Showing posts with label Matlock. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Matlock. Show all posts

Friday, August 28, 2009

Benjamin Thomas Trotter Mitchell 1816-1880 Susannah Houston 1826-1900

Benjamin
Benjamin Thomas Trotter Mitchell
Parents Abraham Mitchell and Annie Colpetzer
Note: According to findagrave.com, his official name was Benjamin Trotter Mitchell but one of his wives didn't like it so he changed the Trotter to Thomas. (Note: some of his ancestors had the surname Trotter so it seems to also fit.)
-M-
3rd great grandfather
Born 12 Jan 1816 Muncytown, Lacommin, Pennsylvania
Blessing 15 Oct 1835 by Prophet Joseph Smith in Kirtland, Ohio
LDS Missions to the British Isles and Nova Scotia
Served in Nauvoo Legion (see photo)
Benjamin Thomas Trotter Mitchell
1848:  traveled west
Occupations: Stonecutter for SL Temple, Shoemaker, Farmer

Note: the first time he traveled to Utah, he was in the Heber C Kimball Company with three of his wives and five of his children.  He was 32 years old.  Six years later, he went back to help more members of the LDS church to Utah and was the Captain of a company that departed 20 Apr 1854 and arrived 5 Aug 1854.  This trip was where he met his 7th wife.

Died 7 Mar 1880 Kamas, Summit, Utah
Burial 11 Mar 1880 Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah  Plot: D-3-9-1W
Deseret News 17 Mar 1880: 
Benjamin T T Mitchell
"In the 16th ward of this city, on March 9, 1880, BENJAMIN T. MITCHELL, son of Abraham Mitchell and Anney Colpeter (should be Colpetzer), born Jan. 12, 1812, in Lacomin County, Pa. He lived and died a faithful Latter-day Saint. Funeral at Thursday at 2 p.m., at 16th Ward Meeting-house. Friends are invited to attend."

In the same paper was the following:

"SUDDEN DEATH. -- This morning, Brother B. T. Mitchell, of the 16th Ward was the victim of a sudden stroke of death. He had been ailing for some time, but yesterday was out walking and this morning apparently much better. All at once he was seized by an attack of his complaint, supposed to be heart disease, and in 15 minutes was no more. Brother Mitchell was a man, aged 64, and was for a long time an employee on the Temple Block. We are not informed of all the particulars, and only heard of the sad event just previous to going to press, when it was too late to make further inquiries."
Benjamin's memorial
Sources
Lovina Headstone: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7651176
Caroline Headstone: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=29340015
Lois Headstone: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7510579
Catherine Headstone: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7543984
1850 US Census, Great Salt Lake county, Great Salt Lake, Utah Territory (age 35)
Note:  living with two of his wives (Lois and Caroline) and three children (Mary, Ruth, Amanda).  The Census incorrectly reports Caroline as being 3 years old.
1860 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 152 (age 44)
1870 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 3
Note:  Surname is spelled Michael in the census
Online:  Mormon Pioneer Overland Travel, 1847-1868
Book:  Latterday Saint Biographical Encyclopedia Vol 2 page 369
Pictures:  Family Search
Headstone:  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7481976/benjamin-trotter-mitchell
More about him (including his journal):  http://benjaminthomasmitchell.com/


He was a polygamist and had 7 wives


Sarah Triesback
1) Sarah Triesback
Parents: Henry Triesback and Catherine Ginder
Born:  9 June 1817 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Married Benjamin:  26 April 1835 Portage, Ohio
Died:(of measles) 23 Aug 1843 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Buried: Old Nauvoo Burial Grounds
Children:  Benjamin Jr, Sarah, Emily 
Note:  Benjamin and his first wife joined the LDS church two months after their marriage. They heard the Saints were gathering in Nauvoo and left Ohio to join them.  He was a stonemason and helped build the original Nauvoo Temple and many other buildings there.  In 1846 he stayed in Winter Quarters for two years to raise crops.
Lavina Buckwalter
2) Lavina Buckwalter
Parents: Daniel Buckwalter and Martha Ann Williams
Born: 28 Jan 1821 Chester, Pennsylvania
Married Benjamin: 10 Oct 1843 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois

