Skip to main content

Warning! May Be Too Graphic for the Faint of Heart!



History fascinates me. I know, I'm a total nerd. I'll let you beat me up at recess. Family history is addicting. Scandal? Intrigue? Blood and gore? Ghost stories, tragedy, and things of lore? All in the family history.

Here is my great, great, grandfather, Samuel Alonzo Whitney:

It is clear where I get my good looks.

Here's what I knew about him: He lost an arm in his youth, was a Pony Express Rider, spoke Shoshone fluently, was an Indian interpreter, and he lost his leg later in life. He was called "Peg Leg."

So how did he lose his arm and his leg? I hunted down a very distant cousin and sent her an email. By the way, the best way to find out about your ancestors is to find that one aunt or distant cousin who is absorbed in family history. They have all the good stories. My life's goal is to become that little old lady with the dowager hump, leaning over a microfiche machine. Can you see the pink sweater and sensible, orthopedic shoes, too? Yeah. That's totally going to be me.

Ahem. Back to my story. Here's what she sent me:

He lost his arm as a child sometime between age 12 and 14 in a farm machine. His sleeve caught in I think a thresher of some kind and twisted it of just below the elbow. My grandmother said his sleeve was loose because the button was missing. It is my understanding that he did not live with his mother at that time.

He lost his leg in his 50’s. He was logging in Logan Canyon. He and the other men were racing down the canyon to see who could get to the bottom of the canyon first. His wagon overturned and his leg was crushed. It was amputated (sawed off) below the knee. It got gangrene in it and they had to saw more off.

My grandmother told me this story. "He was delirious and was never quite the same after that. Chief Washakie stayed with him during that time. They set up a makeshift hospital in the jail since there was no hospital. While he was delirious he kept saying that his toes were bent and his foot was cold and wet. Everyone thought that it was just the ramblings of a delirious mind but finally the Relief Society President dug up the amputated leg which was buried under a pear tree in his yard. It was wet, the toes were bent so she straightened them, wrapped it in clean dry cloth put it in a box and reburied it. He quit complaining after that."

Note to self: Be the little old lady in the pink sweater and polyester skirt with not a worry in the world. Sure beats being the Relief Society president.

Comments

  1. What a great story! I love knowing the little bits of history that make up our past. My Dad can tell stories all night if we let him. Interrupt him and he starts again right back at the beginning... Some nights can be really, really long!

    ReplyDelete
  2. There's a book in tales like that. My Quirky Kin.

    I have to admit. I really like it too. Drive most folk around here crazy asking about the history. My neighbour was born in his house that he still lives in no at almost 90 and he was schooled in the building next door... and I get cabin fever if I don't get out at least weekly.

    ReplyDelete
  3. In his younger days, your grandpa bore a slight resemblence to Woody Harrelson. Interesting story.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I guess I'm a nerd too. Family history, especially, is quite intriguing. I wish I knew more about mine. Guess I'll have to call up Aunt Linda . . .

    ReplyDelete
  5. Man, I really need to learn more about my family history! Cool story!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Ver cool story! It's always great to find out new things about your ancestors.

    BTW, I totally agree with DG, your grampa did look like Woody Harrelson :)

    ReplyDelete
  7. Awesome story... the part about digging up the leg under the pear tree is too much! Hilarious!

    ReplyDelete
  8. The story about the buried leg is awesome. You must pass that on to your grandkids! :)

    ReplyDelete
  9. LOVE this story! My husband is also a history geek! :o)

    ReplyDelete
  10. I love the story! Hey, if you don't know a story when you are a little old lady, you can just make one up! I was shocked at how the first picture looks like it could have been taken yesterday!

    ReplyDelete
  11. That is such an amazing story! I am a major history nut and have started on my family history on my moms side, my aunt and grandma already did my dads side. It is so fun to learn things about the family

    ReplyDelete
  12. Great story! I am super into history and also have a fondness for handsome ancestors, creepy tales of dismemberment, and phantom limbs. More please.

    (Don't forget that the sleeve of the pink sweater is where you keep your tissues.)

    ReplyDelete
  13. Just in time for Halloween. The story of the bent toes (queue eerie music). You can tell that one before the kids go out trick or treating.

    ReplyDelete
  14. That is a really cool story. Thank you to whoever pointed out he looks like Woody Harrelson, it would have bugged me all day trying to figure out who i was!

    ReplyDelete
  15. Hahaha- Yeah the Relief Society President does not sound like she has a fun job!

    That is an incredible story. But tell me- why was he in jail?

    ReplyDelete
  16. Oh I love these kind of stories! Thanks for sharing, I'm telling the amputee story to my kids they will love hearing about digging it up and fixing everything so much so he didn't complain anymore!

    ReplyDelete
  17. And I will drink your tea while you are hunched over the microfiche. And I will mutter "mmm Hmmm" every so often for you.

    Seriously, fascinating story, though. Okay, back to your book review.

    Oh wait, I like how they preferred orphans. What, so they didn't have to pay life insurance??

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Pioneer Trek

Utah was founded by the Mormon pioneers in 1847 after enduring unimaginable losses and seeking a place of peace. July 24th marks the anniversary that the first wagon trains arrived in the Salt Lake Valley. Their numbers were greatly diminished by crossing the country in wagons and handcarts, dying of scurvy, tuberculous, malaria, starvation, unidentified fevers, and freezing to death. This, they found preferable to facing the extermination order put forth by Governor Boggs of Missouri. I believe this is the most courageous act of faith - to leave all they had that was familiar and travel the rough terrain in the unknown in search of a place where they could worship in peace. My daughters left this morning for a small re-creation of what the pioneers experienced. I don't love the idea since I know so many of the pioneers died but it is a way for many of the youth to connect to their ancestors and understand what many of the early members endured for their faith. The youth were asked...

How To Be A Dedicated Neurotic

Going through old files from graduate school, I found an invaluable pamphlet. Be a Dedicated Neurotic Remember the Past. . . and Regret it. Abhor the Present. Dread the Future. 1. Become preoccupied with the body, and make a long list of symptoms. Make them sound very clinical and professional... 2. BLAME your boss, your spouse, your partner, your neighbor, your kid. THEY are responsible for your miseries. 3. Feel trapped. You couldn't possibly declare your own independence without hurting someone's feelings. 4. Overeat. Rationalize and eat! Eat an insulated wall around yourself. Diet for a few days and say it doesn't work for you. 5. Self-pity. No matter what, feel sorry for yourself. Agonize over things about which no one cares. 6. Don't ever try. That way nobody can really accuse you of failure. You can always say, "But I could have done it." 7. Stress how shy you are. Insist that the world must come to you. You're special. 8. Your agg...

Flu

The flu has been making its way through our family.  The first to be hit was the 15 year old.  She was very, very angry.  At me.  She had been begging for the flu shot for the past three months.  I kept forgetting.  She got better but it's one more thing to discuss on her future therapist's couch. Today I picked up my 5 year old from school.  He told me about making valentine's for his friends and how he gave his valentine to his best friend, Chase.  Chase is the little boy who grabbed my scarf on my way to my car today, looked at me earnestly and yelled his telephone number to me so fast I couldn't process it then ran away. "Today I felt so sick." "Why didn't you call me to pick you up?" "I told Teacher but she didn't call you." "What did you say?" "I told her my head hurt and I felt dizzy." "What did she say?" "She told me I wasn't sick." I took mental note to talk to his teacher about c...