The theme for this section of my grandmother's history is fire...
During this time, Ed was on a mission in North Carolina, where he served for twenty-eight months. We had dated a few times before he left for his mission, and corresponded during that time. He arrived home in March 1923, and we took up dating again. We were married in the St. George Temple on my father's birthday, which was 13 September 1923, by President David Cannon, who had married both of our parents. We went on our honeymoon to California where he had employment. As we were crossing the desert from St. George to Las Vegas, Nevada, we had 17 flat tires. The tires were so hot that they wouldn't hold a patch. When we reached Las Vegas, we were able to buy a kit and that ended the tire problems. We arrived in Bakersfield, California where Ed worked on a hospital and earned $1.00 an hour, which was big wages at that time. They ran out of money during November, so the job ended and we returned home. I was the only happy one to be coming back to LaVerkin, but I was so homesick. (We heard that the hospital to this day was never completed.) We came home and lived in the first home his father and mother built, just behind their new home.
On September 14th, 1925, we bought the Fletcher home. We were so happy to have our own home. Just before Thanksgiving Ed and I were picking over beans at night in our kitchen, when a big turkey flew through our window, shattering glass everywhere, and landed in our big tub of beans. It took me so by surprise that I let out a scream and nearly frightened Ed to death as I was so near confinement with our first child. Our first child was born on December 1st at 6:00am in our home. We gave him the name of Lyman "W" Gubler, Ed was so happy to have a boy! The births and marriages of our children are as follows (I left off complete dates for those still living.) :
Lyman "W" 1 December 1925, married Norene Bringhurst 22 November 1948
Faun, 2 January 1927, married Jack R. Eves 11 May 1944
Ramona, 7 April 1928, married Melvin Linbert Gifford, 6 February 1948
Thell "W" -----, married Elaine Nyborg, 15 July 19--
Helen, 3 May 19--, married DuWayne Gilbert Squire, 10 December 19--
Edward Wilson, 3 December 19--, married Janet LaRae Seegmiller, 22 May 19--
Gail, 30 March 19--, married Boyd Jay Earl 25 Nov 19--
While Ed was working down at the LaVerkin hot springs we had 300 small chickens that I had come home to take care of them. During the night I was awakened to hear my neighbor, Pearl Webb, calling to LaFell Iverson that Thora's house was on fire. I jumped out of bed and grabbed the three children from their beds and rushed them outside to safety. Then I noticed that it was the outhouse and chicken coup that was on fire. I took the children back inside then my neighbors and I grabbed water hoses and started putting the fire out. We were able to save most of the chickens and half of the coup.
One afternoon while Ed was at the church house playing baseball, Lyman and a neighbor boy, Paul Webb, were playing with matches up in the barn, which we had just filled with new hay and straw. They had made a tunnel back in the hay and were using it as their hideout, knowing no one would catch them playing with the matches that so intrigues young children, when to their dismay the hay caught on fire. Paul, being three years older than Lyman, sensed the danger and they both scrambled out of the tunnel to safety before the whole barn was consumed in fire.
Ed had gone to the temple with his dad and mother and I was again home alone when fire struck, but this time it was to be our home. I had baked bread earlier and was in sewing on a dress for Helen when a young girl named Essie Aassy called and said, "Thora, your house is on fire!" All of the children were outside playing except Helen, who was sleeping in the back bedroom. The fire started in the kitchen, through a faulty electrical wire. People came rushing from everywhere to give help, but the only things we were able to salvage was the sewing machine, the dress I was working on, all the beds and my piano. (It still carries the charred side where the heat was so fierce.) Everything else went up in smoke--all our clothes, pictures, dad's books and missionary journals--it was all in ashes at our feet in an hour's time, as it was just a frame home.
"I promise that if you will keep your journals and records, they will indeed be a source of great inspiration to your families, to your children, your grandchildren, and others, on through the generations. Each of us is important to those who are near and dear to us and as our posterity reads of our life's experiences, they, too, will come to know and love us. And in that glorious day when our families are together in the eternities, we will already be acquainted." ~President Spencer W. Kimball
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Sunday, March 16, 2014
Life History of Thora Wilson Gubler-Part 1
Thora Wilson Gubler is my maternal grandmother. I have spent a lot of time on my paternal lines and thought it was time to focus on my maternal side. This history was written by my grandma and was included in a book that was compiled by my Uncle Thell and Aunt Elaine for Thora's 80th birthday. The book was entitled, 80th Star Leaves Cosmic Trail of Ancestry, Honoring Thora Wilson Gubler. Dated May 20, 1983.
