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- Vernal Cemetery, GRV11782 1 PION Y
From Builders of Uintah, DUP, 1947:
p. 19
WILLIAM GIBSON
"Born in Killmarnock, Scotland, April 25, 1845 of Scotch Irish parentage. He emigrated to America with his parents in 1852 on a sailing vessel called "Gull in the Air" and was three months making the journey. They moved to Ashley Valley in 1877 and settled in Ashley ward.
"He was appointed Uintah County's first constable preceding the first election. He was elected tothe first State Legislature in 1896. While acting as State Representative he conceived the idea to paint "Remember the Maine" on the face of a high cliff in Ashley Canyon which is still visible on the face of a 500-foot cliff.
"He was the father of three children: J. L. Gibson, Mrs. N. G. Sowards and Sarah A. Eccles.
"He died Dec. 11 1932 and is buried in the Gibson private cemetery."
Ibid, p. 10
"During the coming summer autumn of 1876 and 1877, a number of persoms moved in. among them were Mr. and Mrs. William Gibson...The Gibsions and Dodds had stores on their ranches; later Gibsons moved their store to old Ashley Town... William Britt taught school in and old schoolhouse on Gibson's farm in 1878."
Ibid, p. 12
"Mr. and Mrs. William Gibson landed here [Ashley Valley] from Kamas on the first day of November, 1877. They brought 35 head of cattle and enough provisions to do them for a year or more. The winter was very mild and they lived in a house without doors or windows. While Mr. Gibson was away after supplies two years later, the Indian troubles began over the line in Colorado.
"Mrs. Gibson being afraid, went to Old Ashley Town where the rest of the settlers had gathered. When Mr. Gibson returned he moved their sawed log house which they had built on their ranch during the summer (sawing logs with a whip saw) to Old Ashley Town where they lived for a year, then returned to their ranch. They sold their house in Ashley Town to the county for a courthouse. It was used for this purpose four or five years. The county then moved it to Hatch Town, which is now Vernal, where it was used for many years as a county building."
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From Echoes of Yesterday:
William Gibson, in about 1870, started another sawmill at the mouth of White Pine Canyon. He had his legs so badly broken in an accident at this mill that everyone thought they would have to be amputated. He would not listen to this but had the women of the neighborhood pack his legs in fresh earth. This treatment, all agreed, saved his limbs.
From: Settlements of Uintah County: Digging Deeper
William "Billy" Gibson first saw the virgin Ashley Valley in 1869 from a hill that stretched along the north rim of the valley northeast of Ashley town. He would build a cattle ranch that could be viewed from that ridge. Many years later he later choose a family cemetery site and "dug his own grave in the brow of a rocky ridge a hundred above the valley floor and lined it with six inches of concrete." When Gibson finished his tomb, he took his bed roll and spent the night in the grave. He arose the next morning, stretched the kinks out of his aging muscles, looked up at his three grandsons who stood by the graveside and announced, 'It's a good fit. I slept fine all night.'"
"As he stood on the ridge, Gibson could see his ranch buildings below, his herd of cattle grazing in lush meadowns where he had grubbed head-high sagebrush, bush by bush. He declared, 'That's the view I want to see first come resurrection morning and I want you boys to see that this grave stays where it is after I'm in it.' Fixed with a commanding gaze from the old man's piercing blue eyes, the boys made a promise that they were destined to break thirty-seven years later when the site became part ot Steinaker Dam. Gibson's grandsons, by then prominent men in the community, were forced to exhume the remains of their grandfather and seven other relatives who lay buried in the tiny Gibson graveyard and re-inter them in the Vernal Cemetery."1
In 1898, when the American battleship Maine was blown up in the Havana, Cuba harbor, "Gibson, then a member of the Utah House of Representatives from Uintah County, conceived the idea to paint the motto [Remember the Maine] high on an Ashley Canyon cliff as an enduring tribute that also represented the sentiment of the citizens of Ashley Valley at the time." He paid Leo Voight a sum of fifty dollars to paint the motto on the steep 400 foot cliff. His theory was that if it were high enough off the ground, it would be safe from vandals. Voight, with the help of volunteers who lowered him about 225 feet over the edge of the cliff, painted Remember the Maine using a mixture of lamp black and linseed oil. They thought they had created a memorial that was higher than the Washington Monument which was at that time the highest in the world. But it was later measured and determined to be no more than 400 feet.2
1Burton, Doris Karren, Settlements of Uintah County: Digging Deeper, Uintah County Library, 1998, p. 52.
