#M28
BUSHMAN, Martin (AFN:1KC6-4T) and
#M29 DEGEN,
Elizabeth (AFN:1KC6-51)*
Martin Bushman:
Born: 1 Apr
1802 Strasburg, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Died:
18 Oct 1870 Lehi, Utah, Utah
Buried: 19 Oct
1870 Lehi, Utah, Utah
Married: 20 Mar 1827
Bart, Lancaster, Pennsylvania, to Elizabeth DEGAN (AFN:1KC6-51)
They had ten children.
Father: Abraham
BUSHMAN (AFN:1S6J-1N)
Mother: Esther
FRANKS (AFN:1S6J-2T)
Elizabeth Degan:
Born: 12 Sep
1802 Hollstein, Bassiland, Switzerland
Died:
21 May 1878 Lehi, Utah, Utah
Buried: May 1878
Lehi, Utah, Utah
Father: John
Casper DEGAN (AFN:1S6J-31)
Mother:
Anna Maria GRAFF (AFN:1S6J-46)
Children of
Martin Bushman and Elizabeth Degan
1. (M) Henry BUSHMAN
(AFN:1KC7-6B)
Born:
11 Dec 1827 Bart, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Died: 20 Mar 1828 Bart, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
2. (F) Maria BUSHMAN
(AFN:1KC7-7H)
Born:
21 Jan 1829 Bart, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Died: 5 Feb 1829 Bart, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
*3. (M) Jacob
BUSHMAN #M14 (AFN:1KC7-8N)
Born: 27 Jul 1830 Lampeter Township, Lancaster,
Lancaster, Pennsyvania
Died:
25 Mar 1919 Fairview, Sanpete, Utah
Buried: Mar 1919 Fairview City Cemetery,
Fairview, Sanpete, Utah
Married:
4 Mar 1857 San Bernardino, San Bernardino, California, to
Charlotte TURLEY #M15
(AFN:1BGL-KK)
*Indicates direct line to Frances
McNabb Gray
4. (F) Sarah Ann BUSHMAN
(AFN:1KC7-9T)
Born: 9
Jan 1833 Strasburg, Lancaster, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Died: 17 Jun 1916 Lehi, Utah, Utah
Buried: 20 Jun 1916 Lehi, Utah, Utah
Married: 25 May 1852, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake,
Utah, to Alonzo Donald RHODES (RHOADS) (AFN:215TJ-O3)
5. (M) Abraham BUSHMAN
(AFN:1KC7-B1)
Born: 14 Jul
1835 Bart/Lancaster, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Died: 25 Mar 1839: Bart, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
6. (F) Elizabeth BUSHMAN
(AFN:1KC7-C6)
Born: 9
Nov 1837 Bart/Lancaster, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Died: 12 Oct 1846 Iowa
7. (M) Martin Benjamin
BUSHMAN (AFN:1CXK-77)
Born:
5 Feb 1841 Strasburg, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Died: 31 Oct 1927 Lehi, Lehi, Utah
Buried: 3 Nov 1927 Lehi, Lehi, Utah
Married: (1) Lucinda Ladelia GOODWIN
(AFN:18G6-QM), 21 Mar 1863, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake,
Utah
Married (2)
Martha WORLTON (AFN:1SN9-F7), 2 Mar 1867, Salt Lake
City, Salt Lake, Utah
8. (M) John BUSHMAN
(AFN:1BBD-7L)
Born: 7
Jun 1843 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Died: 30 May 1926 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake,
Utah
Buried: 7 Jun
1926 Joseph City, Navajo, Arizona
Married: (1) Lois Angeline SMITH (AFN:1KC6-1B),
11 Feb 1865, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah
Married: (2) Mary Ann PETERSEN
(AFN:1BBD-8R), 2 Mar 1877, St. George, Washington, Utah
9. (F) Esther Ann
BUSHMAN (AFN:1KC7-DC)
Born: 28 Nov 1845 Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois
Died: 19 Oct 1846 Iowa
10. (M) Elias Albert
BUSHMAN (AFN:1CFH-VN)
Born: 6 Dec 1849 Highland Grove, Pottawatomie,
Iowa
Died: 15 Oct
1925 Lehi, Utah, Utah
Buried:
18 Oct 1925 Lehi, Lehi, Utah
Married:
27 Mar 1879, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, to Margaret Laura
ZIMMERMAN (AFN:1CFH-WT)
Biography of Martin
Bushman and Elizabeth Degen (Based upon Bushman
Family History,** compiled 1956 by Newbern I. Butt for the
Bushman Family History Committee, pp. 12-15). Additions by second
great grandson Elden L. Stewart.
