Mabel (Roundy) Hislop
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Mabel Mary (Roundy) Hislop (1887 - 1958)

Mabel Mary Hislop formerly Roundy
Born in Wanship, Summit, Utah Territory, USA.map
Daughter of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
Wife of — married 8 Apr 1905 in Huntsville, Weber, Utah, USA.map
Descendants descendants
Died at age 71 in Ogden, Weber, Utah, USA.map
Problems/Questions Profile manager: Casey Whiteley private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 20 Jul 2021
This page has been accessed 44 times.

Biography

Mabel was born in 1887. She passed away in 1958.[1]


Mabel Mary Roundy Hislop 1887-1958

Mabel Mary Roundy Hislop was born March 11, 1887 to Margaret Thompson. Her mother took her own life June 7, 1890 by taking strychnine. Mable was about three at the time. Her mother tried to get Mable to take the strychnine “but she stubbornly refused.” At the time of Mabel’s mother’s death Margaret and Mabel were residents of Park City, Summit County, Territory of Utah.

On June 10, 1890, a petition was filed in the matter of estate and guardianship of Mary (Meary) Thompson, minor, by Jerad (Jared) Curtis Roundy for appointment of himself as guardian. Mary who had no relatives in the territory “and needing care and attention of some fit person” was given to Jared Curtis Roundy “upon his giving a bond in the sum of $500.00 and upon his taking and subscribing an oath according to law.” Jared Roundy became Mabel’s legal guardian.

Jared Curtis Roundy was married to Alice Jane Apgood. From June 1890 Meary Thompson was known as Mabel Mary carrying the family name of Roundy. Jared and Alice had a little girl Pearl who was born June 2, 1881. She died February 9, 1882. She is buried in the Wanship Cemetery in Summit County, Utah, as are Jared and Alice Jane. The Roundy’s moved to Huntsville when Mabel was a young child. It wasn’t until Mabel was around twelve or fourteen years old and living in Huntsville that she found out that she was adopted. As Mable told it, she was playing with some friends and one of the girls called her a “bastard” and said Jared and Alice weren’t her real parents. Mabel cried and ran home. She asked her father if this was true and he said, “Haven’t I always been a good father to you?” she said, “Yes.” “Then what difference does it make?” was his reply and never explaining anything more to her.

Mabel told of her mother, Alice Jane, never being affectionate. “She was good to me, but she never showed me any outward love.” Once as a small child, Mabel got into some make up and jewelry. When her mother came into the room and saw her she swept her arm across the dresser pushing everything to the floor and angrily said, “Wash yourself and leave these things alone or you’ll grow up to be just like her!” That was one of the few time Mabel ever remembers her mother being mad. She said, “I never understood what was meant by that statement.”

As a child and young adult Mabel was very beautiful. She had very dark brown eyes and hair. She stood about 5 feet 4 inches and was slender until after her fifth or sixth child. Later in her life she had salt and pepper hair. Her son Curt recalls, “I’m not bias or anything, but mother was pretty. As a young boy I first remember her as being real pretty. It was later in her life I told her she was getting fat. I remember that hurt her, and she cried.” Jane, Mabel’s youngest child said, “Mama was a beautiful woman, inside and out. Her hair was coarse and thick. At one time she wore her hair in braids, pulled up and across her head. The braids went across her head and back again. As she grew older, her hair grayed, but it was always thick and beautiful. Her eyes were black. As she got older she had a weight problem. Of course giving birth to and raising twelve children could have been the reason for some of her weight problem.”

On April 8, 1905, she was married to Charles Henry Hislop in Huntsville. They were a very handsome couple. They raised twelve children. The names and date of their children births are as follows:

Curtis Taylor* 25 Feb 1906 Colonel Dean 15 May 1921 Lawrence Henry “Pete” 21 Apr 1908 Sherman LeMoyne 13 Apr 1923 Alice Alberta 17 May 1910 Lowell Roundy 3 Jan 1925 Fredrick Raymond “Jack” 9 Feb 1914 Wendell Dee 18 Jul 1927 Que Perry 22 Jan 1916 George Ruel 14 May 1929 John Douglas 2 Jun 1919 Mary Jane 25 Mar 1932

Mabel raised her 10 boys, 2 girls, and one grandson, Maun, born Oct 22, 1930, in Huntsville, Utah. There was little professional medical care. She had all her children at home with midwives to assist her.

