Joseph was baptized on his eighth birthday, December 25, 1844 in a hole cut out of the ice of the frozen Mississippi River just out of Nauvoo.
Joseph Moroni married Hulda Charlotte Zabriskie, the daughter of Lewis Curtis Zabriskie, on August 20, 1860 at Fairview, Sanpete, Utah. His parents, Lewis Curtis Zabriskie and his wife, Mary Higbee, came to Utah with the Garden Grove Company in 1851, and eventually settled in Spring City, Utah, which was originally called The Allred Settlement.
Their first child, Mary Amanda, was born at Fairview, September 10, 1861, and on February 26, 1864 a son was born which lived only two days.
In 1865 his father, Moses Martin Sanders, and his family were called to the Dixie Cotton Mission. It was found that cotton could be raised quite successfully here, and there had been a factory built at Washington where the cotton could be turned into yard goods, some ready made clothing, and blankets which could be exchanged for other products throughout the state.
Joseph Moroni and his brothers obtained land in the Washington fields, and his father, Moses Sanders bought the Middleton Ranch and built a house there just east of the bridge, which still stands in good condition.
Their daughter, Nettie Ann Sanders died in 1960.
-from the HISTORY OF HULDA CHARLOTTE ZABRISKIE SANDERS by her daughter, Nettie Ann Sanders Spendlove
Joseph was baptized on his eighth birthday, December 25, 1844 in a hole cut out of the ice of the frozen Mississippi River just out of Nauvoo.
Joseph Moroni married Hulda Charlotte Zabriskie, the daughter of Lewis Curtis Zabriskie, on August 20, 1860 at Fairview, Sanpete, Utah. His parents, Lewis Curtis Zabriskie and his wife, Mary Higbee, came to Utah with the Garden Grove Company in 1851, and eventually settled in Spring City, Utah, which was originally called The Allred Settlement.
Their first child, Mary Amanda, was born at Fairview, September 10, 1861, and on February 26, 1864 a son was born which lived only two days.
In 1865 his father, Moses Martin Sanders, and his family were called to the Dixie Cotton Mission. It was found that cotton could be raised quite successfully here, and there had been a factory built at Washington where the cotton could be turned into yard goods, some ready made clothing, and blankets which could be exchanged for other products throughout the state.
Joseph Moroni and his brothers obtained land in the Washington fields, and his father, Moses Sanders bought the Middleton Ranch and built a house there just east of the bridge, which still stands in good condition.
Their daughter, Nettie Ann Sanders died in 1960.
-from the HISTORY OF HULDA CHARLOTTE ZABRISKIE SANDERS by her daughter, Nettie Ann Sanders Spendlove
Family Members
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Richard Twiggs Sanders
1828–1858
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John Franklin Sanders
1830–1896
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Rebecca Ann Sanders Sanderson
1832–1907
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Martha Brown Sanders Knight
1833–1897
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David Walker Sanders
1835–1914
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Sydney Rigdon Sanders
1839–1845
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Emma Sanders Tidwell
1841–1916
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Eliza Jane Sanders
1843–1847
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Hyrum Smith Sanders
1845–1846
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Moses Martin Sanders Jr
1853–1926
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Mary Amanda Sanders Campbell
1860–1899
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Moses Martin Sanders II
1865–1866
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David Lewis Sanders
1867–1867
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Charlotte Ellen Sanders
1868–1869
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William Sanders
1869–1941
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John Andrew Sanders
1871–1943
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Richard Franklin Sanders
1873–1874
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Sarah Elzira Sanders Hinton
1875–1962
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Julia Ann Minerva Sanders Haslam
1879–1949
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Margaret Irene Sanders Hardy
1880–1959
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Eunice Eliza Sanders Hardy
1883–1941
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Nettie Ann Sanders Spendlove
1885–1960
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