(Written by Elden L. Stewart; retyped and submitted by Ella
Mae [Turley] Judd.)
**The full name and
particulars of the book: The Bushman Family: Originally of
Pennsylvania and the Rocky Mountain States by Newbern Butt,
main author. Its Family History Library call number is 929.273
B964bn. It is located in the Joseph Smith Memorial Building
Family History Book Section. It is also on microfilm, FHL 896926,
item 5. (In the main library located in the FHL US/CAN Film
section.)
Martin, the Pioneer
Bushman immigrant to Utah, was raised on a farm in Lancaster
County, Pennsylvania. He was an excellent hand at all farm work,
so that in slack times, while on the way to Utah and while there,
he was always in demand by his neighbor farmers. During his
active life he was about six feet tall and weighed approximately
175 pounds. His eyes were blue and his hair light brown.
Martin
was married to Elizabeth Degen, daughter of John Casper Degen and
Anna Maria Graf, 20 March 1827. She was well prepared for pioneer
life. Her mother died when she was four years of age, and her
father re-married and had six additional children. When she was
14 years old she came to America with her father. The journey was
in an old sailing vessel which was delayed by a calm. The extra
cost caused by this delay put them in debt to the Captain, which
debt was met by hiring Elizabeth out as a domestic servant for
five years. It was here that she learned to spin and weave, and
made the clothing necessary in a pioneer community. Martin raised
the wool and his wife turned it into clothing. During rush season
she aided directly with the farm work.
The first seven
children of Martin and Elizabeth were born in Bart, Lancaster,
Pennsylvania. The next two, John and Hetty, were born in the
Bishop Hunter home in Nauvoo, Illinois, and Albert, the baby, was
born at Highland Grove, Potawattamie, Iowa.
In the spring
of 1840 two elders, Elisha H. Davis and H. Dean, members of the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, came to preach the
Gospel in Lancaster County. Both Martin and his wife, Elizabeth,
were of a strongly religious nature and investigated the new
doctrine whole heartedly, were convinced of its truth, and were
baptized. In spite of criticism and ostracism by relatives and
friends in Lancaster County, they grew in faith and were filled
with the spirit of gathering in Nauvoo, Illinois with the rest of
the members of this faith. It is probable that they would have
made the thousand mile trip to Nauvoo in 1840, but circumstances
prevented this. Their aged parents were without a home of their
own, and Martin spent the fall and winter in building one for
them. Also they were expecting the birth of their son, Martin
Benjamin, and with more time they had hoped to sell their
property to a better advantage.
The property was finally
sold at a great sacrifice, and provided little more than a team
and wagon and the necessary provisions for the thousand mile trip
with a family of six. When they arrived in Nauvoo, they found the
city crowded with new converts and it was hard to find a place to
live. However, they soon found their old friend, Bishop Edward
Hunter, who was also of Pennsylvania Dutch descent. The Bishop
immediately fixed up and rented to the Bushmans the upstairs
apartment of his house. He also rented to Martin his farm which
was just east of Nauvoo. Martin's harvests were excellent in
spite of the fact that he and his son Jacob spent every tenth day
to work on the Temple which was being built in Nauvoo at this
time. Soon after their arrival, they met the Prophet Joseph and
his brother, Patriarch Hyrum Smith who gave them a hearty welcome
to the community. On 12 March 1843, the Patriarch ordained Martin
to the office of High Priest and also gave he and his wife
Elizabeth a Patriarchal Blessing. The promises and blessings
contained therein have extended to us their posterity.
The
Bushman family although they prospered and were blessed,
experienced along with the rest of the saints, the hatred and
mobbing of the enemies of the church, which grew until 27 June
1844 when the Prophet Joseph and his brother Hyrum were killed at
Carthage jail. This was a terrible shock to the saints but with
the Twelve Apostles at their head they completed the Temple the
next year and many of them received their endowments. On
Christmas day in 1845, Martin and Elizabeth also went to the
Temple and were sealed for time and all eternity.
