Nielsen Hayden genealogy
David Crandall

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Name David Crandall [1] Birth 1789 Hebron, Washington, New York [2]
Gender Male Alternate birth 1 Jun 1795 Caldwell, Warren, New York [3]
Death 12 Mar 1861 La Harpe, Hancock, Illinois [3, 4]
Person ID I3956 Ancestry of PNH, TNH, and others | Ancestor of TNH Last Modified 12 Sep 2021
Father Pardon Crandall, b. 1761, Hopkinton, Washington, Rhode Island d. 24 Mar 1837, Hebron, Washington, New York
(Age 76 years)
Mother Susannah Wells, b. 23 Apr 1767, Hebron, Washington, New York Marriage Abt 1783 Hebron, Washington, New York [2]
Family ID F1973 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family Margaret Ann McBride, b. 1795, Chester, Washington, New York d. Aug 1845, La Harpe, Hancock, Illinois
(Age 50 years)
Marriage Abt 1810 [2, 3] Children + 1. Myron Nathan Crandall, b. 17 Aug 1818, Genesee, New York d. 4 Aug 1860, Springville, Utah, Utah
(Age 41 years)
Family ID F4702 Group Sheet | Family Chart Last Modified 8 Jan 2016
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Photos David Crandall
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Notes - Shoemaker.
From Our Crandall and Beckstead Ancestors:
"The families of David Crandall and his in-laws, the McBrides, remained close and moved from one place to another together. David and his family heard the Gospel in the home of his mother-in-law. [...] The family moved from New York to Kirtland, Ohio, in 1835. Late in 1835, David, Margaret and Daniel Mead Crandall went to Pike County. Most of the family remained in Kirtland. It is in Pike County where their youngest child was born. Daniel returned to Kirtland that year and David and Margaret remained in Missouri. They went through the same persecutions as did the other Saints there. [...] From Missouri, David and Margaret moved to Quincy, Illinois in about 1838, and met up with the rest of the family. They stayed in Quincy for three years. In 1841, the moved to LaHarpe, Illinois, twenty three miles east of Nauvoo, where there was a thriving branch of the church. [...] David and Margaret were endowed on August 24, 1843, in Nauvoo, in the office of the President.
"David Married Mrs. Jerusha Smith sometime between the death of Margaret and when the Saints left the area in 1846. She had children from her first marriage. [...] Two reasons kept David in LaHarpe: his youngest daughter, Margaret Ann, had mental limitations and he knew that she would not be able to handle the arduous trip west; and his second wife, who was not a member of the Church, refused to go. [...] In 1853, his daughter, Margaret Ann, died."
- Shoemaker.
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Sources - [S5951] Mead-Clark Genealogy by Eva Mead Firestone. Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1946.
- [S931] Elder John Crandall of Rhode Island and His Descendants by John Cortland Crandall. New Woodstock, NY, 1949.
- [S392] Our Crandall and Beckstead Ancestors.
- [S931] Elder John Crandall of Rhode Island and His Descendants by John Cortland Crandall. New Woodstock, NY, 1949., year and state only.
- [S5951] Mead-Clark Genealogy by Eva Mead Firestone. Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1946.