Category Archives: Hollist
Alma Alexander Gren
Alma Alexander Gren
My grandfather, Alma Alexander Gren, was born May 15, 1902 in Provo, Utah. I don’t know much about him since he and my grandmother, Helen Madeline Brown were separated by the time I was born. I remember that he would stop by and visit when he was in Salt Lake. As a young child I remember sitting on his lap and taking the pencils out of his pocket one by one and chewing the eraser off each one. He laughed!
He was a sign maker. The ability to print large signs and billboards was not possible during his time and so he hand painted the signs and billboards you would see along the road. He was an artist and very skilled at lettering. During a family road trip to Las Vegas as we were just outside of St George, Utah. My mother exclaimed, “There’s my dad!” My father immediately turned the car around and we stopped and visited with my grandfather.
He was also a talented glassblower. My grandmother had some small animals that he had blown. He also made neon lights. When my mother was a child he would bring home the Christmas tree on Christmas Eve and decorate it with neon lights. Passersby used to come right up on the porch to admire it. I remember finding a neon light in the shape of a candy cane in my grandmother’s back bedroom.
My grandmother was always upset that he waited until Christmas Eve to get the tree. She warned him that one year he would not be able to find one. One year she was right. He searched the city and only found a sad tree with very few branches at an empty tree lot. He took it and collected loose branches from the tree lot. When he came in the door my grandmother was furious. He got out his drill and made holes in the trunk, inserting the branches he had gathered. My grandmother always said that it was the most beautiful tree she had ever seen.
I cannot remember if he brought the divorce papers to grandma or if someone else brought them. I seem to remember that he brought them, but the thing that I do remember clearly is how my grandmother wept while signing them. She loved him so much and was sad for a long time afterwards. He had plans to marry Cleo Belle Larsen. I am sure she did not want a divorce and I am not sure what caused them to separate.
We took another trip to Las Vegas when I was about 10 years old. My grandfather was in the hospital there and my mother wanted to see him. I remember visiting him once while we were there. The next time I saw him he was in the Salt Lake General Hospital. My mother said he had Hodgkinson’s disease. We went to his funeral in Roosevelt, Utah when he died April 15, 1966. Cleo wanted him buried there and he may have wanted that, too. He loved the red rock country.
-Vanalee Carruth 2013
HIstory of Peter Hansen (1827-1903)
Annie Hansen Gren 1878 – 1933
My Father, Peter Hansen, the son of Hans Jorgenson Kaae, was born September 29, 1827 in Haulykke, Lolland, Denmark.
His parents were well to do farmers and hired from five to seven men to work for them besides themselves. The boys, as soon as they were old enough, we sent out to learn a trade. My father at the age of 13 started to learn basket making. The food was poor and he had to carry such large bundles of willows up stairs and was injured, which injury he carried throughout his life. He was taken from there and learned weaving as his trade.
He married and had a family of four boys. The family became members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in 1857, and left soon after for America.
In relating the story of my father’s pioneer days, I will tell it to you as he used to tell it to me in the evenings when I was a little girl. I will try to give a short history of his voyage to America and his journey across the plains.
Here I am, sitting by the side of my log cabin. I can hardly believe I am so far away from my native land. Many thoughts pass through my mind as I think of the journey from Denmark to Utah, when I first heard the Gospel. I remember one day my wife, son and I were sitting by the table eating our dinner when we saw two strange men approaching the house. They were men with a strange gospel. They told us of this new religion, and after many meetings we were converted and joined the church, being baptized on April 5, 1857.
We were happy, though despised by our neighbors and even our own parents turned against us. By and by three more sons entered our home, but our folks still being very bitter towards us, caused us to finally decide to sell all we had and leave for Zion. One of the Elders loaned us some money, and with that and what we had saved, we started for America.
