First Name: Enoch Trane
Age: 71
Gender: M
Cemetery: Pocatello, Idaho--Mountain View
Birth Date: 22 Mar 1856
Birth Place: Irish Sea Atlantic Ocean on board Ship Enoch Train
Date Died: 23 Nov 1932
Death Place: Kellogg, Idaho
Father: Samuel Hargraves
Mother: Agnes Noble
Spouse: Mary Eta Weaver, md.
Sources: Hall Mortuary Record of Funeral. Sexton Record: Section 2W, Row 17, Space 10.
Remarks: Contractor, Cerebro-thrombosis. Hall Mortuary, Pocatello, Idaho. Buried 26 Nov 1932.
(Excerpts from letters and journals from passengers on the Ship Enoch Train sailing from Liverpool to Boston 1856.)
Letter from J[ames] Ferguson
Monday 24 May. At two o'clock, a.m., Sister Agnes, wife of Samuel Hargraves, was delivered of a son--named Enoch Train.
Sunday, June 6. Conference was held after the close of Conference "The captain then presented Enoch Train Hargraves with a sovereign."
Journal of John Daniel Thompson McAllister
Monday 24, A.M. At 10 minutes to 2 o'clock, Sister Agnes, wife of Samuel Hardgraves, was delivered of a son named Enoch Train. Waited upon by Sister Janet Hardie.
Enoch Trane was born when the his family was three days out on the ocean when sailing from Liverpool England to America.His parents had joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and was going to Utah to join the Saints there. He was named after the ship they were sailing on (Enoch Train).
His mother, Agnes Noble Hargraves, used to tell the family of how emarrassed she was when Enoch was taken on deck one day to be blessed and was showered with coins. She said his pinafore could hardly hold them all.
They reached Boston 1 May 1856 and the next day left by train for New York City the on to Iowa City, Iowa where the railroad ended. They traveled in boxcars with no place to sit down except their trunks. They were in Iowa City nearly four weeks preparing for their trek. They were assigned to the Daniel McArthur Handcart Compamy. They arrived in Salt Lake City, Utah 26 Sep 1856. Agnes walked the whole distance (1300 miles) carrying her new-born baby boy, Enoch Trane.
They lived in Salt Lake City until 1859 when they moved to Farmington, Davis, Utah. In 1860 his father Samuel was called on a two year mission to England. When he returned they moved to Providence, Cache, Utah where Enoch's father, Samuel, opened the first general store in town.
Later in life he lived in Pocatello. In the early years of Pocatello, Trane and his mother Agnes Noble Hargraves ran a store on what is now Main Street.
First Name: Enoch Trane
Age: 71
Gender: M
Cemetery: Pocatello, Idaho--Mountain View
Birth Date: 22 Mar 1856
Birth Place: Irish Sea Atlantic Ocean on board Ship Enoch Train
Date Died: 23 Nov 1932
Death Place: Kellogg, Idaho
Father: Samuel Hargraves
Mother: Agnes Noble
Spouse: Mary Eta Weaver, md.
Sources: Hall Mortuary Record of Funeral. Sexton Record: Section 2W, Row 17, Space 10.
Remarks: Contractor, Cerebro-thrombosis. Hall Mortuary, Pocatello, Idaho. Buried 26 Nov 1932.
(Excerpts from letters and journals from passengers on the Ship Enoch Train sailing from Liverpool to Boston 1856.)
Letter from J[ames] Ferguson
Monday 24 May. At two o'clock, a.m., Sister Agnes, wife of Samuel Hargraves, was delivered of a son--named Enoch Train.
Sunday, June 6. Conference was held after the close of Conference "The captain then presented Enoch Train Hargraves with a sovereign."
Journal of John Daniel Thompson McAllister
Monday 24, A.M. At 10 minutes to 2 o'clock, Sister Agnes, wife of Samuel Hardgraves, was delivered of a son named Enoch Train. Waited upon by Sister Janet Hardie.
Enoch Trane was born when the his family was three days out on the ocean when sailing from Liverpool England to America.His parents had joined the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and was going to Utah to join the Saints there. He was named after the ship they were sailing on (Enoch Train).
His mother, Agnes Noble Hargraves, used to tell the family of how emarrassed she was when Enoch was taken on deck one day to be blessed and was showered with coins. She said his pinafore could hardly hold them all.
They reached Boston 1 May 1856 and the next day left by train for New York City the on to Iowa City, Iowa where the railroad ended. They traveled in boxcars with no place to sit down except their trunks. They were in Iowa City nearly four weeks preparing for their trek. They were assigned to the Daniel McArthur Handcart Compamy. They arrived in Salt Lake City, Utah 26 Sep 1856. Agnes walked the whole distance (1300 miles) carrying her new-born baby boy, Enoch Trane.
They lived in Salt Lake City until 1859 when they moved to Farmington, Davis, Utah. In 1860 his father Samuel was called on a two year mission to England. When he returned they moved to Providence, Cache, Utah where Enoch's father, Samuel, opened the first general store in town.
Later in life he lived in Pocatello. In the early years of Pocatello, Trane and his mother Agnes Noble Hargraves ran a store on what is now Main Street.
Family Members
-
Jane O'Conner Hargraves Weir
1840–1877
-
Mary Hargraves Stanford
1841–1890
-
Janette Hargraves McDonald
1844–1897
-
John Hargraves
1847–1927
-
Charles Hargraves
1848–1856
-
Samuel Hargraves
1850–1851
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Elizabeth Ann Hargraves Shaffer
1851–1939
-
Margaret Hargraves Heyrend Streeper
1854–1935
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Thomas William Hargraves
1858–1944
-
Alexander Samuel Hargraves
1860–1893
-
Samuel Hargraves
1864–1931
-
Agnes Noble Hargraves Garr
1866–1952
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