We moved from Mountaindale before I was one year old. My father built a house with a lean-to over a cellar in LaVerkin, so his family could be with him while he worked on the Hurricane Canal, to get water to the city block he owned in Hurricane. (The granary house is going to be restored by Eric Nielson.) Dad later sold this property in Hurricane to the Stanworth brothers for $600.00, as he was called to be the Bishop of the LaVerkin Ward in June 1904, where he served in this capacity for 24 years.
I was baptized in the LaVerkin canal, just above my home, by my father on my 8th birthday, after which we enjoyed a big dinner. We had many happy times in this modest home.
Charles Cottom and son, Walter, built our new home and we moved into it when I was nine years old. It was like heaven to have my own bedroom. When I was 12 Dad bought a new piano and I took lessons from Sister Maud Judd. After Ed and I were married Mother and Dad wanted a new radio and said we could have the piano for what the radio would cost. We purchased a lovely 3 1/2 foot high floor radio and happily made the change. This piano has brought many happy hours into our homes throughout the years and I still enjoy playing it.
When I was in grade school (which encompassed the 1st through 8th grade) we had a religion class before school for the 7th and 8th grades. Ezoe Woodbury was the organist for it, and when she wasn't there I played "Catch the Sunshine," as she wasn't there quite often it became necessary for me to learn other hymns as fast as I could. Emil Graff was my teacher for 6th, 7th, and 8th grades.
(see photos: https://familysearch.org/photos/images/1485500?p=1035905
https://familysearch.org/photos/images/3805413?p=1035905
https://familysearch.org/photos/images/1427165?p=1035905)
I nearly always got A's on my report card, but got B's in deportment, as I sat between Moroni Sanders and Whitney Jones and they were always yanking my long braids and putting them in ink bottles. The teacher caught me as I turned around to hit them back.
When I was 12, my brother Paul was born, and Dad hired Mina Morrell, who was 18 or 19, to come and help during the day and evenings. She was dating Ed at the time, so Emma Woodbury and I called Ed and told him Mina wanted him to come up--so he came and surprised her as they sat out on the porch (Emma and I were hiding on the deck just above them) as Ed kissed her goodnight, Emma and I giggled and had a lot of fun about it, little dreaming in later years Ed and I would date and end up marrying each other.
I attended the first 9th grade class that was held in Hurricane. During this year I contacted the flu, along with my father and brother, Wayne. About two weeks later the doctor came to check on us and then went onto help others at Toquerville. He told them that he was afraid that Bishop Wilson and his daughter would both be dead by morning, but because of a special prayer circle held especially in our behalf that night, we made a turn for the better and made a complete recovery.
In order to finish my high school education, it was necessary for me to move to St. George, where I lived with Sister Julia Graff and her daughter, Rachel, who was my best friend. (This was Emil Graff's mother and sister.) During this time, I and another girlfriend Partha Gubler, became very homesick and decided to borrow a couple of horses and go home over the weekend. We started the long journey home (much farther than it is now, with improved roads). By the time we arrived home, we were both so sore that we had to be lifted off our horses. The only thing I could think of at that time was that same long miserable trek back!
During school we were asked to put on a vaudeville show, in order to raise money for a class project. There were six girls and six boys that did the chorus. In order to have something special and different, we asked Rachel's brother , Grant, who was living in Salt Lake City, to pick up some music that he thought would be good for this production, and one of the songs he sent down was "Oh Gee, Say Gee." Our songs went over with great appreciation with the student-body and the community where it played for three nights with capacity crowds and we made good money.
During the summer, Rachel and her mother moved back to LaVerkin and Rachel would clerk in the store--so when the ward had a special program they asked us to do a number and we decided we would do that lively little number of "Oh Gee, Say Gee." The chorus goes something like this: "Over here, over there, she's a little bit bare, so she wears a lot of leaves to protect her from the air. Oh gee, say gee, you ought to see my gee gee from the frigie isles." Everyone in the audience got a big kick out of it except Dad, and he was really furious to think that we would sing this song.
