Samuel Claridge (1828-1919) was a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints who was a prominent early settler of the Muddy River Valley in Nevada and also Thatcher, Arizona.
Samuel Claridge was at Leighton-Buzzard, Bedfordshire, England. In 1849 he married Charlotte Joy. In 1851 they joined The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. In 1853 they emigrated to Utah, settling in Nephi. In 1868 Wilford Woodruff appointed Claridge to preside over the Latter-day Saints living along the Muddy River in what is now Nevada but was then in Utah Territory. The eastern border of Nevada was later shifted east, and with the attempt to charge back taxes to those living there the Latter-day Saints moved away. Claridge moved to Kane County, Utah.
In 1875, Claridge was one of the founders of Orderville, Utah. He left his wife and children there in 1877 to serve a mission in Britain. After his mission, Claridge lived in Orderville until he moved to Thatcher, Arizona, in 1883. He served as the bishop of the Thatcher Ward and later as the first patriarch of the St. Joseph Stake, which was headquartered at Thatcher. Among those who received patriarchal blessings from him was Spencer W. Kimball.
Claridge's daughter, Elizabeth (1852-1924), was the wife of Alfred William McCune, Sr. (1849-1927)and a prominent benefactor of the operations of the LDS Church in the 1920s.
S. George Ellsworth, a grandson of Claridge, wrote a biography of Claridge titled Samuel Claridge: Pioneering the Outposts of Zion. Claridge's daughter, Lottie, married Brigham Spencer Young, a son of Brigham Young, Jr. and his wife Catherine Curtis Spencer. One of Claridge's sons, David Claridge, was a member of the Arizona State House of Representatives.