Family Heritage Series - http://www.familyheritageseries.org/site
John William Heder (1856-1940)
http://www.familyheritageseries.org/site/articles/55/1/John-William-Heder-1856-1940/Page1.html
Author: FHS Editor
Published on 11/29/2002
 
Source: Adapted from the autobiography of John William Heder, with a final paragraph by his daughter, Rhoda Heder MacDonald – found in the "George F. Sevey Family Book of Remembrance," compiled by Eileen S. Cluff.
John William Heder left Sweden at the age of five with his parents and older brother and sister in 1863 for America. They arrived in New York City on June 20, 1863 after a two-and-a-half month journey. It took them another four and one-half monthss to travel from New York to Salt Lake City, Utah. THe family lived in a small, one-room adobe house in the area now known as Millcreek. In the fall of 1865, the Heders moved to Huntsville, about 20 miles northeast of Ogden, Utah. John married Anna Jorgena Christina Madsen in Salt Lkae City on May 22, 1879. He moved his family and his sawmill business to Colonia Chuichupa, Mexico in 1895. In 1912, John moved to the Arizona in the United States because of the Mexican Revolution. John William Heder died November 6, 1940, and was buried November 10th; his wife, Anna, died June 9, 1955 and was buried in Mesa, Arizona.


Introduction

Born September 22, 1856, at Venesborg Gustava, Elfsborg, Sweden, John William Heder left Sweden with his parents and older brother and sister in 1863 for America. They arrived there, in New York, on June 20, 1863 after 2½ months from the time they left their home in Sweden. It took them another 4½ months to travel from New York to Salt Lake City, in Utah, arriving there on November 9, 1863, having left their home in Venesborg, on April 12th of the same year.

 
Scratching Out a Living in Utah

The day we arrived in Salt Lake my father found a small, one-room adobe house for us to live in, in the area which is now known as Millcreek. We had to walk some distance to this little house, carrying our belongings. Father carried the bedding. Mother carried the dutch oven containing about two pounds of rice -- all in the world we had to eat. When we were within a quarter of a mile of the house, she, being very tired, set the oven down by some bunch grass, and walked on with the other few things she was carrying. When she returned for the dutch oven, and the rice, it was gone. In the place where it had been was nothing, and that is exactly what he had for our supper—nothing.

The next day Mother, Gustav and I started out into one of the wheat fields to glean what was left in the stubble. We gleaned for a couple of days, then the owner came and sent us away, saying he needed that grain for his cows and horses. But we were allowed in other fields and gleaned one row at a time. In this way we secured a little to eat.

The next year father rented a farm and raised wheat on shares. Two hundred bushels was his share. Mother and Gustav and I again gleaned wheat on various farms -- to the amount of twenty-one bushels. This we sold for $8 per bushel and bought a cow and a yoke of oxen. They said the oxen had crossed the plains with immigrants six times. They were old, and poor. But we soon got them in shape so we could use them.

In the fall of 1865, we moved to Huntsville, about 20 miles northeast of Ogden. Here we settled permanently. A man named Peterson got father’s wheat to pay his debts, promising to give father in return his own wheat, which was in Huntsville. That would save father hauling his wheat so far -- a big saving.. But when father went to get his wheat, Mr. Peterson had only a very few bushels and that was frozen, making it unfit for bread. Now we were up against it again for something to eat. So father went to the mountains to peel bark from pines and haul it to Salt Lake City to sell to the tannery for money to buy bread. It took him ten days to peel the bark, make the trip to Salt Lake and back with a sack of flour.

The next year, 1866, father plowed and put in crops, but they froze and didn’t amount to much, so he continued his bark peeling. The following year, 1867, the crops were a little better, although the wheat was frostbitten some.

During these years, I was herding cows and sheep for one cent a head, helping along a little in this way. I had to go barefoot, and my feet and toes could hardly stand it. Sometimes I would find some old Indian moccasins, patch them up, and they would last perhaps two or three days. The next year, 1868, my father put me to helping him on the farm.

All this time, we had been living in what was our first home in Huntsville -- a dug-out. It had two tiers of logs above the ground, a roof of logs covered with dirt, and a fireplace made of adobe, and the chimney protruding above the logs about one foot. In the winter, the snow was generally three feet deep, or more, and often crusted so hard we could walk on top of it, and all we could see of the dug-out was the smoke coming from the chimney in the snowdrifts.

In 1868, we planted wheat and it grew nicely, fine prospects for a good crop. Father and I went to the mountains for logs to build us a new home. As we left in the morning we sat for a few minutes on the hill and viewed the beautiful little valley -- all green with growing grain and grass. Our wheat stood about eight inches high -- a beautiful sight.

When we had our logs cut and loaded, we started for home. On reaching the spot where that morning we sat looking out over the valley, we just could not believe our eyes! Instead of beautiful green fields, everything was black! Grasshoppers had completely cleaned the fields of every spear of grain and every blade of grass it seemed; then they had laid their eggs and flown away. So it was the same thing over again.