2 Ibid., p. 143.
Contributed by Marilyn Hersey Brown
Dear Venita, I had heard the stories you have about Uncle Billy. Here are some more but I do not know of their authenticity. Uncle Billy and a neighbor got drunk and had a gun fight but were so drunk they could not hit each other. Uncle Billy was so thankful that he had not killed his neighbor that he changed his ways and later became an honored citizen and member of the Utah State Legislature I think the Legislator part is in the big book about Utah Pioneers. Here's another. He slept in his own grave to see if he liked the place for he and his wife to be buried. He liked it and was buried there. Years later his grave was to be flooded by the reservoir so he and his wife were reburied in a cemetery. A friend of mine from Vernal remembers going with his father to visit Uncle Billy and says Uncle Billy had a window between the original two graves. He also says that part of the original stone wall for Uncle Billy's corral still stands. I heard these stories from my Mother Gladys Lambert Wilkinson.Thanks for your work. Cousin Don Wilkinson
1880 United States Census
Source Information:
Census Place Ashley, Uintah, Utah
Family History Library Film 1255338
NA Film Number T9-1338
Page Number 112B
Wm. GIBSON Self M Male W 34 SCOT Farmer
Mary GIBSON Wife M Female W 28 UT Keeping House
James L. GIBSON Son S Male W 7 UT SCOT
Mary E. GIBSON Dau S Female W 4 UT SCOT
Geo. LANGSTORS Other S Male W 19 UT Laborer
[Next door]
Jas. B. GIBSON Self S Male W 31 IRE Merchant
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Newspaper: Vernal Express, Vernal, Utah, 1932-12-13, page one.
UINTAH'S FIRST REPRESENTATIVE DIES SUNDAY
William gibson, Pioneer of 1877 and Prominent Helping Build a Greater Ashley Valley, Buried on Wednesday Afternoon
In the death of William, "Uncle Billie," Gibson on Saturday December 11 following a partial stroke of paralysis on the Thursday prior, Ashley Valley lost one of her most prominent, oldest pioneer characters, at his homestead home in Ashley ward.
Mr. Gibson was born in Killmarnock Scotland April 25 1845 of Scotch-Irish parentage the son of Robert and Eliza Campbell Brown-Gibson. His parents joining the LDS church and emigrated to America in 1852 on a sailing vessel called 'Gull In the Air' and was three months making the journey.
They landed in New Orleans. Mr. Gibson told of many incidents on this journey which were indelibly marked in his keen memory. He noticed when landing the difference of the muddy water of the Mississippi river and the clear water of the Gulf of Mexico. The first person he saw was a negro who seemed very strange as he had never seen one before.
After a stay in New Orleans a river boat was taken for St. Louis where the family lived five years. Here he received his early education and learned to swim in the Mississippi. After floods the lad would swim out and gather floating lumber which he sold to help maintain the family. His father was a shoemaker and his mother and sister did sewing and embroidery work on shirt bosems much in vogue at the time.
At about 12 years of age he secured a position in a glass factory and received an injury from melted glass to his foot which scar he carried through life. He then worked in a bakery which furnished pilot bread for General Johnson's army which went to Utah. While in St. Louis his father became a citizen of the United States and the laws then made all children citizens also.
His parents separated in St. Louis and he with his mother, brother and sister, moved to Florence, Neb. to cross the plains in a hand cart company. They were advised to wait. They then moved to Council Bluff, Iowa and landed in Salt Lake Valley, August 9, 1860, where he lived for four years.
The sturdy character of the youth had been formed during the hardships of those few years. His spirit was that of the true youthful pioneer of the times. His life thus far had been one of action and of boyhood sacrifices and hardships. The next few years were even more so. In helping in the pioneering of Utah he crossed and recrossed the plains 7 times driving ox teams. During this time he became thoroughly conversant with the Indian problems then confronting the West and espeically Utah. His keen insight into affairs made him outstanding among his associates. He was trusted in any emergency which arose. He was always busy until it has been said of him his activities seemed to be more than that of one person. Every action counted. There seemed to be no wasted energy anywhere along the line.
In 1864 he went to Kamas to live. Here he met Miss Mary A. Lambert and they were married in the endowment house 60 years ago last April. The three children born to them survive: James L., Dean of the University of Utah, Mrs. N.G. Soward whose home immediately joins that of the Gibson homestead, and Mrs. Sarah Eccles of New York City. Also 14 grandchildren survive. All the children were here when death came to help sustain their mother in the trying hour.
Three years after going to Kamas, the Black Hawk Indian War started. Mr. Gibson enlisted in the Utah militia and served under Captain James McCormick and Lieut. Levi Pangburn. They kept guard night and day but soon abandoned Kamas and built a fort at Peoa.
