William Nutter, son of John and Elizabeth "Betty" (Knowles) Nutter, was born in Stockport, near Barley, Wheatley Booth, White Hough NCP, Lancashire, England, on January 3, 1829 (or 1830 ... conflicting records). (William's ancestry has been traced back to the 1400's. Click here to view it). He was raised in England, and learned the trade of cotton carding and spinning, working in some of the chief cotton factories in England.
Dinah Ingham, daughter of William and Olive (Heyworth) Ingham, was born on Wheatley Lane, in Old Laund Booth, Lancashire, England on June 1, 1834.
William and Dinah were married April 10, 1852. Influenced by a Morman missionary, John and Dinah converted to the Morman faith in 1852. John attained the priesthood in 1855. With their daughter Olive, and son Moroni, they booked passage on the Juventa in 1855, and emmigrated to the United States. John worked mainly in Philadelphia until he saved up enough money for the trip to Utah in 1860. They traveled by riverboat to Florence, Missouri, then joined a wagon train of other Mormans headed for Salt Lake City. The train consisted of 75 wagons, most, like the Nutter's, were pulled by 2 yoke of oxen. The Nutters found the "Promised Land" not what they had been led to believe. They were not welcomed, and generally taken advantage of by the Morman residents. Disillusioned, they left and travelled to Nebraska, where the settled, trading one yoke of oxen for "squatter's rights" to a homestead on the Wood River, near Gibbon. Because of an Indian uprising early in their life in Nebraska, they packed up a wagon, and headed East. With the Civil War raging, they didn't stop until they reached England. However, longing for Nebraska, they soon returned to Philadelphia, and then back to the Wood River country. As their old homestead was now occupied, they purchased "squatter's rights" on another Wood River property, this time including a log house and a log barn. (The builder and previous owner, William Story had been killed by Indians.) They lived in the log house for 18 years.
A brief "Biographical Souvenir" describing the early life of William Nutter was published in the historical records of Buffalo County. A very comprehensive documentary is contained in The Life and Times of William and Dinah Nutter, Prairie Pioneers, written by Michael Scheuer, who is decended from Dinah's sister Mary Ann Ingham.
I'm not certain of all the identities. No doubt William and Dinah are seated, and I believe their son William is kneeling to the right of Dinah, with his wife Laura seated to the left of William, Sr. Daughter Libby (Nutter) Robinson is standing behind William, Sr. I'm not sure who the two men sitting on the ground on the left are. The second from the left could be son Frank (Benjamin Franklin Nutter), and I guess it is likely the man on the left is the youngest son, Mirabeau. I don't know who the gunslinger on the pony is, or the other kids on the roof. Grandkids, most likely. |
In 1887, they finally built a new frame house, octagonal in shape. They lived on this farm for the rest of their lives, and prospered. The recollections of Dinah, documented in a very interesting article by S. C. Bassett, cover their lives as real pioneers in early America, complete with wagon trains, homesteads, and Indian uprisings.
William Nutter died at his home on 13 May 1906, at the age of 92, was buried in Riverside Cemetery near Gibbon. Dinah lived to be 84 years old. She died 30 December 1918 and was buried beside her husband.
William and Dinah had thirteen children:
Olive Nutter | Born April 7, 1853, in Holme End, Reedley Hallows, Lancashire, England. Olive died as a young child in 1855. |
Moroni Nutter | Born October 14, 1854, in New Laund, New Laund Booth, Lancashire, England. Moroni also died as a child in 1856. |
John Nutter | Born March 6, 1856, in Gloucester City, New Jersey.John married Anna Carlson ion May 2, 1881. Anna died young, and John remarried to Jennie Reinholdson in 1893. |
William Ingham Nutter | Born June 9, 1859, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. William married Laura Comstock on November 26, 1891. |
Ellen Nutter | Born July 14, 1861, north of Salt Lake City, Utah, in the Session Settlement. Ellen married Walter Williams on November 20, 1881. |
Ione Nutter | Born October 30, 1863, near Wood River Center, Nebraska. Ione married Boyd Williams on March 28, 1882. Ione's twin sister Leoni died as an infant. |
Elizabeth Margaret "Libby" Nutter | Born December 4, 1865, at 18 Anne Street, Burnley, Lancashire, England. Libby married James Robertson on February 20, 1889. |
Alice Nutter | Born June 21, 1868, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Alice married Wesly Scott on January 2, 1886. |
Thomas Nutter | Born in 1869, and died the same year on the train to Nebraska. |
Jane "Jennie" Nutter | Born May 10, 1870, in the family farm home west of Shelton, Nebraska. Jennie married Robert William Hogg in Salem, Oregon on January 1, 1893. |
Benjamin Franklin Nutter | Born April 22, 1872, in the family farm home west of Shelton, Nebraska. Benjamin married Katherina Link on June 9, 1899. |
Mirabeau Diogenes Nutter | Born December 18, 1875, in the family farm home west of Shelton, Nebraska. Mirabeau married Elizabeth Hogg on July 6, 1910. |
Louise Nutter | Born October 2, 1877, in the family farm home west of Shelton, Nebraska. Louise married Reuben Miller on Fegruary 28, 1899. |
[The history of the Nutter ownership of property in Buffalo County can be found here.]
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The Carlson clan, family of Anna, the deceased, is also present. Her parents Carl and Marta are seated in the center row, 4th & 5th from the right. Anna's brother John is seated 2 places to the left of Carl. Anna's sister Ida and her husband Simon Seeley are seated to the right of Marta. Behind John Carlson and to the right of Frank Nutter is "probably" Conston Carlson, another brother to Anna. The last brother, Charles is "probably" seated at the far right, center row. John and Anna's 5 children are also present. The youngest, Francis Beatrice, is seated on William Nutter's lap. The 3 other daughters Elsa, Effie, and Olive are sitting, probably 1st, 2nd and 6th in the front row, with her brother Herbert sitting 4th from the left. Others are yet unidentified. (Contact me if you can help!) |
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