Joseph Ellis Johnson

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J. E. Johnson was born at Pomfret, Chautauqua County, New York, on the 28th of April 1817. He moved to Kirtland, Ohio, in 1832 and was baptized as a Latter-Day Saint in 1833. He accompanied the Kirtland Camp in 1838. He taught school in Springfield, Illinois in 1840. He went to Nauvoo, Illinois, 1840. He married Harriet Snider on October 6th, 1840. The marriage was performed by Joseph Smith.

Johnson accompanied Joseph and Hyrum Smith on their way to Carthage jail and was taken prisoner when the mob entered Nauvoo. He went to Miller's Hollow, now Council Bluffs, in 1848. He built the first house in Pottawattamie County (other than log cabin). He was postmaster at Council Bluffs for five years and obtained a change of name from "Kanesville" to Council Bluffs. He was a member of the first city council for several years. He established the Council Bluffs Bugle in 1852. The office and store were destroyed by fire in 1853. It was restored and published until 1856. The Bugle had much to do in getting the capitol of Nebraska located at Omaha.

Johnson opened the first store in the city of Omaha and sent the first train of goods to the Denver, Colorado (Cherry Creek) mines. In 1854 he published the Omaha Arrow, the first paper published on Nebraska soil, and the same year accompanied the first party of explorers for a railroad crossing on the Missouri River and Loupe Fork of the Platte River. He wrote the first article published favoring the North Platte route for the Pacific Railroad and contended for same until so located.

Johnson crossed the plains to Utah and back in 1850. In 1857 he started the Crescent City Oracle and laid out Crescent, Iowa. In 1858 he published the Council Bluffs Press. In 1858-1860-1861 he published The Huntsman's Echo at Wood River, Nebraska.

In 1861 Johnson moved to Utah. He traveled in the company of Sixtus E. Johnson which had about 200 people total.[1][2] In 1863 he established the Farmer's Oracle at Spring Lake Villa, Utah County. In 1864/5, he removed to St. George and began a supply garden and nursery. In 1868-1869 he published Our Dixie Times, afterward the Rio Virgen [sic] Times. In 1870 he published the Utah Pomologist and Gardener, monthly for several years. In 1876 he went to Silver Reef and put up a store and printing office but sold part of office before the paper was fairly started. In 1879 it was burned out, with others. He restored the store immediately, but on a larger scale."

In 1882, Johnson once again moved at his church's call, this time to settle what would become Tempe, Arizona. However, his strenuous efforts all his life finally caught up with him, and he passed away on December 17, 1882.

[edit] Sources

  1. ^ Pioneer Company Search Results
  2. ^ Pioneer Company Search Results

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