Friday, November 21, 2014

James Stapleton Lewis’ Father was Joel Lewis

Early Life

Family records often list him as Joel Lewis Sr. since one of his sons is also named Joel Lewis. The information we have on Joel comes primarily from journal entries of his son James, from information in the Lewis Family Newsletters of the 1930s, and from court records. There is conflicting opinion on the name of Joel’s father (that’s an issue for another blog post), but his mother was Sarah Lewis. We have Joel’s birth date from JSL’s journal: “My father, Joel Lewis, Sr., was born February 1, 1776.” Joel was born in what was then Rowan County, North Carolina (now Davie County) where his parents and at least one set of grandparents lived.

When Joel was eleven years old he was placed under the guardianship of Daniel Lewis as recorded in the Rowan County Court minutes book of February 6, 1786: “Daniel Lewis is appointed Guardian of Joel Lewis an orphan – with Stephan Noland, Security, in the sum of $50.00.” It is most likely that the Daniel Lewis mentioned was Joel’s grandfather, not his uncle who was also named Daniel Lewis. Joel’s mother Sarah Lewis had married John Hendricks in 1780. The court record gives no reason for the guardianship; perhaps the guardianship was to give Joel some type of legal status.

At age 14 Joel came into the possession of 149 acres situated on Dutchman's Creek for which he paid his grandfather "seventy-five pounds lawful money of the State of North Carolina." (Deed Book 14, page 287 or 387 [my notes are unclear]) The description of the land was “Beginning at hickory running from thence North thirty nine chains and ninety links to a black oak grub, thence east ten chains to a sassafras stake in a bunch of stones, thence South sixty-three Degrees East; thirty nine chains and twenty five links to a black Oak Giles corner; thence West to the beginning.” The deed was dated blank in the year 1790 and was recorded at the February session of the Rowan County Court of 1797 when Joel was 21.

Military Service

Before his marriage, Joel participated as a very young man in military activities under General “Mad” Anthony Wayne building forts in the wilderness in the period preceding the War of 1812. James was obviously proud of his father’s participation in the effort to establish the series of forts because he mentioned it several times in his journal and correspondence.

JSL recounted, “My father served in the war of 1812 under General Anthony Wayne. Employed in building Forts through the Northern parts of Indiana and Ohio – Fort Greenville, Fort St. Maryes, Fort Defiance and Recovery, and Fort Wayne through which was all a dense forest of unbroken wilderness. This line of Forts was to keep back or protect the white settlements from the merciless Indians who were hired and furnished with firearms and other war material [by the British] to harass the unprotected settlements of American pioneers.” He also recalled seeing palisades built by his father, “When a boy seven years old, I passed through Fort Greenville with my father. Many pickets were [still] standing--they were logs about fifteen feet long set on end in the ground close together.”

The following information in italics is from http://www.ohiohistorycentral.org/entry.php?rec=398 . American Revolutionary War hero General Anthony Wayne ordered the construction of Fort Greene Ville in late 1793. It was named for his Revolutionary War comrade Nathaniel Greene. Wayne’s campaign against Native Americans at the time was along the Maumee River. This fort had ten foot high walls enclosing a stockade of about fifty acres. Wayne’s army used the fort as his encampment during the winter of 1793-1794 and as a staging area for his attacks in 1794.

On November 4, 1791 the U.S. Army under General Arthur St. Clair had suffered the greatest defeat ever of the U.S. Army by American Indians when only 24 of 1000 soldiers escaped from the battle unharmed.

Joel Lewis’ future brother-in-law was part of this episode. The Lewis Family Newsletter of April 1936 includes this account quoted from an old newspaper account kept by a descendant. “Mr. Sackett was living with Colonel Smith, the famous Indian fighter when St. Clair began raising his army of 2000 men to go against the Indians of the Northwest. He (Cyrus) joined the expedition which set out from Fort Washington, now Cincinnati, and pushed its way toward the head waters of the Wabash. The trails were much too great for many of the Kentucky militia, and like Gideon’s Band, many turned back, so that when they reached the point where old Fort Recovery was afterward established by the victorious Wayne, but 1400 men remained with St. Clair. Among them, Cyrus Sackett remained faithful. Here however they suffered defeat, being suddenly attacked by Little Turtle and his warriors in the early morning of November 4, 1792. The army was thrown into such a confused state by the sudden attack of the Indians with their hideous war whoops that, although the American officers bravely endeavored for three hours to repulse them, the army became disorganized, suffered heavy loss, and fled in confusion. Sackett ran for a distance of nine miles expecting to fall into the hands of the red men all the while. He halted once in an open glade and seeing his pursuers were gaining upon him, and being greatly fatigued he took his knife from his belt and cut his blanket loose from his body, leaving it with all the food he had left, a hard dry cake, and ran with renewed vigor until out of the reach of the savages. He, with his companions reached Fort Jefferson about dark of that fatal day. He returned with the rest of the disappointed army to Fort Washington from whence they had set out, and thence to Kentucky.”

