- PROVO CITY CEMETERY
- Black Family Plot
- Coral Jakeman Black (1879-1936)
- Percy Allen Black (1874-1950)
- Glen Stanley Black (1909-1973)
- Grace Dixon Black (1914-2011) buried in Boise, ID
- Norma Kay Black (1939-1939)
- Paul Black (1918-1918)
- Bob Black (1921-1979)
- Jacqueline Morrison Black (1925-1993)
- Lee/Jakeman/Sims Plot
- Ellen L Jakeman Sanders (1869-1937)
- Ivy Sims Snow (1877-1922)
- Gladys J Sanders Roberts (1887-1929)
- Separate Section/no headstone
- Delores Jakeman (1893-1893) no headstone
- SALT LAKE CITY CEMETERY
- Black Family Plot
- Martin Lewis Black (1869-1891)
- Mary Leigh Black (1934-1935)
- Clifton Lee Black (1899-1951)
- Nellie Leetham Black (1903-1992)
- Bagshaw Family Plot
- James Thomas Jakeman (1853-1921) no headstone
- Ellen Jakeman Pitts Bagshaw (1830-1914)
- HUNTINGTON, UTAH CITY CEMETERY
- Martin Luther Black (1848-1918)
- Amy Jane Washburn Black (1832-1888)
- Miller Snow Black (1869-1953)
- ELMWOOD CEMETERY, FRUITA, COLORADO
- Mary Caroline Lee Black (1850-1935)
- Hazel Winona Black (1908-1909)
- Virgil Lee Black (1916-1916)
- Victor Lee Black (1872-1936)
- Anna Margaret Uhrin Black (1877-1953)
- BLANDING CITY CEMETERY
- William Morley Black (1826-1915)
- Maria Hansen Black (1840-1920)
- Martha Jane Black Gale (1849-1921)
- The Utah State History/Cemetery site lists 103 “Blacks” buried in the Blanding Cemetery.William Morley Black and his wives,
Annie and Marinda are buried here,
Margaret is in Salina, UT
Amy is buried in Huntington, UT.
Louisa is buried in Safford, Arizona.
Emma Lanette divorced and remarried to John Conover and is buried in Springville, Ut. - EASTSIDE CEMETERY, SALINA, UTAH
- Margaret Ruth Banks Black (1829-1884)
- THATCHER, ARIZONA CITY CEMETERY
- John Percival Lee (1824-1907)
- Azile Wixom (1914-1914) ggranddaughter of John P. Lee
- MANTI CITY CEMETERY
- Eliza'a Family Plot
- Eliza Foscue Lee (1829-1920)
- Walton Scurlock Lee (1863-1864) reintered ?
- Frederick Montgomery Lee (1867-1869) reinterred?
- Walton & Frederick both died under 2 years of age in Beaver. Eliza possibly had them moved from Beaver to Manti when she moved there.
- Ann Eliza Lee Wixom (1849-1908)
- Lucinda Lee Dalton (1847-1925)
- Guy A Dalton (1876-1912)
- Ernest Raymond Scurlock Dalton (1879-1891)
- Monument to 5 children who died before age 2
- MOUNTAINVIEW CEMETERY, BEAVER, UT
- Ann Field Jakeman (1810-1882) no headstone
- Sarah Jakeman Stoney (1836-1907)
- Susan Jakeman Bagshaw (1842-1890)
- Joseph Field (1831-1911) son of Ann Field
- Sarah Benson Field (1850-1891) niece of John P. Lee
- WASATCH LAWN MEMORIAL CEMETERY, Salt Lake City
- Francis Walton Black (1915--1969)
- HOLLADAY MEMORIAL PARK, Holladay, UT
- Virginia Black Godfrey (1925-2011)
- LeGrande OREGON
- Percy Raymond Black (1904-1905) 20 days old
WELCOME
Every journey begins with a single step. When I took the first step of filling out a simple pedigree chart I had no idea that I had just begun a marvelous journey. As I gathered together names, dates and places from my box of scraps and copies of old, musty family group sheets, I turned to my computer to aid me in the search. Computers and their search engines are amazing! Stories about our ancestors began popping up all over. Growing up with a storytelling father, I always knew we had an interesting family. In fact, the art of storytelling seems to run in the family. The stories I found about these ancestors brought them to life for me. Finding stories on the internet was like putting together a very large and complicated jigsaw puzzle. My quest took me to many small communities and their museums and cemeteries. As I searched for missing pieces, the picture became clearer. I began to know and love these people. I am inspired by their faith, amazed by their endurance and humbled by their sacrifices. They were also not perfect. I extend to them the gift of compassion and understanding that they did the best they could with what they had and what they knew and believed. It is my hope that you will enjoy learning about our family and find inspiration in knowing who they were and understanding who you are.
All of the documents that have come from my files have been published through Google Docs and it is necessary for you to subscribe to Google Docs in order to read them. It will require you to have a gmail address. You don't have to change your e-mail address--just use the gmail account to use Google's services. I apologize for the need for this extra step, but this is the best way I could find to make the documents accessible. It is relatively easy to sign up on Google Docs.
Reading documents in this Blog.
All of the documents that have come from my files have been published through Google Docs and it is necessary for you to subscribe to Google Docs in order to read them. It will require you to have a gmail address. You don't have to change your e-mail address--just use the gmail account to use Google's services. I apologize for the need for this extra step, but this is the best way I could find to make the documents accessible. It is relatively easy to sign up on Google Docs.
Documentation
The information presented here is well-documented for at least 3 generations beyond Coral & Percy and most often more. Some of the further generations reflect work done by others and were acquired through Ancestry.com & One World Tree. They should be viewed as a "guide" and not specifically as factual. I have tried to remove anything that seemed in error.
Black Family Pedigree Chart
Cemeteries
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)