Monday, July 19, 2021

 

The Beauties of Nature, Family, Friends, Art, Service, and More...

Pete and Julie Carlston invited us for an extended family weekend at the ranch in Weber Canyon. Here are just a few photos 



                         Pete made a dugout canoe from a fallen pine tree. 

Sir Pancakes enjoying the kayak with Ming Lu. 

Pete on his raft, Luke in kayak.


        Hannah, Fernanda and Nick de Schweinitz


                                    Pete and Phoebe Carlston
         Elise, Stephanie and Evie (as well as Cordelia) love the horses
         The magnificent view from the cabin, and fun in the great room where the three dogs were hard to keep in their "pen."


Make way for the horses. Alex Wheatley (in the red shirt) was staying at his family's cabin next door. The evening before we talked to his wife Alexa and Courtney McNaught (all Wheatleys, friends from Palo Alto, CA.)!
We then continued on our hike through the aspens, firs, spruce forests and fields of gorgeous wildflowers.


             Pete sharing his knowledge of nature and local history.

 Cousins Elise, Cordelia, Stephanie and Evie



Julie knows the names of most of the flowers


What's up, John?


Peter taught them to blow through grass to made loud whistles, The girls collected reeds, the kids found dead trees to knock down.



                   We crossed lots of creeks on rocks and logs.


It was hard to leave, but driving back home through the Wasatch-Uinta mountains is beautiful, too!






Sunday I attended the Homecoming service in which President Brad and Sister Ann Taylor shared their experiences, challenges, and joys of their 3 year term as mission leaders in Seoul, Korea. Much of the time was served during the Covid-19 Pandemic, when all but the Koreans were sent back to their home countries. It seemed like 100+ of their missionaries were in attendance. I was so excited to see and talk to so many Taylors (who grew up in Palo Alto near me) that I forgot to take any photos! Provo is a gathering place!
But I did remember on Sunday afternoon to take a photo of my dear friends the Gilmans who had all come to visit their parents Paul and Sara who also bought a home in Provo about the same time as I did.


Former football star Steve Young (also of Palo Alto) owns the land and horses on my street (a block away). And 2 friends, Aaron Skabelund and Quinn Mecham, who lived in our Palo Alto ward while doing graduate work at Stanford University, now BYU professors of History and Political Science respectively, are running for Provo and Orem city councils! Good luck to them both, wise and so generous with their time, energy, and talents.

And my prayers and best wishes to all the many people worldwide who are undergoing trials and challenges. Many are of a magnitude I cannot even imagine. 
The following is from my friend Danielle who is going through breast cancer treatment. She cites a favorite quote: 
"Part of enduring well consists of being meek enough, amid our suffering, to learn from our relevant experiences. Rather than simply passing through these things, they must pass through us and do so in ways which sanctify these experiences for our good."
As members of the Church of Jesus Christ we commemorate the entry of Brigham Young and the first group of pioneers into the Salt Lake Valley on July 24, 1847. Today I finished reading a book of accounts of the handcart companies who arrived in 1856. Of the 1000 who left Europe and eastern states and traveled by handcarts, freezing, starving, and sick, about 800 survived. Many were orphans, widows, amputees and suffered poor health the rest of their lives. Very few lost their faith, even as they lost family members. I am grateful for their perseverance and legacy. We celebrate the sacrifice of the rescue parties as well. Many had been away serving missions and turned right around to save their fellow men, women and children. May we be inspired, too, who are so blessed in so many ways, to rescue those in need.

Sunday, July 11, 2021





Fabulous First Week of July, 2021

Provo is known for its July 4th weekend of hot air balloons. I got up at 5, hoping to see the ascent from Freedom Park. Unfortunately it was decided after about 1 1/2 hour wait on Friday, July 2, that the weather was questionable, so no show.

I came back that night to watch the balloon show (firing up to music)


In the meantime I went to neighboring city Orem to the museum, Cries of Freedom The Musical put on by youth theater (U.S. and other Countries' cries of freedom), and the very moving swearing in of 20 new U.S. citizens from 14 countries.







New citizens from Brazil, Tonga, Venezuela, and DR bore testimonials about earning their citizenship.