Fort Recovery was built on the site of St. Clair’s Defeat or the Battle of the Wabash River. Wayne ordered the building of this fort in December 1793 so he could use it for his planned assault against the native warriors in the spring of 1794.

On June 30, 1794, 1,500 Shawnee Indians, Delaware Indians, Ottawa Indians, Miami Indians, and Ojibwa Indians attacked a pack train returning from Fort Recovery to Fort Greene Ville. Little Turtle, Blue Jacket, and Simon Girty led the assault. The attack was made less than one thousand feet from Fort Recovery. Of the 140 American soldiers escorting the wagons, the natives killed or wounded fifteen. They also seized three hundred horses. Indian casualties amounted to three dead warriors. Soon after this attack, the Indians, emboldened by their earlier success, launched a night attack against Fort Recovery. The 250 American soldiers succeeded in defending the fort but lost twenty-two men. The natives suffered forty dead and twenty wounded.

Fort Defiance was built in August 1794. An officer in Wayne’s army, Lieutenant John Boyer, claimed that the fort could protect the American soldiers from "the English, the Indians, and all the devils in hell."

As the last in the series of forts, the United States Army built Fort Wayne at the junction of the St. Mary's, St. Joseph, and Maumee Rivers. [http://www.oldfortwayne.org/index.php]

The question that comes to mind is: What part exactly did 17-year-old Joel Lewis play in this episode of American history? Apparently he was not in the Army at this time – at least I haven’t found record of military service by Joel in this time period. JSL says he was “employed in building” the forts so perhaps he was a civilian laborer participating in the effort. I don’t think everyone involved in the fort building would have been soldiers, but I may be incorrect. That it was dangerous work is intimated by the following description James included in one account of his father:
“Now the Indians of which I write are not like the half-starved and dwarfed Indians of these Mountains [of the Western U.S.] They were in a country where game was plentiful. They were well fed and large and fully developed, ranging from six to six and a half feet in height and capable of great endurance, wily and artful in war. These were the allies Great Britain employed to harass our unprotected frontiers with whom we had to contend and guard against, not like the strife of the battlefield where it is Turk against Turk, but the most cruel savage who knows no mercy but watches for his defenseless prey and darts upon it as a Tiger. And woe be to the captive a far worse than immediate death awaits him or her as the case may be. No tongue can tell, no pen can describe the experience of our fathers and mothers in the history of the early part of the century.”

Married Life

In January 1795 Joel Lewis married Rachel Stapleton in Rowan County, North Carolina. Joel would have been recently returned from his fort building service. Today we might think a not quite 19-year-old a little young to marry, but he had certainly shown that he could perform a man’s responsibilities and workload. Rachel was slightly older at 22.

They began married life in Rowan County where four children were born: Sarah (1796- 1853), Joseph (1799-1802), Richard (1801-1803), and Rachel (1802-1878). Rachel’s sisters had begun to migrate to Ohio, and Joel and Rachel Lewis decided to join them. According to land records, their farm in North Carolina was sold in December 1803. It seems likely they would have waited until spring and better weather before beginning their journey to Ohio though I have come across accounts that state traveling was easier when the roads were frozen rather than wet and muddy.

The Lewis family followed the Wilderness Road through the Cumberland Gap into Kentucky. Their son Joel Lewis Jr., was born in Crab Orchard, Kentucky, on September 8, 1806. Crab Orchard was a settlement along the Wilderness Road. Their son Richmond was born in March 1808 and died in May, but whether this was in Kentucky or in Ohio is unknown. A reference found in Robinson's History of Greene County, Ohio, page 262, under a heading, 'Greene County Pioneers From 1803 to 1840' states: “Joel Lewis, Sugar Creek, 1809.” It is possible that Joel Lewis and his family were traveling from North Carolina to Ohio between the years of 1804 and 1809 and possibly living in Kentucky for part of that period.

