Levinah W.
Jackson
A widow from
Tennessee traveling with her extended family.
Age: 36
Perished.
Parents: Frederick
Jackson (b. 11 Jun 1776, Union Co., SC; d. 6 Aug
1836, Union Co., SC) and Charlotte Vinson (b. 8 Oct
1770, d. 8 Nov 1844 Union Co., SC)
b. 15 Dec 1809 Union
Co., SC
m. 19 Dec 1825 Union Co., SC to Jeremiah Burns
Murphy (b. 3 Mar 1805, Union Co., SC; d. 5 Oct 1839,
Weakley Co., TN)
Ch:
Sarah Ann Charlotte,
Harriet Frances,
John Landrum,
Meriam Marjory,
Lemuel B, William Green,
Simon Peter
d. March 1847 at the
Donner Lake Camp, Nevada Co., CA
Based on a late
memoir by a grandson who had never met her, Mrs.
Murphy’s name
has sometimes been rendered "Lavinia," but this form
is clearly incorrect. Documents dating from her
lifetime give the name as "Levina" or "Levinah"
(pronounced luh-VINE-uh). Her son William spelled
the name "Levinah"; Wilford Woodruff’s
1836 daybook gives the name as "Levinah W. Murphy,"
as does a transcription of a family Bible.
She is often called "old Mrs. Murphy"
in the literature of the Donner Party, but Levinah
Jackson Murphy was only 36 when she set out for
California. She had been born to a prosperous family
living in Union District (now County), South
Carolina. Her father was a responsible landowner who
sat on juries, administered estates, maintained
public roads, and was active in the local Baptist
church. Levinah is said to have acted as his private
secretary.
Four days after her sixteenth birthday she
married Jeremiah Burns Murphy, son of a neighboring
family and her first cousin once removed. The bride
and groom were both descended from one Richard
Murphy, who, according to family tradition, had been
kidnapped from Ireland as a boy and sold as an
indentured servant in Virginia. Jeremiah and Levinah
had four children in South Carolina before they and
several of their siblings moved to Weakley County,
Tennessee, about 1833. The Murphys settled on a farm
about 2 1/2 miles north of Dresden, the county seat.
Three more children were born in Tennessee.
In the summer of 1836 Jeremiah and Levinah
frequently entertained Wilford Woodruff and Abraham
O. Smoot, elders of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints, or Mormon church. On August 6,
Woodruff recorded that he had baptized "Brother and
Sister Murphy" into the LDS church. These were
almost certainly Jeremiah and Levinah; however,
Jeremiah’s
brother Emanuel Masters Murphy and his wife also
became Mormons about the same time, so the notation
may possibly refer to them.
Jeremiah died October 5, 1839, leaving his
29-year-old widow with seven children to support,
the youngest a toddler of 19 months. Jeremiah left a
fair amount of property, and Levinah also put her
skills as a tailor and weaver to good use. She was
still living in Weakley County when the census-taker
passed by in 1840, but by 1841 she and her children
had moved to the seat of the Mormon church in
Nauvoo, Illinois. There Levinah and Sarah were among
the first to perform a new LDS ordinance and were
baptized in the Mississippi River as proxies for the
dead. The four boys attended a school taught by
Henry I. Young (no relation to Brigham) from August
25 to October 28, 1842, in the home of Benjamin L.
Clapp, a fellow convert from Tennessee. Late that
fall the family left Nauvoo. They boarded a
steamship for St. Louis at Warsaw, Illinois, but
didn’t get very
far: the ship became icebound on the opposite shore
of the river. On December 29 the two eldest
daughters,
Sarah and
Harriet, were married on board the ship to
William M. Foster
and William M. Pike
by a justice of the peace.
After the ship was freed it continued on to St.
Louis, where the Pikes and Fosters took up
residence. Levinah and her younger children
continued on to Tennessee; the Pikes joined them
there after about a year. Two years after that the
family had decided to emigrate to California. The
Murphys and Pikes left Tennessee in March 1846 and
picked up the Fosters in St. Louis, making a total
of 13 people: Levinah, her five younger children,
two married daughters, two sons-in-law, and three
grandchildren. They traveled to Independence, where
they heard that a large caravan had recently left,
and caught up with the Russell train at the Big Blue
River between May 26-29 while the larger group was
waiting for the swollen waters to subside.