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On July 3 my daughter Emily, grandson Aaron, and I flew to Kansas City for a disc golf tournament in Emporia, Kansas, wildlife preserve, Amish town and historical sites of pioneer and personal family history in Missouri and Kansas. It was a fun, whirlwind trip. Here are some highlights.

The Kansas City, Missouri LDS Temple

The "Nautilus,"Temple of the Community of Christ, the group that broke with the mainstream Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, when most members began the trek west to settle in Utah. There are other offshoot groups headquartered in Independence, Missouri. 

 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints' visitors center in Independence, across the road from the Community of Christ's Nautilus. 
We criss-crossed the Missouri River several times.

Fireworks were sold and going off all weekend.

Our first night we stayed across the street  from the Truman House.




The neighbor across the street opposed Truman marrying his daughter because he wasn't of the proper social standing, fearing Harry Truman would never amount to anything! He was U.S. President from1948-53.

We liked the prayer in our Hotel Higher Ground. Would that we all were so welcoming to all we meet!

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Liberty Jail (brief summary of Mormon persecution in Missouri)

In October of 1838, mobs and militia antagonistic toward the Mormons laid siege to the Mormon settlement of Far West, Missouri, having received an Extermination Order from Missouri governor Lilburn W. Boggs. The leaders of the Church were given conditions of surrender—the settlement was comprised of only a few hundred people, and the militia of over 3,000 men. The conditions of surrender were as follows: (1) The leaders of the Latter-day Saints were to be taken into custody; (2) the personal property of the Saints was to be confiscated to pay costs, damages, debts suffered by citizens of the state of Missouri; (3) all arms belonging to the Saints were to be confiscated; and (4) all Latter-day Saints had to leave the state. Joseph Smith agreed to meet with militia leaders to avoid bloodshed, but was imprisoned and condemned to be shot without a trial. General Samuel D. Lucas ordered the execution, but General A. W. Doniphan refused, calling the order "cold blooded murder. Joseph Smith and other leaders were held in Richmond for two weeks while a trial was held. The trial was a travesty of justice, but some of the men were released. On November 30, 1838, Joseph Smith, Hyrum SmithSidney Rigdon, Lyman Wight, Alexander McRae, and Caleb Baldwin were taken to Liberty Jail (used 1823-1853) to await another trial. They had been charged with treason against the state of Missouri, an exaggerated and unjust charge.

Liberty jail was more like a dungeon. It was twenty-two feet square and had two levels for incarceration, both below the ground. A hole in the floor of the top level was the only way to get to the lower level. The only way out of the jail was through a trap door in the ceiling. The ceilings on both levels were so low that two of the men who were confined there were never able to stand up straight. There were “inner and outer walls which, combined, were four feet thick. Loose rocks were placed between the walls to thwart any attempt at burrowing through.” The men were forced to stay in Liberty Jail for four months during a bitterly cold winter. There were narrow openings which provided the only light in the prison. Unfortunately, these openings also let in the cold. Conditions were horrible. The prisoners were often sickened by rotten or poisoned food. Along with these deplorable conditions, Joseph and the others also worried for their families and the society of saints who were being driven from their Missouri homes in the midst of winter.

The time in Liberty Jail, however, was not without its blessings. The jail has been nicknamed the “Temple Jail,” because Joseph Smith received many important revelations there. He also had time to reflect on gospel principles. Joseph Smith received the revelations found in Doctrine and Covenants 121, 122, and 123 while imprisoned at Liberty. At one point, Joseph pleaded with the Lord: O God, where art thou? To this cry, the Lord responded:

My son, peace be unto thy soul; thine adversity and thine afflictions shall be but a small moment; and then, if thou endure it well, God shall exalt thee on high... 


Liberty jail as it looked when Joseph Smith was there



We attended church in the Liberty ward because Emily's friend Dorothee's son Nathan Cannon (on left) was finishing his mission there, having left his mission in the Ivory Coast after a year when Covid hit. We helped teach a lesson to cute Makayla.




The cornerstones of the Far West Temple were laid before the Saints were driven out, heading temporarily for Quincy, Illinois, before their slightly more permanent settlement in Commerce/Nauvoo, Illinois. Several important revelations were received here. The property now belongs to the Church of Christ, which split off later.




