Mary Agnes Lund
Dau. of
Wilson Lund & Eliza Ann Brace
Mary Agnes Lund
Born 7.12.1860 at Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA
Marr. Thomas Judd
Died 8th July 1898 at St. George, Washington Co., Utah
(Heart Failure)
Buried at St. George City Cem., St. George, Washington Co., Utah
Child
Robert Lund
NOTE
Thomas, a Land Agent, was born c 1845 at Birkenhead, Cheshire & died in 1922. His father was Samuel Judd. He was also married to Mary Jane Ashworth, who he had several children with, including,
Sarah Ellen Judd. Also see '
A Tribute to Mary Lund Judd'.
Judd, Thomas, Bishop of the St. George 1st Ward, St. George Stake, Utah, from 1879 to 1896, was born Sept. 1, 1846, in Birkenhead, England, a son of Samuel Judd and Catherine Hind. He was baptized in 1864, came to Utah that same year, filled a mission to England in 1876-1878, and was ordained a Bishop March 14, 1879, by Erastus Snow. He died June 7, 1922.
Green Hedge Manor (circa 1872)
aka Thomas Judd Home:
History:
This beautiful home is so named because of the tall tamarack hedge surrounding most of the city block where the home was originally built. Thomas Judd was 18 years old in 1864 when he joined the LDS church and moved his family from England to St. George. Hard working and successful in his business endeavors, he soon built this beautiful home at 269 South 200 East around 1872. Looking to expand his business interests and alarmed that frequent flooding was washing away valuable river-bottom farm land, in 1888 he developed a plan to divert water from the Virgin River onto the LaVerkin "bench" in order to irrigate several hundred acres of fruit orchards that he planned to plant there. Because of extensive delays due to constant breaks in the canal he was eventually forced to mortgage this very house in order to raise the necessary funds to complete construction of his canal, which by then stretched several thousand feet and included an 840-foot long tunnel. Eventually his canal project was the key factor in establishing the community of LaVerkin.
In 1897 Thomas Judd was called by Wilford Woodruff, then president of the Church, to serve a mission colonizing Whitewater, Nevada. By the time he returned home, the railroad had extended far enough south that he was able to import thousands of bags of Portland cement to coat the inside walls of his canal to prevent breaks and leakage and, thus, better assure its success. He subsequently sold much of his interest in LaVerkin, including the hot springs there, and opened Judd’s Store Company, purchasing the store front and warehouse from William Bentley in 1911. In 1991, long after Judd’s death, his original family home was dismantled and moved, piece-by-piece, to the Green Gate Village were it proudly stands today, carefully restored and modernized. The Green Hedge Manor contains two upstairs guestrooms as well as one of the most popular bridal suites at the Village. This home is also on the National Register of Historic Places (#78002710).
Robt. is living with his father (& his first family) at White River, White Pine, Nevada in the 1900 census.
Judd, Robert Lund, a member of the Deseret Sunday School Union Board, was born July 6, 1885, at Logan, Utah, the son of Thomas Judd and Mary Lund, both of St. George, Utah. He was baptized at eight years of age by William T. Atkin in the St. George Temple, and ordained a deacon at the age of twelve. On July 8, 1898, his mother died, and he then went to live with his father's first family, where he was very happy. That same year Thomas Judd was called by Pres. Wilford Woodruff to colonize several large ranches the Church had acquired in White River and Steptoe Valleys, White Pine County, Nevada. Robert, with the family, moved to Nevada in the spring of 1899.
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