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Adrienne Woolley

Adrienne Woolley

Female 1897 - 1982  (85 years)  Submit Photo / DocumentSubmit Photo / Document    Has 2 ancestors and 10 descendants in this family tree.

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  • Name Adrienne Woolley 
    Birth 6 Feb 1897  Preston, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Female 
    Initiatory (LDS) 25 Sep 1918  SLAKE Find all individuals with events at this location 
    FamilySearch ID KWCP-TYQ 
    Death 18 Mar 1982  Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Burial 20 Mar 1982  Whitney Cemetery, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Headstones Submit Headstone Photo Submit Headstone Photo 
    Person ID I50512  mytree
    Last Modified 25 Feb 2024 

    Father Ezra Foss Woolley,   b. 16 Feb 1865, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 20 Dec 1933, Dayton, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 68 years) 
    Mother Grace Ann Hemenway,   b. 10 May 1866, St. George, Washington, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 13 May 1939, Preston, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 73 years) 
    Marriage 13 Apr 1887  St. George, Washington, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F9729  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Lloyd Neeley Beckstead,   b. 16 Sep 1897, Whitney, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 2 Aug 1974, Preston, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 76 years) 
    Marriage 25 Sep 1918  Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
     1. Shirley Beckstead,   b. 28 Jan 1920, Preston, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 9 Dec 1982 (Age 62 years)
     2. Lloyd Neeley Beckstead, Jr,   b. 16 May 1923, Preston, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 18 Nov 1979, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 56 years)
    +3. Spencer Woolley Beckstead,   b. 4 Oct 1927, Preston, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 23 Aug 1997, Bethany, Oklahoma, Oklahoma, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 69 years)
    +4. David Woolley Beckstead,   b. 6 May 1932, Whitney, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 10 Jun 2018, Whitney, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 86 years)
     5. Anthony Woolley Beckstead,   b. 24 Dec 1937, Preston, Franklin, Idaho, United States Find all individuals with events at this locationd. 30 Jul 2001, Bountiful, Davis, Utah, United States Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 63 years)
    Family ID F18796  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 21 Apr 2024 

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - 6 Feb 1897 - Preston, Franklin, Idaho, United States Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsInitiatory (LDS) - 25 Sep 1918 - SLAKE Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarriage - 25 Sep 1918 - Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, United States Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 18 Mar 1982 - Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsBurial - 20 Mar 1982 - Whitney Cemetery, Franklin, Idaho, United States Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Headstones
    Beckstead, Lloyd N b1897 - Woolley, Adrienne b1897
    Beckstead, Lloyd N b1897 - Woolley, Adrienne b1897

