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John and
Mary Ann Sivers
Pioneers of Mills County,
Iowa
The story of the John and Mary Ann Sivers typifies what was best
in 19th Century America. It demonstrates the courage
needed to leave behind the certainties of birthplace for a chance at
opportunities in a foreign land. It represents the commitment to live
freely by convictions that the more orthodox thought sinister,
subversive or absurd. And, it illustrates the success of skill and
work that so many immigrants used to change America's new lands
forever. As such, the story of the John Sivers family deserves to be
told.
It was 17th of July 1842. That
day, Mary Ann Leader, seventeen, and John
Sivers, twenty-two, were married by the
Reverend Sofer in a Congregationalist ceremony at Independence
Chapel, Little Gonerby, Lincolnshire, England. Both bride and groom
were born in Manthorpe, Lord Brownlow's manor house settlement in the
agricultural region near Grantham. Each came from many generations of
ancestors who had lived in Lincolnshire. John shared his unusual
surname with few in England, but with many throughout Scandinavia and
the states along the Baltic coasts where Saxons, Angles, Jutes and
Vikings fought and conquered. All of this suggests that the origins
of the name, Sivers, can be traced to the tribes from historical
Denmark that invaded eastern England, settled the land and ruled it
from the 6th to the mid 11th century.
During the years that followed their marriage,
John supported his young family as a miller and millwright working at
the many watermills around the Grantham area. When the Mormon
missionaries swept through the English countryside preaching and
converting, John and Mary Ann were among those baptized. It was as
Mormons that they left Lincolnshire with their children, Mary Ann and
Thomas, for the port of Liverpool. Other close relatives joined them,
including Mary Ann's Mother, Ann
Leader, her Grandmother, Lydia Laughton and the families of Mary Ann's brother, John, and
sister, Eleanor. On the 29th of January 1849 all boarded the British
square-rigger, Zetland, to begin the long religious journey to the
Great Salt Lake Valley.
So it was that the passenger-laden vessel
sailed into the Irish Sea, where, during a storm, a drunken first
mate nearly sank it on dangerous rocks. Then the ship moved into the
Atlantic where the passengers faced the dangers of an onboard fire.
Fierce storms pushed the ship off course time and again, lengthening
the voyage and forcing the frightened passengers below deck. Finally,
after sixty-three days on the Atlantic, the Zetland arrived at the
port of New Orleans on the 2nd of April 1849.
But New Orleans was no safer for John and Mary
Ann's family and their relatives than life at sea. Cholera was in the
city. Thousands were dying. The shortage of caskets was so severe
that people were dumped into common graves. On April 5, John and Mary
Ann's family and their fellow Mormon immigrants hurried onto the
side-wheel paddle steamboat, Iowa. The vessel moved immediately into
the Mississippi for the next leg of the journey to Saint Louis. But
cholera followed them aboard, soon killing nine passengers including
the pilot of the boat.
Despite the deaths, the Iowa arrived in St.
Louis around the 12th of April. But there
was still no rest from the disease. The cholera was killing about 200
of the city's citizens a day, and on the 17th much of St. Louis
burned. In such turmoil, John Sivers managed to buy a covered wagon,
a team of oxen and provisions for the trip. (The list of items and
their individual costs are detailed in a typed copy of the $112.95
provisions' bill.). The family, with Mary Ann's Mother and
Grandmother headed west and so began the more than 500-mile journey
across Missouri destined for Kanesville (now Council Bluffs) in
Southwestern Iowa.
The way was slow, little more than 10-15 miles
a day. As they moved across Missouri, they saw the slaves at work in
the fields. At night, as the family camped, they would sometimes
watch them dance and sing. When the Sivers' wagon entered Iowa, the
family members could hardly have guessed that their final destination
was to be a small Mormon settlement in Pottawattamie County. Its name
was Coonsville. Here, where Keg Creek flowed over the bluffs onto
rich bottomlands, Bishop Lebbeus
Thaddeus Coons had surveyed and
established a town in which newly arriving Saints could settle and
farm before they resumed the demanding Spring and Summer journey to
the Great Salt Lake Valley.