We left in May, 1866. It took several days for us to reach Copenhagen where we set sail in a very poor and unwholesome sail boat. There were several families of immigrants on board. We battled against storm and waited for the right winds, and in six weeks we landed in New York City. Many of the people were sick and all were tired and weary from the long sea voyage. We were anxious to be on our way, so we left as soon as a company could be made up. We crossed the plains with ox teams.
We had no sooner started on the journey than many people took sick with that dreadful disease called cholera. They were dying incessantly. My wife became sick, we did all that we could but help and medicine were very scarce. She passed away on the 8th of August 1866. She was placed in a box for a casket, but not having many boxes a little girl belonging to the same company was put in the box with her. I felt that I could hardly stand the burden, but when I looked around the whole company was facing the same privations.
We had with us and old blacksmith who did the blacksmithing. He was a good fiddler and would play in the evening for the folks to dance, but more and more people became sick, and no one would dance because the well had to help with the sick.
It was well along in the summer and very hot, with cholera still raging, when my sons Nelse and Andrus became very sick. I did not know what to do, my wife being gone and four boys to care for. Nelse said, “Father I am so sick I can’t eat, but if I only could get a small potato I think I would get well.” I made up my mind that if there were a potato in the company my son should have it. I went to every wagon and asked if there was one potato, but not one could be found. I was very sad to think so small a favor could not be granted. The next morning, the 27th of August, 1866 he died. There being no more boxes, I wrapped him in a sheet and in the evening I went out and buried my boy. I built a smudge with buffalo chips on the grave so the wolves would not scent the remains and devour them.
This was not the end of my tribulations, as four days later on September 1st, Andrus died, and once more I had to dig another grave and build a smudge to keep away the wolves. Now I felt that my burden was heavy.
A young girl named Betty, 18 years old, being the only member of her family who had joined the church, was traveling alone. She came and offered to help me. I was very glad of this kindness, but she was only with me three days when she passed away, and not having any folks it became my lot to care for and bury her.
Then my third boy, Danel took sick. There was a woman with a large family in our company. Her husband had died and some of her children were sick so we helped each other the best we could, but it seemed that Danel could not live, and once again, this time on October 11, 1866 I dug another grave in the silent night, hearing the wolves howl and again built a smudge to keep them away.
My son Jorgen and I were alone. He was fourteen years old, the oldest of the family. We did what we could to help the other sufferers. On and on we came.
I will never forget the morning before we entered the Salt Lake Valley, we could hear the cocks crow. I never heard a more welcome sound. We reached Salt Lake City on October 23, 1866, being over five months on the journey.
We were weary, sad and miserably dirty, but we had friends who made us comfortable. After resting in Salt Lake awhile, we went to Provo and settled there.
I worked for farmers grubbing land and earned a small piece of land where I built a log cabin. We lived here for three years fighting the grasshoppers of 1867 and 1868. The railroad came through and bought my property. I then worked for them and with what I got for my little place and what cash I earned I bought a larger piece of land and built me another log cabin.
I worked for a farmer and earned a cow from which I raised two steers and broke them for oxen, so I had a team to do my farming.
I often cut boys hair in that neighborhood, and every Sunday morning there were as high as ten or twelve to have a haircut, but so many came, we decided to cut hair Saturday afternoons. So I would quit work at noon Saturday and go home, the boys would be waiting. After I cut their hair they would go and take a bath in the creek that flowed through the place, leaving them ready for Sunday morning. Nearly all the baptisms were performed in this creek for many years.
My son Jorgen and I lived alone for nine years, then I married my second wife on December 18, 1875. Six children were born to us. My son Jorgen was married a short time after I was.
My father, Peter Hansen buried his second wife in 1902 and he died June 18, 1903.
This story was given to me by my grandmother Helen Madeline Brown Gren.
Rick and Vanalee Wedding Reception
Rick Carruth and Vanalee Hollist were married in 1974. Their reception was held in the Lion House
in Salt Lake City.