Mabel was a good doctor with her home remedies. When Jane was small and had pneumonia Mabel stripped her down, put her in a hot bath by the fire then without drying her wrapped her in a blanket to sweat away the germs. When the kids had colds a “mustard plaster” was her favorite cure. Sometimes it burned the kids’ skin, but they got better. One time when her grandson, Maun had the mumps she tied a red ribbon around his neck, so the others wouldn’t catch the germs. Jane said. “Don’t laugh! I didn’t get the mumps and I drank from the same glass as Maun so I could get them, but I forgot to have him take off the red ribbon.”

Until the 1930’s Mabel was alone with the children most of the time. Her husband Henry was a Foreman for Perry Land Stock and herded sheep in the west desert in Utah. Week after week when her children were small she would wash by hand and wash board ten to fifteen pair of overalls and other clothes, and hang them on the line to dry. With her wood burning stove she would bake twelve loaves of bread two or three times a week and always have an ample supply of cookies, cakes, and pies on hand for family and friends. Pete’s wife Fawn recalls, “I was fifteen when I first remember going to the Hislop’s place, there were four pineapple cream pies on the table along with six loafs of new baked bread. In later years I came to see that this was always the case. There were always cookies for the kids and you never did enter Mabel’s home without making your taste buds happy. Her house was so homey and there was always an open door.”

Jane recalls, “Mama loved parties, picnics, and places people gathered and ate. She loved to talk on the phone. Her home was always full of rags. She collected rags and from them made quilts and braided rugs. She cooked on a wood-burning stove in the kitchen. She could do anything on that old stove, bake bread, pies, cookies, can fruit and make a delicious dinner for a family of fourteen. I remember one time she stayed with me when my second child was born. She tried to cook an egg for my husband Eddie for breakfast on our electric stove. She burned it! But on her old wood-burning stove it was a different story. It had no thermostat, she used her hand to gauge the temperature”

Around 1917 Allie recalls that the flu epidemic went through the Huntsville valley and Mabel almost died. Several ladies in Huntsville did die from the flu that year. She said that Henry’s brother, Uncle Lou was very good to help them, as Henry was out on the winter range with the sheep. Also that year Que was about one, Allie shut his finger in the door. Mabel grabbed him and ran up town to Dr. Shidds. The Doctor sewed his finger back on.

George said, “Though mom was a very busy hardworking person she always found time for children and friends. She spent many hours caring for Mrs. Nelson, an elderly lady that lived up the road from us. She had always found time to lend a listening ear to everyone who needed it. I remember folks from all around would come to talk and share with mom, even younger ones after they grew up and moved from Huntsville, when ever they were back in town they would come by to visit mom. She would never spend the money to buy a comfortable pair of shoes, so consequently her feet always hurt. She would have me massage her feet for her. She had a special way of making me feel I was her favorite child. I think the only thing that kept me from ever getting into serious trouble was, knowing that it would hurt and embarrass my mom. The saddest time in my life was when I was in the Philippines and received word that my mother had died. She was a ‘one of a kind lady’ with a heart bigger than life. To me there could never be another like her.” Lemoyne also tells of how Mabel helped Mrs. Nelson, seeing that she had a clean path to walk on, coal, and wood in the winter time. “Many a morning before six she could call mom for assistance and she would gladly attended to her.”

Mabel often when down to her son Curtis’ place to help pick tomatoes for the canning factory. Curt said he’d have to put his mom in a row between himself and his wife Jennie. If he didn’t she’d wander all over the field picking the biggest tomatoes she could find and leaving the rest.

When she was in her fifties she learned to ride her daughter Jane’s bike. She fell many times and was badly bruised and skinned up, but she didn’t quit until she had it mastered. She never told Henry about it because she was afraid he would get upset and yell at her.

When Mabel was in her late fifties she had eight sons serving in World War II. This took its toll on her. Her daughter Jane once said, “As a teenage girl I remembered mama crying a lot. During this time she was very proud, but she also suffered. She worried desperately about her boys, but she suffered in silence. She never complained, but I remember many tears with mama. She had good reason too!” During this wartime of the 40’s Mabel did her part to help the war effort by working at the Defense Depot in Ogden, Utah. She referred to her work as “a pleasure permitting me to do my bit along with my sons, to hasten the day when peace will again reign over the country.”

