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IIBERKLEY LLOYD BUNKER 1906-1999
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Orson Pratt Brown's Aunt Emily's Step-Grandson

section header - biography

Berkeley Lloyd Bunker 1906-1999

Berkeley Lloyd Bunker

Born: August 12, 1906 at St. Thomas, Clark, Nevada
Died: January 21, 1999 at Las Vegas, Clark, Nevada

Compiled by Lucy Brown Archer

Berkeley Lloyd Bunker was born the eighth of eight children born to Martin Allen Bunker (1863-19470) and Helen Euphemia McNeil Bunker (1866-1934) of St. George, Washington, Utah. Berkeley's grandparents were Edward Bunker Sr. (1822-1901) and Mary Ann Mathieson McQuarrie Bunker (1846-1906),

A.C.R. 50

ASSEMBLY CONCURRENT RESOLUTION NO. 50
APRIL 23, 1999
____________

Read and Adopted

SUMMARY— Memorializes former Speaker of the Assembly, Berkeley L. Bunker. (BDR R-1385)
~

ASSEMBLY CONCURRENT RESOLUTION— Memorializing former Speaker of the

Assembly, Berkeley L. Bunker.

1WHEREAS, The members of the Nevada Legislature note with profound
2 sorrow the passing of native Nevadan and former Assemblyman Berkeley
3 L. Bunker on January 21, 1999; and
4 WHEREAS, The story of this native Nevadan began on August 12, 1906,
5 on a farm in the Moapa Valley hamlet of St. Thomas, where Berkeley
6 Bunker was born one of the 10 [8] children of Martin and Helen Bunker,
7 pioneers who settled in St. Thomas in 1877; and
8 WHEREAS, In the 1920s, the Bunker family relocated to Las Vegas, a
9 railroad town with a population of just a few thousand whose future excited
10 Berkeley Bunker as he envisioned the possibilities which he would spend
11 most of his life helping to make reality; and

– 2 –

1 WHEREAS, After graduation from Las Vegas High School and time
2 spent as a missionary for his church, Berkeley Bunker married his high
3 school sweetheart, Lucille Whitehead, who was his partner for the next 55
4 years until her death in 1988; and
5 WHEREAS, Berkeley Bunker later married Della Lee, a long-time friend
6 and native of Panaca; and
7 WHEREAS, Berkeley Bunker was elected to the Nevada Assembly in
8 1936, 1938 and 1940, serving as Speaker of the Assembly during his
9 second term and also as Chairman of the Ways and Means Committee; and
10 WHEREAS, Before serving his third term as Assemblyman, Berkeley
11 Bunker was appointed by Governor E. P. Carville to complete the term of
12 United States Senator Key Pittman; and
13 WHEREAS, In 1944, Berkeley Bunker won the only Nevada seat in the
14 United States House of Representatives; and
15 WHEREAS, After his career in politics, Berkeley Bunker, who did not
16 believe in retirement, continued as co-owner of Bunker Brothers Mortuary
17 and then as a bankruptcy trustee; and
18 WHEREAS, Berkeley Bunker’s commitment to the community is
19 evidenced by his membership and service in numerous organizations such
20 as the Kiwanas Club, Rotary Club, Boy Scouts of America, American Red
21 Cross and American Cancer Society, as well as being past President of the
22 Las Vegas YMCA and national President of the Order of the Golden Rule; and
23 WHEREAS, Berkeley Bunker is survived by his beloved wife Della, his
24 daughters, Loretta Derrick and Ann Harris, his stepson, Dr. James Lee
25 Richards, his stepdaughter, Sharla Humphrey, his sister, Ann Shipley, as
26 well as 22 grandchildren and 24 great-grandchildren; now, therefore, be it
27 RESOLVED BY THE ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF NEVADA, THE SENATE
28 CONCURRING, That the members of the 70th Session of the Nevada
29 Legislature express their heartfelt sympathy and sincere condolences to the
30 family and friends of former Assemblyman Berkeley Bunker; and be it
31 further
32 RESOLVED, That Berkeley Bunker will long be remembered with the
33 highest regard for his integrity, sense of humor and positive outlook as well
34 as the rich legacy of his service to the community of Las Vegas and to the
35 State of Nevada; and be it further
36 RESOLVED, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly prepare and transmit a
37 copy of this resolution to Berkeley Bunker’s family.
38 ~

section header - children
Children of Berkeley Lloyd Bunker and Lucile Whitehead Bunker