Little emerges from the historical record about
Levinah Murphy’s
personality. Whether she left the Mormon faith when
she left Nauvoo is unclear, but she was a devout
woman. Her son
William wrote, "She was noted for her extensive
erudition in scripture, and the facility with which
she handled the subjects then agitating the
religious community, and the skill with which she
rightly divided the truth."
In August 1847 the Mormon Battalion's services
were no longer needed in California. As the veterans
traveled east to Utah they stopped at Johnson’s
Ranch before crossing the Sierra. Young Mrs.
Johnson, the former Mary
Murphy, reportedly told them that her mother
- being a widow,
with several children dependent upon her for
support, while residing in Nauvoo, heard of a
chance of obtaining employment at Warsaw, an
anti-Mormon town, thirty miles lower down the
Mississippi. Thinking to better her condition,
she, accordingly, removed to Warsaw, and spent
the winter of 1845-46 there. In the spring of
the latter year, a party about emigrating to
Oregon or California, offered to furnish passage
for herself and children on the condition that
she would cook and do the washing for the party.
Understanding California to be the final
destination of the Saints, and thinking this a
good opportunity to emigrate without being a
burden to the Church, she accepted the
proposition, but, alas! the example of Sister
Murray [Murphy], although her motives were good,
is an illustration of the truism, that "it is
better to suffer affliction with the people of
God" and trust in Him for deliverance, than to
mingle with the sinful "for a season," and be
lured by human prospects of a better result!
This story, as
reported, cannot be corroborated. The Murphys took a
boat from Warsaw in late 1842 and returned to
Tennessee, according to William G. Murphy, and
Weakley County sources place the family there during
the winter preceding their departure for California.
There is no indication that the Murphys were closely
associated with another family for whom Levinah
might have cooked and washed. However, it was widely
known that the Mormons were leaving Illinois, and
California was rumored to be their destination. The
Murphys very likely did emigrate in order to rejoin
the Saints in their new home. According to her
daughter Mary, Levinah was very unhappy in
Tennessee. Mary also described her mother as
"persecuted" and "long suffering," but the precise
reasons for Levinah’s
unhappiness are a mystery.
Little is known about the Murphys' experiences
crossing the plains. When they finally arrived at
Donner Lake, Levinah's remaining son-in-law William Foster
and
William Eddy built a cabin alongside a boulder,
using its almost vertical eastern side as one wall.
Located about 200 yards from the existing cabin
which the Breens occupied, the Murphy cabin site was
excavated archaeologically in the 1980s by Donald L.
Hardesty of the University of Nevada-Reno. (See his
article "Donner Party Archaeology" in Overland
Journal 10: 3 (1992), p. 19-26
for more
information.) Here the Murphy clan and the Eddys
spent the winter.
Christmas 1846 was bleak for the Donner Party.
That night the Murphys had eaten their supper of
boiled bones and Levinah's son William was
reading her favorite psalm to her when she became
seriously ill. She was blind for a time during the
winter, and the Second Relief found that she had
become "so reduced by famine, that she was
helpless," alternately laughing and weeping. When
the Third Relief arrived she was too weak to travel.
Georgia Donner Babcock wrote to C. F. McGlashan,
- Mrs. Murphy was
so kind to the little children that we remember
her affectionately. It was always my impression
that the last [third] relief party took from the
cabin Frances, Georgia and Eliza Donner, and
Simon Murphy. As we were ready to start, Mrs.
Murphy walked to her bed, laid down turned her
face toward the wall. One of the men gave her a
handful of dried meat.--She seemed to realize
that we were leaving her, that her work was
finished.
When the Fourth Relief returned a month later,
they found her mutilated body.
Sarah Ann
Charlotte Murphy
Daughter of Jeremiah
Burns Murphy and
Levinah W. Jackson;
wife of
William McFadden Foster.