Building a brush bed to cross Keg Creek, the
John Sivers family arrived in Coonsville on the 4th of July 1849. Once
there, Bishop Coons, who was also the President of the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints' Union Branch at Coonsville,
welcomed them with a gift of fresh eggs. (Years later, Mary Ann would
recall how much those simple deeds of kindness meant to her when the
Sivers family arrived.) Some old friends, the William Britain's, offered
to share their cabin.
On the 19th of July, Mary Ann
gave birth to John Henry
Sivers, the first child of European
descent born in the area that would become Glenwood. John rented land
east of Coonsville along Keg Creek. It was there, that he built their
first home. The family moved into the modest log cabin on an August
day in 1849. Perhaps the family did not know that the area around
Coonsville was still home to the Pottawattamie Tribe. One day a
tribal member walked into the cabin to look into the cradle where
John Henry lay. Terrified, Mary Ann picked up her broom as a weapon.
But the Pottawattamie, his curiosity satisfied, left
peacefully.
The following spring, Mary Ann's sister, Eleanor,
her husband, John Page, and their children arrived in Coonsville. A year
later, in 1851, the Page family prepared to leave for Kanesville, a
Mormon staging area for the difficult journey over the Great Plains
and through the Rockies to the Great Salt Lake Valley The Pages
begged John, Mary Ann, her mother and grandmother to leave with them
for Kanesville. But, over the protests of the Pages, they were
persuaded by Dr. L. T.
Coons to stay on. John knew that the
Coolidge grain mill on Keg Creek already needed his talents as a
miller and millwright, while the friendly Mormon townsfolk and the
lush beauty of the area won over Mary Ann.
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Soon John was farming his own
lands. On them, he built a larger home for his growing
family. Still later, he built an even larger home on the
bluffs east of Keg Creek. John earned a part of his living
by outfitting the many families moving westward- some for
California's goldfields, others intent on settling new
acreage on the fertile soils of Oregon, and still others
continuing the religious quest to Utah. But it was as
a miller and mill-wright that he spent much of his time.
John owned and operated a mill on Keg Creek in the Northwest
of Section 30 Township 73 North Range 42 West. In addition
to the Coolidge mill there were years when he operated the
Vinton mill in Old Pacific (now Pacific City). By 1865, John
and another citizen, Judge (William?) Deupree, had built and were operating a
mill on Keg creek north of Glenwood. Later, John bought Judge
Deupree's interest and became sole proprietor. |

Probably John Siver's Mill on Keg Creek,
Mills County, Iowa.
~source: Scrapbook of Louella Miller
Sivers, in possession of Ruth Sivers Dixon. |
As involved as he was in business interests,
John and his family were equally devoted to their Mormon faith. They
had traveled thousands of miles from Lincolnshire to reach Zion, and
they were active members of the Coonsville Union Branch. On the
advice of their Church leaders, they delayed the dangerous trek to
their final destination in Utah Territory. John and his family, among
thousands of other Mormons, settled into small communities near the
banks of the Missouri in Iowa.
On September 21, 1851, Brigham Young and others
commanded all of them " ... to evacuate Pottawattamie and the States
and next fall be with us [in the Great Salt Lake Valley]". To
underline that command to the Saints who were apt to delay leaving,
the same letter required the destruction of the Church's organization
in Iowa and Nebraska. Without the leadership or the religious
community provided by their local Branch, an unprecedented number of
Mormons left the Church or joined other denominations. Ten years
later, in 1861, John and Mary Ann as well as their friends, the
Britton's, helped establish the Reorganized Church of Latter Day
Saints of Oak Township. It is worth noting that John and Mary Ann's
children joined several of the major protestant faiths in the area
and so, perhaps, did their parents in later years.
John and Mary Ann Sivers played a critical role
in the civic affairs and real estate of Coonsville and Glenwood. The
story, the legal documents and the timeline are complex. Even the
sources that provide the basic information are at times seemingly
contradictory. A simplified version of the events, which tries to
step around some of the disagreements, follows below.