Saturdays
During my early childhood my sister Susan and I spent at least 3 nights each week with our grandmother, Helen Madeline Brown Gren. My mother was not your typical mother in the 1950’s and 1960’s, she worked. Her working was necessary for our family to survive and plus I think she liked it most of the time. The way she and my father avoided paying for childcare was for my father to work days and my my mother to work nights. Our grandmother was our babysitter when they had other things they wanted to do and that was often.
Tuesday nights my dad met with his buddies and worked away on his dragster. We went to Gramma’s. Friday they had their bowling league. Saturday they both worked during the day and at night they partied. Sunday they recovered. We were picked up from Gramma’s when they got up, sometimes it was early, sometimes it was late.
Saturday was the best day at her house. The first thing she asked us when we woke up was what we wanted for breakfast. Some Saturdays we would lay on the couch watching cartoons while she delivered stacks of toast covered with margarine. I loved margarine for some reason, we only ate butter at our house. The toast was made from Hollywood bread, a thinly sliced bread with sesame seeds on the top. Often the toast would be accompanied by her home canned pears or peaches. I liked dipping my toast in the fruit syrup.
Other Saturday’s, Susan and I would go to the Wainwright bakery around the corner and buy a loaf of bread dough. Then Gramma would fry scones and we would douse them in margarine and jam. We would often buy the bakery’s delicious cinnamon knots. Another breakfast we loved was toast with soft boiled eggs, I dipped my toast in the egg.
After eating and watching cartoons for most of the morning we would get ready to go on Gramma’s errands. She worked as a secretary
at Rose Park Elementary school during the week so Saturday was errand day. Her errands usually involved grocery shopping, fabric shopping and sometimes a stop at a variety store (think mini-Walmart). Susan and I were good listeners and obedient children and didn’t cause many problems. I do remember getting extremely bored in fabric stores and pushing the bolts of fabric apart so I could sit between them, my legs were so tired. Gramma seemed to take such a long time to decide on fabric. I remember one very long fabric shopping trip when an exasperated Susan exclaimed, “Do we have to go in another ‘terial store!”
After errands were done we would go back to her house and unload her purchases and have an early dinner. Then it was time to pick up the “aunts.” The aunts were Gramma’s sister Arvilla and her aunt Hilma. Neither of them drove and so we would pick Hilma up when she finished work at Auerbach’s department store and then we’d get Arvilla at home. The next couple of hours were a repeat of
the morning errands minus the fabric shopping. Gramma didn’t like to shop much when she took the aunts, she was just the driver. Susan and I knew that if we behaved on this trip Gramma or Arvilla would buy us a new Little Golden Book or sometimes we would get some other treat. We were always good. We would drop off the aunts and their packages, they lived together in the house my grandmother grew up in. In the summer one of our favorite treats was a drive to the A & W drive in for a baby root beer or a lemon slush. As an adult I was shocked at how small the baby root beers really were and how I was perfectly content I was with it. I think they were free and Gramma’s root beer was a nickel.
Gramma would often hum songs when we drove home in the car at night. Songs like the Old Rugged Cross, The Red River Valley and most often I Love You Truly. She seemed sad when she hummed. If it wasn’t too late when we got home we would go out on the front porch and watch the Saturday night life go past while she watered the lawn with her hose. If we were lucky her fireman brother Byron, we called him Boogan, and his son-in-law Tommy would go by on their way to or from a fire. They always made sure to sound the siren whenever they went past Gramma’s house. We loved it!
When we were very young we would both sleep in the full bed with Gramma, but as we got bigger she kicked one of us out and made us sleep on the couch. We took turns until I was finally to too tall to sleep on the couch and then Susan had to all the time. I hated sleeping on the couch. In the winter, I could hear the mouse traps snapping and worried that one would crawl on me. In the summer, Gramma left the front door open with the screen door latched, I was worried that some one would come in and get me.
Saturday with Gramma was my favorite day of the week! I am so grateful we got to be with her instead of a babysitter.