Sealing record


Died 21 Mar 1875 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Buried:  Kamas Cemetery, Kamas, Summit, Utah 
Children:  Joseph, Percis, Hyrum, Jerome, Martha, Rachel, Margaret, Mariah
Note:  Lovina was head of household in 1850 Davis county, Utah.  The census spelled her given name Souvina.  She also had the three children from Benjaman's first wife living with her
Sources:
Marriage record: Family Search
Caroline's headstone
3) Caroline Deseret Conrad
Parents: Joshua Conrad and Eve Rathvon
Born: 18 Sep 1828 Newtown, Queens, New York
Married Benjamin: 7 Jan 1845 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Children: Amanda, Zadoc

Sealing record


Died 18 Aug 1851 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Buried Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah
Sources:
Marriage record: Family Search
Headstonehttps://www.findagrave.com/memorial/29340015/caroline-deseret-mitchell



Lois Judd Mitchell
4) Lois Judd
Parents: Arza Judd Jr. and Lucinda Abigail Adams
Born: 15 Sep 1825 Quebec, Canada
Married Benjamin: 1 January 1848 Winter Quarters, Nebraska

Marriage Record

Children: Rachel, Mary, Ruth, Daniel, Annie, Nathaniel, Fanny, Lucy, Byron
Died: 9 Jun 1912 Draper, Salt Lake, Utah
Buried: Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah
Sources:
Marriage record: Family Search
Headstone: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7510579/lois-mitchell
Family Search



Lydia Maria Day
5) Lydia Mariah Day
Parents:  Hugh Day and Rhoda Ann Nichols
Born  1 June 1833 Bastard, Leeds, Ontario, Canada
Married Benjamin:30 June 1851 Endowment House, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah

Sealing record


Children:  Hugh, Amelda, Abram, Franklin, John, Jedediah, Lois, Rosanna, Rhoda, Bernetta, Marion
Died 8 Apr 1886 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Buried
Sources
Marriage record: Family Search
Memorial:  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/76204075/lydia-maria-mitchell
Catherine F M Johnson
6) Catherine Frederikke Marcussen Johnson
Parents:  Marcus Jensen and Ane Margaretha Rasmussen Lindhartsen
Born: 11 May 1837 Skorringe, Maribo, Denmark
Married Benjamin: 21 Dec 1856 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah

Marriage record


Children:  Rosanna, Frederick, Brigham, Benjamin, Mark, Annie, Alice, Henry, George
Died:21 April 1917 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Buried: Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah
Sources
Marriage record: Family Search
Headstone: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7543984/catherine-frederikke-mitchell

Susannah Houston
7) Susannah Houston
Parents James Houston and Mary Madelina Ettleman
Born 11 Feb 1826 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Married 1) Gideon Cooper Matlock about 1848 Iowa
Children:  Cameron Alexander Matlock (a.k.a. Alex Campbell Matlock)
2) Benjamin Trotter Mitchell 6 Mar 1857 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah

Marriage to Benjamin 
Recorded in Benjamin's journal with a list of his other wives. See the clips I made below for each. They are not written by the same person, so I'm not sure who wrote them. On the inside of the front cover was written: return to Zadock L Mitchell
163 N 7th West 
 Transcription: Susan Huston on the 6th day
of March 1857

Died 6 May 1900 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Buried 7 May 1900 Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah

-M-
3rd Great grandmother

Life Sketch, my correction in red
Susanna Houston Matlock Mitchell was born in Jackson, Stark County, Ohio (not Pennsylvania). She was the sixth child in a family of seven children. Her parents and other relatives joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (a.k.a. Mormon Church) soon after it was organized in 1830. Susanna was seven years old when her family left Canton, Ohio to travel to Adams County, Missouri, then to Caldwell County, and from there to Nauvoo, Illinois. Some of these moves were caused by anti-Mormon mobs driving the family from their home. 

In 1846, the Houston family, with thousands of other Saints, found themselves in makeshift homes in Winter Quarters. After all kinds of privations, exposure to cold and inadequate diet, Susanna's parents died.
  
