Permelia Darrow and Cornelius P. Lott
The Mormon Connection
Permelia Darrow is the 3rd cousin 2 times removed of Frances Louise Berlin.
The common ancestral grandparents for Permelia Darrow and Frances Berlin are Christopher
Darrow b. 1678 and Elizabeth Packer b. 1679. Permelia descended through George
Darrow b. 1712, son of Christopher. Frances descended through Jedidiah Darrow b.
1721. Jedidiah was the son of Christopher and brother of George.
Permelia Darrow was born 15 Dec 1805 in Bridgewater, Susquehanna, PA. She
was a schoolteacher prior to her marriage. She rode 20 miles on horseback to get
to her
school.
Permelia married Cornelius Peter
Lott, 27 April 1823 in Bridgewater. Her husband, Cornelius Lott, was born 27 Sep 1798 in New York, the son
of Pieter Lott b. 1 May 1774, NJ and Jane Smiley b. abt. 1777, NY.
Cornelius and Permelia lived in Bridgewater, Pennsylvania, where the first seven of their children
were born. Later, they moved to Kirtland, OH, where their son, Joseph, was born
in 1839.
It was probably while they lived in
Ohio that they became joined to the Latter Day Saints Church (commonly known as
the Mormon Church whose founder was Joseph Smith.) It appears
that Permelia Darrow and Cornelius Lott were the only members of their
respective families that joined the LDS church.
From Ohio, they moved to Illinois, where Permelia gave birth their
third son, Peter Lyman, in Pike County in 1842. In 1845, at Nauvoo, IL, Permelia
and Cornelius buried their four-month old son, Cornelius. Their youngest son,
and the last of eleven children, Benjamin, was born in Salt Lake City, UT, in
1848.
All of the children that lived to
adult age, along with their parents became prominent members of the Mormon
Church. Malissa Lott, the oldest daughter became one of the wives of Joseph
Smith, the founder of the Mormon Church. (See below.)
Records show that Cornelius
practiced polygamy and probably had 6 wives. Other researchers list these as:
Permelia Darrow (11 children), Narcissus Rebecca Faucett/Fauset (1 child),
Charity Dickinson, Jane Rogers, Elizabeth Smith, and Elizabeth Davis.
Cornelius
and his eldest son, John, were among those chosen to accompany Brigham Young on
his journey to Salt Lake City, completing their trip in Jul 1847. Permelia and
her nine children remained in Iowa. Two of her children, Harriet Amanda and
Joseph Darrow died in Oct 1847, just ten days apart, and her grandson, Lyman
Cornelius (son of John Smylie) died the following month. Permelia joined a
company in 1848, led by Heber C. Kimball, and traveled to Salt Lake City. After
being reunited with his family for less than a year, Cornelius Lott died 6 Jul
l849.
Permelia
later moved to Utah Valley, near her second daughter, Mary Elizabeth, and lived
in a covered wagon. In the spring
of 1851, Permelia joined the Lehi Colony, where she and her family lived in a log cabin
with a dirt floor. Her children later recalled long nights when coyotes howled
in the yard. Indian trouble forced them to move to the safety of the fort, and when
they could leave, they built a four-room, two-story house.
Permelia
loved her fruit trees and flowers, and had a beautiful flower garden. She was
also known for her willingness to help the sick and needy. Permelia died at the
age of 70, and was buried next to husband in Salt Lake City Cemetery.
Children
of Permelia Darrow and Cornelius Lott.
- Malissa Lott b. 9 Jan 1824 Tunkhannock, Luzerne, PA. On 20 Sep 1843
in Nauvoo, IL she became the 12th wife of Joseph Smith. The FamilySearch
Pedigree Resource File of Ancestry.Com shows that Smith had a total of 21
wives. The following information is written in the book, "The Mormon
Experience, A History of the Latter-day Saints" by Leonard J. Arrington
and Davis Bitton; "The number of women so sealed to Joseph Smith is
not known. One biographer listed forty-eight, but many of these were
undoubtedly wives in name only, officially 'sealed' to him for the future
life but not living with him conjugally in the present. As for the others,
abundant discussion has failed to establish whether or not Smith actually
cohabited with them, and the lack of evidence of children from these
relationships has not clarified the question. Several women later did
testify that they were wives in the full sense of the word. Emily D. P.
