Elizabeth Jane Wilson was born in Grover, North
Carolina, 13 Mar 1876, a daughter of Lawson and Elmina Green
Wilson. She lived with her family, on a farm and the children
learned to work hard early in life. She spent much of her time, as
a child, picking cotton and tending babies. She and her sister
Mary Lee had to card the cotton, which was made into rolls and then spun
into hanks. A hank would weave about a yard of cloth. The
girls also learned to card and spin wool from their little flock of
sheep, which their thrifty mother dyed and wove into cloth.
She
attended school, which was about 5 miles from their home. She and
her sister walked the distance every day. They couldn't attend
much as they had to help at home. The Wilson home was built of
hewed logs, covered with weatherboards on the outside and chinked and
plastered on the inside. The house was built on a slope of the
ground and on the low side were stilts, the height of a grown-up, which
supported it. It was a large home with three bedrooms
upstairs. In the living room was a large fireplace. As was
customary in the south, the kitchen was a small building by itself,
built about 40 feet from the main house. There was a milk house
down by the creek in a grove of trees. In the life story of Mary
Lee, there is a full description of the tasks around the home.
Elizabeth Jane, known as Jennie, became an excellent seamstress, like
her mother.
Along with the hard times they had much fun, at the
corn huskings, corn poppings, candy pulls and dancing. The
furniture was shoved back, and the young folks enjoyed a regular
hoe-down. They had quilting bees. Her father was strict with
them. His orders were that the girls were to come home from the
parties alone, and not with the boys. The girls would march ahead
with a pinnion pine torch, but the boys marched close behind.
The
family belonged to the Baptist Church and attended meetings
regularly. A few years later the missionaries from the church of
Jesus Christ of Latter-Day-Saints came to their home and told them about
the Gospel. At first the parents listened with interest, but when
relatives heard of this they warned the Wilsons that the Mormon Elders
were there to win his wife and daughters away from him. Then other
Elders came and the parents listened and believed their message and
were baptized. Their friends turned on them and would have nothing
to do with them. In fact they made it so miserable for them that
they moved to South Carolina to join a colony of Mormons, for by then,
mob violence was becoming stronger. It was hard for Jennie's
grandparents and relatives to understand why the Wilsons wanted to be
Mormons.
In March 1891, the Wilson and Bolin families,
along with a number of other saints from the Southern States, emigrated
to Utah. They boarded the train at Cowpens, a town made historic
for having been the site of a battle of the Civil War. Traveling
from Monday till the following Sunday, they arrived in Ogden, Utah 15
Mar 1891. The Bolins stopped off at Lehi.
They would never
forget the cold ride from Ogden to North Ogden in an open hay wagon,
clad in thin cotton clothes, as they were used to the warm climate of
the south. It year they arrived, the sugar beet industry was
beginning in Lehi and farmers advertized for Southern people to come and
help with the hoeing. Jennie's father and brother went to Lehi to
get work. They introduced the long-handled hoe, which made the
work much easier. That winter the whole family moved to
Lehi. The next spring they rented a farm in Highland and moved up
there. Pioneer life in Highland was not easy.
cont.