Joel’s wife Rachel Stapleton Lewis had three sisters. They, with their spouses, had already settled in Greene County, Ohio where the first white settlement was in 1796. (Nancy Anne Stapleton and Cyrus Sackett and Avis Stapleton and Abraham/Abram Van Eaton settled perhaps as early as 1799 and at least by 1801; Hannah Stapleton and Daniel Lewis, Jr. arrived between 1804-1806.­) I have located numerous records of land transactions for these three men in this early time period. However, I haven’t located any for Joel Lewis. I wonder if perhaps he and Rachel resided on the property of one of his brothers-in-law. He did not stay in the area as the other families did.
Greene County, Ohio
Bellbrook, Green County, Ohio as it appears today.



Shortly after their arrival in Greene County, Ohio, hostilities with the Indians again arose. This account, given from the viewpoint of Joel Lewis, Jr., is found in the Lewis Family Newsletter of November 1935. “When the boy was eight year of age [I think this should be 6, not 8] an event occurred which greatly excited the settlement and made an impression upon his memory so vivid that time failed to dim its dramatic clearness. General Hull, the American commander at Detroit, basely surrendered to the British, August 16, 1812. As Detroit was the chief defense from invasion from the North all of Ohio was endangered. The news of the surrender at Detroit reached Dayton on Saturday the 22nd day of September. Riders were at once dispatched all over the adjacent country summoning the captains of militia to gather their men and march to Piqua where war materials were stored.  In the village street of Bellbrook, on the quiet Sabbath morning of the next day, Joel [Jr.], wide-eyed, looked upon a company of seventy grim-faced pioneers drawn up in military formation, every man with his trusty rifle on his shoulder and his hunting knife in his belt. Among them was his own father, one of the heroes of Wayne’s army in its Indian campaign. Monday morning seven more companies were there. Many of them, including the company from Xenia, belonged to the First Regiment, Ohio Militia, of which Duncan McArthur was colonel, and James Denny and William A. Trimble, Majors. The soldiers departed in a cloud of dust for Piqua. Arriving there, by their show of force, they convinced the restive Indians of the futility of the latter’s design to seize the military stores kept there and to use them against the Americans should the British invade the state. The supplies were taken to Dayton under heavy guard and the militia returned to their homes. Later they were called out several times for patrol duty and when Fort Meets was besieged in May, 1813, Greene County furnished 700 troops, mostly mounted.
The muster record shows that Joel Lewis was in active service from October 18, until November 20, 1812, and from August 10, until September 5, 1813, as a soldier in John Clark's [Sugar Creek] Company in the First Regiment.
"I do hereby certify that Joel Lewis did volunteer under the proclamation of the Governor and the Circular of General Harrison, on the 15th day of September 1812, and the said Joel Lewis did act the part of a faithful soldier during his continuance in my company, and is hereby discharged. Given under my hand this 5th day of January, 1813. John Clark, Captain."

On April 15, 1812 another son was born to Joel and Rachel named Greene. He lived to eight years of age and died in 1820. The last child in the family was born February 22, 1814 in Greene County, Ohio. This was their son James, my great, great, great grandfather.

In 1815 Sarah Lewis became the first of the Lewis children to marry when she married widower John Hale. Daughter Rachel followed in 1818 with her marriage to William Fallis. Both marriages were in Greene County, Ohio. It was following the marriages of the two sisters that Joel Junior joined the roving band of Miami Indians rather than have to do what he considered “women’s chores” around the Lewis homestead.

In 1819 or 1820 Joel and Rachel and their son James ventured further west into Indiana according to the writings of Arthur K. Love, editor of the Lewis Family Newsletter. Land records indicate purchase of land in Randolph County, Indiana, in 1833, however, I think this was a land purchase by Joel, Junior following his 1825 marriage in Greene County, Ohio, to Mercy Fallis and his subsequent migration to Randolph County, Indiana.

James described his father’s work during that period of his life in this way, “My father afterward carried the United States mails through this Indiana wilderness country, crossing the Wabash and other rivers without a house on either side, without bridge or boat, sometimes swimming his horse from bank to bank. At night lay down in wet clothes covering with a saddle blanket, wet too, and take comfort at the music of the wolfs howl or the Indian yell.”