Partridge said she 'roomed' with him, and Melissa Lott Willes testified that
she was his wife 'in every deed'.
The testimony of Melissa Lott Willes can be found in: "Affidavit
of Melissa Willes, 4 August 1893, in Raymond T. Bailey, 'Emma Hale, Wife of
the Prophet Joseph Smith' (Master's thesis, Brigham Young University, 1952),
pp 98-100."
After Joseph Smith assassination in Nauvoo in 1844, Malissa moved to
Utah with her mother in 1848. On May 13, 1849, she married Ira Jones Willes.
The following is written about Mr. Willes and is taken from the "Latter-day
Saint Biographical Encyclopedia", Volume 4, Miscellaneous Biographies
by Winn, Dennis Wilson.
"Willes,
Ira Jones, a member of the Mormon Battalion, Company B, was born Jan. 21,
1812, in the State of New York, a son of Eleazer Willis and Achsah Jones.
Ira joined the Church in early days and was with the saints in many of their
persecutions. Having arrived on the Missouri River as an exile, together
with the rest of the saints from Illinois, he enlisted in the Mormon
Battalion in July, 1846, and marched as a private in Company. B to
California. In 1849 (May 13), after his discharge as a soldier and his
arrival in Utah he married Malissa Lott
Smith, a young widow of the Prophet Joseph Smith and moved to Lehi, where he
purchased a farm and became actively engaged in farming. He was accidentally
killed Dec. 5, 1863, while crossing Dry Creek, near Lehi, by a load of wood
overturning and burying him in the ice, together with his nine year old son,
Cornelius."
Some researchers show that Malissa married a third time to John Milton
Bernhisel. Bernhisel was a very prominent church member who served as a
delegate to congress from the Utah territory and fought very hard to have
Utah admitted as a state. I have not been able to find any substantial proof
of Malissa's marriage to Bernhisel.
- John
Smylie Lott b. 23 Mar 1826 in Springville, Susquhanna, PA. John Smylie
Lott was an active member of the church and apparently took advantage of the
polygamy aspect of the church. Records show that he married Mary Ann Faucett,
5 Apr 1846; Clarissa Cemantha Rappleye, 22 Jan 1859; and Docia Emmerine
Molen 20 Jun 1862. He had children with all three women. He died 4 Aug 1894
in Joseph, Sevier, UT.
- Mary
Elizabeth Lott b. 9 Mar 1827, Susquehanna County, PA. Mary Elizabeth
married Abraham Losee, 12 Nov 1848. This marriage had an issue of 6
daughters and 2 sons. Mary died 18 May 1888.
- Almira
Henrietta Lott b. 15 Dec 1829 in Bridgewater, Susquehanna, PA. On 13 Nov
1849, she married John Riggs Murdock in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT.
The
following is found in Latter-day
Saint Biographical Encyclopedia, Volume
1, Biographies, Parkinson, William
Chandler
"Murdock,
John Riggs, president of the Beaver Stake of Zion from 1877 to 1891, is the
son of John Murdock and Julia Clapp, and was born Sept. 13, 1826, in Orange
township, Cuyahoga county, Ohio. His father and mother joined the Church in
November, 1830, being among the first converts to "Mormonism" in
Ohio; and they became closely associated with the Prophet Joseph. The mother
died in 1831, leaving a family of five children, including a pair of twins,
a boy and a girl (Joseph and Julia), born at their mother's death. The twins
were adopted by the Prophet and his wife and tenderly fostered. When the boy
was a year and a half old, he caught the measles, and through exposure took
cold and died at the time the Prophet was mobbed at Hiram in 1832. Julia
remained in the family until she had grown to womanhood. After his mother's
death John R. was sent with [p.305] Caleb Baldwin, sen., to Jackson county,
Mo., where he lived in the family of Morris Phelps. After the Saints were
driven out of Jackson county, he was baptized by his father in Clay county
in the year 1834; he also passed through the mobbings and persecutions in
Caldwell county. His father, after spending about five years on missions,
married again, when John R. left Brother Baldwin and rejoined his father's
family, with which he removed from Quincy to Nauvoo. Here he worked on the
Prophet Joseph's farm about four years, and was still in the Prophet's
employ at the time of the martyrdom; in the exodus from Nauvoo in 1846, John
R. came west with Father Cornelius P. Lott. On his way he enlisted in the
Mormon Battalion, and as a private in Company B he marched all the way to
San Diego in California. After serving his time he made his way, in company
with many other Battalion boys, to Great Salt Lake valley, and arrived on
the present site of Salt Lake City, Oct. 12, 1847, after a tedious journey
of twelve hundred miles with pack animals. He spent the winter in the
"Old Fort" and married Almira H. Lott, daughter of Cornelius P.