Mabel enjoyed braiding rugs from old levies and coats. She would give these rugs to family and friends. She also made many quilts. Her daughter-in-law Fawn, Pete’s wife, shares this, “In the long winter months when the men were away, four to six months of each year, many an evening was spent in Mabel’s home. Jennie, Allie, Flora, all the kids, and me would come for Chinese noodles. Mabel didn’t even squander a minute of this time. We would talk while she braided rugs or sewed on buttons and crocheted on a pillowcase. Her talents were many and she put them to good use for others.

Mabel learned at an early age to stick up for herself. She would speak up for herself when she needed to. If she wanted something she wasn’t afraid to talk and deal to get it. In the 1930’s times were tight. Henry had been sick for about two years. Henry and Mabel were renting a home from Henry’s sister Ella. Mabel pushed, talked, and made arrangements for them to get a loan to buy a home. She wasn’t afraid to barter or “jew” someone down on the price they were asking for something. When she was older and her son’s would take her out to dinner if they left a tip for the waitress she would often pick it up and take it with her. She was fun to be around, liked to laugh and joke and mixed well with people. Allie says the following about her mother, “Everything was for her family and dad. She was so unselfish. She loved people. The ones that really needed to be helped are the ones she would notice and help. She could make anyone feel better by just talking to her. Mother had a very cheerful disposition. She was surely the strength in our family. Mother worked hard all her life. She was a real wonderful mother. When I think of all the things she had to put up with from us kids, it makes me sadden. She surely had a strong constitution. I know for sure mother loved my dad very much. You could tell by the way her eyes would light up when he would show up. They had little troubles and a few big ones, but I think they had a pretty good marriage. Dad sure depended on mother. When she passed away he just gave up.”

Fawn said, “When ever a problem arose it was easy to get love, sympathy and good advice from Mabel. She communicated easily with everyone. How Mabel made time for everyone I’ll never know. Wherever she was needed she went. When there was sickness in our families or neighbor families, she was there with help, food and encouragement. She felt for folks and their troubles.”

Jack said, “I know mom’s whole life centered on her children over whom she was very defensive. One time after Que and Vic Newey had a fight with Robert Wangsgard; Lewis Wangsgard stopped Sterling Woods and me as we rode up the street on a horse. He accused me of hurting Robert and took hold of the horse’s bridle. I tried to tell him I didn’t get near Robert, but he wouldn’t listen, so I tried to make the horse run over him. I guess we made quite a racket. My mother who was picking beans near by heard the trouble and she came out of that bean patch like a she-bear after her cub. Among other things she said to Lewis was, ‘Don’t you ever dare lay a hand on one of my kids. Lewis just wilted, crawled back into his car and drove off with Ma still talking at him. ‘My God,’ Lewis told the neighbors, ‘I thought the Hislop kids got their fightin’ from Henry, but I know better now. It’s Mabel’” Que recalls, “Mom was a hard working mother and wife. She loved her husband and children. She was willing to fight anyone or anything that would harm any of her children.”

Mabel was a little superstitious. She liked to read tealeaves. Many of the town ladies used to have tea with her and then turn their cup upside down, spin it around three times and give it to Mabel to have their fortune read in the leaves. LeMoyne said, “If ESP is real, mom had it. One day she said, ‘Que will be home today.’ Que at that time was thought to be in California and travel was at least two or three days. Dad asked. ‘Just how do you know that?’ Mom answered, ‘I just know he will!’ That afternoon Que came through the gate.”

Mabel handled most of the family finances. When her sons were in the service they often sent money home one week, and then would ask for it to be sent back to them a few weeks later. This kept her financial mind working and proved to be a challenge for her. Curt said, “She had it pretty rough when the kids were in the service. Some of them would get upset with her for not taking care of their money they were sending home. But, I tell you; she had a hell of a job! I know, because she could call me to come to Huntsville and get one of the kids’ checks to put in the bank. Then the next day someone else needed his money so she’d call an ask me to take some money out. Then she would take money from one account and put into another account. If she used the money, it was to help out one of the other kids. It would take a Philadelphia lawyer to keep track of it. I don’t think any of us have a hell of a lot of kicking coming about money. She NEVER spent it on herself! She spent it on the kid she thought needed it the worst.” There were different times that Henry and Mabel were given money for Christmas or other occasions and they would give the money to some of their children that they thought needed it.