 In 1848, after surviving so many trials and hardships, Susanna's life was made happy with her marriage to an intelligent young lawyer, Gideon Cooper Matlock. On 12 Jun 1849, their son, Alexander Cameron Matlock, was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Susanna's husband was familiar with some of the Indian languages and had often acted as an interpreter. He was sent on a mission by the U. S. Government to an Indian tribe. Weeks lengthened into months and Susanna received no word from him. To support herself and her son, she began to sew for some of the families in the neighborhood. She tried every way possible to get some word about her husband, but communication was slow. Perhaps he was being held by the Indians, but would somehow escape and return home.

  Most of the Saints had left for the West, but Susanna refused to leave her home. She thought that her husband might come and find her gone. Finally, after six long years, she decided to make the journey to Utah and join the other members of her family. She later learned that her husband had died of Smallpox on his journey into the Indian Country. Susanna met Benjamin Thomas Mitchell in 1855 when she was in the emigrating party that he led across the Plains. She was a widow with a six-year-old son. 

Benjamin was returning from a three-year Church mission. Susanna became his seventh wife on 6 Mar 1857. Seven sons were born to this couple. Her husband tried to deal fairly with his wives and children and they were congenial and happy with each other. His family grew so large that he had to have land to till in order to raise food for over fifty people. As a result, he helped settle Kamas, Utah. Here, they farmed and raised cattle and sheep: Benjamin died in Salt Lake City on 9 March 1880 at the age of sixty-four.
  
Susanna, who was ten years younger than her husband, lived for twenty years after he died. Her grandchildren remember the large orchard in front of her house, her pantry shelves that were always stocked with goodies, fruit and pies for those who visited her often and were always made to feel welcome. 
Susanna's headstone
in Salt Lake City Cemetery


Susanna died on 6 May 1900 in Salt Lake City. She left a large posterity that honors her name.

Six years later, her son, Alexander Campbell Matlock, drowned.
Alexander Campbell Matlock
Enhanced and colorized pic


Notice in the paper about
the circumstances of his death.

Sources
Article written by Pearl Mitchell Boyce for the Daughters of Pioneers 20 Dec. 1943 available on Family Search that tells Susannah's history.
Book: Pioneer Women of Faith and Fortitude Vol 3 M-R page 2026 published by Daughters of the Utah Pioneers
Alexander Campbell Matlock's body found:  7 Jul 1906 issue of Mariposa Gazette
Note:  There is a trail excerpt from her journal that she wrote while traveling to Salt Lake on the overland pioneer trail available at http://www.lds.org/It covers May-Aug 1854 from her viewpoint as a pioneer member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day saints 
1880 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 142 (widowed, age 54, living with her son Alex Matlock)
Note:  Her name in the census was given as Susan
Family Search
ancestry.com
Headstone:  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7543293/susanna-mitchell

CHILDREN (With Susannah)
all but Edward are my 2nd great grand uncles/aunts


Thomas H Mitchell
Thomas Houston Mitchell
Born 22 Jan 1858 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Occupation: Gold Miner (1910) Stone Cutter
Married Elizabeth Ann Blythe 25 Apr 1878 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Children:  Thomas, Louie, Blythe, John, Pearl, Wallace, Lila
Thomas H Mitchell headstone
Note:  On his death certificate and 1900 US Census, it claims he was divorced, but on the 1910 Census, he is listed as widowed.  
Died 1 May 1914 St Mark's Hospital, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
COD: Meningitis, Cirrhosis of liver
Note:  The informant on the death certificate was his son, Louie, and perhaps it was Louie that was divorced - this could use some research.
Buried 3 May 1914 Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah
Plot: U-26-010-01-E
Sources
1860 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 152 (age 2)
1870 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 3
1900 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah
1910 US Census for Sandy, Salt Lake, Utah page 9 (widowed, living with daughter-in-law, age 53)
Utah Death Certificate
Headstone:  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/59473663/thomas-houston-mitchell
Edward H Mitchell
*Edward Hunter Mitchell
-M-
2nd Great Grandfather
Born 17 Aug 1859 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Blessing 1 Dec 1859 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Occupations: Stonecutter for SL Temple, Farmer
Married Mary Emery 7 Jul 1881 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah

