Family Heritage Series - http://www.familyheritageseries.org/site
Louisa Busenbark (1827-1885)
http://www.familyheritageseries.org/site/articles/7/1/Louisa-Busenbark-1827-1885/Page1.html
Author: FHS Editor
Published on 10/17/2000
 
Source: "Rice Pioneers: Family Groups and Stories", compiled by David Eldon Rice. Pocatello, Idaho. 1976. No copyright information listed.
Louisa Busenbark, born on May 25, 1827, was a daughter of Isaac Busenbark and Abigail Manning. She came from German-Jewish descent. Her family were wealthy New Yorkers, but that changed when her father’s family became Mormons and moved to the Salt Lake Valley in 1847. She married Asaph Rice in 1850 and settled first in Farmington and then St. George, Utah. She passed away in Panaca, Nevada on May 3, 1885.


Life Sketch

Louisa Busenbark, born on May 25, 1827, was a daughter of Isaac Busenbark and Abigail Manning. She came from German Jewish descent. Her people were well-to-do in New York, but they lost everything—friends, relatives and money—when her father’s family became Mormons.

Louisa was part of a large company of emigrants that reached the Salt Lake Valley in 1847. She came in company with her sister, Sarah Jane Busenbark Hall. Some where along the way, she married Edwin Calkins who enlisted in the Mormon Battalion, and was killed by Indians on his way home after he was released from service.

After her marriage to Asaph Rice in 1850, she and Asaph lived in Farmington, Utah, where some of their children were born. After Asaph’s marriage to Louisa’s sister Mary Busenbark in 1852, they all moved to North Ogden for a few years. They were among the first families in that locality. Louisa saw the Rice men folk help dig ditches, build the first meeting house in North Ogden, and went through real Indian problems brought on by a foolish white man.

Louisa and her children were hustled down south when Johnston’s Army came into Utah. She lived in a wagon box all summer while the men cleared land, cut ditches, and planted crops. Then all hands set out together to cut trees and build log cabins in a fort formation as a protection from the Indians.

Ten years later she was in another moving project—this time to St. George or Utah’s Dixie Land. In this day Louisa would have refused to move again, but she made no complaints. She was in a wagon train that numbered sixty wagons. Slowly and warily, they all went until they finally landed in Panaca, Nevada. Here Louisa Busenbark Calkins Rice died on May 3, 1885. She was buried beside her husband and was followed by her sister—his second wife.

Louisa never saw an electric light or a washing machine of any kind. She seldom rode in a carriage and never dreamed of a horseless carriage or an electric iron. If she could visit some of her granddaughters now, she would marvel at the life of common housewives today. And she would weep to find so many of them lukewarm in the Church of Jesus Christ for which she gave up so much just to be counted among the Children of God.