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I DANIEL SKOUSEN 1865-1940
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Orson Pratt Brown - Fourth Wife's Half-brother

section header - biography

Daniel Skousen

Daniel Skousen

Born: April 17, 1865 at Draper, Salt Lake County, Utah
Died: December 10, 1940 at Colonia Juárez, Chihuahua, Mexico

Compiled by Lucy Brown Archer

"Daniel Skousen was the sixth child and fourth son of James Niels Skousen and Sidsel Marie Pedersen. James Niels Skousen was born September 30, 1828 in Herslev, Vejle, Denmark. Sidsel Marie Pedersen was born August 23, 1826, in Leasby, Aarhus, Denmark.

They heard the message of the Elders after they were married, believed and were baptized. He was one of the King's guards in Denmark. Soon after they joined the Church they began saving to move to America. They had four children born in Denmark before they accumulated enough funds to make the journey. The oldest child, a girl, Petria, and the third child, Parley Pratt, died in Denmark.

On April 17, 1863, Daniel was born in Draper, Utah. He had eight brothers and sisters and had to help his parents make a living in a new and strange land. He went to school but a few months each year and all the formal schooling he gained was during those few months in Draper. The work Daniel did was to herd cows and as with most boys, he found time to swim, play and lie in the sun. But he learned early in life, as did the other members of his family, to obey. Sometimes he learned the hard way. His parents were very strict. His mother was espcially strong-willed, a characteristic passed on to Daniel. But also he inherited, among other things, wisdom, and a desire to work.

Soon the Church called the Skousen family to help settle Arizona. With all their belongings loaded into two wagons they started on this move. Dan drove the cows and loose stock. They settled in St. Joseph first and there they lived the United Order. After a short time it was discontinued. They then moved to Springerville, took up farms and thought this would be their permanent home. Dan's father had taken a plural wife who was also a woman from Denmark, so it wasn't long until the law took him to prison.  This left the responsibility for care of the family on Daniel and his brother Peter Skousen.

Daniel was a sober man but very active and a first-rate baseball player, checker player and wrestler. He enjoyed good sportsmanship. He was a sports fan and it stayed with him through his life. Not onlly did he enjoy sports but he loved to dance and sing. The arts were always interesting to him. He was put on the spot many times in his social life and forced to stand up for what he knew was right. This was especially the case with the Word of Wisdom. Very often designing men would tempt him, almost with force to go against what he thought was right. But he stood by his convictions and would talk his way out and leave the drunken companions with his explanations.

It seemed that he seldom escorted only one lady friend alone. They usually went in groups. But all the time he had his eye on one special girl, Melvina "Malley" Clay Greer.  She was his favorite dancing partner. When his younger sister, Caroline Skousen, decided to go to St. George and be married [to Abel Alexander DeWitt], Daniel thought it a good idea to go along. He convinced Melvina to accompany him. The four of them made the trip by team and wagon to St. George where they were married for time and eterneity on December 9, 1885. [They had nine children]

It was soon learned that one of Dan's father's families would have to leave the country if his father were to remain out of jail. So Dan, with his young bride, took his mother and younger brother and sister to Mexico. Dan and Malley (Melvina) had no idea of staying in Mexico, since his brother Peter Skousen had also come to Mexico to make his home and could take care of his mother.  But it wasn't long until Dan decided to make his home in Mexico also. The people were still living below the preent townsite and Dan sorely in need of lumber to build things. Brother Joseph Moffett and Dan went up on the mountain, sawed lumber by hand, to help build homes, furniture, and other thngs. This was the first lumber sawed in the colonies.

Dan was a healthy, stalwart, robust young man, six feet tall.  Never was he afraid of work. "Early to bed and early to rise'" was his theme song, and daylight scarcely ever found him in bed. He alwasys enjoyed good health except in the last year of his life when he was stricken with terrible pain.  After taking him to a specialist in El Paso, they operated and found him afflicted with cancer. He was bedridden for nine months, and his body wasted away with the disease.

Dan was a faithful member of the Church. He upheld authority both by deed and precept. He worked in the Sunday School Superintendency for years and was always punctual and dependable. He instilled there qualitie into his children. He was an honest tithe payer and always had family prayers. The choir, depended on his rich bass boice and he enjoyed singing at public gatherings. At all the old folk's gatherings, which were held once a year, he was asked to render one or two vocal solos. He encouraged his children to not only improve their talents but also to render service whenever possible.

Dan worked wherever he could to earn a livelihood for his family and for his mother, as his father did not come to Mexico to live but remained in Arizona. He found work in Galeana on a thresher at harvest time and as foreman of a big hacienda owned by Don Luis Terrazas in San Diego. Wherever he went, he made a good name for himself through his honest, fair, and well-done work. His employers soon found out that they could trust him and could depend on what he said.

