards making their home city a desirable place in which to live.

I set my example before my family in keeping family records.  I urge them to begin their accurate records keeping now.




[1] Margaret Eleanor Smurthwaite Heywood was born 9 Oct 1895 in Ogden, Utah.  She married Leland Heywood 18 Aug 1921 in Salt Lake City, Utah.  She had five children, Margaret Josephine “Jo”, Barbara Lea, Alfred Leland “Al”, Richard Neal, and Carol Jayne.  She has 27 grandchildren many greats and great-greats.  She taught school for over forty years, including about twenty at Mesa High School and five at the Church of College of Hawaii.  She died at age 96 on 7 Feb 1992 in Mesa, Arizona.
[2] These stories are available to the public  via FamilySearch Family Tree https://familysearch.org/tree/#section=pedigree
[3] These were never written.

Margaret Eleanor Smurthwaite Heywood is the mother of the contributor, Richard Neal Heywood.

Saturday, January 10, 2015

Heywood, Martha Emma (Mattie) 1883-1893

Mattie is the great-Aunt of the contributor, Richard N. Heywood

Martha Emma “Mattie” Heywood,
Parents: Joseph Neal Heywood, Sr. and Sarah Francelle Coleman
Birth: 21 Feb 1883, Alpine, Apache, Arizona
Death: 24 Dec 1893, Alpine, Apache, Arizona

                                   Mattie’s Death

Mattie, actually named Martha Emma after her grandmothers, was 10, almost 11 when she became ill on a cold December day in 1893. Her tiny home in Alpine, Arizona had a leaky wooden roof and the wind blew through cracks in the log walls and sometimes snow, too. At night it was freezing, even indoors.

Mattie’s family had moved to Arizona from Utah a few years before her birth on February 21st, 1883. She was the third of eleven children. It was a hard life in Alpine. There were only a few neighbors. They were trying to clear the land for farming. They had horses, cows, chickens and lots of room to play outside, but in the winter the snow and cold made everything hard, even the ground froze.

Mattie’s room had a cheesecloth ceiling which hung from stringers stretched across the room. Rain water and dirt stained the ceiling. There were two small windows which let in some light during the day; a kerosene lamp was used for light. There was no bathroom in the house. Outside, they had to walk on paths from which snow had to be shoveled away into heaps. The temperature at night was sub-zero.
There were no doctors, only kindly neighbors and Olive McFate, a practical nurse, who gave cheerful, sympathetic, understanding, and loving, tender care. But in those days, medicines were scarce and not very effective. Mattie was anointed and blessed by the elders. They called on the Almighty to bless her and “if it be Thy will restore her to health that she might be useful here on earth, and if you live, you will live unto the Lord and if taken you will die unto the Lord. . . Thy will, not ours, be done.”

In spite of all, on Christmas Eve, December 24th, 1893, Mattie faded into eternity.

The next day was a sad Christmas, the saddest the family had ever known.

The funeral was held in the log schoolhouse. The procession was small, three or four wagons driving slowly, wheels squeaking and bumping over the frozen road. The grave was amongst the pines. The frozen earth fell with heartless thuds on the lowered box, tearing at the heart of the grieving family.



Pioneer life in the cold forests of Arizona was difficult, even tragic.

Grief and sorrow endured. But so did they.






Adapted by Richard N. Heywood from Mattie’s Death written by her older brother, Joseph Neal Heywood, Jr. about 35 years after her death.