Mob
violence continued so that in February 1846 the main body of the
saints left Nauvoo for the west. However Martin Bushman, along
with a few others, were asked to remain at Nauvoo to plant crops
and harvest them to provide food for the many new members coming
from the east and elsewhere to gather with the saints. Bounteous
crops were raised, but just when they were ready to harvest, the
mobbers moved in and drove the rest of the faithful saints away
from Nauvoo. Before they left the city, Martin took all of his
children into the temple and showed them the baptismal font
resting on the backs of twelve bronze oxen. This occasion was
never forgotten by the children.
Forced to leave with just
a few hours' notice, Martin was poorly prepared to make the five
hundred mile trip from Nauvoo to Council Bluffs, Iowa. The trip
was made during the wet season of fall and winter, over roads
which were often all but impassible. The suffering was intense,
and two of their little girls died and were buried in graves
without coffins.
After they finally reached the saints at
Council Bluffs, Martin was assigned to the nearby settlement of
Highland Grove located a few miles east of the Bluffs. He
immediately proceeded to build a log cabin for his family. This
accomplished, he headed for Missouri where he earned enough
provisions to see the family through the winter.
As soon
as the crops were planted in the spring of 1847, Martin again
went to Missouri to earn food for his family, and left his son
Jacob and the smaller boys in charge of the
crops.
Martin was an excellent farmer, but the expulsion
from Nauvoo and the hard journey across Iowa had left him with
almost nothing to continue the journey to Utah. He worked out
again in 1849 to earn clothing for the family and returned in the
winter. All of the land available was put in crops in the spring
of 1850 so that they would be assured of food for the planned
trip to join the Saints in Utah in 1851. Jacob and Sarah went to
Missouri in order to earn whatever they could to help, and Sarah
taught school in the winter. They felt that they were greatly
blessed when they were able to start across the plains with a
good supply of food, a wagon, two yoke of oxen and two yoke of
cows. The trip across the plains was uneventful and their food
just barely lasted until they reached Utah.
The Bushmans
stayed in Salt Lake City for one week, and then went to Lehi
where their old missionary friend, Elisha Davis lived. There were
only 30 families living in Lehi at that time. At this place they
were welcomed to the use of a vacant log hut which belonged to
Abraham Hatch. Martin and Jacob helped with the first harvest in
Lehi, and later cut grass for their cattle from the common
pasture of the lower field. The following spring he bargained
with Hatch for a farm, and built himself a new log home where he
lived a short time before he built his adobe home in which they
lived until his death. In 1854 he helped built the mud wall
around the town.
Elizabeth was a typical Swiss girl, with
dark brown eyes and hair, and a stout build. She was five foot
four inches tall and 140 pounds in weight. She was exceptionally
healthy until near her death at age 76. Considerable of the last
25 years of her life were devoted to work as a practical nurse
and midwife. She was exceptionally spiritual in nature, and
enjoyed many spiritual gifts, even the gift of tongues which she
had spoken ever since she joined the L. D. S. Church. On May 6,
two weeks before her death, she spoke the following prayer in
tongues. It was interpreted by her old friend, Mary Ann
Davis.
"My Father and my God that dwelleth in the
Heavens. The father of my spirit and the spirits of all men, look
upon me in mercy because I am thy daughter and I feel that I am
about to pass the valley and shadow of death, but I fear no evil
for thou wilt be my prop and my stay. My mind is as calm as a
summer's morning and I have a peace that passeth understanding.
Permit me, Oh God, to depart in peace, for my body not to be
racked with pain and anguish. Lay underneath me thy arms of love
to be my stay and my support.
"Oh my Father, a joy
unspeakable fills my breast because I shall soon behold Thy face.
Fools have said in their hearts, there is no God, but I know that
Thou art the Living God, I have trusted in thee, and have never
been confounded. Oh Lord, I have been many years from thy
presence, I have endured many trials, pain and anguish of body,
but I thank thee for my body thou has given me, for my mission
and my work to do upon earth.
"I have done my work
and through Thy grace I have kept my body pure and undefiled for
which I thank Thee, Oh God. Oh my Father, comfort the hearts of
my family and friends which are dear to me. I shall only be
separated from you for a little season. In the morning of the
resurrection I shall arise without this frail body having an
immortal one.
"Oh my Father, a joy unspeakable fills
my soul and rapture fills my heart for the veil will soon be rent
and I shall behold my companion and children that have gone
before me. I shall meet them with joy and not with grief and more
I shall behold Thy face and enjoy Thy smiles and Thy presence and
bask in Thy favor forever more.