Daniel met with several severe accidents which almost cost him his life. One of these was while freighting down the San Diego Canyon. Two span of horses drawing a big wagon loaded with lumber were coming down the steep grade when the brake block broke turning the load loose. They were nearing a bend in the road and Dan knew they were going too fast to make it, so he climbed out onto the tongue of the wagon and dropped to the ground, hoping the load would pass over him and leave him unharmed. All would have been well but the tongue chain caught his foot and threw it under the wheel, crushing his foot and ankle. Brigham Pierce, living near by, hearing the noise, came to see the cause. Seeing Dan badly hurt, he was going to take him to his home but Dan, being a lover of animals, asked him to please to cut the teams loose first. He could hear them struggling far down the hill. Dan was confined to his bed for four months.  Blood poisoning set in and Dr. Lake did all he could for him but to no avail. One day Edmund Richardson came in. Seeing the pain Dan was in, he turned and walked out, returning soon with a drug. This brought relief and with the administration of other strong drugs he was soon up and around on crutches.

His depenability was proverbial. When a Sunday School representative came from Salt Lake City, desiring to go to Pacheco, he cold find no one who was able to take him. He then inquired where Dan Skousen was.  Dan was plowing but when the request came he unhitched his team from the plow, put it on his light buggy and took Brother Stoddard to Pacheco.

In 1901 he bought a gristmill from William R. R. Stowell. Don Luis Terrazas advanced him the money. By this time Dan Skousen's name was as good as his bond, he could borrow money or have credit anytime he wanted. He also took a contract with Brother Stowell to build a dam for Luis Terrazas up on the Tapiacitas. This dam held for many years. Dan built a fourteen-room house for his family and was alwas reaching out for more property. He leased a large tract of farming land south of the Colonia Juárez purchase and he bought a 300 acre farm called the "Ojo", north of Old Casas Grandes.

Dan had the ability to get along with the Mexicans. He was willing to help show them how to plant and irrigate their land and how to harvest the crops. He worked on committees to visit the governor and often went to Mexico City on legal matters. He was know as "Don Daniel" by his native friends. Especially was this manifest during the Revolution. The coming and going of different factions was a difficult situation and it was his policy, as recommended by the Church, to be neutral. Very often he was caled in to settle disputes for them. At the time Pancho Villa was in Casas Grandes, when leaders of the Stake and others had gone to get him to return some of their horses, Villa sent them on their way with threats. Dan also called upon him. And although Villa was very much disturbed, without raising his voice or losing control of himself, Dan convinced Pancho Villa of their need and soon Villa gave him an order for some of the horse to be returned.

At the time of the Exodus, when most colonists left the country, Dan Skousen and his wife, Sarah Ann Spilsbury, were among the first to return. Brother Ivins, former Juárez Stake President, said, "If I had a mill full of wheat like Brother Skousen, I would go back."

Dan's material wealth was almost depleted by the end of the Revolution, but they couldn't take his land, only what he raised on it.; He still had faith in future crops. Many of the rebel leaders ate at his table. He believed, "It is better to feed them than to fight them." but often it wasn't all voluntary. During the Revolution he never knew when he went to bed at night what he would find in his spacious yard the next morning. He trusted in the Lord and taught his family to have this same faith in proyer. He was held for ransom many times, with guns held at hs head if he didn't give over all his money or his guns. He was threatened with having his hay, mill and home burned, but with that same reasoning power, "that a soft word turneth away wrath," he evaded many possible catastrophies. Many a person, Mexican and Anglo alike, came seeking help, either for themselves or some of their family, needing either money or protection until the Revolutionaries, that while on the ranch, soldier and leader alike, they would cut the ropes from around a horse's neck, put a chld on its back and give the horse a spat, send the rider on a run for the tall corn fields or plum thickets to hide until the rebels had gone away.

Dan was a devoted husband and father and very much the head of his family. He sired fourteen daughters and seven sons. Seven of these twenty-one children died in their tender years. Three of them filled honorable missions.  All the living children obtained their education in the Juárez Stake Academy and graduated, many with honors. One became a registered nurse and returned to Colonia Juárez and was an angel of mercy to her home town. They have all filled positions of leadership in their Wards and Stakes. Three children obtain their degrees from college and many of them have taught school, two of them in the Academy.

His love of animals and his ability to get them to respond to his desires because of his kind treatment was phenomenal. He always had a favorite horse that he would ride. And scarcely ever did one see him without his shovel. He could irrigate probably more profitably than anyone else, and water was at a premium in those days. So Dan, his horse, and his shovel were a common sight on the streets of Colonia Juárez.