On Sunday, April 10, 1955, Mabel and Henry celebrated their Golden Wedding Anniversary. All their children except for George and Lawrence came home. George was in the Navy and out at sea. They had an open house at their home in Huntsville and a family dinner at the Mansion House Restaurant. They were so pleased to be surrounded by their children and their wives.

Mabel took sick and had a stroke in August 1957 at the Hislop Family Reunion in Huntsville Park. She was able to stay at her home for two or three months. After that it became too hard for Henry and the family to care for her. She was then taken to her son Curt’s home. She was there for four or five months mostly confined to a hospital bed. The last month of her life she was at Grant Rest Home where she passed away on May 8, 1958.

From age twelve or fourteen until her dying days Mabel wondered and wanted to know of her birthright. No matter what the fact might have been, her mind was not at peace over this situation. It was several years after Mabel died that Curt and his family and Jane and her family found some court documents and newspaper articles that gave them information about Mabel’s early existence in Park City, Utah.

LeMoyne tells of Mabel’s testimony, “For Weber High School Seminary graduation, I was one of the student speakers, and George Albert Smith was the featured speaker. It was in the old Ogden Tabernacle. The story as Allie tells it is: mom sat about half way back. After I talked, a lady next to mom said, ‘Oh, I wish I had a son like that.’ Mom answered, ‘I have.’ I remember when Bishop Jensen asked mom and me to come to his office in the fall of 1941. He asked mom if they could support me on a mission, as I would be old enough by the spring of 1942. Mom said, “Yes.” Then she wrote letters to Dean, John, Que, and Jack asking if they would commit to giving five dollars a month to support me. They all said, “Yes.” But by the spring of 1942 there was a World War and a mission never came. Mom had a strong testimony of the Gospel. She wanted dad and her to go to the temple. That was her most important goal in life.”

Que shares this about Mabel’s love for the Gospel. Mom talked to me a great deal about not smoking, when I was a young man. She told me how important it was that I live the Word of Wisdom. I left home when I was about seventeen years old. I had my mother’s blessings. The one thought she gave me was, ‘Always admit you are a Mormon.’ As the years went by, when people would ask me what religion I belonged to, my answer was always, ‘I’m a Mormon.’”

Que tells of this experience with his father, Henry, “Towards the end of his life, dad and I, talked often when I came home. He told me, about a year after mother died, that mom came to him and told him how important it was that he should go through the Temple. She visited him several times. He was very sure mom had been there. He said, ‘She was as real here in this room as you are right now.’ There was no doubt in my mind that she had come back to him, and for good reason. Mom wanted to be sealed in the Temple for time and eternity with her husband. To me, of all the women I have known, my mother would be the closest one the Lord would choose to be His favorite. I’m sure she had enough influence with the Lord to come back to see her Henry. Mom always thought she would live longer than dad, and then she would get the Temple work done.” Henry had similar conversations with Curt and LeMoyne about Mabel’s visits to him. Telling them after his nightly prayers, “She came and said I could not die until I went through the Temple and we were sealed. She wants us to be together forever. I must go to the temple.” In a letter he wrote to his sister Laura on March 16, 1959 he said, “I am trying to get a recommend to go through the Temple as I know Mabel wanted it done before she left me. So I want it done as soon as possible.” Henry was endowed and sealed to Mabel in the Salt Lake Temple on July 21, 1959, fourteen months after Mabel’s death. He died September 17, 1959, two months after having his and Mabel’s temple work done.

Jane said,” When ever there was a problem. We went to mama and she could intercede with dad. I can’t remember very many good times for mama. She was tired and worn out, but she was a fighter from birth and she always came back with love. Times were difficult. Times were hard. If all her children feel as guilty as I for not making her life easier, then maybe somewhere or sometime we will be able to make it up to her if only to carry her love and understanding to our children. Her legacy to the world is tremendous. She came from a very humble beginning and through her determination and love she became in the eyes of many, one of the greatest women that ever lived.”