Age: 19
Survived
b. 04 Nov 1826 Union
County, SC
m. 29 Dec 1842 Clark Co., MO, to
William McFadden Foster
Ch:
Jeremiah George,
Alice E., Georgiana C., William Budd, Minnesota
"Minnie," Harriet "Hattie," Frances S.
d. 20 Dec 1906 San Francisco (?), CA
Sarah Murphy
Foster was one of the five young women who joined
the Forlorn Hope snowshoe party, leaving her son
behind. She and her husband never saw him again.
Peter H. Burnett met Sarah two years later in
Marysville and listened to her talk about the Donner
Party:
- Mrs. Foster was
then about twenty-three years old. She had a
fair education, and possessed the finest
narrative powers. I never met with any one, not
even excepting Robert Newell of Oregon, who
could narrate events as well as she. She was not
[only?] more accurate and full in her narrative,
but a better talker, than Newell. For hour after
hour, I would listen in silence to her sad
narrative. Her husband was then in good
circumstances, and they had no worldly matter to
give them pain but their recollections of the
past.
After her
husband’s death in 1874 Sarah stayed for a time with
her brother William in Marysville but later moved to
Mendocino County, where she lived for many years.
She died in San Francisco and was buried at Fort
Bragg. For a photo of her tombstone.
William McFadden
Foster
Husband of
Sarah Ann Charlotte Murphy;
son-in-law of
Levinah W. Jackson;
Age: 30
Survived
Parents: David
Foster (b. 1782; d. 11 Sep 1840, Crawford Co., PA)
and Rebecca McFadden (b. 1786; d. 8 Mar 1861,
Crawford Co., PA)
b. 25 Oct 1815
Meadville, Crawford Co., PA
m. 29 Dec 1842 Clark Co., MO to
Sarah Ann Charlotte Murphy
Ch:
Jeremiah George,
Alice E., Georgiana C., William Budd, Minnesota
"Minnie," Harriet "Hattie," Frances S.
d. 25 Feb 1874 San Francisco, CA
Nothing is
known about William Foster’s
youth. According to William G. Murphy, Foster was
the mate on the boat the Murphy family took from
Nauvoo in December 1842. The ship became icebound
and two romances sprang up between the crew and the
passengers. Foster and his shipmate
William Pike were
married to Sarah and Harriet Murphy respectively on
December 29 by a justice of the peace in Clark
County, Missouri, across the river from Nauvoo.
Foster left the ship and appears to have
followed the carpenter’s
trade in St. Louis. He and Sarah were living there
when their first child,
George, was
born.
In the annals of the Donner Party William
Foster is best remembered as the man who killed
Sutter’s
vaqueros,
Luis and
Salvador, for food. He does not seem to have
been much blamed for this act; William Eddy’s
account, related to J. Quinn Thornton, emphasizes
that Foster was deranged at the time.
Regarding his later personality, Peter H.
Burnett wrote:
- Foster was a
man of excellent common sense, and his
intelligence had not been affected, like those
of many others. His statement was clear,
consistent, and intelligible.
After the
disaster Foster worked as a carpenter in San
Francisco, but later joined his brothers-in-law,
Michael C. Nye and Charles Covillaud, in a ranching
venture. During the gold rush he and Nye prospected
for gold; Foster’s
Bar on the Yuba was named for him.
Foster was a founder and prominent early
settler of Marysville, but in the mid-1850s he and
his growing family moved to Carver County,
Minnesota. An attempt to found a community called
San Francisco failed, and they returned to
California about 1860.
William Foster died of cancer in 1874 in San
Francisco. A convert to Catholicism, he was buried
in the cemetery of the old Mission Dolores.
Jeremiah George
Foster
Son of
William McFadden Foster
and
Sarah Ann Charlotte Murphy
Age: 1
Perished
b. 25 August 1844
St. Louis, MO
d. March 1847 at the Murphy Cabin, Donner Lake Camp,
CA
This child is
referred to as George Foster in Donner Party
sources, but Murphy family records indicate that
this was actually his middle name.