The war on grasshoppers continued for about three years, and we had to live on half-rations most of the time. Our breakfast usually consisted of a little flour and bran bread and a cup of skim milk.

In the year 1871, we began again to raise good crops, and the earth yielded forth her strength.

When the Union Pacific Railroad was being built through Weber Canyon, father got work and made some money, and from that time on we got along pretty well. Crops matured better too, and we built another, better house, which still stands (1938).

Young Hired Hand
Hiring Out To Support Myself

I worked along with father on the farm, and in building houses and barns for other people. During the time from 1864-68, my mother and my sister had been carding and spinning wool and weaving cloth for the family of Heber C. Kimball and others, and had saved a little money. So we bought another cow and a few sheep.

In 1873, began the hard work for me, for to feed our animals meant that about twenty-five tons had to be cut with a scythe and a swath. I’d be so tired at night I could hardly walk home. But father would brag of me to mother, tell her what a good worker I was, so I couldn’t complain after that.

In 1874, the mowing machine came to our help, along with the reaper. These made farming much easier. I was now seventeen years old.

Because of the constant struggle against poverty in pioneer life, and frequent moves, my schooling was very limited, as was the case with many other children in those pioneer times. I had only three or four years of elementary schooling. After that my father was my instructor, and a good one he was too. He had mastered several languages as well as several trades in his native Sweden. These trades he also taught to me.

My parents had given up all their possessions in the Old World to come to Zion. Here in Utah, we suffered privations for years just to live. My brother and I felt we could not let them sacrifice further for our education, so we being now well in our teens, hired out in numerous ways and places to help them to get ahead and to take care of my own needs. But I was determined to somehow make my own opportunities for some education. I asked myself, “Does anyone ever get too old to want to know, to learn, to find out, to reach out for new experiences?”

From my father, I had learned not only carpentry, cabinet-making and wheelwright, but other occupations as well: farming, dairying, lumbering, saw-milling, and others. Over the years, I was always able to keep busy at something. At various intervals, I built many homes, churches, schools, barns, stores, railroad bridges and canals, in Utah, Old Mexico, and in Arizona.

My brother went to Wyoming to work at hauling cordwood, and sent for me to come work with him. One day I was driving four horses hitched to the wagon loaded with about two cords of wood. In leading the rack, Gustav had put in front a green quaking aspen with the bark on it. Going down hill the bark slipped, and the wood I sat on began slipping too. It bunted the wheel horses and they started to run. The road was very steep and rocky, and we couldn’t stay on the road. I tried to get off the side, but fell directly across the tugs of the head wheeler and hung there for a minute. I made a lunge to get off for fear of being kicked to death, but I fell under the wheels. The front wheel passed over my right arm, breaking it, and the back wheel went over my back and so badly bruised and injured it that I never fully recovered from it. I was unconscious for six days, and laid up for four months. When I got better, I went home.

Adventures in Montana

The next spring, there being no work at home, I went to Montana to work on a large ranch. Wages for a good man were only $15-$25 per month, but this rancher had written, offering me $40 with room and board. A very good thing for me. So once again I left home. I walked all the way, a distance of 800 miles, in eleven days and nights.

I worked here for nearly two years; I cut and hauled wood, milked cows, had charge of a crew of men cutting and putting up 100 tons of hay, rode the range at round-up time, cut and hauled fence posts, set posts and strung wire fence.

Up in the timbers we’d work sometimes for weeks in snow, often up to our waists, starting at 4 o’clock in the morning and never getting back before 9 o’clock at night -- sometimes not until 1 o’clock. We were always wet and our clothes frozen so stiff when we removed them to put dry ones on that they would stand alone. As a result of the exposure I began to feel rheumatism in my arms and knees.

The next summer I was sent on the round-up again. I liked the work, but the Nez Perce Indians went on the war-path and we were 1,000 miles from home! Everyone left their ranches for the towns and cities but we had no way to go. This was a trying time, with danger on every side. At Horse Prairie, a ranch only nine miles away, six men were killed; but the only thing we could do was to stay and trust in Providence.

This Indian uprising lasted about five weeks before they could be subdued, but we completed the round-up in the fall, and in mid-December I left for home, half promising to return in the spring. Another man who had been working on the same ranch, returned with slush and mud. We walked most of the way to Pocatello, then rode to the train from there to Ogden. There father met us and we rode to Huntsville in a sleigh drawn by a little team of mules -- Jack and Jule.

Marriage & Family

It was not long before I knew that I wouldn’t return to Montana. My brother-in-law, Christian F. Schade, introduced me to a girl he had converted in Denmark. Her name, Anna Jorgena Christina Madsen. I soon found she had my heart in her keeping so I asked her to be my wife. She consented and I bought the ring.