What a blessing that Mabel was a “stubborn” little three year old child, a “fighter from birth,” had “determination,” and didn’t take any of the strychnine that was pushed on her. Her posterity is numerous. There are engineers, an Olympic coach, auctioneers, teachers, educators, educational administrators, dairy farmers, service men, military officers, land developer, firemen, policeman, salesmen, missionaries, bishops, students, nurses, singers, artist, carpenters, dancers, broadcasters, mailmen, ranchers, social workers, and the list goes on, of people who have made the world a better place because they are the posterity of Mabel Mary Roundy Hislop.

On November 30, 1991, the children of Henry & Mabel Hislop dedicated a monument in the Huntsville Cemetery in honor of their parents. Their children felt their parents were the real heroes of the war times. They had to worry all the time about their boys’ safety. If there was a battle one of them was most likely involved in it. On the monument there are two portraits of Henry and Mabel, in one they are finely dressed as a young married couple in 1905, in the other they are in work clothes and have been married half a century. There are also portraits of each of their twelve children. On the west side of the monument it says, “And the hearts of the children shall turn to their parents….and children yet to be born shall be blessed…Thanks mom and dad for we were born of goodly parents.”



Sources

  1. Find A Grave: Memorial #21105264
  • *USA Census 1900.

Mabel Roundy United States Census, 1900 Name: Mabel Roundy Event Type: Census Event Date: 1900 • Event Year: 1900 Event Place: Huntsville Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States • Event Place (Original): ED 182 Huntsville Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States Sex: Female Age: 14 Marital Status: Single Race: White Race (Original): White Birth Date: Mar 1886 Birthplace: Utah Mother's Birthplace: Ireland Relationship to Head of Household: Adopted daughter Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Ad. Daughter Sheet Letter: B Sheet Number: 9 Household Role Sex Age Birthplace Alice Roundy Head Female 40 Utah Mabel Roundy Adopted daughter Female 14 Utah

"United States Census, 1900," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MMRB-W3G : accessed 20 July 2021), Mabel Roundy in household of Alice Roundy, Huntsville Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 182, sheet 9B, family 189, NARA microfilm publication T623 (Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1972.); FHL microfilm 1,241,688.

Event Type Census Name Mabel Roundy Sex Female Age 14 Event Date 1900 Event Place Huntsville Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States Event Place (Original) ED 182 Huntsville Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States Marital Status Single Race White Relationship to Head of Household Adopted daughter Sheet Letter B Sheet Number 9 Birth Date Mar 1886 Birthplace Utah Mother's Birthplace Ireland Mabel Roundy's Parents and Siblings Alice Roundy Mother F 40 Utah

Event Type Census Name Alice Roundy Sex Female Age 40 Event Date 1900 Event Place Huntsville Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States Event Place (Original) ED 182 Huntsville Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States Marital Status Married Race White Relationship to Head of Household Head Mother of how many children 0 Sheet Letter B Sheet Number 9 Years Married 22 Birth Date Jul 1860 Birthplace Utah Marriage Year (Estimated) 1878 Father's Birthplace England Mother's Birthplace England

  • USA Marriage 1905.

Mabel Roundy mentioned in the record of Henry Hislop Name: Mabel Roundy Age: 18 Sex: Female Husband: Henry Hislop Other information in the record of Henry Hislop from Utah Marriages, 1887-1935

Name: Henry Hislop Event Type: Marriage Event Date: 8 Apr 1905 Event Place: Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States Event Place (Original): Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States Sex: Male Age: 23 Birth Year (Estimated): 1882 Spouse's Name: Mabel Roundy Spouse's Sex: Female Spouse's Age: 18 Spouse's Birth Year (Estimated): 1887

"Utah Marriages, 1887-1935", database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F8GZ-2Z9 : 16 March 2020), Mabel Roundy in entry for Henry Hislop, 1905.

Name Mabel Roundy Age 18 Sex F Mabel Roundy's Spouses and Children Henry Hislop Husband M 23

Name Henry Hislop Sex Male Age 23 Birth Year (Estimated) 1882 Spouse's Name Mabel Roundy Spouse's Sex Female Spouse's Age 18 Spouse's Birth Year (Estimated) 1887 Marriage Date 8 Apr 1905 Marriage Place Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States Source Details 2573

  • USA Census 1910.

