Sunday, June 10, 2012

Mary Ann Mellows Walker

Mary Ann Mellows Walker, mother of James John Walker, was one that gave her life for the Gospel's sake.  Three hundred miles from Salt Lake City out on the prairie in Wyoming she was laid to rest August 12, 1853 in an unmarked grave.   She had prepared a bird pie for their supper meal and during the night became ill and died.  The exact cause is not known, but because of the hardships and trials of crossing the plains, and walking the many, many miles over the dusty trails in all was just too much for her.  In the early morning her son asked the man in the near-by wagon if he could borrow a spade that he might dig a grave for his mother.  So it was, as she was prepared for burial in her best clothes, wrapped in a blanket, lowered into the unmarked grave, the sod and rocks were shoveled on her.  A fire was then made on the grave so the wolves would not molest her body.  The company moved on in their journey toward the Rocky Mountains in the West.

She had worked hard to prepare for the journey.  The census of 1851 tells us that she was a washerwoman.  Through the years previously to 1848 when her husband Thomas Walker died, he had been a fisherman or a man away from home much of the time as he had different jobs as a mariner on the rivers Thames and Medway.  So it is very evident that caring for her children was her concern and task.