"Oh my children and
friends, be true to God and His work and He will take you through
the gates of death and there will be a light in the valley for
you. My Savior will let me lean on His arm so I will not be
afraid nor fear any evil. My heart rejoices in God, my Savior.
Although my body has pain and anguish, have faith and pray for me
that I may depart in peace and when you lay me in the grave,
mourn not for me but rejoice that I am delivered from this body
of anguish and if you shed tears, let them not be of bitterness.
Be faithful to the truth and all shall be well with you. We shall
only be separated for a little season. God bless you all. Oh
Lord, grant that my name may not pass into oblivion, but that it
may be from generation to generation, because I have tried to
keep Thy commandments. Amen."
Elizabeth never rallied
or gained her strength from this last illness, but could converse
and enjoy the company of her children and friends. On the 21 day
of May 1878, she passed away, surrounded by her family of four
sons and one daughter.
The Life and Labors of John
Bushman Son of Martin and Elizabeth Degen.
This is a copy of the
edited diary of John Bushman, which was copied by himself from
the original diaries into a large journal during the later years
of his life. The book from which this typewritten copy was
made is of the ledger type about 8 x 11 inches in size. The
writing was entirely in ink. The latter part of the journal
which records the death, etc. was in other handwritings.
The original from which this copy was made is now in the hand of
members of the John Bushman Association, of which Fred Bushman of
Salt Lake City, Utah was the Chairman. [Now in Church
Historian’s Office.]
Copied by the Brigham
Young University Library 1935?
[This bound manuscript is
kept in the Brigham Young University Harold B. Lee Library,
Special Collections. This Life Sketch was found at the end
of John Bushman’s journal entries and was retyped here by
Ann Laemmlen Lewis, September 2005. Spelling and
punctuation from the original has been retained.]
SKETCH OF
THE LIFE OF MARTIN AND ELIZABETH BUSHMAN
Written by their
son Martin Benjamin Bushman
Martin bushman was born April
1st 1802 in Lancaster Co. Pennsylvania.. US.
He was the son of Abraham and Ester Franks Bushman. His
parents had ten children four boys and six girls. They were
of German descent, Their ancesters came to America about
the year 1753, Martin Bushman received a good common education in
his boyhood days, he was raised on the farm, and understood all
the branches as carried on in those days, He was a very skillful
hand at sowing grain, also at using the sycle to cut grain, and
the sythe to cut the grass for hay. And he spent the winter
months in threshing the grain with the flailing their large
barns, as there were not Threshing Machines in those days.
He also took great pride in taking care of the cows and horses,
and could always get employment in those occupations. He
was a very strong and healthy young man, he stood six foot high,
and weighed about 175 pounds, he had light brown hair and blue
eyes. At the age of twenty five he had found it necessary
if he wished to be happy in life to have a companion to share
joys and sorrow with him. He found her in the person of
Elizabeth Dagen of the same state in which he lived, she was born
in Basel Switzerland on the 12th of September 1802,
Her Parents were John Casper and Maria Graff Dagen, her mother
died when she was an infant therefore she never had a mothers
care. And love to guide her in her youth. She had a
good education in her childhood, then she had to work for her own
living, at the age of fourteen she came with her father to
America, they had a very long voyage on the ocean and suffered
much for food and water. After arriving in America she was
again put out at service to earn her own living, she was a child
of good character and strong will power, and was able to work her
way along in the community in which she lived. The
experiences she got between the age of 15 and 25 seemed to
prepare her for her future life, at twenty five she could read
and write and speak the English Language as well as her native
language. She also learned to cook and to do all kinds of
household work, she was also very handy with the needle, she was
an expert with the spinning wheel, and could spin the wool into
yar, and the flax lint into thread ready for the loom. she
could milk the cows and make butter and cheese, she could go into
the field and bind up and shock the grain. and at that age
she was strong and healthy, she had black eyes and hair was short
in statue but stoutly built, weighing about 140 pounds, she was a
good specimen of a Swiss maiden, She accepted the hand of Martin
Bushman and they were married march 20th 1827 and made
their home near their parents and lived happy togather gaining
many of the comforts of life, and had dear children born unto
them, living there untill 1840 when some Latterday Saint
Missionaries came to their home and brought to them the plan of
Salvation as revealed through Joseph Smith the Prophet, They
investigated the Doctrine and embraced the same, feeling that it
was from the Lord and that it was the only true Church, they
concluded to gather with that people, after selling his property