Mr. Gibson said he spent the best part of his life from 31 years of age to 36 between the years 1865 and 1871 in building forts, standing guard, and traveling between one and two thousand miles following horses tracks as the only guide into an unknown country on the Book Cliff mountains, and on other Indian trails where he believed that White man's foot had never before trod.
Because Kamas was too cold, they decided to come to the Ashley valley, a place he had not seen in his dealings with the Indians. With 35 head of cattle and enough provisions to do one year, they landed in Ashley Valley on November 1, 1877 just as the sun was going down. The first winter was very mild and in a cabin withough doors or windows they were comfortable by hanging homemade carpets in the openings and placing straw under the carpets spread over the dirt floor and tacked down with wooden pegs. This was on the same land they now occupy with one of the most pretentious dwellings in Ashley Valley.
While on a trip to Salt Lake for provisions, the Meeker Indian Massacre started and when he returned all settlers were quartered in a fort in Old Ashley town. Mr. Gibson then moved his house of whip sawed logs to Ashley where they lived comfortably for a year. He sold this house for a county court house and it was later moved to Vernal still used for a court house. Later the building was remodeled and used as a dwelling on the lot just across from the Sterling Transportation office the old Uintah State Station.
Mr. Gibson was the first constable in the valley. He served 2 terms as state representative. The following incident enlivening his sojourn there, depicting the determined will of Mr. Gibson and to which he sometime jokingly referred happened on his return from his first session of the state legislature.
On his way home, after the close of the legislature he arrived in Price on a Saturday afternoon and as no stages ran on Sunday, it would necessitate a stay until Monday with added expense. Securing a lunch of crackers and cheese and placing his belonging in a red bandana handkerchief he started out on foot thinking that perhaps he would be overtaken by some one coming thru.
At any rate he traveled continuously except for short intervals of rest and was not overtaken by anyone until his arrival at the hill top overlooking Ashley Valley, just as the stage arrived. He was invited by the driver to a seat in the stage for the remainder of the journey. Weary and footsore as was this pioneer legislator he refused the offer and trugged his weary way across the flats to his home. The stage fare was $17.50 which he always maintaned was a hold-up fare as he had demontrated one could make big wages by walking the entire distance.
While acting as state representtive Mr. Gibson conceived the idea to paint the Remember the Main on the face of a very high cliff in Ashley canyon, which would be a lasting reminder of patriotism to the citizens of this section. Leo A. Voight painted the phrase which is still visible on the face of the 500 foot cliff.
The stirring incidents in the life of Mr. Gibson would make a large book if published. He was a lover of nature and all things beautiful giving liberally of his time and means to all worthy causes.
A large crown gathered on one of the coldest days ever recorded since the earliest pioneering days in Ashley Valley, to pay to this honored man their last respects in the Vernal First ward chapel at noon Wednesday. The bishopric of the Ashley ward was in charge, Counselor Edward Kidd conducting. A double mixed quartet sang "Lead Kindly Light," "My Beautiful Home," and "I Know That My Redeemer Lives." Mrs. Mae Jorgensen, accompanied by Mrs. Glen Lambert, sang "One Fleeting Hour," as a soprano solo.
Carl Preece of the High Council was first speaker. In a tribute told of his acquaintance with the departed and showed that his desire for truthfulness in all things his hatred for sham, determined his success in life. Sixteen years ago Mr. Gibson made a request that Mr. Preece speak at his funeral.
President K. B. Calder told of how Mr. Gibson, through his determined will power, had solved the problems of the pioneer and how his efforts had been crowned with success. From the very start his home had been one of refinement and culture. Mr. Calder also told of how all his succeses and failures had been equally shared by his faithful wife in the rearing of their family. He spoke of Mr. Gibson's efforts with the Indians and how he had risked his life to save that of William Anderson. He also mentioned his sentiment in patriotism.
Joseph Lambert of Roosevelt, half brother of Mrs. Gibson, was the last speaker who told of Mr. Gibson's trips across the plains to help the immigrants in their difficulties in settling the West.
The floral offerings were profuse come from all sections.
Charles B. Carter offered the opening prayer and Hugh W. Colton the benediction.
Interment was made in the private burial plot north of the homestead.* Here fours years ago Mr. Gibson had constructed cement vaults for himself and wife. Every detail for the burial preparation had he worked out in advance. He stated last fall that if he had the strength and knew ahead when the end would be he would go to the vault and lay down for the final sleep. Mr. Colton also dedicated the grave.
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*Those buried in the Gibson family cemetery were later moved to the Vernal city cemetery.
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