History of Thora W. Gubler
I was born in Virgin, Utah, 20 May 1903 to Morris Wilson, Jr. and Minnie Ann Stratton Wilson. My cousin, Elola Stratton, and I were both born the same day on Uncle Powell Stratton's birthday.We moved from Mountaindale before I was one year old. My father built a house with a lean-to over a cellar in LaVerkin, so his family could be with him while he worked on the Hurricane Canal, to get water to the city block he owned in Hurricane. (The granary house is going to be restored by Eric Nielson.) Dad later sold this property in Hurricane to the Stanworth brothers for $600.00, as he was called to be the Bishop of the LaVerkin Ward in June 1904, where he served in this capacity for 24 years.
I was baptized in the LaVerkin canal, just above my home, by my father on my 8th birthday, after which we enjoyed a big dinner. We had many happy times in this modest home.
Charles Cottom and son, Walter, built our new home and we moved into it when I was nine years old. It was like heaven to have my own bedroom. When I was 12 Dad bought a new piano and I took lessons from Sister Maud Judd. After Ed and I were married Mother and Dad wanted a new radio and said we could have the piano for what the radio would cost. We purchased a lovely 3 1/2 foot high floor radio and happily made the change. This piano has brought many happy hours into our homes throughout the years and I still enjoy playing it.
When I was in grade school (which encompassed the 1st through 8th grade) we had a religion class before school for the 7th and 8th grades. Ezoe Woodbury was the organist for it, and when she wasn't there I played "Catch the Sunshine," as she wasn't there quite often it became necessary for me to learn other hymns as fast as I could. Emil Graff was my teacher for 6th, 7th, and 8th grades.
(see photos: https://familysearch.org/photos/images/1485500?p=1035905
https://familysearch.org/photos/images/3805413?p=1035905
https://familysearch.org/photos/images/1427165?p=1035905)
I nearly always got A's on my report card, but got B's in deportment, as I sat between Moroni Sanders and Whitney Jones and they were always yanking my long braids and putting them in ink bottles. The teacher caught me as I turned around to hit them back.
When I was 12, my brother Paul was born, and Dad hired Mina Morrell, who was 18 or 19, to come and help during the day and evenings. She was dating Ed at the time, so Emma Woodbury and I called Ed and told him Mina wanted him to come up--so he came and surprised her as they sat out on the porch (Emma and I were hiding on the deck just above them) as Ed kissed her goodnight, Emma and I giggled and had a lot of fun about it, little dreaming in later years Ed and I would date and end up marrying each other.
I attended the first 9th grade class that was held in Hurricane. During this year I contacted the flu, along with my father and brother, Wayne. About two weeks later the doctor came to check on us and then went onto help others at Toquerville. He told them that he was afraid that Bishop Wilson and his daughter would both be dead by morning, but because of a special prayer circle held especially in our behalf that night, we made a turn for the better and made a complete recovery.
In order to finish my high school education, it was necessary for me to move to St. George, where I lived with Sister Julia Graff and her daughter, Rachel, who was my best friend. (This was Emil Graff's mother and sister.) During this time, I and another girlfriend Partha Gubler, became very homesick and decided to borrow a couple of horses and go home over the weekend. We started the long journey home (much farther than it is now, with improved roads). By the time we arrived home, we were both so sore that we had to be lifted off our horses. The only thing I could think of at that time was that same long miserable trek back!
During school we were asked to put on a vaudeville show, in order to raise money for a class project. There were six girls and six boys that did the chorus. In order to have something special and different, we asked Rachel's brother , Grant, who was living in Salt Lake City, to pick up some music that he thought would be good for this production, and one of the songs he sent down was "Oh Gee, Say Gee." Our songs went over with great appreciation with the student-body and the community where it played for three nights with capacity crowds and we made good money.
During the summer, Rachel and her mother moved back to LaVerkin and Rachel would clerk in the store--so when the ward had a special program they asked us to do a number and we decided we would do that lively little number of "Oh Gee, Say Gee." The chorus goes something like this: "Over here, over there, she's a little bit bare, so she wears a lot of leaves to protect her from the air. Oh gee, say gee, you ought to see my gee gee from the frigie isles." Everyone in the audience got a big kick out of it except Dad, and he was really furious to think that we would sing this song.
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