Notes |
- PROPERTY:
T3 R9, Sec 24, SW/4, 160 Acres (Rocky Run) Also listed under Lewis LAMBERT
BIRTH: VARIANT PLACE: Marsden Heights, Colne, Burnley, Lancashire, England
DEATH: Gunshot
(?) Salt Lake City Cemetery, A-1-14--
Probably baptised in Burnley before 1840
Seventies Ordained After 1849:
LAMBERT, Joseph
Birth: Marsden, Lancastershire County, England
Parents: Richard [Lambert] and Patience Vey
Residence: Utah
Remarks: [Lived in or near Nauvoo during 1840s. See file in Nauvoo Family and Land Records Office.]
Source: Seventies Record, 9th Quorum, 3rd List, c. 1850s, pg 33-34
From: Mormom Immigration Index, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 2000, CD
LAMBERT, Elizabeth <1815>, F, age 25, Origin England, Occ. Stock Maker
LAMBERT, John <1821>, M, age 19, Origin England
LAMBERT, Richard <1823>, M, age 17, Origin England
LAMBERT, Joseph <1824>, M, age 16, Origin England
Ship: North America
Date of Departure: 8 Sep 1840
Port of Departure: Liverpool, England
LDS Immigrants: 201
Church Leader: Theodore Turley
Date of Arrival: 12 Oct 1840
Port of Arrival: New York, New York
Source(s): Customs #779 (FHL #002289); NSHP; Diary of William Clayton, pp. 73-96.
Notes: SECOND COMPANY -- North America, about 200 souls. Saturday, September 5th, 1840, Apostles Brigham Young and Willard Richards went from Manchester to Liverpool, and in the evening organized a company of Saints bound for New York, by choosing Elder Theodore Turley, a returning missionary, to preside, with six counselors, among whom was Elder William Clayton, one of the earliest English converts. Apostles Brigham Young and Willard Richards went on board the North America on Monday the 7th, and remained with the Saints on board over night. On Tuesday morning, about nine o'clock, the vessel was tugged out by a steamer. The Apostles accompanied the emigrants about fifteen miles and then left them in good spirits. The company had a prosperous voyage to New York, where they arrived in the beginning of October, and from there they continued the journey to Buffalo, New York. Owing to the expensiveness of the route many of the emigrants fell short of means to complete the journey to Nauvoo, they therefore divided at Buffalo, a part going to settle in and around Kirtland, Ohio, while the balance, under the leadership of Theodore Turley, continued the journey to Nauvoo, to which place Joseph the Prophet states he had the pleasure of welcoming about one hundred of them, about the middle of October, 1841.
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