On May 20th my sweetheart and I left for Salt Lake in a little one-seated buggy the little mules mentioned earlier, Jack and Jule being our team. We rested that night in Ogden with a friend of my parents, then next morning were again on our way.

Arriving in Salt Lake I took her to the home of some friends living in the 16th Ward, while I went to Brother Joseph F. Smith’s home to have my recommend signed. His home was located in the block north of the Temple block, and there he (Elder Smith) ordained me an Elder.

The next day, May 22, 1879, we…were married, the ceremony taking place about 3 o’clock in the afternoon. We left the building at 4 o’clock and started back home. We arrived in Ogden to find my father there in the doctor’s care, having taken very ill. We remained in Ogden several days to be sure he was receiving all needed care and was on the mend. When we reached Huntsville we were warmly received and entertained by friends who played harmonicas and used tin pans to beat the rhythm -- and how we danced!

We lived in a little two-room house with a basement, and were very happy. Also, we were glad to be living close to our parents where we could help them when we were needed.

I continued to run father’s farm, raising hay and grain. After a while, it began to look as if we would not be blessed with a family. We went with the young people a lot to socials and dances. Then after being married for four years, our first child, a little girl, was born on July 18, 1883. We called her Minnie May.

I had built a very nice two-story house in Ogden, where we had moved and had lived there for some time, then sold it and moved back to Huntsville.

In 1883, I bought an interest in a saw-mill and the next spring we went up the south fork of the Ogden River to cut logs and skid them to the river so that when the snow melted and the river rose high we could roll the logs in and float them down to the saw-mill. There were five of us, and one of the men remarked that in all his years of riding and working in these mountains, he had never seen a bear. Just then I looked down the hill and there just a short distance away was a big brown bear, sitting on his haunches and with his mouth wide open. I yelled, “Look!”

Carl, the man who had "never seen a bear," took one look and gave a loud yell. With froth dripping from his mouth, the bear started toward us, coming fast! I had been in the lead going down, but in about three jumps I as in the lead going back, the others were coming, but it seemed like the bear was just about ready to grab the last man. I whirled a large rock, but it jut grazed its stomach. One of the men threw another big rock and it just waved the hair on its back. Just in that moment when it looked like the bear was ready to grab Nephi, he stopped, looked at us a few seconds, then turned rocks, leaping ledges, and we just stood there and watched

Pioneering in Mexico

It In 1885, I received a letter from the First Presidency asking me to go to San Juan to help settle that country. I sold my share in the saw-mill and was about ready to leave with my family . But as my father had died the previous October, leaving my 70-year-old mother alone, with me as her sole support, Bishop David McKay and President Shurtliff wrote to the First Presidency and had me released from that mission.

The ensuing ten years were busy and prosperous. Besides saw-milling and farming I had a sizable flock of sheep, and also contracted the building of houses and barns.

Here in Huntsville, five of our children were born. They were Anna Christina, born October 19, 1885; Maude Elizabeth, born December 18, 1887; Rhoda Sophia, born April 21, 1890; John Earl, born January 31,1892; and Walter Oliver, born March 3, 1894.

Then in 1895, I took a trip to Mexico to look over the country, particularly the Mormon colonies, and I decided to move there. So on my return home, I harvested my wheat and oats, arranged with my brother-in-law to take charge of my sheep, and soon had my business in shape to leave.

My friend, Bert Engstrom, and I bought a saw-mill. I chartered two railroad cars, one to ship the saw-mill and the other machinery in, and the other for our horses and furniture. Also a passenger car for my family and those who had decided to go with us. There were Carl E. Peterson and family, W.G. Moyes and family, William Moffat and son, also C.F. Schade and A.F. Macdonald.

We arrived in El Paso, Texas, May 15th, and had to wait there—rather in Ciudad Juarez—for nine days, getting our machinery, horses furniture, etc., through customs. We reached Magdalena May 26th, and from there we went on to settle to Chuichupa, hauling all machinery, furniture, and other belongings overland in wagons.

Our first year was hard, but within a couple of years we were able to build a nice house and a good barn. In this home two more of our children were born. They were Lillian Juanita, born July 29, 1897, and George Roland, born February 7, 1900.

Later, I sold our home in Chuichupa and we moved to Dublan. Here our ninth and last child, Stanley Marius, was born February 12, 1908. This was our home until July 1912, when because of the Revolution all Americans were endangered, and responding to directions from the authorities of the Church, the Mormon colonists all left their homes in Mexico and came to the United States, where most of them remained.

We went to El Paso, where all the people were temporarily sheltered in a large lumber yard, until we could determine where to go to begin again. We, with our family, together with our two married daughters, their husbands and families, went to Arizona finally, and settled in Mesa, where we have lived since that time except for two short stays in California with some of our children who eventually settled there.

Author’s note: John William Heder died November 6, 1940, and was buried November 10th; his wife, Anna, died June 9, 1955, and was buried June 15th. Both were buried in Mesa, Maricopa County, Arizona, where they had lived for so many busy years.