Children:  Lenora, Mary, Edna, Edward, Elizabeth, Frank, Hubert, Lucille, George, Alfreda, Bernice, Ida

Died 14 Jul 1924 Woods Cross, Davis, Utah
Buried 17 Jul 1924 Bountiful Memorial Park, Bountiful, Davis, Utah


1910 Picture:  Back Row: Elizabeth, David, Alfreda, Lucille, Frank, Mary, Ella, Edward (Ben), Henrietta, Hubert, Leonora
Front Row: George, Mary, Ida, Howard, Bernice
His Obituary
Edward Hunter Mitchell, prominent Davis County resident and stone cutter on the Salt Lake Temple, died at his home in Woods Cross at 12:25 A.M. Monday morning (July 14, 1924) of diabetes at the age of 65 years, after a serious illness of six weeks. He had been ailing for some ten years, and but a week before his death he had been removed to his home from the L.D.S. hospital where for a month he had taken the newly discovered serum treatment for the disease. Only momentary relief was afforded by the treatment and the disease returned in all its acuteness after he left the hospital.

Mr. Mitchell is a son of the late Benjamin T. and Susan Huston Mitchell and was born in Salt Lake City, August 17th, 1859.
Headstone for Edward

As a young man, he learned the stone cutting trade and cut stones for the Salt Lake Temple throughout its erection, for the Catholic Cathedral of Brigham street, for the Deseret News building, the McCune residence, now the building occupied by the L.D.S. school of music and many other public and private buildings in Salt Lake City and vicinity. He also worked at the Working Men's
Co-op for a few years.

In 1892 and for the succeeding seven years, he was engaged in the sheep business as a sheep owner in Toole county. In 1899 he moved to Davis county where he purchased the Frank Grant farm and engaged in farming and dairying which occupation he had continued to pursue until the time of his death.

By nature public-spirited, interested in education, and all things for the betterment of the community, country, and state in which he lived, Mr. Mitchell served a four-year term as school trustee of the West Bountiful School District before the consolidation of the several school districts of the county during which time he superintended the building of the best Bountiful schoolhouse, and again as a member of the Board of Education of the Davis County School District immediately after the consolidation for one term.

Continuously active in a religious way, Mr. Mitchell was counselor to Bishop William Winegar for a number of years and filled various offices in the Latter-Day Saint Church.

As a representative of the Utah Fire Clay Company of Salt Lake City and various other corporations of the intermountain area and as a businessman, he was distinguished by his scrupulous honesty, which trait he stressed and exemplified.


Mr. Mitchell was essentially a home man. He married Mary Emery on the 7th of July 1881 and raised a family of fourteen children, all of whom survive, a really remarkable witness of the parental qualities, the care, and tender family devotion of Brother and Sister Mitchell.

Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Mary Emery Mitchell children, Mrs. Alma Hepworth, Mrs. Andrew Smith, Herbert B., David, Georgia, Lucille, Bernice, Alfreda„ and Ida all of Woods Cross; Edward E. Mitchell of Bountiful; Mrs, Ray Stringham of Holden; Mrs. Alma Taylor, and Mrs. Roy Taylor of Salt Lake City, and Frank H. Mitchell of Ophir and thirty-nine grandchildren.
Sources
1860 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 152 (age 0)
1870 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 3 (age 10)
1880 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 142 (age 20)
1900 US Census for Davis County, Davis, Utah page 11A (no age given - gives birth month/year)
1910 US Census for West Bountiful, Davis, Utah page 2 (age 50)
1920 US Census for Davis County, Utah page 2 (age 60)
Headstone:  http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=50168504
Erastus Snow Mitchell
Erastus Snow Mitchell