and settling of his affairs, and built his Parents a home his
Parents nor any of his Relatives joined the Church, he wished to
leave them in comfortable circumstances, He bade them all
Farewell and took his family and journeyed to Nauvoo Illanoise,
they traveled with horse team over the long journey After many
hardships and trials they arrived among the Saints in Nauvoo, and
they had the privelidge of seeing the Prophet whom they loved and
were happy to meet, They rented a farm from Edward Hunter near
Nauvoo and went to work with all their energy to make themselves
comfortable, every thing prospered in their hands, they were able
to feed and cloth their children and they helped to build the
Temple the Saints were building at that time. Every thing
was peace and prosperity for three short years then the dark
scene was before them, Their Prophet was slain in cold blood
their people plundered and in September 1846 they were driven
from their homes leaving their crops standing in the fields and
every thing else they had only a few things they could put in
into a wagon. A short time previous to this the Mother took
her children by the hand and led them to the Temple that they
might see it and behold its beauty out side and inside too, that
perhaps when they got old they might remember how it looked, it
was a place that they had loved and a place where they had
recieved their Sacred blessings. After taking a few things
in their poorly prepared wagon and a light team for a long
journey, they took their last look at the Beautiful City of
Nauvoo and started on their dreary journey through Iowa.
Winter soon came on and they suffered greatly with hunger and
cold, They had two of their children die, two girls through
exposures they had to endure, one was nine years and one was a
year old. They died but one week apart, they had to be
placed in their graves without coffins as there was nothing to be
had to make them with, their bodies were lightly wrapped and a
few branches of trees laid over their bodies to protect them from
the dirt. The Father and mother greatly mourned their loss
but they still continued the journey with the Saints, after much
suffering and hardships they arrived in the Western part of
Iowa. They stopped at a small place called Highland Grove
near Council Bluffs. Here again the Husband tried to make
wife and children comfortable, he built them a house of logs and
covered it as best he could with sticks and dirt, He
then went into the state of Missouri and labored to procure them
something to eat, after working for some time he recieved for his
pay some corn meal and pork and a few other little things, he
then returned to his Family with a Joyful heart that he had
procured something to eat for them. He then took up some
land and raised some crops, he stayed there four years and was
prospered so he had sufficient to bring him to Utah, in May 1851
he started on that journey, They had one wagon with two Yoke of
oxen and two Yoke of cows hitched to it and sufficient provisions
to last the family five months. After traveling five months
with tired limbs and glad hearts they arrived in Salt Lake City,
they only stopped there one week and then went south 30 miles to
Lehi there again they procured land and built them a home.
It was here their early training became most useful to them, it
was over a thousand miles to where any of the nessary supplies
could be obtained, therefore the only thing they could do was to
procure it from the soil, Then it was the husband raised the
grain and threshed it, also the corn and vegatables, he also went
to the canyon and procured wood to burn and timber for building,
he raised sheep that they might have the wool to make into cloth,
the wife then in her place knew how to take care of the wool and
spin it into yarn and weave it into cloth that she might cloth
her husband and children. In this way they prospered in the
land, and they felt to thank the lord for bringing them to this
goodly land, and for preserving their lives through all the
trials and dangers they had passed through. They came to
Utah when it was a barren desert and in connection with their
colaborers the Latterday Saints they made it to blossom as the
rose. They made beautiful homes and nice places of
worship. They lived in Lehi 24 years in peace. They
had ten children born to them six boys and four girls, five of
them being alive at his death, the others having passed away.
Martin Bushman departed this life Oct. 10th 1879, aged
68 years, he was an honest upright man and a good Latterday
Saint, he received his blessings in the Nauvoo Temple and
recieved his Priesthood under the hands of Hyrum Smith being
ordained a Hight Priest. He was an affectionate husband and
a kind to his children, he never turned the stranger away
hungry. Elizabeth Bushman survived her husband 8 years, she
lived to see her sons and daughter all married, and seen her
grand and great grand children, she remained quite healthy almost
up to the time of her death, she died May the 21st
1878, aged 76 years she died a faithful Latterday Saint and was
pure and undefiled from the sins of the world. She was a
loving wife and a kind mother, she spent much of her time with
the sick and afflicted she will live in the hearts of many of her
sex for years to come for her kindness to them in sickness and
sorrow.
