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Obituary of Moses Harris
Deseret Evening News
March 27, 1890, page 3:
DEATH OF MOSES HARRIS.
Yet Another Aged Veteran Passes Away.
Moses Harris, the subject of this sketch, was born July 20th, 1798, in
Somerset County Pennsylvania. He was the son of Silas and Annaretta Wright Harris. His
Ancestor was among the first of New England. In an early day his father moved into Indiana and
settled in Cork County. There Moses became acquainted with Fanny Smith, whom he married
Jan. 1st, 1824, and who still survives him, aged 86 years. Both were baptized into
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on February 23rd, 1833. He, in
company with his brother-in-law, Sm. Hawks, gathered with the Saints in Missouri in the summer
of 1836, and stopped through the winter of 1836 and '37 at Charlton, Missouri, and in the
following spring located on Crooked River, Caldwell County. He suffered with the Saints in the
persecution of 1838, and in the inclement months of March, 1839, with a one-hose wagon, in
which had be stowed the most necessary household goods, with several children, he set out for
Illinois, leaving all the balance of their property a prey to the mobbers. He finally settled about five miles west of Montrose, Iowa, in a very destitute condition.
He was ordained a High Priest under the direction of the Prophet Joseph Smith in Nauvoo.
The season before the exodus of the Saints from Illinois he moved on a farm nearer
Montrose which he had retained. About the first of May, 1846, he took up the line of march with
the Saints for the West, and arrived at Council bluffs about the time that Colonel Allen called on
the Twelve for 500 volunteers to go to California. He gave up his eldest son, Silas, who was the
main support of the family in response to the call of the Twelve, to enlist in the battalion. At the
Bluffs he located on Little Pidgeon Creek. In October, 1848, his son arrived from California and,
with his assistance, the family were prepared to cross the plains in R.N. Allred's company, in
1849. After they had crossed the Loup Fork, his sister, the wife of William Hawk, was killed in a
stampede.
He arrived in Salt Lake valley on the 16th of October and settled in
Bountiful, ten miles north of Salt Lake City, where he remained until the spring of 1851, when he
joined the company of Charles C. Rich and Amaza Lyman to go to San Bernardino to form a
settlement. At that place he purchased forty acres of land at #10 per acre, but not having it quite
paid for when the settlement was broken up, he got no title for it and so lost it with the
improvements he had made. He started on his return to Utah in the fall of 1857 in Jefferson Hunt's
company, and settled in Washington, Washington County, Utah, in February, 1858. In the spring
of 1859 he moved to Harrisburg, which place was named after him by President Brigham Young,
he being the only settler there at that time.
In May 1864 he moved with his son John to Berry Valley (now Long Valley), Kane
County, Utah, and located at what is now the town of Glendale, where he remained until driven
out by the Indians in June 1867. He returned to Harrisburg where he remained about three years,
and then assisted in building up the town of Leeds, three miles eat of Harrisburg. From this place
he moved back to Glendale, Long Valley, and settled near his son Silas, at which place he
departed this life March 15th, 1890, after an illness of thirty days, caused by an
attack of influenza, which settled in his stomach, causing severe pain. He finally passed peacefully
away a few minutes before midnight, aged 91 years, 7 months and 25 days.
He leaves a posterity now living of five children, [55] grandchildren. Father Harris' long
and eventful life, after gathering with the Saints in Missouri, was mostly spent in opening up new
settlements. He was very unassuming, and was honest and upright in his dealings with his fellow
man, always quietly performing all duties required of him. He was very temperate in his habits.
He never faltered nor murmured under all the trying scenes he was called to pass through, and
was ever ready to bear a strong testimony to the truth of this Latter-day work. It can truly be said
of him, "He has fought the good flight, he has kept the faith," and will come forth in the morning
of the first resurrection and inherit all the blessings sealed upon his head in the Temple of the
Lord, wherein he passed through all the ordinances given in those scared places.
WARREN FOOTE.
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