Born 22 Jan 1862 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Occupations: Sheep Business (1900) Sand and Gravel Contractor (1910) Cement Contractor (1920) Watchman (1930)
Married Loverna Ruth Williams 30 Aug 1888 Kamas, Summit, Utah
Children:  Evelin, Erwin, Arnold, Harold, Viola,  Leona, Arvilla, Veretta, Zola, Delphin
Died 6 Jan 1935 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah 
COD: Lobar Pneumonia, Diabetes, Senility
Note:  his daughter Evelyn was the informant



Erastus Snow Mitchell death certificate

Erastus Snow Mitchell
and Loverna's headstone

Buried 9 Jan 1935 Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah
Plot: A-07-005-03-S2W
Sources
Marriage: Utah Marriages 1887-1966  Film 429054 Batch M73739-7 Reference Number bk B page 23 # 511
1870 US Census 
1880 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 142 (age 18)
1900 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 6B (no age given)
1910 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 1 (age 48)
1920 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 15 (age 58)
1930 US Census for Magna, Salt Lake, Utah page 13B (age 68, widowed, listed as a lodger)
Utah Death Certificate
Headstone:  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/52139315/erastus-snow-mitchell

Charles James Mitchell
enhanced picture
Charles James Mitchell

Born 30 Jul 1864 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Occupations: Sheep Herder (1880) Stone Mason (1900) Builder (1910) Bricklayer (1920-30)
Married Signa Amelia Bonneru abt 1888 California
Children:  Mabel, Ole, James, William, Paul, Gilbert, May
Died 11 Nov 1932 Santa Monica, Los Angeles, California
Buried Unknown - two years earlier, he was living with son, Gilbert. It stands to reason he was likely buried in California - possibly in the same cemetery his son Gil is buried in (Forest Lawn Memorial Park)
Sources
1880 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 142 (age 15)
1900 US Census for Peoa, Summit, Utah page 10A
Note:  lists his wife as Sisne
1910 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 11 (age 46)
Note: 1910 Census incorrectly lists his father's birthplace as Massachusetts and his mother's as Iowa. His wife is going by Amelia B, not Sonia
1920 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 10 (age 54)
1930 US Census for Santa Monica, Los Angeles, California (age 65, widowed, living with son Gilbert) 
http://www.archives.state.ut/ lists a criminal case brought against him filed 12 Jul 1882 Case 830 Note: could no longer find this as of 2021
Memorial (no headstone):  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/80553811/charles-james-mitchell


Lehi's Death Certificate

Lehi Houston Mitchell (twin to Nephi)
Born 7 Sep 1866 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Occupation: Common Labor
Unmarried
Died 7 Jul 1931 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
COD: Asphyxiation by fumigating gas (see the below information. It was later ruled to be suicide). The informant on the death certificate: his younger brother, Walter

Police Blame Gas Death to Suicide Suicide was the verdict of police Wednesday after investigating the death of Lehi Mitchell, 65, whose body was found in a room filled Hued with fumigating gas In the Lincoln house 68 East First South street.
James Hanson night clerk who discovered the body told City Detectives E.R. Apelgren and W.C. Smith that Mitchell had inquired about the lethal power of the gas and later had entered the room despite a warning sign on the door. Mitchell was said to have been worried over financial difficulties.
Police resumed their search for relatives of the dead man after learning that former Sheriff Frank Emery tentatively identified by Patrolman J.Y. Smith as a relative, had no connection with Mitchell or his family. NOTE: while the Sheriff wasn't directly related to Lehi, his sister, Mary, was the Sheriff's sister-in-law. I'm sure the patrolman knew this and therefore, that is what he had based his information on.

Burial 10 Jul 1931 Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah

Lehi's headstone
Sources
1880 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 142 (age 13)
Note: His name is spelled Lehigh in the record
1920 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 6 (age 53)
1930 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah Page 7B (age 63, listed as single, 'roomer')
Suicide: Newspaper Salt Lake Telegram 8 July 1931 issue
Utah Death Certificate
Headstone: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/95108241/lehi-houston-mitchell
Nephi's headstone
Nephi Houston Mitchell (twin to Lehi)
Born 7 Sep 1866 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Died 30 Sep 1867 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Buried Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah, Plot: S-17-10
Note:  His name is carved into the top of the stone and it has markings at the bottom.  It would help to have a picture from the front and maybe a close up of whatever is at the bottom
Sources
Headstone:  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37754282/nephi-houston-mitchell

