Showing posts with label Henry Maiben. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henry Maiben. Show all posts

Monday, January 14, 2013

Henry Maiben: Additional Song



This post at the blog Times and Seasons alerted me to another song written by my 3rd great grandfather Henry Maiben.  The post called the title of the song "Come, Mormons, All attention pay."  So I went looking for it and found the song in a book called The Mountain Warbler.  The song begins on page 67.  The songs in the book have no music and just list the tune name.  This song is sung to the tune of "The King of the Cannibal Islands" (of which I am not familiar.)

The subject of the song is the paying of tithing.  If there was a title listed for the song, I would have guessed it would be "Come Forward, and Pay Up Your Tithing."  The words of the song are below.



TUNE—" The King of the Cannibal Islands."

Come, Mormons, all attention pay,
While I attempt to sing my say;
I've chosen for my text to-day,
Come forward and pay up your tithing.
These may not be the very words
Which ancient Holy Writ records-,
But Malachi, I think, affords
A verse with which the sense accords,
It seems that he had cause to scold
The Saints; or Israelites of old;
In fact, they needed to be told
Come forward, and pay up your tithing.

CHORUS:
Then, if to prosper you desire,
And wish to keep out of the fire
Nay, if you to be Saints aspire
Come forward, and pay up your tithing.

Just as it was in olden times,
With ancient Saints in other climes;
The call is now, bring out your dimes,
Come forward, and pay up your tithing.
Our prophet says, "when elders preach,
The law of tithing they should teach,
Pay up themselves, and then beseech
All those that come within their reach;"
This makes me now appeal to you,
To follow counsel: right pursue;
And whilst all evil you eschew,
Come forward, and pay up your tithing.

Now, male and female, rich and poor,
Who wish to keep your standing sure:
That you salvation may secure,
Come forward, and pay up your tithing.
A tenth that is, and nothing less,
Of all you do or may possess:
In flocks and herds, and their increase,
In pigs and poultry, ducks and geese;
A tenth, indeed, of all your toil,
Likewise the products of the soil;
And if you've any wine or oil,
Come forward, and pay up your tithing!

HENRY MAIBEN

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Alice Penn Maiben (1847-1920): Death Certificate



This is the death certificate of my 2nd great grandmother Alice Penn Maiben.  I obtained this from the Utah State Archives online.

 This certificate has her place of birth as Brighton, England on October 16th, 1847.  Her parents are Henry and Caroline Penn Maiben.

She passed away on May 6th, 1920 in Logan, Utah.  Cause of death appears to be pneumonia. (It is difficult to read.)

She was married to John Fell Squires.  He was the informant who signed the document.


Monday, January 7, 2013

Henry Maiben: Yet another song

This post from the blog Times and Seasons talks about a song written by my 3rd great grandfather Henry Maiben.

The song is about the Provo Sunday School.  Check it out!

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Caroline Penn: Newspaper Article on her Death


The article above appeared in the Deseret News on October 19th, 1864.  Caroline Penn Maiben (my third great grandmother) had died on the 15th, just 4 days earlier.  This article has many beautiful things written about her.  Below is the text of the article:

DEATH OF MRS. CAROLINE MAIBEN

On Friday evening last Caroline Penn, the wife of Mr. Henry Maiben, of this city, departed this life, after a  severe illness of 13 days, aged 47 years and 7 months.

A virtuous, loving wife,
She spent a most industrious life.
Of mothers too, one of the best.
So neat, so clean, so kind, so blest:
On earth, her mission, well she fill'd
And when, to call her hence, God will'd
In perfect happiness she sped,
To mingle with the righteous dead;
And now, her trials being o'er,
She'll live in bliss for evermore.
We miss the dear departed one,
Yet feel to say, "God's will be done." -COM.

President Brigham Young was present at the funeral ceremonies, and delivered a very impressive and consoling address to the numerous friends of the deceased.

Mr. John T. Caine has furnished us the following for publication, which shows the high esteem Sister Maiben was held in by those who knew her:

At an informal meeting of the Deseret Dramatic Association, held on the Stage of the Theatre after the performance on Saturday evening, Oct. 15th, inst., Mr Clawson being called to the Chair and Mr. Clayton appointed Secretary, Mr. Caine presented the following expressive resolutions, which were unanimously adopted:

WHEREAS, It has pleased the Supreme Ruler in His infinite wisdom, to remove from our midst, by death, our beloved sister, Mrs. Caroline Maiben:
The Deseret Dramatic Association, whilst humbly bowing to this visitation of an all-wise Providence, deeply regret the loss of one of its most worthy and useful members, a lady whose virtue, modesty and amiability won for her the affection and esteem of all who had the pleasure of her acquaintance, Therefore
RESOLVED, That the Members of the Association, sincerely sympathising with the bereaved husband and family, tender them their heartfelt condolence in the loss of so excellent a wife and mother.
RESOLVED, That as a mark of respect to the deceased, the Members of the Association attend her funeral to-morrow. Further,
RESOLVED, That a copy of these Resolutions be transmitted to the bereaved family, and that the Editors of the DESERET NEWS and Daily Telegraph be requested to publish the same.
H.B. CLAWSON, Chairman
WM. CLAYTON, Secretary.

