Thomas Levi Whittle
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Thomas Levi Whittle (May 21, 1812 – July 3, 1868) was an early Mormon pioneer who crossed the American Great Plains in the mid 1800s among the first company of pioneers to enter and settle near Salt Lake City, Utah Territory.
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[edit] Early life and conversion
Whittle was born to Thomas Whittle and Elizabeth Levi in Mersea Township, Essex County, Upper Canada. Whittle married Mary Amelia Fullmer in 1833, and after a few years, moved to Detroit, Michigan.
Whittle and his family heard the Mormonism preached by early LDS missionaries, and on November 22, 1837, Whittle and his wife were baptized members of the Church of the Latter Day Saints by Zera Pulsipher. As was common in the early days of the Latter Day Saint movement, Whittle was re-baptized by William Clayton on June 3, 1849 after Whittle and his family had reached the Salt Lake Valley.
Whittle's wife witnessed the important event in LDS Church history when Brigham Young spoke to a large group of Latter Day Saints and took on the appearance and speech of the recently martyred Joseph Smith, Jr. This event signified to many that Brigham Young should be the next leader of the church.[1]
Shortly before making the trek west, Whittle and his wife Mary received temple ordinances in The Nauvoo Temple on January 1, 1846.[2]
[edit] Journey West
Whittle and his family made the journey to Winter Quarters in Nebraska to what is now the state of Utah among the very first pioneers to enter the Salt Lake Valley. The family traveled with the 2nd Company, 2nd Division under the leadership of Heber C. Kimball. They arrived September 20, 1848.[3]
[edit] Mission
Whittle was called on a mission in 1849 and headed to California. The following year, Whittle was assigned to the Sandwich Islands, now called the Hawaiian Islands. Whittle arrived in Honolulu on December 12, 1850 with nine other LDS missionaries: Henry W. Bigler, Hiram Blackwell, George Q. Cannon, Hiram Clark, John Dixon, Wm. Farrer, James Hawkins, James Keeler, and Thomas Morris. The small group of missionaries arrived aboard a small whaling vessel called the Imaum of Muscat. The mission to the Sandwich Islands did not last long for Whittle and some of his companions as the Hawaiian language and reception proved very difficult.[4] Whittle returned home and the Whittle family moved to Herriman, Utah. Later, the Whittle family helped settle Richmond, Utah.
Whittle died July 3, 1868. To pay tribute to Whittle, the Utah Territorial flag was flown at half-staff on July 4, 1868.[5]
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- Thomas Levi Whittle; ancestral file number 1BJX-FG, Ancestral File, Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah.
- Thomas Levi Whittle. (1997, July). Retrieved July 1, 2007, from http://www.jnjtreeclimbers.com/index.cgi?ThomasLeviWhittle
- The Polynesian Mission. (1898 July 30). Deseret News. Retrieved December 8, 2007, from http://udn.lib.utah.edu/u?/deseretnews5,25888
- Published Letter to George Q. Cannon by Henry Standage. (1868 July 22). Deseret News. Retrieved December 8, 2007, from http://udn.lib.utah.edu/u?/deseretnews2,38445
[edit] External links
- Trail Excerpt: Hale, Aroet Lucious, Diary of Aroet Lucious Hale, 1828-1849, 194-?, 12, 16-17
- Trail Excerpt: Conover, Peter Wilson, Reminiscences ca. 1880, 6-7.
- Trail Excerpt: Jacob, Norton, Reminiscence and journal 1844 May-1852 Jan., 110-15.
- Trail Excerpt: Kimball, Heber C., Journal, in Autobiography ca. 1842-1858, in Heber C. Kimball, Papers, 1837-1866, reel 1, box 1. written by William Clayton
- Farrer, William vol. 1, 1850-1851 in special collections Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University (Whittle mentioned in missionary companion Farrer's journal)
- Farrer, William vol. 2, 1851 in special collections Harold B. Lee Library, BYU (Whittle mentioned in missionary companion Farrer's journal)
- Farrer, William vol. 4, 1851-1852 in special collections Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University (Whittle mentioned in missionary companion Farrer's journal)
- Farrer, William vol. 5, 1852-1853 in special collections Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University (Whittle mentioned in missionary companion Farrer's journal)