1
Loretta Bunker

Born:
Married: Mr. Derrick

Died:

2
Ann Bunker

Born:
Married: Mr. Harris

Died:

Right Click mouse on image - then click on view image - to see enlarged photo

BERKELEY BUNKER
(1906-1999)

Politician, Patriarch and Preacher

For the Las Vegas Review-Journal by K.J. Evans

A member of a pioneer Mormon family, who found himself thrust into a national office after a key official died, returned to the city he loved and made himself and his family proud.

The annual equestrian appearance in the Helldorado Days parade was standard practice for local dignitaries, and Berkeley Bunker was no exception.

Photo courtesy of Della Lee Richards Bunker


Photo from Review-Journal files

Berkeley Bunker held the title of Patriarch in the Mormon Church, and was a patriarch in the secular sense as well. Here, he leads a Bible study session with some younger family members.

Of all the bizarre tales of Nevada politics -- and there are plenty of them -- none is stranger than the one in which a dead senator, on the eve of his re-election in 1940, was preserved on ice in a hotel bathtub by his campaign aides until the vote was final.

He was Democrat Key Pittman, first elected in 1912. Having hit the end of the campaign trail, the rarely sober senator began hitting the bottle, and subsequently suffered a heart attack in his room at the Riverside Hotel in Reno.

The politician-on-ice story is almost certainly bogus; serious researchers have concluded Pittman was rushed to the hospital, where he died, after the election was already in the bag.

But Pittman's death did set into motion an equally strange series of events in the career of a serious-minded young man named Berkeley Bunker. He would be celebrated as the first Southern Nevadan, and first Nevada Mormon, to hold national office. Later, he would be accused by his fellow Democrats of the heinous crime of political ingratitude, becoming a party pariah.

Denied a career in the political arena, he returned to Las Vegas and became a successful businessman and the much-loved and respected church leader who would spearhead the final drive to build the Las Vegas Temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

The Bunkers are a pioneer Mormon family of the Moapa Valley. Martin Bunker and Euphemie Bunker moved there from St. George, Utah, in 1877 and established the family ranch at St. Thomas. Berkeley was born there in August 1906, one of six boys and two girls.

When he was 17, his father sold the ranch in St. Thomas to the federal government, which was acquiring land that would be submerged by the waters of Lake Mead behind Hoover Dam, and bought another ranch near Alamo in Lincoln County. Martin Bunker moved his family to Las Vegas, and divided his own time between there and the ranch. Young Berkeley, impressed with Las Vegas' modern conveniences, like electricity and indoor plumbing, promptly became a city boy.

"I said, 'This is for me,' and I fell in love with town -- and I've loved it ever since," he said in a 1988 interview.

He was one of 26 graduates of the Clark County High School class of 1926, and then was called on a church mission to the Deep South. On his return in 1933, he married Lucile Whitehead, on December 29, 1933 in St. George, Utah, daughter of Steven R. Whitehead and Gertrude Watson Whitehead..

Mission in deep south
Bunker's Mission in Deep South - Elder's balanced pose

The fall of 1935 was the season of petroleum and politics, as Bunker was elected vice president of the Nevada Young Democrats Club, and leased a Mobil Service Station at the corner of Las Vegas Boulevard and Carson Street. Shortly after that, he opened a Texaco Station at Fifth and Fremont streets.

Bunker's first foray into politics was in the summer of 1936, when he entered the race for the state Assembly, and was the top vote getter in the primary race.

During his first term in 1937, Bunker astonished everyone by garnering an appointment to the Assembly Ways and Means Committee.

He easily won a second term in the 1939 Legislature, and surprised everyone again when he challenged William Kennett of Tonopah for the position of Assembly speaker, and won.