He lived in Colonia Juárez fifty-four and a half years. He was well thought of by businessmen of the area and in the border cities as well. He enjoyed the respect of many and left the example of his stalwart characteristics to his posterity.

--Written by his wife, Sarah Ann Spilsbury Skousen. [daughter of Alma Platte Spilsbury] See "Stalwarts South of the Border" by Nelle Spilsbury Hatch and Blaine Carmon Hardy, 1985. Pages 610-614

section header - children
Children of Daniel Skousen and Melvina "Malley" Clay Greer Skousen

1
Polly Melvina Skousen

Born:

Married: George Guthrie Sloan on June 19, 1914

Died:

2
Cecile Virginia Skousen

Born:

Married: Walter Ernest Young on June 9, 1915

Died:

3
Joseph Daniel Skousen

Born: 1891

Child

Died: 1891

4
Asenath Skousen

Born:

Married: Almas Walter Walser on 1 January 1917

Died:

5
Amelia Skousen

Born: 1900

Child

Died: 1904

6
Elizabeth Skousen

Born: 1900

Child

Died: 1901

7
Hannah Skousen

Born:

Married:  Charles Helaman Call on June 28, 1922

Died:

8
Willmirth Skousen

Born:

Married: Leonard David Whetten on June 13, 1934

Died:

9
Caroline Skousen

Born: 1909

Child

Died: 1918

section header - children
Children of Daniel Skousen and Sarah Ann Spilsbury Skousen

1
Daniel Stansell Skousen

Born: 1902

Child

Died: 1904

2
Owen Mathias Skousen

Born:

Married: Vivian O'Donnal on November 29, 1931

Died:

3
Willard Luis Skousen

Born: 1905

Child:

Died: 1907

4
Mary Viva Skousen

Born:

Married: Lothaire E. Bluth on August 29, 1929

Died:

5
Leah Skousen

Born:

Married: Melvin Clarence O'Donnal on November 26, 1930

Died:

6
Lester Platte Skousen

Born:

Married: Eva Irene Shupe on 14 September 1933

Died:

7
Rita Skousen

Born:

Married: LeRoy Johnson on June 9, 1942

Died:

8
Aytch Greer Skousen

Born:

Married: Margaret Evelyn Evans on 17 July 1938

Died:

9
Rowene Skousen

Born:

Married: Joseph Charles Stein on 18 February 1938

Died:

10
Pearl Skousen

Born:

Married: Dale Porter Farnsworth on 10 October 1939

Died:

11
Nylis Skousen

Born:

Married: Thomas Willard Johnson on 14 May 1947

Died:

12
Reed Wayne Skousen

Born: 1926

Child

Died: 1928



Sources:

PAF - Archer files = Captain James Brown + (7) Phebe Abbott > Orson Pratt Brown

PAF - Archer files = Nelle Keziah Spilsbury < parents Alma Platte Spilsbury + (1) Mary Jane Redd > (Nelle's sister) Sarah Ann Spilsbury + Daniel Skousen < James Niels Skousen + (1) Sidsel Marie Pedersen; wife (2) Ane Kirstine Jorgensen /Hansen/ [Hanson] > Eliza Skousen fourth wife of + Orson Pratt Brown. Eliza and Daniel have the same father but different mothers.

Photos and information from :

"Stalwarts South of the Border" by Nelle Spilsbury Hatch, and Carmon Hardy, 1985. Pages 610-614

Additions, bold, [bracketed], some photos, etc., added by Lucy Brown Archer

Copyright 2001 www.OrsonPrattBrown.org



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PERSONAL ANCESTRAL FILE
...
Password Access Only

ADDRESS LIST FOR BROWN FAMILY
...
Password Access Only

ORSON PRATT BROWN FAMILY REUNIONS
... Easter 1986 through October 2005


... 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"
(unfortunately the publisher incorrectly changed the photo
and spelling of Phebe Abbott Brown Fife's name
after it was proofed by this author)
Researched and Compiled by
Erold C. Wiscombe

... 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"

Send Comments and Information to: 
OrsonPrattBrown@gmail.com


ORSON PRATT BROWN FAMILY UPDATES

... FAMILY GROUP PHOTOS
...
FAMILY REUNIONS

... FAMILY GET TOGETHERS

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

...Gustavo Brown Family Reunion in October 2007

... FAMILY MEMBERS WHO DIED RECENTLY
... NEWS, WEDDINGS, BABIES, MORE
... HELP US IDENTIFY THESE ANCESTORS
Send Additions and Information to:
OrsonPrattBrown@gmail.com


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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Park City, Utah 84098-0111
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