Walter Houston Mitchell
Enhanced and Colorized picture
Walter Houston Mitchell

Born 8 Nov 1869 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Occupation: RR car checker (1900) Inspector Whipper (safety inspector) (1910) Supervisor of Coal Weights (1920) Supervisor of Weights (1930) Supervisor of Wright (1940)
Married Margaret (Maggie) Hutchinson Simpson 22 Feb 1893 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Children: Edith, Walter, Stella, Howard, Bessie, Vilate, Margaret, Afton
Walter Houston Mitchell
original headstone

Died 21 Jan 1944 Provo, Utah, Utah
COD: Coronary Occlusion, Heart disease, Senility
Buried Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah 
Note: Plot: S-17-10

Walter's second headstone 

Sources
1880 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 142 (age 10)
1900 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 6A (no age given)
1910 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 11 (age 40)
1920 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 4 (age 50)
1930 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah page 28A (age 60)
1940 US Census for Salt Lake City, Utah (age 70)
Note:  his name is misspelled Walker Mitchal
Utah Death Certificate
Headstone:  https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37754331/walter-houston-mitchell

James Houston 1779-1841 Mary Ettleman 1786-1847

Note: This family was steeped in the early history of the LDS church. They suffered much and were given much. There is a lot of information out there available online but be careful because you need to pay attention to research (for example see my notes on Catherine).

M - 4th Ggrandfather
James Houston
Parents William Houston and Catherine Boyle
Born abt 1779 Franklin Co, Pennsylvania
Married Mary Magdalena Ettleman 7 Sep 1813 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Buried Mormon Pioneer Cemetery, Omaha, Douglas, Nebraska
Note:  No stone exists
Sources
Book:  LDS Biographical Encyclopedia Vol 1 page 800
Family Search
ancestry.com
His parents, wife, and children: http://winterquarters.byu.edu/pages/ward4/pafg01.htm#20
LDS Pioneers
NOTE:  This link is no longer operative as of 2020

Group Headstone 
M - 4th Ggrandmother
Mary Magdalena Ettleman
Parents Jacob Frederick Ettleman and Chloe Ann Benner
Christened 27 Aug 1786 Franconia Township, Montgomery, Pennsylvania
Died 26 Mar 1847 Winter Quarters, Douglas, Nebraska
COD:  Scurvy (poor nutrition)
Buried Mormon Pioneer Cemetery, Omaha, Douglas, Nebraska Plot #116
Note: Remember her name appears as Mary Houston on the monument
Sources
Online: http://winterquarters.byu.edu/pages/ward4/pafg01.htm
NOTE:  This link is no longer operative as of 2020
Headstone: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/35005827/mary-magdalena-houston
Her personal plot:  http://winterquarters.byu.edu/pages/graves.aspx#Top
NOTE:  This link is no longer operative as of 2020
Family Search
ancestry.com
CHILDREN