“My father, Joel Lewis, Sr., also died near Logansport, Cass County, Indiana, and age sixty-four years.” This was on January 20, 1839. According to Arthur K Love he was buried in the 9th Street Cemetery in Logansport, but I cannot document that fact.

Tributes to Joel Lewis by his son

“Periled his life in many ways to assist in securing his country's freedom and blessing of peace for himself and his posterity after him, not being associated with any class of religious faith. He was a firm believer in the Bible and read it much.”

“I, James Stapleton Lewis, will say of my father, Joel Lewis Sen., that he was a great reader of the Bible, but was not a professor of the religion of his time.”

“I am proud this day to say of my father, he was a man far above the principle of deception or hypocrisy, a lover of truth and fair dealing with all men. His integrity was above suspicion, brave and generous to a fault. Was a pioneer of no small ability, penetrating far into the unknown dense forests of the wilderness of the great western wilds of North America. Civilization has followed in the path of the brave pioneers and leaves the world to write their history which to say the least alas. A hundredth part is never done. They of which I now write have gone to the great beyond with a consciousness that they have served their country in its most critical and trying hour. In the midst of invasion by a powerful nation, both by sea and land, whose sole object was tyranny and oppression to rob us (their posterity) of the rights which Heaven gave, not only this formidable force on one side. Our would be oppressors hired the then powerful tribes of Indians, furnishing them with arms and ammunition, to harass all our frontier country which was then all exposed to their merciless and cruel warfare as death by torture--who can write the fearful facts of those early pioneers or give the credit that is due to them impossible. My father, Joel Lewis was there--my mother was there.”

“No tongue can tell, no pen can describe the experience of our fathers and mothers in the history of the early part of the century. My father, Joel Lewis, Sr., gave all that he could give for his country and his posterity but his life and did not withhold the offer of that. Were it possible to describe the experience of the past, it would be more like explaining the beautiful colors of the rainbow to a person that had never seen the light of day.”





Friday, October 31, 2014

The Stapleton Name

James Stapleton Lewis’ birth name was James Lewis. When his marriage record was recorded in 1833 in Jackson County, Missouri, he gave his name as James Lewis. He added Stapleton as a middle name after he settled in Utah.

In a letter written from Utah Territory to his brother Joel Lewis in 1855 James wrote, “I have by the advice of the governor taken my mother’s name for a middle name on account of others here of the same name. Be sure to notice this in directing a letter or I may not get it.” He signed the letter James S. Lewis.

Writing of his mother, James said:
              “My mother, Rachel Stapleton Lewis, was born 1773 in the state of Maryland. Was early left an orphan, the youngest of four daughters. Her parents were slave holders but when she was of age there was but little left for her. She was baptized in the Church of England, taught her children to believe the Bible. She had eight children, only four that lived to be grown, two sons and two daughters. Died near Logansport, Indiana. Was seventy-three years old.”

That is quite a brief summary of a life lived for more than seven decades that included:
  • Birth just before the Revolutionary War in Maryland  
  • Marriage in 1795 in Rowan County, North Carolina
  • Giving birth to four children in North Carolina and losing two of them as small children
  • Traveling as a pioneer from North Carolina, through Kentucky and having at least one child and possibly two while enroute on the pioneer Wilderness Trail
  • Living on the frontier in Greene County, Ohio during the time of the War of 1812
  • Having two more sons and losing two sons in Greene County
  • Moving to settle in Cass County, Indiana, again creating a home on the frontier
  • Living as a widow for six years after the death of her husband Joel Lewis

When James left the family home in Indiana to strike out on his own, his mother gave him a Bible which he cherished and carried all his life. When he began to listen to Mormon missionaries James noted that as they quoted scriptures, he “was careful to see every one of them with my own eyes and knew they were in my mother’s Bible.”

Speaking of his parents, James Stapleton Lewis praised, "Civilization has followed in the path of the brave pioneers and leaves the world to write their history which to say the least alas. . . Who can write the fearful facts of those early pioneers or give the credit that is due to them - impossible. My father, Joel Lewis, was there - my mother was there."

What else is known about Rachel Stapleton and her family? Actually, from court and other records we can make an outline of her life and the lives of her sisters and parents.