Lott. In the spring of 1851 he settled in Lehi, Utah county, being one of
the early settlers of that place; and among the several positions filled by
him here was that of mayor of the city. In 1856 he took a most active part
in rescuing the hand-cart companies, who were perishing in the snow storms.
When he brought in some of the suffering emigrants he found the snow on the
Big Mountain fifteen feet deep. To many of those who crossed the plains
before the Union Pacific Railroad was built, the name of John R. Murdock is
very familiar. He was sent east five times as a captain of Church trains
after the poor, namely in 1861, 1862, 1863, 1864 and 1868. He also carried
the mails from the Valley to Independence, Mo., as an employee of the B. Y.
X. Company, and in that capacity he made two round trips to the States in
1857, in unprecedented short time. In 1358 he went to Omaha as an escort to
Col. Thos. L. Kane, making the round trip of 2,120 miles with the same
animals in 42 traveling days. He also brought trains of merchandise for
Livingston & Bell in the early days. Altogether "Captain
Murdock," as he was familiarly called in early days, made eleven round
trips across the plains, and has brought more "Mormon" emigrants
to Utah than any other leader. He is credited with making a better record
than any other man known in bringing ox and mule trains across the plains
and over the mountains. In the spring of 1864 he was called and ordained to
the office of a Bishop by President Brigham Young and sent to preside in
Beaver, Beaver county. He occupied that position until 1877, when the Beaver
Stake of Zion was organized, and he was chosen and set apart as its
president. This responsible position he filled for fourteen years. He has
served eight terms in the Territorial and one in the State legislature. He
was also a member of the Constitutional convention, which framed the State
constitution in 1895. He has also served as probate judge of Beaver county
and as a colonel in the Iron County Military District. From the first Elder
Murdock was one of the representative and leading men in the Church and
community at large. He has occupied many positions of honor and trust in the
Territory and State, and is now in his old age highly respected and beloved
by the people."
Almira
Henrietta Lott died 16 Dec 1878 in Beaver City, Beaver, UT.
- Permelia
Jane Lott b. 2 Oct 1832 in Bridgewater, Susquehanna, PA.
Permelia Jane married Abram Hatch, 2 Dec 1852 in Lehi, Utah, UT. The
following is from Latter-day Saint Biographical
Encyclopedia
Volume 1, Biographies, Smart, William Henry
Hatch, Abram, president of the Wasatch Stake of Zion from 1877 to
1901, is the son of Hezekiah Hatch and Aldura Sumner, and was born Jan. 3,
1830, in Lincoln, Addison county, Vermont, in a pleasant farm house near the
foot hill of the Green Mountains. He is the fourth son of a family of five
sons and two daughters. His grandfather (Jeremiah Hatch) was a soldier of
the Revolution and served under General Washington. Abram received a common
school education in the rural district schools of Lincoln and Bristol, and
had reached the age of ten years when Elder Peletiah Brown came to that
section of country, preaching "Mormonism." The entire family,
consisting of his grandfather and grandmother, father, mother and their
children, joined the Church. His mother died in 1840, and in the fall of
that year the family moved to Nauvoo, where his father bought property,
opened up a farm on the prairie and built a brick house on Mulholland
street, in the city, three blocks east of the Temple; he died in 1841. Abram
became a member of the Nauvoo Legion and served with the posse under Col.