There has been some confusion about his age;
McGlashan lists him among the nursing infants in the
Donner Party, but his age elsewhere is given as
four. He was in fact only one when the family set
out from Missouri, but had turned two by the time
the emigrants reached the lake.
Sarah and William Foster left George behind
with his grandmother when they departed with the
Forlorn Hope in mid-December. Levinah did the best
she could for him during the dreary winter, but was
herself unwell. In February the Second Relief found
George and little
James Eddy lying in bed, filthy and crying from
hunger. They washed the boys and did as much as they
could for them, but the outlook was bleak.
One night in March
Louis Keseberg took George to bed with him, and
in the morning the boy was dead; grief-stricken,
Levinah accused Keseberg of killing him. The little
body was cannibalized by the cabin’s inhabitants.
Harriet Frances
Murphy
Daughter of Jeremiah
Burns Murphy and
Levinah W. Jackson;
wife of
William M. Pike.
Age: 18
Survived.
b. 08 May 1828 Union
Co., SC
m1. 29 Dec 1842 Clark Co., MO to
William M. Pike
Ch:
Naomi Levina,
Catherine
m2. 24 Jun 1847 Sutter’s
Fort, Sacramento Co., CA to Michael C. Nye (04 Apr
1821-1905)
Ch: Harry, d. 21 Oct 1854, age 1 yr 10 mos.;
possibly others
d. 1 Sept 1870 at The Dalles, Wasco Co., OR
Levinah
Jackson Murphy’s
second daughter was only 14 when she married William
Pike in 1842. They lived for about a year in St.
Louis, then made their home in Tennessee with
Levinah until the spring of 1846, when the families
left to emigrate to California. Harriet lost her
husband in a shooting accident along the Truckee
River at the end of October 1846. On December 15
she, her brother Lemuel, sister Sarah, and
brother-in-law William Foster set out with the
Forlorn Hope, leaving her daughters Naomi and
Catherine with their grandmother Levinah at the
Murphy cabin. The First Relief rescued Naomi, but
Catherine died the day after the relief arrived at
the camp.
On May 25, 1847, the Murphy girls wrote to
their relatives back in Tennessee. Harriet’s
brief note reads in part, "theare is know one that
knows how to simpathise with mee left a widow in a
strange cuntry with one por orpant childe to take
care of I have not the hart nor minde to word all my
suffering since I saw you..." A month later, Harriet
had found someone to sympathize with her. On June
24, she married Michael C. Nye, who had come to
California with the Bidwell-Bartleson Party of 1841
and was now working at Neu Mecklenburg as Theodor
Cordua’s
majordomo.
Harriet’s
marriage to the handsome young Nye seems to have
been quite happy. In 1849 Mary Murphy wrote,
"Harriet is married to Mr. Nye he is a very nice
man... he loves Harriet very much." Nye prospected
for gold with Foster during the gold rush, but his
main interest was stockraising and dealing. He also
established a livery stable in Marysville.
The Nyes and Fosters were living in
Marysville when they got to know Peter H. Burnett in
1849: "Mrs. Nye did not talk much, not being a
talkative woman, and being younger than Mrs. Foster,
her sister."
Late in 1849 the Nyes and Fosters returned
east for a visit via the Isthmus of Panama. There
Harriet ran into an acquaintance, Heinrich Lienhard,
who was escorting
John Sutter’s
wife and children from Switzerland to California.
Lienhard happened to overhear "an attractive
American woman" speaking of him and discovered that
it was Mrs. Nye.
The Nyes lived in Marysville for several
years, but moved to Oregon in the 1860s. Harriet
died at the relatively young age of 46 and was
buried in Marysville, but her widower remained in
Oregon until his death in 1905.
William
Montgomery Pike
Husband of
Harriet Frances Murphy; son-in-law of
Levinah W. Jackson
Age: [32]
Perished.
