We thought we were going to find lots of things when we visited Bath, England, in the summer of 2012, but our search of area records in the Guildhall in Bath did not yield anything we didn’t already know. We have searched microfilms, we have searched on Ancestry.com and FamilySearch.org, as well as Google maps. I’ll show you what we found as I recap Jemima’s life, but we are still left with some questions.
Jemima’s christening record of April 24, 1803 |
Thomas Brown christening record |
Jemima married when her boy Thomas was nine years old. She was living in the northern part of Bath, in the Walcot parish, and she married a carpenter named Francis Baker Rogers, who also lived in the same parish, on 2 June 1834. Here is their marriage record.
Jemima Brown and Francis Baker Rogers |
Jemima and Frank seemed to have been happy together, based on family tradition. Of course, in this family some incorrect tradition was also passed down, but Jemima herself made sure to have Frank’s records added to hers after she arrived in Utah, to show that they were spouses. That argues for her having been happy with him.
1841 Census: Frank, Jemima, Thomas, and Eliz. Nash |
They lived on Church Street, a very short street perpendicular to the great Bath Abbey on its south side. We have photographs of it from Google maps street view.
Looking in at Church Street from either end. (I said it was a short street.) On the left you're standing in the square across which is Bath Abbey. This is probably the end of the street where they lived.
Thomas grew up and completed his apprenticeship to become a cabinet maker. We know he joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on 21 April 1844 in Bath; he was 19 years old. The next autumn, Jemima and Frank also joined the Church. Jemima was baptized on 19 November 1844, and Frank was probably baptized the same day, but the records have become unclear (the online record shows he was baptized during his lifetime, but there is no date shown).
The young woman living with Jemima and Frank in 1841 was probably the one said by Jemima’s grandson Nephi James Brown to be the servant girl who got into trouble and gave her baby to Jemima and Frank to raise. In 1851 the census shows Jemima and Frank living in James Street, in the north part of Bath in the parish of Walcot where they were married. With them was a little girl named Elizabeth Naish, listed as a visitor. Lizzie wasn’t so much a visitor as a permanent fixture—she and Jemima would be together for over thirty more years. Lizzie had been born in September 1847, and the tintype we found shows her as a child of between 1 and 2 years of age, on Jemima’s lap. The image must have been made in 1848 or 1849 in Bath.
Jemima Brown Rogers and Lizzie Nash Rogers about 1849 |
Frank, Jemima, and little Lizzie on the 1851 Census |
From Google Maps images, this is the place on James Street where the building they lived in must have stood in 1851. |
During the same time, Jemima and Lizzie left England in the spring of 1856 aboard the Thornton. This record is the ship’s manifest, made upon their arrival in New York. Arriving in Iowa late in the season, they had to wait for handcarts to be built before their company could leave on its arduous journey, and those handcarts didn’t hold up well during the journey, delaying them again and again. They walked the thousands of miles across the Great Plains with the James G. Willie Company, and early in September the weather turned against their company and the ones after it. Frosts came, and then the frosts turned to severe blizzards in the middle of October. Their food ran out, and the delays proved fatal to many people. Jemima used all of their spare clothing to keep Lizzie warm, and she slept with the little girl on top of her to keep her out of the snow.
Jemima and Lizzie, winter 1857 |
This photograph was made probably within a few months of their arrival in Salt Lake City, judging by Lizzie's age. Jemima is so much more aged looking than she was in that tintype, taken about 8 years earlier, that the extreme hardship of the journey is apparent in what a toll it took on her health.
Jemima Brown Rogers in 1849 and 1857 (with Lizzie on the left) |
In Salt Lake City, Jemima and Lizzie lived with Thomas, who worked as a skilled carpenter and cabinet maker. In 1857 Thomas married a woman from a village near Erlestoke in England, Jane White. Jane’s brother, John, married a woman named Eliza Brown (no relation to Thomas) who came from the same group of villages. When John White died a number of years later, Thomas married Eliza Brown White, making her name Eliza Brown White Brown. This was a polygamous marriage for three years until Jane died. Thomas ended up with 19 children: his and Jane’s, Eliza’s and John’s, and his and Eliza’s. The youngest of his children was Nephi James Brown, who wrote about Jemima's life and made up, or passed along, a few traditions about her that have proven incorrect.
1860 U.S. Census, Salt Lake City |
The next year, in October 1864, 17-year-old Lizzie married James Sharp, a railroad man. The 1880 Census shows Jemima living with the Sharp family, which consisted of James and Lizzie and six of their children: Lizzie, Katie, Celia, Aggie, John, and Heber. On the day of the Census, little Celia had the measles. You have to wonder how difficult it was for Lizzie to do all the work of the household with that many small children—there was no maid living with them. With Jemima growing older and perhaps less able to do a lot of helpful work, Lizzie might have been feeling extremely pressured.
1880 U.S. Census, Salt Lake City |
The Sharps had a family of ten children in all, and James became the Mayor of Salt Lake City in 1885. They were prosperous by then, living in a large house on Brigham Street (later called South Temple Street). At that time, Lizzie sent Jemima north to Thomas and his second wife, Eliza. Jemima never got over it. To her grandchildren she often recounted the blow, saying, “And then the beezum turned me out!” She blamed Lizzie for valuing the high life of important society more than her adoptive mother. It was a sad division.
Through a long life of incredible hardships, Jemima was strong-willed, courageous, determined to come out on top, and completely faithful to her chosen religion and to her family. She died 25 January 1890 in North Ogden and was buried in the Ben Lomond Cemetery in that community.
Jemima Brown Rogers gravestone (her birth year is wrong) |
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