
Ephraim Myres Lindsay was the first child born to William
Buckminster Lindsay, Sr. and Sarah Myres. He was born 4 May 1820 at Johnstown, Ontario,
Canada. He met Jane Parish in Nauvoo,
Illinois where they were married 22 January 1845. Jane had come from Kittley, Leeds,
Canada with her parents in 1839 settling in Scott county Illinois.
He built a home in Nauvoo near Janes parents and near the
temple. Their first child, a son was born there 20 November 1845. Only a few months later
the saints were driven from Nauvoo. Ephraim took his wife and son, David, and his
brother's wife, Julia in the exodus from Nauvoo. His brother, William B., had gone with
the advance company as a guard for Brigham Young.
Ephraim stopped in Pisgah and here they met William who was
returning from Council Bluffs and carrying the news of the call for volunteers for the war
with Mexico. Ephraim sold a small wagon that had been given to Jane by her parents. The
corn they received from this sale was used to buy a larger wagon and more oxen.
Ephraim and his brother and two other brothers left the saints and went to Wisconsin for their parents. They apparently stayed in Wisconsin a
year or so because William Buckminsters first child was born in Lafayette county,
Wisconsin in 1847. Ephraims second child was born in Des Moines, Iowa in 1848,
apparently as the group was on their way back to join the saints in Council Bluffs. In
Jane Parishs autobiography she states:
"He (William Buckminster Lindsay, Jr.) went to Wisconsin from Pisgah."
Ephraim settled in Council Bluffs approximately four years
while the Lindsays were growing food and obtaining resources for the trip to the west.
Janes parents, the Parishes, had gone to Utah with the first company in 1847. The
Lindsays did as many of the other saints. They raised grain and vegetables both for food
and for sale so they could buy wagons, oxen, and other equipment that they needed for
traveling.
In 1852 the Lindsays left Council Bluffs with the John B. Walker company and traveled
by covered wagon to Utah.
Jane Parish told of how she nursed her mother-in-law during to three month trip to
Utah. Ephraim s mother, Sarah Myres Lindsay, was suffering from
breast cancer during this journey. She was in bed all the way across the Plains. She
promised her family she would live to reach the body of the saints in Salt Lake if they
would just start with her. She died 24 October 1852 approximately three weeks after the
company reached the Salt Lake Valley.
The trip vas dusty, and the group was fearful of the Indians. Ephraim was considered
the best gunman in the company. When they would come across buffalo he would furnish the
company with meat. When they met Indians who gave the peace sign, he went with them to get
them meat.
The Lindsays settled in Centerville for better than a year
since that is where the Parish family was. They then moved to Kaysville
where the family lived for six or seven years. While there, Ephraim outfitted a rig for
his son David to go and aid the handcart saints. Several trips with oxen and this rig were
made in this behalf.
While the family was living in Kaysville, Ephraim was called by Brigham Young to go to Las Vegas, Nevada to help build a smelter and open a lend mine,
Ephraim must have been the one listed by the 1840 census as employed in mining in
Wisconsin. His experience in the lead mines there would explain his call to Nevada.
He returned from Nevada about 1860 or 1861 and moved with his family to Brigham City. The lack of water in Kaysville made farming
difficult there. In Brigham City, he planted one of the first peach orchards, raised
grain, and built a home on his farm. Here his children grew and received what education
they could get.
Ephraim enjoyed his farming. He built cradles to cradle the grain, bundled it for
drying and ripening, and took it to the threshing floor and flailed it out. His ability in
swinging the scythe and cradle in cutting the grain could keep two men busy binding it.
They say he cut as high as three to four acres a day,
One day David, Joel and Harvey went up the canyon to get wood. They
tried to get the best and get it home the quickest so they spied a big tree way on the
mountain that would slide down the mountainside if cut right. When the tree was cut it
came with such a rush it brought timber enough for all winters wood. There was quite an
excitement about the city over the big tree and the way it came down the mountain.
Ephraims last move was to Bear Lake Valley where
his father and two of his brothers had already moved. They homesteaded a farm in Bear Lake
with a lovely spring of flowing water. Here he farmed, milked cows, and enjoyed the
association of his grandchildren. The farm in Bennington was fenced all around with posts
and poles which took much hard work. Grain, hay potatoes, berries were the main crops and
meat, milk, and butter from the cattle provided the living.
Ephraim had six months schooling in Canada. He enlarged his education through self
study. He was a good student of history and geography and was called a walking dictionary" because of the words that he could define.
He was described as six feet tall with blue eyes and blonde or
brown hair. In the later years of his life, he was bothered by a bad hernia. He would
perform his work sitting the ground because he was unable to stand--doing such things as
chopping wood, hoeing and weeding the garden, and other things. It has also been stated
that he had some lead poisoning from his work in the lead mines.
Often the boys would gather and talk with their father, Ephraim, about their ancestors.
The family traditions of Captain David Lindsay and others who fought in the Revolutionary
war and of the old records that were burned when the family home was burned down in Canada
were subjects of conversation,. The granddaughters were privileged to trim his hair and
his beard and to help him in other ways occasionally.
He preceded his wife in death by some eighteen years passing away
on his eighty first birthday, 4 May 1901 at Bennington, Bear Lake, Idaho where he is
burned. He was fine example of righteous Latter-Day Saint living. He was dearly loved by
all who knew him and has earned the love and respect of his posterity.
In 1949, there were 183 descendants of Ephraim Myres Lindsay and Jane Parish. A
thirteen page autobiographical sketch of Jane Parish is contained in the book Parish
Dach Families P. 62.-75 at the Genealogical Library in Salt Lake City. (Call Number
B19A8)