Bunker had not planned to seek a third term, but at the urging of party leaders, filed for re-election in 1940, and won.

But then U.S. Senator Key Pittman died. Responsibility for naming Pittman's successor fell on Gov. E.P. "Ted" Carville, who was instantly set upon by a horde of eager applicants, including Pittman's brother, Vail Pittman. Chief among the contenders was Review-Journal Editor Al Cahlan. He traveled north with state Democratic boss Ed Clark to attend Pittman's funeral, and to lobby Carville. John Cahlan recalled in later years that his brother was certain he had a lock on the plum position.

"It was agreed among Carville, Ed Clark, and my brother that Carville would appoint my brother," said John Cahlan. "This was all wrapped up and apparently ready to be the gift that Carville was to give to Al. No question -- none whatever."

On Nov. 26, 1940, Carville announced his choice -- Berkeley Bunker. [Bunker later said, "I was the most surprized man in the state," when the appointment was announced.]

1940 Berkeley Bunker appointed U.S. Senator from Nevada. [First native Nevadan to hold Federal office, and the first Latter-day Saint to hold national office from Nevada and first Latter Day Saint U.S. Senator from outside Utah.]

"Bunker's appointment can perhaps be seen as a slap at anti-Mormonism," said Michael Green, history professor at the Community College of Southern Nevada. "It was also an acknowledgment that the Mormon Church, and its adherents in Southern Nevada, were gaining political power."

Las Vegas attorney and political watcher Ralph Denton thinks the clamor from the numerous factions in the Democratic Party may have prompted Carville to choose someone who wouldn't offend any of them.

"How could you knock the appointment?" he said, "Nobody was mad at Berkeley Bunker."

"The fact of the matter is," said Bunker, offering his own explanation for the appointment, "I managed (Carville's) Southern Nevada campaign when he ran for governor... when I was speaker, we worked closely on legislation, and we were very close friends. But why he chose me, I'll never know. I didn't campaign for it; I didn't lift a finger. I was the most surprised man in the state when it came."

Cahlan, the second most surprised man in the state, spoke no ill of Bunker, but did give plenty of newspaper space to expressions of astonishment and dismay from other Democrats.

With little knowledge of international affairs, and a war already going in Europe, Bunker's public utterances concerning foreign policy were cautious.

"I shall be a strong advocate for a strong national defense program, but I am not in favor of sending our men to Europe," he said, "I think the British can win the war with the assistance the United States can render under the lend-lease bill."

But isolationists became extinct on Sunday, Dec. 7, 1941, when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor. Bunker was in church in Washington, D.C., when he heard of it.

"At lunchtime, we received word ... The next morning I went to the House of Representatives -- they had called a joint session of Congress. When I walked over to the House chamber, the sergeant-at-arms pulled me out of the line because he thought I didn't look like a senator; he said I looked too young." Another senator vouched for him and he was allowed in.

With war under way, Bunker cast himself in the role of gadfly, harshly criticizing plans by Basic Magnesium and the Defense Plant Corp. to build a company town -- which would become Henderson. The senator insisted housing also was needed in Las Vegas proper and, as a result, several hundred new houses were built in the Huntridge district, near East Charleston and Maryland Parkway.

Bunker continued the pressure, accusing BMI and the DPC of drawing up a contract that would result in an annual profit to BMI of more than 4,000 percent.

"If the agreement between the Defense Plant Corporation and Basic Magnesium Inc. represents a cross section of conduct on the part of the DPC, I can come to only one conclusion; we are tolerating the existence of an agency of the government that is so corrupt that it would make profiteering in the last war look like petty larceny by comparison."

Bunker later explained that he tackled the BMI issue because he was concerned that the plant would not survive into the competitive postwar marketplace unless it were put on sound financial and managerial footing from the outset. The BMI complex has survived to this day.

The freshman senator was obliged by law to stand for election in 1942, and to his chagrin, his opponent in the primary was former Gov. James Scrugham, then one of the top Democrats in the state.

Given the caliber of his opponent, his 1,100-vote loss to Scrugham in the primary was a respectable showing. Still, it was his first political setback, and left him feeling "kind of empty."