Elizabeth H McBee
Elizabeth Houston
Born 25 Feb 1814 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Married James Riley McBee 27 Jan 1831 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Note:  married by George Roberts, Justice of the Peace
Obituary
Children: Mary, John, Levi, Harriet, Henry, Caroline, Sarah, James, Sam, David
Died 6 Mar 1893 Tinney's Point, Missouri
COD: Paralysis and old age
Buried: McBee Chapel Cemetery, Carroll, Missouri
Headstone
Sources
Membership of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
Ohio County Marriages 1789-1994 Film 897628 page 218
1850 US Census for Ray County, Ray, Missouri (age 35)
1860 US Census for Morris, Carroll, Missouri (age 46)
1870 US Census for Morris, Carroll, Missouri (age 56)
1880 US Census for Bates, Carroll, Missouri page 403C (age 66, widow, living with son, David)
Family Search
ancestry.com
Headstone: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/91515559/elizabeth-mcbee
John Houston
Born 17 May 1816 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Married Christiana Ettleman 15 Oct 1840 Adams, Illinois
Christiana's obituary
Note:  his surname given as Huston in record
Children:  William, Catherine, Lucy, Mary, Wilson, John
Died and Buried 5 July 1852 On the plains
Life Events:
John marched in Zion's Camp. 
John crossed the plains in a handcart company, died, and was buried along the trail.
 John was a member of the Quorum of Seventy and ordained as such in Nauvoo. 
John served in the Military as Private, Company E
Sources
http://winterquarters.byu.edu/pages/ward4/pafg01.htm
NOTE:  This link is no longer operative as of 2020
Illinois County Marriages 1810-1934
Christiana Ettleman Houston Forney's obituary
The following sources were listed on Family Search
The Forney Five Family Records by Charles W Forney 1931 Standard Printing Company, Boone, Iowa p 72. Nauvoo Land & Records Office A biographical story written for the young child by Dorothy Wight Brinck is in the Daughter of the Utah Pioneer's Files for John Houston.
ancestry.com
Headstone
Mary Houston
Born 11 Sep 1818 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Married: 1) Joseph Smith Jr 1842 in Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Note: This marriage is debatable.
Heber Chase Kimball
2) Heber Chase Kimball 3 Feb 1846   Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Note;  she was one of  43 wives - they had no children)
Note: Some have recorded this as a proxy Temple marriage
Died 24 Dec 1896 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Buried 27 Dec 1896 Salt Lake City Cemetery, Salt Lake, Utah Plot A-8-75-E
Sources
Headstone: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/69396974/mary-kimball
Anne Houston Headstone
Anne Houston
Born 8 May 1821 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Married Newel Kimball Whitney 7 Jan 1846 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Children: Jethro 
Note:  this is her ONLY child
Died 16 Nov 1848 Winter Quarters, Douglas, Nebraska
Newel K Whitney
Note: records are inconclusive about her final resting place.  The monument stone is in Salt Lake.
Buried: Kimball-Whitney Cemetery, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Note:  Supposedly the first person to be buried in the private cemetery. What it does not say it if she died in Nebraska and her body brought to Salt Lake.
Sources
Headstone: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/65790/anne-whitney
The Utah genealogical and historical magazine, Volumes 28-29 page 67
Family Search
ancestry.com
Sarah <i>Houston</i> Pratt
Sarah Houston Pratt headstone
Sarah Houston
Born 3 Aug 1822 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Parley Parker Pratt
picture likely taken by
Marsena Cannon
Married 1) Parley Parker Pratt 15 Oct 1845 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Children:  Julia, Mormon, Teancum, Sarah, David
2) A. Louis Taussig 15 Nov 1857 President's Office, Salt Lake City,
Salt Lake, Utah (polygamy - 3rd wife)
Children:  Isabell, David, William
When Louis deserted them, Sarah took back the surname Pratt, and the two older children, Isabell and David, also took the Pratt name.
3) Culbert King  This is NOT her husband, but her son-in-law, married to her daughter Sarah (thank you Paul for pointing this out in the comments)
Died 22 May 1886 Coyote, Garfield, Utah 
COD: dropsy (edema)
Buried Antimony Cemetery, Antimony, Garfield, Utah
Her obituary
A Hard Experience
Richfield, June 15, 1886
Editor Deseret News:
I send you a very brief sketch of the life of Sister Sarah Houston Pratt, who died at Coyote Creek, Grass Valley, Garfield County, May 26th 1886, which you will confer a favor by publishing.
She was the daughter of James and Mary Houston, born in Stark County, Ohio, August 3rd, 1823. When 9 years of age she became a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and, with her parents, gathered with the Church and suffered in all the persecutions of that time.
In 1848 she was married to Apostle Parley P. Pratt, and in 1847, in company with her husband and the first company of Saints, started across the plains, traveling on foot, with her infant in her arms, most of the way. From that time until her demise she suffered many severe hardships; but in the hardest trials she trusted in the will of God. It may truly be said of her, “Thou hast come out of much tribulation.” Of late she has resided with her daughter, Mrs. Sarah E. King, at Grass Valley. She leaves 6 children and 30 grandchildren to mourn her departure.
–J.G.
[Deseret News, June 30, 1886]
[Journal History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, June 15, 1886, 4]
Sources
http://winterquarters.byu.edu/pages/ward4/pafg01.htm
1870 US Census (age 47, working as domestic servant for the J. Smith family)
1880 US Census (age 56, occupation:  Spinning at home, living with Eugene and Wesley Pratt - supposedly children of hers)
http://jared.pratt-family.org/parley_family_histories/list_parley_wives_histories.html
Online: History of Parley Parker Pratt by Marie Dean Speakman
Patriarchal Blessing of Sarah Pratt
Obituary Deseret News, June 9, 1886

