Jefferson Hunt
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Jefferson Hunt | |
California State Assembly Utah Territorial Legislature |
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Born | January 22, 1804 Bracken County, Kentucky |
Died | May 11, 1879 Oxford, Idaho |
Political party | Whig, Democratic |
Spouse | Celia Mounts Matilda Kease |
Jefferson Hunt (January 22, 1804 – May 11, 1879) was a U.S. western pioneer, soldier, and politician. He was a captain in the Mormon Battalion, brigadier general in the California State Militia, a California State Assemblyman, and a representative to the Utah Territorial Legislature.
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[edit] Early years
Hunt was born in Bracken County, Kentucky in 1804. Some sources believe that his full name was Charles Jefferson Hunt.
He married Celia Mounts in 1823. In 1834 they both converted to Mormonism.
[edit] Mormon migration
He later migrated with the Mormons to Far West, Missouri
He served as a Major in the Volunteers (which later became the Nauvoo Legion), and participated in the Battle of Crooked River.
Later, in Nauvoo, he was an early participant in Mormon polygamy when he married Matilda Nease.
[edit] Mormon Battalion
In 1846, while encamped at Council Bluffs, Iowa, he joined the Mormon Battalion, which was formed at the request of the U.S. government for participation in the Mexican-American War.
He was commissioned as a Captain, and was placed in command of Company A. Two of his sons also enlisted, and served under his command.
He temporarily commanded the entire battalion when its commander died, until a replacement arrived.
His entire family journeyed with the battalion as they completed what is to this day the longest march in U.S. Military history, ending in San Diego, California.
[edit] California expeditions
After being discharged from the Mormon Battalion, Hunt and his family settled in Salt Lake City, Utah in 1847.
Soon thereafter, Hunt proposed traveling back to California to bring food and supplies for other recent Utah arrivals. Mormon authorities approved this proposal, and Hunt undertook this journey with Porter Rockwell, several former Mormon Battalion members, and two of his own sons.
Later he guided several parties of gold prospectors from Utah to California.
One of the groups he led to California became impatient at his slow progress, and many of the party members elected to abandon Hunt's group, and follow their own route to California. They became the infamous Death Valley '49ers. Those staying with Hunt made the journey without serious incident.
He briefly represented Iron County in the Utah Territorial Legislature in 1851. He was not a resident of Iron County, but he happened to pass through the county as elections were held, and he was chosen by the locals.
[edit] California years
In 1851 he was called by his church to help create a Mormon settlement in San Bernardino, California.
From 1853-1857 he served as a member of the California State Assembly. Elected to represent Los Angeles County, he introduced legislation in his first year in office to create San Bernardino County, which passed, and he became San Bernardino County's Assemblyman.
In 1856 he was appointed as a Brigadier General in the California State Militia.
[edit] Later years
In 1860 he founded the town of Huntsville, Utah.
He served as a representative to the Utah Territorial Legislature in 1863, representing Weber County.
He died in 1879 in Oxford, Idaho.
[edit] Legacy
Hunt has a number of noteworthy descendants:
- John Hunt Udall, great-grandson, Mayor of Phoenix, Arizona
- Jesse Addison Udall, great-grandson, Chief Justice of the Arizona Supreme Court
- Don Taylor Udall, great-grandson, Arizona State Legislature
- Nick Udall, 2nd great-grandson, Mayor of Phoenix, Arizona
- Gordon Harold Smith, 3rd great-grandson, U.S. Senator from Oregon
[edit] See also
[edit] External links/sources
- Text of speech about Jefferson Hunt's Life
- Assorted info about Jefferson Hunt's Life
- "Parowan Settled By Mormons 150 Years Ago" Will Bagley, Salt Lake Tribune, 13 January 2001. Story of Hunt's selection to Utah Legislature
Categories: Historic California people | History of the American West | History of Utah | Latter Day Saint leaders | Latter Day Saint politicians | Members of the California State Assembly | Members of the Utah Territorial Legislature | Mormon pioneers | People from Kentucky | People from Utah | Polygamists | California politician stubs | Utah politician stubs