[Simultaneously, serving as Bishop of a local congregation. When a large, poor, and ailing family moved into twon, Bishop Berkeley Bunker mobilized his ward. "We cared for them, paid their rent, furnished food, clothing, and bedding. The priesthood of the ward, with the Elders Quorum in the lead, built them a house and paid for it," stated Marion Earl in the "History of the Las Vegas First Ward."]

Readjusting his sights to a lower trajectory, Bunker bounced back in 1944, announcing his candidacy for Nevada's lone congressional seat, challenging and beating incumbent Democrat Maurice Sullivan in the primary.

"Bunker surprised the wiseacres by beating Sullivan in his home county of Washoe," crowed the Las Vegas Review-Journal. The fact that Sen. Patrick McCarran campaigned for him couldn't have hurt.

The general election, in which he faced silent film star Rex Bell, was a 14,000-vote landslide for Bunker. Berkeley Bunker was elected to U.S. House of Representatives from Nevada and was the first Latter-day Saint elected to national office from outside Utah.

The next year, 1945,Gov. James Scrugham died, vacating the very seat Bunker had once warmed. Gov. Carville again had to name a replacement, and Bunker was a top contender. But Carville had a better idea. He made a deal with Lt. Gov. Vail Pittman; Carville would resign, Pittman would become governor, and appoint Carville to the Senate. The only catch was that he would have to stand for election in 1946.

It was more than Bunker could stand. He announced that he would challenge his former benefactor in the 1946 Democratic primary, a move that he would later admit "was the biggest mistake of my political career."

Bunker easily defeated Carville, and was expected to trounce Republican George "Molly" Malone in the general elections. Pat McCarran campaigned for him, saying, "I would rather work for the next four years by the side of Berkeley Bunker than any man I know." The Congressional Quarterly said he was "sure to be elected." The Las Vegas Review-Journal ran an editorial on the front page center, a gushing endorsement of Bunker.

So fragmented was the Democratic vote that Malone rode to an easy victory -- though it should be noted that 1946 was a very good year for the GOP nationwide.

Back home again, Bunker was hired by P.O. Silvagni to manage the Apache Hotel, then one of the best in the city. (The property would later be leased by Benny Binion, and renamed the Horseshoe Club.) Bunker stayed for less than a year, resigning because his duties required him to work Sundays, a day that Mormons set aside exclusively for worship and church activities.

As an LDS bishop, Bunker was much in demand among his brethren as a funeral preacher. And his years in politics had enhanced his oratorical skills. For a deeply religious man, the job of "preaching people into heaven" was quite satisfying.

"I never knew the real heartbeat of the people until I became a bishop of the LDS church. When you hold a funeral, clasp the hand of the dying and prepare for the last rites ... you feel the true pulse of the people."

So, Berkeley joined his elder brother Bryan Bunker in the mortuary business.

Bunker Brothers Mortuary and Eden Vale Memorial Park Cemetery
Bunker Brothers Mortuary and Eden Vale Memorial Park Cemetery
Bunker Mortuary & Memorial Park 925 Las Vegas Blvd N
Las Vegas, Clark, Nevada

Bryan Bunker had bought a half-interest in the Howell C. Garrison Mortuary, at 515 Fremont St., in 1944. His partner was Lester Burt, who had been Garrison's embalmer. Brother Berkeley bought Burt's interest in 1946, and the familiar Bunker Brothers name was created.

Berkeley Bunker made one last bid for elected office in 1962 when he got his party's nomination for lieutenant governor. He faced a relative newcomer in Paul Laxalt, but the young man was a ferocious campaigner, according to Bunker, who dubbed him "The Man of War." Bunker might still have beaten him, said Ralph Denton, but for defectors in his own party.

"A lot of old wounds from 1946 came back," Denton said. "Many of the old Carville people remembered that, and were bound and determined to beat him."

In 1988, Lucile Bunker died, and the following year, Berkeley married Della Lee, a native of Panaca. She would care for him as his health deteriorated, until his death Jan. 21, 1999, at age 92.