Parents: James Brown Pike (b. 01 May 1784, New
York, d. 19 Apr 1855 Kirkville, Wapello Co., Iowa)
and Mrs. Wolfries.
b. abt 1814 in Dearborn Co., Indiana
m1. 29 Dec 1842 Clark
Co., MO to
Harriet Frances Murphy
Ch:
Naomi Levina,
Catherine
d. Late Oct 1846 along the Truckee River in Nevada
William M. Pike, the illegitimate son of
James Brown Pike and a Mrs. Wolfries, was a grandson
of a Revolutionary War officer, Zebulon Pike, and a
nephew of the explorer
Zebulon Montgomery Pike, after whom
Pike’s Peak in Colorado is named.
In late 1842 Pike was the engineer aboard a
riverboat which became icebound on the western shore
of the Mississippi. One of the passengers was
fourteen-year-old Harriet Murphy. The couple was
married on board the ship on December 29, the same
day that William Foster married Harriet’s sister
Sarah. The Pikes spent about a year in St. Louis,
then went to live with Harriet’s family in Weakley
County, Tennessee.
There Pike helped clear a 200-acre tract
belonging to the family. His unfamiliarity with
woodcutting amused the Murphy boys, who nevertheless
thought him "the greatest man they ever met."
According to William G. Murphy, Pike was "an
extraordinary man, a real genius, a full fledged
mechanic" and a "powerful ally" to Levinah Murphy.
On the trail, Pike is recorded as going ahead
with
James F. Reed and
Charles Stanton to overtake Hastings and get his
advice about the route through the Wasatch
Mountains. In 1871, however, Reed wrote that his
companions were Stanton and
William McCutchen. It has been suggested that
Reed confused the mission to consult Hastings with
the sending of Stanton and McCutchen ahead to
Sutter’s Fort for supplies. Whatever the case, the
earliest sources--an article which appeared in the
California Star on February 13, 1847 and J.
Quinn Thornton’s Oregon and California in 1848--report
that it was Pike; survivors told McGlashan it was
Pike; even Virginia Reed Murphy said it was Pike,
contradicting her father.
In October, while the company was traveling
along the Humboldt, Pike returned from a hunting
trip with William Eddy to discover that
Mr. Hardcoop had been put out of Keseberg’s
wagon and was now missing. When Hardcoop had not
arrived at the camp the next morning, Pike, Eddy,
and
Milt Elliott volunteered to go on foot after
him, but the company would not wait and they were
forced to leave Hardcoop to his fate.
William Pike met his own fate not long
thereafter. As C. F. McGlashan told it
- After the arrival of Stanton, it was still
deemed necessary to take further steps for the
relief of the train. The generosity of Captain
Sutter, as shown to Stanton, warranted them in
believing that he would send still further
supplies to the needy emigrants. Accordingly,
two brothers-in-law, William Foster and William
Pike, both brave and daring spirits, volunteered
to go on ahead, cross the summits, and return
with provisions as Stanton had done. Both men
had families, and both were highly esteemed in
the company. At the encampment near Reno,
Nevada, while they were busily preparing to
start, the two men were, cleaning or loading a
pistol. It was an old-fashioned "pepper-box." It
happened, while they were examining it, that
wood was called for to replenish the fire. One
of the men offered to procure it, and in order
to do so, handed the pistol to the other.
Everybody knows that the "pepper-box" is a very
uncertain weapon. Somehow, in the transfer, the
pistol was discharged. William Pike was fatally
wounded, and died in about twenty minutes. Mrs.
Pike was left a widow, with two small children.
The youngest, Catherine, was a babe of only a
few months old, and Naomi was only three years
of age. The sadness and distress occasioned by
this mournful accident, cast a gloom over the
entire company, and seemed an omen of the
terrible fate which overshadowed the Donner
Party.
Naomi Levina Pike
Daughter of
William M. Pike
and
Harriet Frances Murphy
Age: 2
Survived.
b. 13 Nov 1843 in St. Louis, MO
m1. 8 Sep 1864 in Marysville, Yuba Co., CA to
Benjamin W. Mitchell
m2. abt 1877 to John L. Schenck
d. 3 Apr 1934 in The Dalles, Wasco Co., OR
John Rhoads of the First Relief met Harriet Pike
at Johnson’s Ranch, and, moved by her plight,
determined to rescue her children. He may have been
influenced by the fact that he, like Harriet, was or
had been a Mormon. Catherine died the day after the
relief arrived, but Naomi was still alive. Rhoads
carried her slung on his back in a blanket to her
mother. Decades later, Naomi wrote of him with
gratitude.