  • Notes 
    • ADRIENNE WOOLLEY BECKSTEAD
      I was born at Preston, Franklin County, Idaho, on February 6, 1897. My p a rents, Ezra Foss Woolley and Grace Hemenway were very good people. The y w ere truthful, kind, and religious. My mother was very modest and chas te . We never heard a vulgar story in our home. My parents had just move d fr om Kanab, Utah, when I was born. My father had been called to Presto n t o teach school in the old Oneida Stake Academy. He was glad for thi s cal l because he had just gone through three years of drought in the Ka nab Co unty and had to sell out his brand for a very small amount.
      At the time of my birth, Preston was a very small village. A square, a b l ock each way contained the old Oneida Academy. The high school and Jeff er son school (Jr. high) have been added. We lived kitty corner (the corn e r of 2nd East) from the swamp, which was north of the Academy. The swa m p was later filled in to become the football stadium. At that early ti m e the Academy square was a child’s paradise. A high fence surrounded i t ; a flat board along the top made it possible to walk along the fence w a y up in the air. We felt very adventurous. Within the square ran a litt l e stream. Wild flowers, Sweet Williams, Buttercups, Sego Lilies, and Bl u e Bells grew there. We would gather our treasures and take them home t o f ill our mother’s cups and glasses. The scent of flowers still bring s bac k many a happy thought.
      My family consisted of my parents, four sisters, and one brother. My fat h er was a bright, studious man with a strong sense of honor and a good s en se of humor. He never ceased to study, and was interested in neighbors , f riends, relatives, religion, and politics. His word was his bond. I f I co uld ever get him to promise me something, I knew it was mine. He n ever br oke his promise to me in his life. He read for information and pl easure . I have seen him laugh and chuckle aloud while reading Alice in W onderla nd. I have also seen him cry until the tears ran down his cheek s at somet hing sad in his story. He died strong in the faith of the gosp el.
      We lived next door to the Joseph S. Geddes family. There was just a f e nce separating our homes and all Vera Geddes and I had to do was clim b th rough a fence to get together. Our pasture was a block north (kitty- corne red) from where the Geddes family later built their brick home. We' d tak e our cows from the Matthias Cowley barn over there to pasture. Tha t's th e corner on Second East and Oneida, where Dr. M. O. Merrill lived . At th e turn of the century there was a big open field on that corner , and that 's where father pastured our cows."
      My mother came from a very cultured family. Her father was Luther Single t on Hemenway, and her mother was a very strict Englishwoman, Harriet Hod gs on.
      My sister Grace was a very beautiful girl, a schoolteacher, and a regist e red nurse. She taught me many things about keeping my children health y an d caring for them when they were ill. She assisted at the birth of m y son , Lloyd. She married the son of our neighbor--Joseph A. Geddes. H e becam e the principal of the Oneida Stake Academy where I went to schoo l.
      My second sister, Leah, was always full of love for children and charita b le deeds for everyone who needed her. She was a wonderful seamstress. S h e went blind at about the age of 65 and was blind for the last ten yea r s of her life. (Unfortunately, she married a polygamist apostate whic h sa ddened the family.)
      My sister, Effie, was an ardent Democrat and couldn’t see much good in a n y Republican except me. She was very orderly, neat, and clean to a faul t , almost. She was a great reader and read all the seven volumes of th e hi story of the church. She has read all the Standard Works of the chur ch ma ny times; she also has ready many histories of nations, books on ps ycholo gy, sociology, novels, etc.
      My sister, Thelma, was very idealistic, very honest, clean, and uprigh t . She was very valiant in her testimony of the gospel. She died at th e ag e of 45, leaving three motherless, and to all intents, fatherless ch ildre n.
      My brother, Ezra, who it took many years to grow out of the spoiling giv e n him by a worshipping mother and father and five sisters who thought t h e Lord had really done something when He sent them a boy, did very wel l o n a farm in Boise Valley. He was very happy in the latter part of hi s lif e.
      It seems to me that I must have spent a lot of my very young life unde r t he table. I have been told many times by my mother that the minute co mpan y came I would run and crawl under the table to hide. As Father wa s a sch oolteacher, and I had three very popular older sisters, we natura lly ha d a lot of company; so hence, I spent a lot of time under the tabl e.
      I remember having wonderful playmates as I grew up—very nice, clean gir l s who turned out to be good, clean women—Jennie and Marta Nelson, Edn a Pa cker Stokes, Ann Thomas, Vera Geddes Merrill, Lucia Thomander Nelson , Vur vian Daines Daniels. They all had a hand in my growing up. They al l had h igh standards and I tried to live up to them.
      I remember a summer day spent with the Primary officers of the 1st war d . I was about nine years old. Sister Agnes Thomas and her officers plan ne d a day in the canyon. She invited her daughter Gwen and me to go. W e dro ve to Cub River in a white top buggy. It was a big adventure. The w omen c ared for the horses and the lunch. We started early in the mornin g so w e could have lots of time to wade in the river and listen to its s ound . I can remember the lovely canyon smell that began just after we pa sse d the old power house.
      Cub River was not so lived in then as it is now. Just a few small hous e s were found along the valley. The road was narrow and rutted. We coul d s mell good black dirt when we came to a mud puddle. Everyone must “pil e ou t” to see how deep the mud was. We couldn’t get the horses stuck!
      When we returned from this happy day, we were greeted with the news th a t our neighbor boy, Rudolph Petersen, had been struck by lightening an d k illed. Everyone said that he had been called to go prepare a home fo r hi s mother to come to in heaven. This thought comforted me a lot.
      I remember a little about polygamy at our house. The church was teachi n g against the practice of polygamy because it was after the manifesto . Ho wever, Father’s cousin, Brother Matthias Cowley, would not fall in l ine . Father had always loved this older cousin, and our families had bee n ve ry close. Therefore, Father had it in his mind to join the polygamis ts. O ne day, when he was postmaster, he put an apple in Miss Annie Frost ’s mai lbox. She was teaching at the academy. Mother removed the apple fr om th e box, and Miss Frost married the music teacher, Brother Ottie.