Among the members of his church, Bunker will certainly be best remembered as chairman of the fund-raising committee that finally gathered the money needed to construct the long-anticipated Las Vegas Temple, the gleaming spired structure at the base of Frenchman's Mountain.

In 1988, with the temple nearing completion, Bunker made a point of downplaying his role in the enormous undertaking, noting that the fund-raising effort had been started by the late Reed Whipple.

Las Vegas has been very kind and good to the Mormon people," said Bunker in 1988. "We have grown and thrived and lived as good neighbors to the Catholics and Jews and Protestants and all denominations without ever a rift."


Berkeley L. Bunker Elementary School
6350 Peak Drive
Las Vegas, NV 89108



Sources:

PAF - Archer files = Captain James Brown + (5) Abigail Smith Abbott : Abigail Smith Abbott + Stephen Joseph Abbott > (1) Emily Abbott + Edward Bunker Sr. : Edward Bunker Sr.  + (3) Mary Ann Mathieson McQuarrie > Martin Allen Bunker + Helen Euphemia McNeil > Berkeley Lloyd Bunker.

"Saints in Babylon: Mormons and Las Vegas" by Kenric Ward, 2002

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7853903

http://www.library.unr.edu/specoll/mss/98-05.html

http://www.pbs.org/bouldercity/incorporation.htm

http://www.1st100.com/part2/bunker.html

Copyright 2001 www.OrsonPrattBrown.org



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ORSON PRATT BROWN FAMILY REUNIONS
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... ARTICLES OF ASSOCIATION - BY-LAWS
COMMENTS AND INPUT ON ARTICLES

... Published December 2007:
"ORSON PRATT BROWN AND HIS FIVE WONDERFUL WIVES VOL. I and II"
By Erold C. Wiscombe

... Published March 2009:
"CAPTAIN JAMES BROWN AND HIS 13 WIVES"
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and spelling of Phebe Abbott Brown Fife's name
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Researched and Compiled by
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... Published 2012:
"Finding Refuge in El Paso"
By Fred E. Woods [ISBN: 978-1-4621-1153-4]
Includes O.P Brown's activities as Special Church Agent in El Paso
and the Juarez Stake Relief Committee Minutes of 1912.


...Published 2012:
"Colonia Morelos: Un ejemplo de ética mormona
junto al río Bavispe (1900-1912)"
By Irene Ríos Figueroa [ISBN: 978-607-7775-27-0]
Includes O.P. Brown's works as Bishop of Morelos. Written in Spanish.

...Published 2014:
"The Diaries of Anthony W. Ivins 1875 - 1932"
By Elizabeth Oberdick Anderson [ISBN: 978-156085-226-1]
Mentions O.P. Brown more than 30 times as Ivins' companion.

... To be Published Soon:
"CAPTAIN JAMES BROWN 1801-1863:
TEMPER BY NATURE, TEMPERED BY FAITH"

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ORSON PRATT BROWN FAMILY UPDATES

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FAMILY REUNIONS

... FAMILY GET TOGETHERS

... Lily Gonzalez Brown 80th Birthday Party-Reunion
July 14, 2007 in American Fork, Utah

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... NEWS, WEDDINGS, BABIES, MORE
... HELP US IDENTIFY THESE ANCESTORS
Send Additions and Information to:
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ORSON PRATT BROWN 1863-1946

...... Wives and 35 Children Photo Chart
...... Chronology
...... Photo Gallery of OPB
...... Letters

ORSON'S JOURNALS AND BIOGRAPHIES

...... Biographical Sketch of the Life Orson Pratt Brown
...... History of Orson Pratt Brown by Orson P. Brown
...... Journal & Reminiscences of Capt. Orson P. Brown
...... Memories of Orson P. Brown by C. Weiler Brown
...... Orson Pratt Brown by "Hattie" Critchlow Jensen
...... Orson Pratt Brown by Nelle Spilsbury Hatch
...... Orson Pratt Brown by W. Ayrd Macdonald


ORSON PRATT BROWN'S PARENTS
- Captain James Brown 1801-1863

...... Wives and 29 / 43 Children Photo Chart
...... Captain James Brown's Letters & Journal
...... Brown Family Memorabilia
...... Mormon Battalion 1846-1847
...... Brown's Fort ~ then Brownsville, Utah
...... Chronology of Captain James Brown

