Person:Susan Risley (3)

Facts and Events
Name Susan Risley
Gender Female
Birth? 24 Aug 1807 Madison, Madison, New York, United States
Marriage to Welcome Chapman
Death? 18 Feb 1888 Fountain Green, Sanpete, Utah, United States
Burial? 21 Feb 1888 Manti, Sanpete, Utah, United States

Susan Amelia Risley (known as "Amelia") was born into a family of seven girls and five boys on a flax farm in upstate New York. Her mother taught the girls reading and mathematics, as well as how to cord, spin and weave wool and linen.[1]

Risley married Welcome Chapman in about 1831 and they made their home in a hamlet known as Hubbardsville in Madison County, New York, where they had their first four children, all daughters. The first was a pair of twins who died in infancy.[2]

While in Hubbardsville, they joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. First Welcome joined, to which Amelia reacted harshly, declaring "You have went and joined those awful Mormons." However, she joined the church about six months later.

Soon, persecution against them began and their friends and neighbors shunned them and looked down on them. This was especially difficult for Amelia, as she came from a prominent family in Madison County.

Amelia's parents were broken-hearted over their daughter joining this new, unpopular religion, but they did not turn bitter. However, Chapman's family disowned him.[2] The Chapmans soon moved to a Latter Day Saint community, possibly in Kirtland, Ohio, but by 1838 in Missouri.[3][2]

Armed mobs drove the Chapmans from their homes in Missouri and Wikipedia:Illinois.[3] They built a home in Far West, Missouri, in 1838, only to be forced from the state by order of the governor that Fall.[4] Amelia was six months' pregnant when a mob gave the Chapmans and their Mormon neighbors a few hours to clear out before their homes would be burned. They remained in the area long enough for Amelia to carry the baby, a son, to full term. He was born two weeks after the Wikipedia:Haun's Mill Massacre.[2] They soon fled to Illinois,[5] where they built a home in Nauvoo along the banks of the Mississippi River[6] and Chapman cut stone for the Nauvoo Temple.[7] While in Nauvoo, Amelia had three more children, all sons, one of whom died at three months.[2][8]

Mobs drove them from Nauvoo in 1846, when they fled with most other Nauvoo residents across the river to Iowa,[9] and then on to what later became known as Winter Quarters, an unsettled area along the Missouri River in present-day eastern Nebraska, where Amelia gave birth to another daughter in October 1846. Two months earlier, Brigham Young divided the Winter Quarters settlement into two "grand divisions" presided over by himself and Heber C. Kimball, respectively. Each division had two subdivisions presided over by a foreman. Welcome was foreman of the fourth subdivision, with Hosea Stout serving as its clerk.[10] In the summer of 1848, the Chapmans crossed the plains with their six surviving children to what later became Utah Territory.[2]

The Chapmans had their final child, a son named Welcome Chapman, Jr., in the Salt Lake Valley in Fall 1849. About the same time, Brigham Young asked the Chapmans to help colonize the Sanpitch (now Sanpete) Valley with Isaac Morley.[2] They arrived in November 1849 and endured a harsh winter with little shelter. Welcome was part of the first militia of Manti and used his stone cutting skills to help construct the first fort.[11] He was also among the first group of [[Wikipedia:Selectmen]|selectmen].[1] The young colony experienced great difficulties, but gradually began to prosper. In 1854, Welcome became the first stake president in Manti.

When the Chapmans first arrived in the Salt Lake Valley, Amelia turned most of the housework over to her 12- and 14-year-old daughters while she focused on weaving Linsey-woolsey cloth, which the young community badly needed. Contemporary accounts consider Amelia an excellent cook and housekeeper and an authority on herbal medicine. She served as a practical doctor and nurse to "neighbors for many miles around" and as a midwife. She assisted in the births of somer of her grandchildren and great-grandchildren.[1] She was more educated than her husband, which helped him during his active public life. After the Chapmans relocated to Manti, Brigham Young and other authorities from Salt Lake City made the Chapman home, which was better furnished than most neighbors, their headquarters when visiting Sanpete.[2][1]

Amelia died in Fountain Green, Utah in 1888, and was buried in Manti, Utah.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Chapman, John Davis. Welcome and Susan Amelia (Risley) Chapman. Provo, Utah.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8
  3. 3.0 3.1 Smith, Arlene M. “Times and Places of Welcome Chapman,” 1997. See online version at BYU Special Collections: [1]
  4. Roberts, B.H. Comprehensive History of the Church. Salt Lake City, Utah. 1902. Vol. III, Ch. XVII
  5. Times and Seasons. Nauvoo, Illinois. January 15, 1842. Vol. III, No. 6, p. 670.
  6. Black, Susan Easton. Membership of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints:1830-1848. LDS Church. Salt Lake City, Utah, 1990. Vol 9, pp 313-318.
  7. Nauvoo Neighbor, November 29, 1843.
  8. Winter Quarters Wards Membership Lists 1846 - 1848. Historical Department, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Salt Lake City, Utah. See also http://winterquarters.byu.edu
  9. Stone, Wayne. History of Hosea Stout. pp. 80, 84.
  10. Conquerors of the West: Stalwart Mormon Pioneers. Florence C. Youngberg, ed. Agreka Books. 1998, p. 510. ISBN 188810631X.
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