Mabel Hislop United States Census, 1910 Name: Mabel Hislop Event Type: Census Event Date: 1910 • Event Place: Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States • Event Place (Original): Huntsville, , Utah Sex: Female Age: 23 Marital Status: Married Race: White Race (Original): White Birth Year (Estimated): 1887 Birthplace: Utah • Father's Birthplace: Utah Mother's Birthplace: Utah Relationship to Head of Household: Wife Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Wife Sheet Letter: A Sheet Number: 8 Household Role Sex Age Birthplace Henry Hislop Head Male 28 Utah Mabel Hislop Wife Female 23 Utah Curtis Hislop Son Male 4 Utah Lawrence Hislop Son Male 2 Utah

"United States Census, 1910," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M5X9-HMQ : accessed 20 July 2021), Mabel Hislop in household of Henry Hislop, Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 219, sheet 8A, family 167, NARA microfilm publication T624 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 1982), roll 1611; FHL microfilm 1,375,624.

Event Type Census Name Mabel Hislop Sex Female Age 23 Event Date 1910 Event Place Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States Event Place (Original) Huntsville, , Utah Birth Year (Estimated) 1887 Birthplace Utah Marital Status Married Race White Relationship to Head of Household Wife Father's Birthplace Utah Mother's Birthplace Utah Sheet Letter A Sheet Number 8 Mabel Hislop's Spouses and Children Henry Hislop Husband M 28 Utah

Event Type Census Name Henry Hislop Sex Male Age 28 Event Date 1910 Event Place Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States Event Place (Original) Huntsville, , Utah Birth Year (Estimated) 1882 Birthplace Utah Marital Status Married Race White Relationship to Head of Household Head Father's Birthplace England Mother's Birthplace England Sheet Letter A Sheet Number 8 Curtis Hislop Son M 4 Utah

Lawrence Hislop Son M 2 Utah

  • USA Census 1930.

Mabel Hislop United States Census, 1930 Name: Mabel Hislop Event Type: Census Event Date: 1930 • Event Place: Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States • Sex: Female Age: 43 Marital Status: Married Race: White Race (Original): White Birth Year (Estimated): 1887 Birthplace: Utah • Father's Birthplace: Utah Mother's Birthplace: Utah Relationship to Head of Household: Wife Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Wife Sheet Letter: A Sheet Number: 4 Household Role Sex Age Birthplace Henry Hislop Head Male 48 Utah Mabel Hislop Wife Female 43 Utah Alice Hislop Daughter Female 20 Utah Fred Hislop Son Male 16 Utah Q Perry Hislop Son Male 14 Utah John Hislop Son Male 10 Utah Dean Hislop Son Male 9 Utah Lemoin Hislop Son Male 7 Utah Lowell Hislop Son Male 5 Utah Wendell Hislop Son Male 3 Utah George Hislop Son Male 1 Utah

"United States Census, 1930," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:XH6R-3SS : accessed 20 July 2021), Mabel Hislop in household of Henry Hislop, Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) ED 8, sheet 4A, line 4, family 75, NARA microfilm publication T626 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2002), roll 2425; FHL microfilm 2,342,159.

Event Type Census Name Mabel Hislop Sex Female Age 43 Event Date 1930 Event Place Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States Birth Year (Estimated) 1887 Birthplace Utah Marital Status Married Race White Relationship to Head of Household Wife Father's Birthplace Utah Mother's Birthplace Utah Sheet Letter A Sheet Number 4 Mabel Hislop's Spouses and Children Henry Hislop Husband M 48 Utah

Event Type Census Name Henry Hislop Sex Male Age 48 Event Date 1930 Event Place Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States Birth Year (Estimated) 1882 Birthplace Utah Marital Status Married Race White Relationship to Head of Household Head Father's Birthplace Scotland Mother's Birthplace England Sheet Letter A Sheet Number 4 Alice Hislop Daughter F 20 Utah

Fred Hislop Son M 16 Utah

Q Perry Hislop Son M 14 Utah

John Hislop Son M 10 Utah

Dean Hislop Son M 9 Utah

Lemoin Hislop Son M 7 Utah

Lowell Hislop Son M 5 Utah

Wendell Hislop Son M 3 Utah

George Hislop Son M 1 Utah

  • USA Census 1940.