Harriet’s marriage to Michael C. Nye gave
Naomi a kind stepfather. Mary Murphy wrote, "he
loves Naomi as well as if she war his own child."
She was often called "Naomi Nye."
Naomi married Benjamin Mitchell, a physician,
in Marysville and moved to Oregon; the Nyes later
moved there as well. After Mitchell’s death she
married John L. Schenck, an agent for a steamship
company who later went into banking. When he died in
1913 he left Naomi a wealthy widow, but she was
impoverished by the stock market crash of 1929. She
had no children by either of her husbands.
When Naomi died in 1934, the passing of the
next to the last survivor of the Donner Party was
widely reported in the press.
Catherine
Pike
Daughter of
William M. Pike
and
Harriet Frances Murphy
Age: [1]
Perished.
Catherine Pike was evidently named after
her father’s sister, who had died in 1843 at the age
of 22. Catherine’s exact age is unknown; her sister
Naomi Pike Schenck wrote Kansas historian John
Ellenbecker that Catherine was only "nine months
old," but was that Catherine’s age when she died or
when the family left Missouri for California?
In mid-December Harriet Pike left her two
small daughters behind in a desperate attempt to
seek assistance:
- Dear Mrs. Murphy had the most sacred and
pitiful charge. It was the wee nursing babe,
Catherine Pike, whose mother had gone with the
"Forlorn Hope," to try, if possible, to procure
relief. All there was to give the tiny sufferer,
was a little gruel made from snow water,
containing a slight sprinkling of coarse flour.
This flour was simply ground wheat, unbolted.
Day after day the sweet little darling would lie
helplessly upon its grandmother’s lap, and seem
with its large, sad eyes to be pleading for
nourishment. Mrs. Murphy carefully kept the
little handful of flour concealed--there was
only a handful at the very beginning--lest some
of the starving children might get possession of
the treasure. Each day she gave Catherine a few
teaspoonfuls of the gruel. Strangely enough,
this poor little martyr did not often cry with
hunger, but with tremulous, quivering mouth, and
a low, subdued sob or moan, would appear to be
begging for something to eat. The poor, dumb
lips, if gifted with speech, could not have
uttered a prayer half so eloquent, so touching.
Could the mother, Mrs. Pike, have been present,
it would have broken her heart to see her
patient babe dying slowly, little by little.
Starvation had dried the maternal breasts long
before Mrs. Pike went away, so that no one can
censure her for leaving her baby. She could only
have done as Mrs. Murphy did, give it the plain,
coarse gruel, and watch it die, day by day, upon
her lap.
On February 22, 1847, Patrick Breen recorded, "I
burried pikes child this moring in the snow it died
2 days ago."
John Landrum
Murphy
Son of Jeremiah
Burns Murphy and
Levinah W. Jackson
Age: 16
Perished
b. 16 Nov 1829 Union
Co., SC
d. 31 Jan 1847 at the Murphy cabin, Donner Lake
Camp, Nevada Co., CA
When Foster
and Eddy left with the Forlorn Hope in mid-December,
Landrum became the oldest male living at the Murphy
cabin. On him no doubt fell the brunt of cutting
firewood and shoveling snow, chores which became
increasingly arduous as he weakened from starvation.
Patrick Breen’s
diary records his decline: on January 17, "Lanthrom
crazy last night"; January 19: "Lanthrom very low in
danger if relief dont come soon"; January 27: "Lanthrom
lying in bed the whole of his time"; January 31: "Lantron
Murphy died last night about one Oclock."
As C.F. McGlashan described it,
- Landrum Murphy was a large and somewhat
overgrown young man. The hides and burnt bones
did not contain sufficient nourishment to keep
him alive. For some hours before he died, he lay
in a semi-delirious state, breathing heavily and
seemingly in little or no pain. Mrs. Murphy went
to the Breen camp, and asked Mrs. Breen for a
piece of meat to save her starving boy. Mrs.