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Henry Maiben: Song



I stumbled across this song entitled Reformation written by my 3rd great grandfather Henry Maiben.  It appeared in the Deseret News on December 31st, 1856.  The article says it was sung in a meeting of the "37th Quorum" on December 6th, 1856.

The song is sung to the tune of "Paddy Miles" (which I am not familiar with.)

Here are the words:

Oh! now is the time for us all to be proving
  Ourselves and determine to whom we belong -
Whether God or the Devil our spirit is moving,
  And which we desire, to do right or do wrong:
For the hour is approaching when those who've neglected
  To weigh up themselves, will by others be weighed
In a balance by which ev'ry fault is detected
  And even the thoughts of the heart are displayed.

Chorus:

Then - let's wake from our slumbers,
And rise up in numbers,
And prove that we're servants and saints of the Lord!

The word has gone forth that it is the intention
  Of those who now lead us this people to prove,
And where they discover the seeds of dissention,
  To take proper measures the cause to remove -
That is, they've resolved on a grand revolution
  In moral, as well as religious complaints;
And mean to eradicate sin and pollution
  And sinners themselves from the midst of the Saints

'Tis surely no fable our teachers are telling -
  The time has arrived when the Saints must be pure;
Not only each person, but even each dwelling
  Must really be clear, or it cannot endure:
Then woe to all those who love filth and corruption,
  Whose thoughts and desires and to evil inclined;
But joy and rejoicing without interruption,
  All lovers of truth will eventually find.

Yet still there is mercy for those who have faltered,
  If they will give proof of their honest intent,
That what has been wrong in their lives shall be altered -
  Confess all their faults and sincerely repent;
To make them feel free, they will be permitted
  To enter the font and be baptized again,
Whereby they may have all their past sins remitted,
  Unless blood in needed to take out the stain.

Then who is so foolish as not to take warning,
  While mercy's extended to those who repent?
'Twould be worse than madness for us to be scorning
  The counsel which for our salvation is sent.
Oh! let us then come to a fixed resolution,
  No matter what may be to us the expense,
Wherein we have wronged to make full restitution
  And live our religion in every sense.

Henry Maiben
G.S.L. City, Nov, 20, 1856

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Henry Maiben: Actor



The above comes from the blog All Things Ancestor.  It shows information about a play called Lady of Lyons. Henry Maiben, my 3rd great grandfather, played the part of Glavis.  The play was to be performed one night only, Wednesday, November 4th, 1863 in the Salt Lake Theatre.  It seems some professional actors were passing through the city and agreed to put on this performance with some of the local talent playing the supporting roles.

Just another example of Henry's love of the arts.


Thursday, September 13, 2012

Alice Penn Maiben (1847-1920): Gravesite



The is the gravesite of Alice Penn Maiben, my 2rd great grandmother. These photos come from the findagrave.com website.

She is buried in the Logan City Cemetery in Logan, Utah.


The following paragraph about her life is included with the website:

Alice Penn Maiben Squires was the oldest child of Henry and Caroline Penn Maiben. Her parents were converted to the LDS church in 1851. The family left for America in 1853 and arrived in Salt Lake Valley. She walked most of the way across the plains. She married a young man who was in the same pioneer company as her John Fell Squires on 7 Aug 1868. They had 12 children together. Her descendants remember her as being a wonderful cook and lovely lady. Heber J. Grant spoke at her funeral in the Logan Tabernacle.


Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Henry Maiben (1819-1883): Gravesite



The is the gravesite of Henry Maiben, my 3rd great grandfather. The photo comes from the findagrave.com website.

He is buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery in Salt Lake City, Utah.

This short paragraph about his life is included on the website:

Born in England, Henry worked with his father's business as coach maker/ painter and was educated at Eton and Oxford Colleges. He married Caroline in 1845 at the Parish Church of St. George in London. They were baptized into the LDS Church in 1851 and came to America in 1853, settling in Salt Lake City. Henry was a lead actor in the old Salt Lake Dramatic Company, a poet, lyricist, dance master, and painter. He moved to Provo for a while with his second wife Flora and eventually settled back in Salt Lake City where he passed away and is buried next to Caroline and Flora.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Henry Maiben - Songwriter


My third great grandfather, Henry Maiben, was very much into the arts.  Actor, painter, songwriter, etc.  In my notes I came across something that said Henry Maiben had written the popular song "Zion is Growing."