Mable M Hislop United States Census, 1940 Name: Mable M Hislop • Event Type: Census Event Date: 1940 • Event Place: Huntsville Election Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States • Event Place (Original): Utah, Weber, Huntsville Election Precinct, Huntsville Last Place of Residence: Same House Sex: Female Age: 54 Marital Status: Married Race: White Race (Original): White Birth Year (Estimated): 1886 Birthplace: Utah Relationship to Head of Household: Wife Relationship to Head of Household (Original): Wife Household Role Sex Age Birthplace Charles H Hislop Head Male 59 Utah Mable M Hislop Wife Female 54 Utah John Hislop Son Male 22 Utah Dean Hislop Son Male 19 Utah Le Moine Hislop Son Male 17 Utah Lowell Hislop Son Male 14 Utah Wendell Hislop Son Male 12 Utah George Hislop Son Male 11 Utah Jane Hislop Daughter Female 8 Utah


"United States Census, 1940," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VT4D-Q5Z : 4 January 2021), Mable M Hislop in household of Charles H Hislop, Huntsville Election Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 29-9, sheet 5B, line 67, family 97, Sixteenth Census of the United States, 1940, NARA digital publication T627. Records of the Bureau of the Census, 1790 - 2007, RG 29. Washington, D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, 2012, roll 4222.

Event Type Census Name Mable M Hislop Sex Female Age 54 Event Date 1940 Event Place Huntsville Election Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States Event Place (Original) Utah, Weber, Huntsville Election Precinct, Huntsville Marital Status Married Race White Relationship to Head of Household Wife Last Place of Residence Same House Birth Year (Estimated) 1886 Birthplace Utah Mable M Hislop's Spouses and Children Charles H Hislop Husband M 59 Utah

Event Type Census Name Charles H Hislop Sex Male Age 59 Event Date 1940 Event Place Huntsville Election Precinct, Weber, Utah, United States Event Place (Original) Utah, Weber, Huntsville Election Precinct, Huntsville Marital Status Married Race White Relationship to Head of Household Head Last Place of Residence Same House Birth Year (Estimated) 1881 Birthplace Utah John Hislop Son M 22 Utah

Dean Hislop Son M 19 Utah

Le Moine Hislop Son M 17 Utah

Lowell Hislop Son M 14 Utah

Wendell Hislop Son M 12 Utah

George Hislop Son M 11 Utah

Jane Hislop Daughter F 8 Utah

  • USA Death 1958.

Mabel Roundy Hislop Utah Death Certificates, 1904-1965 Name: Mabel Roundy Hislop • Event Type: Death Event Date: 08 May 1958 • Event Place: Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States • Sex: Female Age: 71 Marital Status: Married Birth Date: 11 Mar 1887 • Father's Name: Jared Roundy • Mother's Name: Alice Apgood • Spouse's Name: C Henry Hislop • Certificate Number: 58 29 0284

"Utah Death Certificates, 1904-1965," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QKDV-H6JM : 3 March 2021), Mabel Roundy Hislop, 08 May 1958; citing Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States, certificate , series 81448; Utah State Archives Research Center, Salt Lake City, Utah; FHL microfilm.

Name Mabel Roundy Hislop Sex Female Age 71 Death Date 08 May 1958 Death Place Ogden, Weber, Utah, United States Birth Date 11 Mar 1887 Marital Status Married Father's Name Jared Roundy Mother's Name Alice Apgood Spouse's Name C Henry Hislop Certificate Number 58 29 0284 Mabel Roundy Hislop's Parents and Siblings Jared Roundy Father M

Alice Apgood Mother F

Mabel Roundy Hislop's Spouses and Children C Henry Hislop Spouse

Name Mabel Mary Roundy Hislop Death or Burial Place Huntsville, Weber, Utah, United States of America Cemetery Huntsville Cemetery Death Date 08 May 1958 Birth Date 11 Mar 1887 Photograph Included Y

Mabel Mary Roundy Hislop BIRTH 11 Mar 1887 DEATH 8 May 1958 (aged 71) BURIAL Huntsville Cemetery Huntsville, Weber County, Utah, USA PLOT 46-1-5 MEMORIAL ID 21105264 · View Source





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Categories: Huntsville Cemetery, Huntsville, Utah