Breen gave her the meat, but it was too late,
Landrum could not eat. Finally he sank into a
gentle slumber. His breathing grew less and less
distinct, and ere they were fairly aware of it
life was extinct.
Meriam Marjory
Murphy
Daughter of Jeremiah
Burns Murphy and
Levinah W. Jackson
Age: 14
Survived
b. 15 Nov 1831 Union
Co., SC
m1. 24 Jun 1847 Sutter’s
Fort, Sacramento Co., CA to William Johnson;
divorced
m2. 25 Dec 1848 Sutter’s
Fort, Sacramento Co., CA to Charles Julian Covillaud
(b. 21 Nov 1816 in Cognac, France; d. 05 Feb 1867
Marysville, Yuba Co., CA)
Ch: Mary Ellen, Charles Julian, William Pierre,
Francis Theodore, Naomi Sabine
d. 27 Sep 1867 Marysville, Yuba Co., CA
- Although
she is usually known as Mary, church and family
records give her name as Meriam, a form that
occurs several times in the Jackson and Murphy
families. The middle name Marjory is from a
transcription of a family Bible.
Mary was rescued from the Donner Lake
camp by the First Relief in February 1847. She
was haunted by the tragedy. In May 1847 she
wrote, "i hope i shall not live long for i am
tired of this troublesome world and i want to go
to my mother." A brief and troubled marriage to
William Johnson, the proprietor of Johnson’s
Ranch, was followed by a much happier union with
Charles Covillaud. Yet in 1849, despite her
greatly improved circumstances, Mary was still
sad: "I shall always wish that it had been gods
will for me to die with my Mother."
During the gold rush a thriving town
sprang up on the Yuba river at what had been
known as Nye’s
Ranch. The town was named Marysville after the
wife of a prominent citizen, Mrs. Charles
Covillaud--the former Mary Murphy.
As a surviving photograph shows, Mary was
a lovely young woman; Heinrich Lienhard
remembered the first time that he saw "the
beautiful Mary." Bostonian Franklin A. Buck met
Mary Covillaud and her sister Sarah Foster in
1850. He acknowledged her looks but was
otherwise unimpressed:
- Mrs. C. and Mrs. F.
are two of the party who came over the mountains
in 1846 and came so near starving. You recollect
the horrid sufferings they endured, even to
eating each other. They are the elite of the
place, of course. Mrs. Covilland is quite young
and pretty but there is not the least refinement
or taste about them. The fact is that there is
no woman who can come to this country at present
and have any refinement. Their finer feelings,
if they have any, will soon get blunted with the
life they must live here.
Although she did not
meet Buck’s
standard of refinement, Mary was remembered as a
kind and generous woman who enjoyed flowers. She
seems to have lived happily in the town that bore
her name. Charles Covillaud died in February 1867
and his widow followed him only seven months later,
dying at the age of 35. She is buried in the
Catholic cemetery at Marysville.
Lemuel B. Murphy
Son of Jeremiah
Burns Murphy and
Levinah W. Jackson
Age: 12
Perished
b. 17 Oct 1833
Weakley Co., TN.
d. 27 Dec 1846 at Camp of Death, Nevada Co., CA.
The birthplace of Lemuel Murphy,
Levinah's second son, is uncertain but was it
probably Tennessee.
Lemuel set out with the Forlorn Hope in
mid-December:
- A boy about thirteen years old, Lemuel was
dearly loved by his sisters, and, full of
courage, had endeavored to accompany them on the
fearful journey. He was feeble when he started
from the cabins, and the overwhelming sufferings
of the fatal trip had destroyed his remaining
strength.... (C. F. McGlashan)
At Camp of Death Sarah Foster sat holding
Lemuel and trying to comfort him in his delirium.
The sun set, the moon rose, and about two o’clock in
the morning Lemuel died. Ever afterwards, Sarah told
McGlashan, she could never "behold a bright
moonlight without recurring with a shudder to this
night on the Sierra."