I'd never heard of the song (It's popularity has apparently waned) so I decided to go and look for it.  I found it in the hymnbook Deseret Sunday School Songs from 1909 at this link.  It is hymn #12 in that book.

I also found it in this book called Songs of Zion here at this link.  It is song #12 in this book as well.  This hymnbook was published in 1908.

Finally, I also found the song in this book called The Children Sing, a children's songbook published in 1951.  It is song #72 and was renamed "As Children of Zion."


Monday, June 18, 2012

Caroline Penn (1817-1864): Poem


The poem above was written by Eliza R. Snow after the death of Caroline Penn (3rd great grandmother.)   It appeared in the Deseret News on October 26, 1864.  You can see the full page at the following link.  Caroline Penn died on October 14th, 1864.

Books today of the poetry of Eliza R. Snow title the poem Caroline.


Caroline

Respectfully Inscribed to Br. Henry Maiben

To live a Saint - a Saint to die,
Perfects the aim of mortal life -
Secures the key to courts on high,
With all the powers of being, rife.

Thus when a parting, lingering look
Of that dear gemless casket form,
Which in the coffin lay, I took;
This thought diffused a soothing charm.

For she was faithful, to the end -
In life's associations, true -
An upright, kind, confiding friend -
A faithful wife, and mother too.

Peace to her dust: your Caroline
Lives where no earthly ills betide:
In brighter spheres, her graces shine:
She lived a Saint - a Saint she died.


E. R. Snow
G.S.L. City, Oct. 17, 1864.

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Henry Maiben (1819-1883): Death Notice


The above was a notice about the death of Henry Maiben (3rd great grandfather.)  It appeared in the Deseret News October 10th, 1883.  A link to the full page can be found at this link.

He died on October 8th, 1883.

Saturday, June 16, 2012

Caroline Penn (1817-1854): Gravesite



The is the gravesite of Caroline Penn, my 3rd great grandmother. The photo comes from the findagrave.com website.

She is buried in the Salt Lake City Cemetery in Salt Lake City, Utah.
The following paragraph about her life is included in the website:

Caroline was born in Brighton, England to Thomas Penn and Sarah Edwards. As a young woman Caroline was head dressmaker in a large dressmaking establishment in London. She married Henry in 1845 in London and joined the LDS church in 1851. They traveled to America in 1853 settling in Salt Lake City, Utah. Caroline made the costumes for the old Salt Lake Dramatic Company where her husband was a lead actor. She died at age 47. Brigham Young spoke at her funeral and Eliza R. Snow wrote a poem in her memory and gave it to the family. She is buried next to Henry in the Salt Lake City Cemetery.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Mormon Overland Pioneer Database: Part 2

This is the second post on the Mormon Overland Pioneer Database.  This first is here and is about the Henry Maiben Family.

This post concerns the family of John Paternoster Sqiures, my third great grandfather.  This family, like the family of Henry Maiben, also crossed the plains with the Jacob Gates Company in 1853. The company left Keokuk, Iowa on June 3rd, 1853 and arrived in the Salt Lake Valley September 26-30 of that same year.
Traveling with the family was John Paternoster Squires, his wife Catherine Harriet Fell, and their children Mary, John Fell Squires (My 2nd great grandfather), Richard, and Henry.  Their son Richard died along the trail on September 12th about 200 miles from Salt Lake City.

This except from the life of my 2nd great grandfather John Fell Squires that can be found in the database is interesting as it talks about meeting his future wife (He was 6 or 7 years old on the trip.).

"There was a little black eyed curly headed girl [Alice Penn Maiben] under six years of age. Her Father’s [Henry Maiben’s] wagon was next to ours most of the way. She was gritty and tougher than myself. She truged along day after day walking nearly the entire distance from the Missouri River to S.L. City.

I used to watch her at this and I might say kept my eye on her until we grew up and became husband and wife. Since then she has kept her eye on me."

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Henry Maiben and Family: Emigration to the United States

This post is a follow-up to this post.

Before beginning their journey from Keokuk, Iowa to Salt Lake City, Henry Maiben, his wife Caroline, and daughter Alice had already been in a long journey to get there.

This information comes from the Mormon Migration Database.  The family sailed on a ship called the International from Liverpool, England on February 28, 1853.  There were approximately 477 passengers on the ship.  The ship was wind powered, so the journey took about 10 weeks to get to New Orleans in the United States.  They arrived in New Orleans on April 23, 1853.

