Mary Elizabeth Chugg, born Cardiff, Glamorgan, South Wales 4 May 1853. Died 31 January 1894 at Franklin, Franklin, Idaho after or while giving birth to her 9th child, who also died. She married in Salt Lake City 27 March 1874 to Moroni Walker Pratt. Survived by her husband and seven children, one daughter Cora Agatha having died about 2 years prior. The others were Ellis, Mary Louie, Francis Moroni, Evelyn Vilate, Mabel Elizabeth, Hazel, Florence and the child born at the time of Mary's death.
Jane Chugg born Cardiff on 9 May 1856. She would die in Ogden, Weber County, Utah at age 68, on January 15, 1925. She was the mother of four daughters with her husband Israel Plummer Frodsham,a businessman, whom she married 23 Jan 1881 in Ogden, Weber County, Utah. These daughters were Pearl Amelia, Ruby Vernell, Florence Arnetta, and Grace Myrtle.
Joseph Chugg, 24 March 1861 to 9 September 1919. A farmer in Weber County, my grandmother remembered going to stay with his family in the summer time, watermelon pulled from the well, cold and wonderful to eat outside. This was one of the early dairy farms in Chugg stewardship. His son Nathan continued the farming until he passed it on to nephew Dale Chugg, who has continued that work. Joseph married Zenia May Rawson (27 Feb 1866 - 4 Apr 1961) on December 23, 1885 in Logan. They were parents to four sons and five daughters: Orley Joseph, Zennia Myrtle, Ray Royal, Gerald Rawson, Nathan George, Mabel Eliza, Maude Vilate, Vera Elizabeth, and Iva Geneva.
Sarah Chugg, born Cardiff, Wales 1st of January 1863 passed away in Ogden on 20th September 1932, the widow of Thomas Culley, a pharmacist in Ogden. Sarah had no children. Mr Culley (1850-1924) was born in England and died in Ogden. They both lie at rest in the Ogden City Cemetery.
David Chugg also rests in Ogden, in the same lot as his father and stepmother Hannah Lee. Also born in Cardiff, he died from a tragic railroading accident on December 11, 1887 while working in Nevada. He was 22 years old. A popular young man, he never married. An article ran in the Ogden Standard-Examiner.
No comments:
Post a Comment