When L. T. Coons established Coonsville in
1848, about thirty Mormon families arrived to live there. At that
time, he platted Coonsville and divided ownership of the lots among
his stepsons, his son-in-law, himself, and some close associates. In
1850, Coons submitted his map and lot division. These papers were
accepted and recorded as legal documents by Pottawattamie
County
During 1851, a certain Colonel Joseph S. Sharp,
"a shrewd politician as well as an able lawyer.", used his
considerable skills to help establish Mills County as the southern
portion of Pottawattamie County. By the end of summer 1852, many
Mormons, following President Brigham Young's commands, had left Mills
County and Coonsville for Utah. Among them were L. T. Coons'
relatives and associates. As each of these co-proprietors of
Coonsville left, Coons bought the remaining unsold lots. At the end
of the process, he owned more than a third of the property in
Coonsville and its environs.
Meanwhile, in 1852, the citizens of Mills
County elected Colonel Sharp as their representative in the Iowa
legislature. Evading established legislative procedures, he
introduced a bill that changed the name, Coonsville, to Glenwood. In
addition, the bill established Glenwood as the Mills County seat. On
the 12th of January 1853, the people of Mills County voted to
accept Glenwood as the new name of their town.
About two months later, on the
16th
of March 1863, L. T. Coons sold all his land in the Glenwood area to
fellow Mormon, J. W.
Coolidge. (He was also the owner of the
mill where John Sivers worked after the family's arrival in 1849.) In
turn, Coolidge transferred half of Coon's holdings to Colonel Sharp.
Both then jointly distributed one sixth of their holdings to John
Sivers and Oliver N.
Tyson. These four now became
co-proprietors of over a third of Glenwood and of much of the
agricultural land surrounding the town.
But the title to all this land was not secure.
The United States Land Office was due to open soon. People could then
enter claims on Glenwood land based on squatters rights in Coonville
and other legal ambiguities. To prevent these claims, Oliver Tyson
first resurveyed Glenwood. The co-proprietors then submitted the new
map with renamed and renumbered streets to the County Judge, Hiram P. Bennet. Accompanying the map was a statement signed by the
co-proprietors and their wives agreeing to the preemptive disposition
of their Glenwood lands into a trust for the benefit of the town and
proprietors of Glenwood. Additionally the co-proprietors donated one
block in the center of town on the condition that it be used only for
the Mills County Courthouse.
The effect of this series of complex legal
actions was to provide clear title to all land presently owned by the
co-proprietors Sivers, Tyson, Coolidge and Sharp. Glenwood deed books
show that John Sivers sold many of his Glenwood lots over the
following years, thereby providing a steady stream of income that
complemented that earned from his other work.
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Mary Ann (Leader) Sivers and Her
Family, Iowa, about 1880
Back row, left to right:
Lydia (Sivers) Everham, John Henry, Olive (Sivers) Gettler
Front row, left to right:
Mary Ann (Sivers) Cook, Mary Ann (Leader) Sivers, Edward |
John and Mary Ann's children numbered
eleven, of whom nine were born in the Glenwood area. He and his
wife guided seven children to adulthood: Mary Ann, John Henry, Edward, Eleanor, Matthew,
Lydia, and Olive. On 31 March 1880,
John Sivers died after a four-day illness. With the help of Olive
and Edward, Mary Ann continued to manage her financial affairs.
She died in Glenwood on the 22nd of October 1902,
leaving the home, the stories of her young life with John, her
beloved art objects, the bedding and furniture that she brought
from Lincolnshire and 200 acres of prime farmland to her
children.
The last and youngest child, Olive (Sivers) Gettler,
died in Glenwood at age 84 on the 22nd of August 1953. It was she
who preserved the furniture, the books, the tales and the tools
that were important to her pioneering parents. Many of them are
housed today in the Glenwood Historical Museum. It was also she
who caused the memorial stone to be erected in her father's honor
at Glenwood Park, not far from Sivers Road that marks a busy way
through property that John and Mary Ann held long ago.
Submitted by Robert Sivers, e-mail:
rbsivers@worldnet.att.net
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