In New Orleans, the ship's passengers traveled by steamship up the Mississippi river to Keokuk.

One interesting note from the voyage.  On April 6th, the passengers had a special meeting to commeration the organization of the Church.  A journal entry from one of the passengers note this about the meeting,

"One of the songs composed on that occasion was a description of the officers on the ship and as I have said nothing about them, will give the parts of the song. I do not remember all of it but will give the parts that I remember.
It was set to the tune of Yankee Doodle and you may judge when four hundred were singing with all their [-] we at least made some noise, whether it was very musical or not."

That song was composed by my 3rd great grandfather, Henry Maiben.  Below is the song.  (Caution: language used that is considered to be in very bad taste in our modern times.)

An original song, Written and Sung, by Henry Maiben [Maibin] (of Brighton) on board the ship International, on the occasion of a Festival, held April 6th, 1853, in commemoration of the organization of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

------------
TUNE--YANKEE DOODLE
------------

On board the InternationalAll joyful, and lighthearted, Bound Zionward, four hundred Saints, From Liverpool we started. We're English, Irish, Scotch, and Welsh Assembled here together; Resolved to do the will of God, Whate'er the wind and weather.
CHORUS Then, sing aloud, ye Saints of God, In one united chorus; Old Babylon we'll leave behind, For, Zion is before us.
We had a noble president, You'll scarce find such an one, Sirs, He stands near six feet six, in height,  And weighs near twenty stone, Sirs. But, best of all, he's full of love, He's frank, and open-hearted; And as sincere as any that From Bab'lon has departed.

Now, Elder Arthurs' counselors (I wish you all to know it) Are, Elder Lyon (from Glasgow), The celebrated Poet: And, Elder Richard Waddington, (From London's famous city) Who's been sick almost all the way, Which has drawn forth our pity.

And Elders are appointed to Take charge of wards and sections, And do all things according to The president's directions. Thus ev'ry regulations made Which is found to be needed; So that, there's not a soul on board Whose welfare is unheeded.

Then, of such fact, or incident That's worthy of remark here; We have a faithful record kept, By Elder Sims, our clerk here. [p.14 ] Amongst which you'll find, two deaths, five births, And twenty-five baptisms. Likewise (today) four marriages, But no such thing as schisms.

The Captain name is "David Brown," My muse cannot refuse its Verse, in reference to him; He comes from Massachusetts. Of course, he is tarnation 'cute,' Yet, he is honest, "rather," And must, ere long, become a Saint, And serve our Heav'nly Father.

The first mate's name is "Alfred Howes," The second mate's "Arch. Campbell," The third mate's is "John Marston," and Then, comes a sort of scramble: That is to say, a motley crew, Called sailors, or ship-riggers; Amounting to about eighteen, Swedes, Germans, Dutch, and Niggers.

The Captain's "Steward, and his wife," Next and forth our attention; Then "Richard Foulton" Captain's cook, I can 't omit to mention. And last (not least) the carpenter, "Calle Westerlind," a Swede, Sirs, The first of the ship's company T' embrace our Holy Creed, Sirs.

We've been on board five weeks and more, And have endured much sickness; We've also had headwinds and storms, T' impede the vessels quickness. Yet, we have cause, and do rejoice, Thanks to the God of Heaven! For unto us, his blessings have Abundantly been given.

Today's the 6th of April, and We now, are celebrating The glorious anniversary, With gladness unabating. And who? that could but witness now, Our festive, happy faces; But would obey the truth, to share The joy our faith embraces.

BIB: Lyon, John. Diary. (Ms 4687), pp.1-15. (CHL)

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Mormon Pioneer Overland Trail Database: Part 1

This is an interesting database for those who have Mormon pioneers that traveled across the plains by wagon or handcart.  The database can be found here.

This first post looks at the family of my 3rd great grandfather Henry Maiben.

This family traveled with the Jacob Gates Company in 1853 by ox pulled wagons.  The company left Keokuk, Iowa on June 3rd, 1853 and arrived in the Salt Lake Valley September 26-30 of that same year.

Henry Maiben, his wife Caroline Penn, daughter Alice Penn Maiben (my 2nd great grandmother), and an infant daughter Marion Maiben made the journey.  Marion was born in Keokuk.

Monday, April 9, 2012

Caroline Penn (1817-1864)


I found this post and the above picture on the blog All Things Ancestors about my 3rd great grandmother Caroline Penn.  She was married to Henry Maiben.

I have more information on Caroline Penn to come in a later post.