From
Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah, p.785
BUSHMAN, MARTIN (son of Abraham Bushman, born
April 12, 1767, Lancaster county, Pa., and Esther Franks, born
Oct. 5, 1764—married Jan. 12, 1788). He was born April 1,
1802, Lascaster county, Pa., came to Utah October, 1851, Capt.
Kelsey company.
Married Elizabeth Degen (daughter
of John Casper Degen and Maria Graff). She was born Sept. 12,
1802. Their children: Henry b. Dec. 11, 1827, and Maria b. Jan.
31, 1829, died; Jacob b. July 27, 1830, m. Charlotte Turley March
2, 1858; Sarah A. b. Jan. 9, 1833, m. Alonzo D. Rhodes; Abraham
b. July 19, 1835, and Elizabeth b. Nov. 9, 1837, died; Martin B.
b. Feb. 5, 1841, m. Lucinda Goodwin; John b. June 7, 1843, m.
Lois A. Smith Feb. 11, 1865; Hetty A. B. b. Nov. 28, 1845, died;
Elias A. b. Dec. 6, 1849, m. Margaret Zimmerman. Family home
Lehi, Utah.
High priest. Died Oct. 18, 1870.
Patriarchal Blessing of Martin
Bushman
pronounced by Patriarch Hyrum Smith
12 March 1843, Nauvoo, Illinois
Brother Martin I lay my hands upon your head, in the
name and by the authority given me of Jesus Christ to bless and
seal the same upon you, even a blessing according to your linage
and rights according to the holy Priesthood, coming down upon
your head in these last days of Anti-christ, there was a promise
obtained for you to go down in your posterity to come unto you
and your father’s house as leaven was put into the measure
of meal that shall leaven the lump, or like unto that parable,
will the power and spirit of God work in the minds of your
father’s house all being of lineage and tribe of Ephriam in
which lineage cometh the Priesthood beginning upon your head, in
the order of the lineage of the Patriarch, which you now
receive. Under mine hands whereas I ordain you an High
Priest after the order of Melchizedec to preach repentance and
remission of sins in the name of Jesus Christ, and the endurance
of faith on his name unto the end, therefore you are blessed with
the Priesthood which I seal upon your head, that you may bear
testimony and minister in that holy order according to the gifts
and calling which is in you, and according to the spirit which
shall move upon you in the times and seasons that cometh, in the
days of your probation, and be blessed in your house, and your
habitation, fields, flocks, and herds, and that your name shall
be perpetuated through the blessings of the Priesthood as it
shall go down upon the heads of your posterity from generation to
generation, and as to your days and your years, shall be given
you according to your faith, and the desire of your heart and you
shall have an inheritance in the lineage of your fathers, even so
Amen.
Patriarchal Blessing of
Elizabeth Degen
pronounced by Patriarch Hyrum Smith
12
March 1843, Nauvoo, Illinois
Sister Elizabeth, I lay my hands upon your
head and in the name of and by the authority given me of Jesus
Christ and by the power given me of the holy Priesthood to place a
sealing blessing upon your head even to seal you to everlasting
life, from henceforth that your heart may be comforted with an
assurance that let what will happen your name is registered in the
lamb’s book of life, and these are the things which you desired to
know whether you would be saved, therefore this is thy promise which
I seal upon your head for God hath seen the honesty of your heart
and hath blessed you according to your integrity and this shall be
your witness that when these words shall be read, or you shall read
them your heart shall swell with gratitude to God and joy shall
spring up in your heart which shall be to you a comforter to you in
all your days of probation, it shall be with you as a second
comforter as in the testimony of John, which is the promise of
eternal life and as to the blessings of your inheritance your house
and habitation, fields flocks and herds and the benefits of the
Priesthood by which the knowledge of God is obtained in the order of
the kingdom of God, shall be in common with your husband, even unto
the seal of the covenant, which you have made to be continued in
your everlasting inheritance and a crown celestial shall be given in
the mansions of your father, and your name be perpetuated and kept
in honorable remembrance from generation to generation, these
blessings I seal upon your head, even so Amen.
See web site on
Elizabeth Degen Bushman at
http://www.ida.net/users/rdk/gen1/degen/Bush.html
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