- Phebe Abbott Brown Fife 1831-1915

- Colonel William Nicol Fife - Stepfather 1831-1915


ORSON'S GRANDPARENTS

- James Brown of Rowan County, N.C. 1757-1823

- Mary Williams of Rowan County, N.C. 1760-1832

- Stephen Joseph Abbott of, PA 1804-1843

- Abigail Smith of Williamson, N.Y. 1806-1889

- John Fife of Tulliallan, Scotland 1807-1874

- Mary Meek Nicol, Carseridge, Scotland 1809-1850 


ORSON PRATT BROWN'S 5 WIVES

- Martha "Mattie" Diana Romney Brown 1870-1943

- Jane "Jennie" Bodily Galbraith Brown 1879-1944

- Elizabeth Graham MacDonald Webb Brown 1874-1904

- Eliza Skousen Brown Abbott Burk 1882-1958

- Angela Maria Gavaldón Brown 1919-1967


ORSON PRATT BROWN'S 35 CHILDREN

- (Martha) Carrie Brown (child) 1888-1890

- (Martha) Orson Pratt Brown, Jr. (child) 1890-1892

- (Martha) Ray Romney Brown 1892-1945

- (Martha) Clyde Romney Brown 1893-1948

- (Martha) Miles Romney Brown 1897-1974

- (Martha) Dewey B. Brown 1898-1954

- (Martha) Vera Brown Foster Liddell Ray 1901-1975

- (Martha) Anthony Morelos Brown 1904-1970

- (Martha) Phoebe Brown Chido Gardiner 1906-1973

- (Martha) Orson Juarez Brown 1908-1981

- (Jane) Ronald Galbraith Brown 1898-1969

- (Jane) Grant "Duke" Galbraith Brown 1899-1992

- (Jane) Martha Elizabeth Brown Leach Moore 1901-1972

- (Jane) Pratt Orson Galbraith Brown 1905-1960

- (Jane) William Galbraith Brown (child) 1905-1912

- (Jane) Thomas Patrick Porfirio Diaz Brown 1907-1978

- (Jane) Emma Jean Galbraith Brown Hamilton 1909-1980

- (Elizabeth) (New born female) Webb 1893-1893


- (Elizabeth) Elizabeth Webb Brown Jones 1895-1982

- (Elizabeth) Marguerite Webb Brown Shill 1897-1991

- (Elizabeth) Donald MacDonald Brown 1902-1971

- (Elizabeth) James Duncan Brown 1904-1943

- (Eliza) Gwen Skousen Brown Erickson Klein 1903-1991


- (Eliza) Anna Skousen Brown Petrie Encke 1905-2001

- (Eliza) Otis Pratt Skousen Brown 1907-1987

- (Eliza) Orson Erastus Skousen Brown (infant) 1909-1910

- (Eliza) Francisco Madera Skousen Brown 1911-1912

- (Eliza) Elizabeth Skousen Brown Howell 1914-1999

- (Angela) Silvestre Gustavo Brown 1919-


- (Angela) Bertha Erma Elizabeth Brown 1922-1979

- (Angela) Pauly Gabaldón Brown 1924-1998

- (Angela) Aaron Aron Saul Brown 1925

- (Angela) Mary Angela Brown Hayden Green 1927

- (Angela) Heber Jedediah Brown (infant) 1936-1936

- (Angela) Martha Gabaldón Brown Gardner 1940


ORSON'S SIBLINGS from MOTHER PHEBE

- Stephen Abbott Brown 1851-1853

- Phoebe Adelaide Brown Snyder 1855-1930

- Cynthia Abigail Fife Layton 1867-1943

- (New born female) Fife 1870-1870

- (Toddler female) Fife 1871-1872

ORSON'S 28 SIBLINGS from JAMES BROWN

- (Martha Stephens) John Martin Brown 1824-1888

-
(Martha Stephens) Alexander Brown 1826-1910

-
(Martha Stephens) Jesse Stowell Brown 1828-1905

- (Martha Stephens) Nancy Brown Davis Sanford 1830-1895