History of Sarah Houston Pratt and A. Lewis Taussig by Phil Cowley
“Research Report on Sarah Houston Pratt (Taussig)” by Angie M. Grigg.
Personal History of Sarah Huston Pratt Tausig by Gardner Cousins, Blane Gardner, 1983
Family Search

ancestry.com
Susanna Houston Mitchell
* Susannah Houston
Born 11 Feb 1826 Jackson, Stark, Ohio
Married 1) Gideon Cooper Matlock 1848 Council Bluffs, Pottawatomie, Iowa
Children:  Alexander
Susanna Mitchell headstone
2) Benjamin Thomas Trotter Mitchell 6 Mar 1857 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Children:  Thomas, Edward, Erastus, Charles, Lehi, Nephi, Walter

M - 3rd Ggrandmother
Died 6 May 1900 Salt Lake City,
Salt Lake, Utah
Buried 8 May 1900 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Sources
Headstone: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/7543293/susanna-mitchell
1860 US Census for Utah, 15th ward, page 152 (age 34, called 'Susan')
1880 US Census for Utah (age 54, widow)
http://winterquarters.byu.edu/pages/ward4/pafg01.htm
Family Search
ancestry.com
Catherine Houston Alexander
Catherine Houston
Born 12 Mar 1831 West Canton, Stark, Ohio
Traveled with the Willard Richard's Company to Utah Jul-Oct 1848
Married Horace Martin Alexander 15 Feb 1849 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Died 22 Mar 1900 Pleasant Grove, Utah, Utah
Buried: Pleasant Grove Cemetery, Utah, Utah
Sources
http://winterquarters.byu.edu/pages/ward4/pafg01.htm
Online: Mormon Pioneer Overland Trail 1847-1868
A short history written by Lucille H. Walker
Catherine's shared headstone
Note: While the history from Lucille is fun to read, there are a few points I feel are important enough to bring up for they change relationships and timing.
1) Catherine became an orphan on 21 Mar 1847 when her mother died in Winter Quarters (see Winter Quarters Project website) so she was not an orphan when she first arrived there and likely traveled to Winter Quarters with her mother and maybe a married sister or two.

2) In the story, Catherine's sisters were listed as Mrs. Heber C. Kimball and Mrs. Henry Rollins. Anne, her sister, did marry Heber, but I the way I understood it, Mrs. Rollins was actually the sister of

Horace's first wife, Nancy Walker - see below.

Written and compiled in 1927 by his granddaughter, Lucille Walker, and displayed online at homeutah@edu: It explains how Catherine, much younger than Horace, came to be his 2nd wife:
"...with Nancy (Horace's 1st wife) during her illness was my grandmother, Catherine Houston, then an orphan girl of fifteen years. After the children went to live with Nancy's sister, Mrs. Henry Rollins. Catherine was taken along too, to take care of the children who loved her. Together they crossed the plains.
Horace Martin Alexander

Grandfather received word that his children, with one of the Parley Pratt Companies was well on its way to the Valley. (NOTE: Catherine traveled at the age of 16 with the Willard Richards company which left 3 Jul 1848 and arrived in Salt Lake in mid October 1848) So with a few other brothers he hurried forth again on horseback to meet them. It is thought that he sighted the emigrant train somewhere in Wyoming. Grandmother still continued to live with the Henry Rollins family and to take care of the little Alexanders until her marriage to Horace.