Kansas and Missouri are filled with cornfields, silos, and LONG trains



                                    

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Such a beautiful, peaceful place. Much of the surrounding land is owned by the church. 






We believe that Adam-ondi-Ahman, on Tower Hill, is the place where Adam built an altar, offered sacrifice, and blessed his posterity.  Nothing remains of the Mormon settlement of 1836-9 or of  Adam's altar stones. It is the place where Adam shall come again to visit his people. Far West will be rebuilt with a temple, and Independence will be the place where Jesus Christ will come again.


Hawn's Mill, near Far West, was a Mormon settlement , scene of a bloody massacre against Mormons by anti-Mormons on October 30, 1838. We feared getting stuck in the mud, but made it to the site of mill on the river, which has disappeared. Aaron caught some frogs.
 
In Richmond we visited the cemetery with monument to Joseph Smith and the original 3 witnesses of the metal plates from which the Book of Mormon was translated. Oliver Cowdery and the Whitmer brothers temporarily left the church (some came back) but none ever denied the authenticity of the book, which is "another testament (with the Bible) of Jesus Christ. Several Whitmers and Cowdery are buried here





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We enjoyed our short stay in an Amish village, Jamesport. Our host was a young woman who had converted from her Amish childhood upbringing to the Mennonites, who are less strict.







 We were not really tempted to buy Amish clothing but enjoyed the children's books and food products in their general stores.


                           We loved the many beautiful sunsets
Every day we found a disc golf park for Aaron, who also loves bugs!


Peter Pan Park (one of 5-6 large and beautiful golf parks) was given by journalist (editor of The Emporia Gazette)William Allen White (1868-1944) to the city of Emporia, Kansas, as a memorial for his beloved and amazing daughter Mary who died at age 16 when she was swept off her horse by an overhanging branch. It was so named because she was a tomboy, thoughtful and independent, who never wanted to grow up. A movie was made of her life.


     


Emily and I managed to get a private tour of the Whites' house. He was also an advisor and special friend to many, including 5 U.S. Presidents, especially Hoover and Teddy Roosevelt. He wrote articles opposing the KKK in Kansas, and supported the League of Nations in 1920. He and Einstein both received honorary degrees from Harvard in 1935. Son Will and grandson Bill carried on his work and legacy.


This rug, in the guestroom where he and others stayed, was given as a gift from Roosevelt. The head curator came to take our photo!









Missouri is very green, but we were glad to have mosquito repellent! We loved the fireflies, however!

I was thrilled to visit the small towns that were my father's Allen (in Sedalia) and Blanchard (in Marshall/Grand Pass) parents' birthplaces, before the families came to California in the 1880's and 1890's, as well as the gravestone of my great great grandparents. Hiram was a child of the first Blanchard immigrant to America.

                          Sedalia central plaza and courthouse



Back in Kansas we headed west of Emporia to the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve. The Flint Hills region (once a vast Permian inland sea) is one of the last remaining (11,000 acres) such ecosystems in the world  and is home to many birds, animals (bison, beaver, raccoon, badger, rabbit), flowers. Much of it disappeared as settlers moved west and bought up or were given this rich land for ranches and farms.



The tiny school, house, and barn of one of the settlers next to which is the visitors' center


We were very impressed with the beautiful campus of U. of Kansas in Lawrence, my last stop before my flight back to SLC from Kansas City, Missouri. Emily and Aaron stayed a few more days for disc golf.





Back in Utah I enjoyed the 8th birthday of my grand-daughter Evie.


 
from left: Stephanie, Elise, Lucie, a friend, Evie, and friends.
Even strong 3 year old Phoebe climbed in the obstacle course gym.


Evie's mom Fernanda made a beautiful cake and cupcakes. We eagerly await her baptism in August.


What a fabulous week for me! It is SO hot here (100+ all week), but I have air-conditioning, new English students from Venezuela, had a visit from family and my friends the Aldous family from Palo Alto, rode to church today in the Jacksons' golf cart, and look forward to a busy week ahead with a trip to a family mountain ranch. Life is good!