In 1898 James corresponded with Arthur Kennedy Love, a descendant of James’ brother Joel. Arthur quotes from that correspondence:
              “My mother, Rachel Stapleton Lewis was the youngest of four sisters that were left orphans at an early age. Her sister Hannah married father’s great uncle Daniel Lewis (junior) My mother’s sister Nancy [Nancy Anne] married Cyrus Sackett well known in Greene County before it was a county. My mother’s sister Avis married Abram (Abraham) Van Eaton. She died in Greene County, Ohio, in a very early day.” “The Stapleton name is from England. At an early day they pioneered from the old world to the new. My mother’s people were slave holders in the State (then Colony) of Maryland but lost all their property in the Revolution.”

The parents of the four Stapleton girls were Joseph and Sarah Stapleton. Some online family trees give Sarah’s maiden name as Lewis, but I have never seen any proof of that and think they might be mixing Sarah Stapleton with JSL’s grandmother Sarah Lewis Hendricks. Researchers have identified other Stapleton family members also. More on that in another post.

Land deed records for Rowan County, North Carolina detail land transactions by Joseph as early as July, 1774. However, in October 1776, Sarah Stapleton sold the land. Sarah had become a widow sometime between those two dates. 

Evidence of her impoverished condition and the difficult decisions that were required of her are found in Rowan County Court records for August 6, 1777.
  • Ordered by the Court that Hannah Stapleton, orphan of Joseph Stapleton be bound to Hugh Cathay, she being 11 years old and to serve until she be 18 years of age, said master to give to said orphan 6 pounds, one spinning wheel, and what the law allows. [He got the land and the daughter.]
  • Ordered that Avis Stapleton, orphan of Joseph Stapleton, be bound to James Bailey, being 8 years old, and to serve until 18. Said master to give her 6 pounds, a spinning wheel and what the law allows. [His property adjoined the Stapleton land.]
  • Ordered that Anne [Nancy Anne] Stapleton, orphan of Joseph Stapleton be bound to John Lowry, she being 9 years 6 months and to serve until she be 18. Said master to give her 6 pounds, one spinning wheel and what the law allows.
Apparently Rachel was too young to be bound out and remained with her mother. While it can be hoped that the neighboring families who took the three Stapleton daughters as bound servants treated them with kindness, no records survive to tell the details.

The Stapleton girls obviously remained close because, following their marriages, all four migrated to Greene County, Ohio.

In the next blog posts I’ll give more information on the other Stapleton sisters.


              

Monday, June 30, 2014

JSL 200th Birthday Reunion

Help us celebrate James Stapleton Lewis' 200th birthday by joining us at the JSL Family Reunion on July 25th and 26th in Albion, Idaho, where he lived the last part of his life. Albion is in the mountains southeast of Burley, Idaho.

On Friday evening we will have a soup supper at the home of Dorothy Clark who lives on the JSL homestead. It's a relaxed evening of conversation and getting acquainted.

The main reunion will be held in the Albion LDS church building from 10 a.m. to late afternoon. Meet cousins, share family history, and be inspired by our pioneer ancestors. The potluck lunch will begin at noon.

If you can find Albion, Idaho, you will be able to find the church house. Dorothy Clark's house is a couple miles southwest of the church. Just head for the row of lombardy poplars - they were planted by JSL himself and make a great landmark. You'll find us sitting in the shade under the trees enjoying the company of "cousins."
JSL homestead in Albion, Idaho



James Stapleton and Mary Lewis grave marker in the
Albion Pioneer Cemetery. JSL donated the land for this cemetery

Some JSL descendants view plot map in cemetery.

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Your Invitation to the James Stapleton Lewis Virtual Family Reunion

February 22, 2014 marks the 200th birthday of our ancestor James Stapleton Lewis. A special JSL family reunion is planned for this summer on July 25-26, 2014, continuing the reunions that have been held for a number of years in Albion, Idaho where James and his wife Mary spent the last years of their lives.

In addition, we would like to invite you to participate in a James Stapleton Lewis Virtual Family Reunion now to honor the legacy we have from James, Anna, and Mary Lewis. JSL has more than 3500 identified descendants scattered throughout the United States and probably in other countries as well. It would be quite difficult and expensive to get all of us together, but through technology we can get to know each other better and participate in activities to honor the heritage we have received from these pioneer ancestors.

You are invited to choose from the list of activities below that tie into events in the lives of James, Anna, or Mary, then share online with other James Stapleton Lewis descendants. If none of these suggested projects interests you, feel free to come up with something else.