- Mrs. Foster spoke of
this young hero with the greatest feeling. His
patience and resignation were of the martyr
type. When they were reduced to half a biscuit
each, he insisted that she should eat his
portion as well as her own; but this she
refused. (Peter H. Burnett)
William Green
Murphy
Son of Jeremiah
Burns Murphy and
Levinah W. Jackson
Age: 10
Survived
b. 15 Jan 1836
Weakley Co., TN
m. 03 Dec 1861 Weakley Co., TN to Damaris Kathleen
Cochran
Ch: Tullulah "Lulie" T., Kate Nye, William
Green, Jr., Charles Mitchell, Ernest H., Harriet F.,
Leander B.
d. 04 Feb 1904 Marysville, Yuba Co., CA
Young William set out with the Forlorn
Hope with other members of his family, but had no
snowshoes and had to turn back. Had he not done so,
he almost certainly would have met the same fate as
his brother Lemuel. Two months later, on his way out
of the mountains with the First Relief, William’s
feet became so badly frostbitten that he couldn’t
continue, but it came to a choice of walk or die. He
walked.
After their rescue and recuperation, the two
surviving Murphy boys flourished in California. In
1849 their sister Mary Covillaud wrote, "William
and Simon are large helthy boys and as like the
other boyes was William can ride wild horses like a
spaniard they can talk spanish and indian to[o]."
William acted as an Indian interpreter at Bidwell’s
Bar in 1848-49.
In December 1849 William and Simon
Murphy accompanied their sister Harriet and
brother-in-law Michael Nye east via the Isthmus of
Panama. At Gorgona they met John Sutter’s family,
who were on their way to Sacramento escorted by
Heinrich Lienhard. After arriving at New Orleans,
William and his companions traveled on to Dresden,
Tennessee, where the family still owned property.
The Nyes returned to California but the boys
stayed on, living with a local family. Evidently
William, as the eldest surviving son, was expected
to continue his education. His schooling had been
scanty, however, so he had to be tutored until he
was ready to enter the University of Missouri at
Columbia for the school year 1852-53. In 1854 he
returned to California, helping to drive a large
herd of cattle back to Marysville, but after a few
years went back to Missouri and completed his
education, graduating in 1861.
William returned to Marysville, where he was
admitted to the bar in January 1863. In August of
that year he was admitted to the bar of the Supreme
Court of Nevada and practiced law in Virginia City
for three years, but in 1866 went back to Marysville
for good. His law practice was very successful. He
served as court commissioner for twenty-seven years
and also as district attorney of Yuba County.
Murphy stood more than six feet tall, loved
children, was a noted orator, a staunch
prohibitionist, and a founder of Marysville’s
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). His passing
in 1904 was sincerely mourned by his fellow
citizens.
Simon Peter
Murphy
Son of Jeremiah
Burns Murphy and
Levinah W. Jackson
Age: 8
Survived
b. 14 Mar 1838
Weakley Co., TN
m. 21 Sep 1859 Weakley Co., TN to M. C. Foster
Ch: John Robert, Naomi, Geneva, Emanuel
Byrd
d. 31 Mar 1873 Weakley
Co., TN
Simon was rescued with the three little
Donner girls by the Third Relief. Georgia Donner
Babcock referred to him as "Simon Murphy, whom I
remember so kindly."
Simon and William Murphy returned to Weakley
County, Tennessee in 1849. Simon remained there, but
William returned West after graduating from college.
When the Civil War broke out, Simon served as
a private in Company L, Sixth Cavalry, USA, also
called the West Tennessee Cavalry Regiment. His unit
was described on May 6, 1864 as "a raw,
undisciplined detachment" and for many months was
reported as "dismounted and unassigned."
Simon stayed in contact with his family in
California -- his death was reported in a Sacramento
newspaper -- but little known about his children. At
least some of them had children of their own: In
January 1952, when the passenger train
City of San Francisco was trapped by snow
for three days in the Sierra, the analogy to the
Donner Party did not escape the notice of the media.
A Tennessee newspaper article reporting the incident
published information given by a descendant of Simon
P. Murphy. |