-
(Martha Stephens) Daniel Brown 1832-1864

-
(Martha Stephens) James Moorhead Brown 1834-1924

-
(Martha Stephens) William Brown 1836-1904

-
(Martha Stephens) Benjamin Franklin Brown 1838-1863

-
(Martha Stephens) Moroni Brown 1838-1916

- (Susan Foutz) Alma Foutz Brown (infant) 1842-1842

- (Esther Jones) August Brown (infant) 1843-1843

- (Esther Jones) Augusta Brown (infant) 1843-1843

- (Esther Jones) Amasa Lyman Brown (infant) 1845-1845

- (Esther Jones) Alice D. Brown Leech 1846-1865

- (Esther Jones) Esther Ellen Brown Dee 1849-1893

- (Sarah Steadwell) James Harvey Brown 1846-1912


- (Mary McRee) George David Black 1841-1913

- (Mary McRee) Mary Eliza Brown Critchlow1847-1903

- (Mary McRee) Margaret Brown 1849-1855

- (Mary McRee) Mary Brown Edwards Leonard 1852-1930

- (Mary McRee) Joseph Smith Brown 1856-1903

- (Mary McRee) Josephine Vilate Brown Newman 1858-1917

- (Phebe Abbott) Stephen Abbott Brown (child) 1851-1853

- (Phebe Abbott) Phoebe Adelaide Brown 1855-1930

- (Cecelia Cornu) Charles David Brown 1856-1926

- (Cecelia Cornu) James Fredrick Brown 1859-1923

- (Lavinia Mitchell) Sarah Brown c. 1857-

- (Lavinia Mitchell) Augustus Hezekiah Brown c. 1859

ORSON'S 17 SIBLINGS from STEPFATHER FIFE

- (Diane Davis) Sarah Jane Fife White 1855-1932

- (Diane Davis) William Wilson Fife 1857-1897

- (Diane Davis) Diana Fife Farr 1859-1904

- (Diane Davis) John Daniel Fife 1863-1944

- (Diane Davis) Walter Thompson Fife 1866-1827

- (Diane Davis) Agnes Ann "Aggie" Fife 1869-1891

- (Diane Davis ) Emma Fife (child) 1871-1874

- (Diane Davis) Robert Nicol Fife (infant) 1873-1874

- (Diane Davis) Barnard Fife (infant) 1881-1881

- (Cynthia Abbott) Mary Lucina Fife Hutchins 1868-1950

- (Cynthia Abbott) Child Fife (infant) 1869-1869

- (Cynthia Abbott) David Nicol Fife 1871-1924

- (Cynthia Abbott) Joseph Stephen Fife (child) 1873-1878

- (Cynthia Abbott) James Abbott Fife (infant) 1877-1878


ORSON PRATT BROWN'S IN-LAWS

- (Diana) Caroline Lambourne 18461979

- (Diana)  Miles Park Romney 1843-1904

- (Jane) Emma Sarah Bodily 1858-1935

- (Jane) William Wilkie Galbraith 1838-1898

- (Elizabeth) Alexander F. Macdonald 1825-1903

- (Elizabeth) Elizabeth Atkinson 1841-1922

- (Eliza) Anne Kirstine Hansen 1845-1916

- (Eliza) James Niels Skousen 1828-1912

- (Angela) Maria Durán de Holguin 1876-1955

- (Angela) José Tomás Gabaldón 1874-1915


INDEX OF MORMON COLONIES IN MEXICO

INDEX OF MORMON MEXICAN MISSION

INDEX TO POLYGAMY IN UTAH, ARIZONA, MEXICO

INDEX TO MEX. REVOLUTION & THE MORMON EXODUS

INDEX OF SURNAMES

MAPS OF THE MEXICAN COLONIES


BROWN FAMILY MAYFLOWER CONNECTION 1620

BROWN's in AMERICAN REVOLUTION 1775-1783

BROWN's in AMERICAN CIVIL WAR 1861-1865

BROWN's in WARS AFTER 1865

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