There are two ways to share your thoughts from the experience with the rest of the JSL “family.” You may send it to the private Facebook group “James Stapleton Lewis 200th Birthday Celebration: Family Reunionhttps://www.facebook.com/#!/groups/613835778675973/ This is a closed group. You can access it and ask to be invited to join. In that way the comments that you share will be able to be seen only by other JSL family members. If you are comfortable with sharing your experience with a more public audience in a way that will come up on an Internet search, share on The James Stapleton Lewis Families Project blog at jamesstapletonlewis.blogspot.com by making comments under this blog post.

  • One of the reasons we know so much about JSL is because he kept a journal which recorded information about his life and that of his ancestors. Other relatives have preserved those records for us, including his great grandnephew Arthur K Love, a descendant of James’ brother Joel, who edited Lewis Newsletters in the 1930s. You might write a brief account of your life or that of your parents and grandparents that can be shared with your children or grandchildren.
  • Share information about JSL and his family with your own family in a family get-together or family home evening. Janis Durfee’s website genealogybyjan.com is one source of information. You might also take a look at Jamesstapletonlewis@blogspot.com .
  •  James stated, “Civilization has followed the path of the brave pioneers and leaves the world to write their history which to say the least, alas, a hundredth part is never done. They of which I now write have gone to the great beyond with a consciousness that they have served their country in its most critical and trying hour. . . . – who can write the fearful facts of those early pioneers or give the credit that is due to them – impossible. My father, Joel Lewis, was there – my mother was there.” With your family, determine a way you can be pioneers in our day so that you can carry on with the legacy we have been given.
  • Speaking of his father Joel Lewis, James wrote, “My father, Joel Lewis, Sr., was born February 1, 1776. Served in the war of 1812 under General Anthony Wayne. Employed in building Forts through the Northern parts of Indiana and Ohio – Fort Greenville, Fort St. Marys, Fort Defiance and Recovery, and Fort Wayne through which was all a dense forest of unbroken wilderness. This line of Forts was to keep back or protect the white settlements from the merciless Indians who were hired and furnished with firearms and other war material to harass the unprotected settlements of American pioneers. . . .” James’ father Joel and uncles Daniel Lewis, Cyrus Sackett, and Abraham Van Eaton served during the War of 1812. Do some research on the War of 1812 or these forts and try to understand the service they gave to our country, then share your findings with your family or with us.
  •  The Lewis family moved from North Carolina to Ohio, traveling through the Cumberland Gap and along the Wilderness Trail forged by Daniel Boone. James’ brother Joel was born in 1806 in Crab Orchard, Kentucky, a main stop along the Wilderness Trail. Find out more about the Wilderness Trail or other pioneer trails and share your research with your family and with us.
  •  James and Anna Jones Lewis and later James and Mary Swenson Lewis persevered through many difficult experiences. Share with the rest of us how learning about their lives has inspired or motivated you in some way as you travel your own life path.
  • Mount Pisgah, Iowa was a stop along the Mormon Pioneer Trail. James and Mary lived there with their sons for several years following the expulsion from Nauvoo, Illinois. Find out more about this little known period of LDS history and educate the rest of us.
  • Mary (Anna Maria Swensson) Lewis came as a young immigrant from Sweden about 1864 on the ship Monarch of the Sea, desiring to join other LDS church members. She was part of the large migration from the British Isles and Scandinavia in the 1850s and 1860s. Research this migration and the circumstances these courageous immigrants experienced. Let the rest of us know what you discovered.
  • Write down a spiritual experience or your testimony and share it with your family or friends just as JSL frequently did.
  • In 1894 James wrote to his son Wilford saying, “I have made up my mind to start to the Temple, Wed., Oct. 24 if nothing providential prevents.  Mary will go with me. . .We dare not wait longer.  To wait for money and to get ready is saying we will not go at all.  We, therefore, tear loose and make a start.  I know of no other object the Lord has in sparing my life, thus far. . . .” James and Mary, with help from their children and their spouses performed temple ordinances in the Logan, Utah temple over a 15-year period for more than 300 relatives. You might want to visit a nearby temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, perhaps with your family. Enjoy the spirit that is felt on the grounds or worship in the temple.

As descendants of James Stapleton Lewis, we look forward to hearing your experiences as you learn more about the Lewis families or try to follow some of the examples they gave to us. We hope you will be able to join in this Virtual James Stapleton Lewis Family Reunion.