      I remember Brother Cowley coming to our place to visit. When it was ti m e for him to go, Mother went outside to check to see if it was safe fo r h im to go over to his 2nd wife’s place. The next day Father drove hi m ove r to Cache Junction to board the train so he wouldn’t have to be se en i n Preston. His daughter Laura Cowley Brossard and I went along in th e whi te top for the ride.
      I remember being out on a hay farm with my father helping load hay. Th e s un beat down and I longed for a cold drink. After the hay was loaded , I w ent across the street to a small log cabin with yellow roses growin g to g et a drink. A fine old music teacher and his family lived there. H e had s uch a kind face; maybe that is why I have had such a tender spo t in my he art for school teachers—that and the fact that my father was o ne. My olde st son, Lloyd Jr. is a fine music teacher, and I love him fo r it .
      My father was postmaster when I was about six. When he was called on a m i ssion to the New England States, my mother was given the postmaster jo b . He had the habit of gathering all the children in the neighborhood ab ou t him in the evening and telling us stories. I remember so much for be in g only six! Father told me all the Bible stories from Adam through th e Ol d Testament in order. I never forgot the order those stories were in .
      When I was about thirteen, we moved to a ranch in Cub River. We move d i n the spring. I can still hear the rushing of the river, swollen wit h th e fast melting snow. Old Plum was what we called the ranch because o f th e many plum trees growing there and also because we thought the ranc h wa s going to be a “plum” in our lap. For about three years we rode hor ses , walked about the hills, fished, hunted wild chickens, and milked co ws . We attended church a lot. There was no other recreation except an oc cas ional dance. The things I remember with tenderest feelings of the ran ch a re the heavily scented wild roses. They grew along the streams and p aths— large, deep pink ones. We learned they didn’t last long in the hous e; the y were nicest out where they grew. We had company all the summer s through . I wonder now what Mother thought about it .
      While at Cub River I acted as secretary to the Sunday School and prima r y teacher with Annie Neff Merrill as president. I was a counselor in t h e Mutual with Vurvian Daniels as president. I attended high school at t h e old Oneida Academy from 1915 to 1917. The next year I attended the Un iv ersity of Utah. I lived with my sister Leah and her husband, Laurenc e Sim mons. They were very good to me. I can remember walking down from t he Uni versity to 1st avenue along D street when the lilacs were in bloom . Sal t Lake had many beautiful lilacs at that time. My sister Grace ha d lovel y lilacs at her home, and she gave me starts to plant on my thre e homes . They are still blooming every year.
      In the fall of 1918, September 26th, I married Lloyd Neeley Beckstea d i n the Salt Lake Temple. We built a home on a forty acre piece of grou nd h is father Amasa sold us. Later we bought the old homestead from hi s fathe r. We have built two nice brick homes on it. We have five, everyo ne alway s says, wonderful children—Shirley, Lloyd Jr., Spencer W., Davi d W., an d Anthony W.
      I have always been active in church work. It has sustained me, educate d m e, helped me raise the children, and been the guiding light of my lif e . I have taught in Primary, Sunday School, Genealogical Organization, s er ved on the Relief Society and Primary Stake Boards. I have taught in a l l of the departments of the Relief Society, worked in the presidency o f t he Mutual and twice in the Relief Society presidency. I have worked i n th e Farm Bureau and enjoyed it very much. I learned a lot when I was p resid ent of the high school PTA. I taught the lessons in Daughters of th e Uta h Pioneers in the Syringa Camp for a long time. I served in other p ositio ns there—Vice Captain, Captain, etc. Now I belong to Willow Cree k Camp ; I have been the Vice Captain and Captain and other positions i n this ca mp also. I belong to a fine study group—the Preston Study Group .
      At present, age 65, I am taking a class in how to make a Family Group Sh e et and allied subjects. Our teachers are two ladies so very beautiful t ha t the sight of them helps keep me revived the last half hour of this t hre e-hour class. I have enjoyed this peek into research for our dead an d hop e to keep up my interest in it. I am grateful to the Bishop for ask ing m e to take this class.
      In 1962, when we were 65, Lloyd and I were called on a six-month missi o n to the Central States Mission. We were sent to Emporia, Kansas. We st ud ied hard to learn the discussions. Lloyd would wake up really early an d b e reciting them to himself when I would wake up. We tried to be goo d peop le and set a good example in the Emporia Branch. We made lasting f riends . It enriched our lives. My patriarchal blessing says that I woul d go o n a mission and there would be those who would believe my testimon y. Thi s was fulfilled at this time. David and Pauline looked after the f arm whi le we were gone.
      In 1968, on our 50th wedding anniversary, David and Pauline held an op e n house for us. It was really nice. Pauline’s mother and her sister Bet t y helped a lot to put it over. Many old and dear friends and new ones c am e. Tony flew in from California. I was very happy when he came in th e doo r. The other children and their families were here.
      In November of 1968, I had my hip operated on. It was a very serious ope r ation. Again, in 1973, I had the same operation. Lloyd took care of m e wi th love and patience during each sickness. He visited every day wit h me a t the hospital and took good care of me after I got home. He showe d tha t he really loved me.
      Lloyd loved his land and cattle and loved to raise a good crop. When h e w as about 73, he developed heart trouble. It was hard for him to slo w down ; in fact, he never did. He died at home in August of 1974 fro m a heart a ttack.
      I still live on the farm near David and Pauline. All my children are tho u ghtful of me; I have spent a lot of time with Spencer and Ann and fami l y and Tony and DeAnn and family. Adrienne and Russell invite me to liv e w ith them every now and then.
      I am still the Spiritual Living teacher in Relief Society.
      Comments - Adrienne passed away in the Ogden Hospital after another hi p o peration on March 18, 1982. She had been living with Tony and DeAnn a t th e time. She was 85 years old. Her great grandson, David Justin Becks tead , was born on her birthday a month before she died. She was very ple ase d about it. Adrienne was very staunch in her testimony of the gospel . Sh e began to lose her eyesight in her later years, but she listened t o chur ch tapes and tied baby quilts by feeling with a little cardboard s quare . She gave many of these quilts to her grandkids who greatly apprec iate d them. She was a valiant, sweet woman whom her family loved.