Stephen Markham and Sheriff Jacob Backenstos in 1845. During the exodus of
1846 he rendered efficient service as captain of the numerous flat-bottomed
ferry boats employed to cross the Mississippi river carrying the fleeing
multitude. He was also in the first company that moved west in the main
"Camp of Israel" which made its rendezvous on Sugar creek, and he
drove a wagon for Joseph C. Kingsbury. He assisted to build the temporary
settlement of Garden Grove, visited Missouri, and later made a trip to
Pennsylvania to see some of his relatives who had identified themselves with
the Rigdonite movement. He again joined the exiled Saints at Council Bluffs,
Iowa, and assisted his brother Lorenzo to harvest a crop on "Brigham's
Farm," near Winter Quarters, after which he went to the settlements of
Missouri and there helped his brothers to earn a traveling outfit with which
they with their families crossed the plains in 1850. Having spent the winter
in Salt Lake City, Abram moved to Lehi, Utah county, in 1851, and assisted
to build a grist mill at the mouth of American Fork canyon. Dec. 2, 1852, he
married Miss Permelia Jane Lott, after which he
made his home in Lehi till 1867 and assisted materially in the development
of the place. He engaged in farming and stock-raising, and also kept a
hotel. In 1861, in company with Captain John R. Murdock, he made a trip to
the States for the purpose of bringing immigrants across the plains and
buying and freighting merchandise for his store. They also freighted goods
for others, and found it a profitable business. In 1863, he again went back
to the Missouri river for the same purpose as in 1861. On both trips he
drove a mule team in the train. Altogether he has made eleven trips between
the Missouri river and Utah. In 1864-67 he filled a mission to Great
Britain, where he labored as a traveling Elder in the Birmingham conference,
later as president of the Manchester pastorate, and still later as president
of the Birmingham pastorate. He also visited Switzerland, Germany and
Holland. Returning to America, he crossed the Atlantic ocean in the
steamship "Great [p.360] Eastern." He arrived home in August,
1867, and a few weeks afterwards he was called by Pres. Brigham Young to go
to Wasatch county to act as presiding Bishop. He was ordained and set apart
to that office Dec. 2, 1867. Under his wise and practical management Wasatch
county soon became a prosperous and desirable locality and Heber City
especially grew to be a town of importance. When the settlements of the
Saints in Provo valley, or Wasatch county, were organized into a Stake of
Zion, in 1877, Abram Hatch was appointed its president, and in that capacity
he served about a quarter of a century. His duties as president were
necessarily various, active and continuous. "He took a leading part in
all measures adopted for the development of the resources of the county, and
utilized them for building up the Stake and promoting both the material,
moral and spiritual welfare of the people, in improving Church property,
superintending the erection of public edifices, building roads, bridges,
irrigating canals, etc." He also established a ranch in Ashley valley,
where settlements of the Saints, that have since grown into a Stake of Zion,
were founded. Pres. Hatch has served several times in the Utah legislature,
has acted as probate judge of Wasatch county and been elected to many other
offices within the gifts of the people. (See also Tullidge's Histories, Vol.
2, Bio. p. 187.)
Permelia Jane Lott died 28 Nov 1880 in Heber City, Wasatch, UT.
- Lucinda
Alzina Lott b. 4 Mar 1834 in Tuckhannock, Luzerne, PA. She married
William Sydney Smith Willes, 23 Apr 1852 in Lehi, Utah, UT. Lucinda and
William had ten children.
William Sydney was born 18 Mar 1819 in Jefferson, Cole, MO, the son of
Eleazer Willes/Willi and Achasah Jones. He practiced polygamy being married
to both Lucinda Alzina Lott and Docia Emmerine Molen. He married Docia 15
Feb 1857. William died 3 Feb 1871 in Lehi, UT.
Lucinda Alzina Lott died 18 Aug 1910 in Lehi, Utah, UT.
- Harriet
Amanda Lott b. 30 Mar 1836 in Tunckhannock, Luzerne, PA. d. 5 Oct 1847
at age 11.
- Joseph
Darrow Lott b. 18 Feb 1839 in Kirtland, Lake, OH. d. 15 Oct 1847 at age
8.
- Peter Lyman
Lott b. 2 Nov 1842 in Pittsfield, Pike, IL. Peter married Sarah Hannah
Snow, 23 Dec 1862. Other researchers show that they had an issue of 9
children.
Peter Lyman Lott died 1 Mar 1906 in Lehi, Utah, UT.
- Cornelius
Carlos Lott b. 30 Sep 1844 in Nauvoo, Hancock, IL and died 6 Jan 1845.
- Benjamin
Smith Lott b. 16 Nov 1848 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, UT. Benjamin
married Mary Abigail Evans 25 Oct 1869. They had 8 children.
Benjamin Smith Lott died 26 Mar 1923 in Lehi, Utah, UT.