Thomas Sirls Terry ~ Enterprise, Utah, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member brwhiz
N 37° 34.408 W 113° 42.246
12S E 261195 N 4161929
This marker is one of four plaques on the large stone monument in the center of the Enterprise Heritage Park on the east edge of Enterprise, Utah. They honor an early Enterprise LDS patriarch and his three wives.
Waymark Code: WME89A
Location: Utah, United States
Date Posted: 04/17/2012
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Dunbar Loop
Views: 2

Thomas Sirls Terry
3 Oct 1825 - 12 Aug 1920

Thomas Sirls Terry was born in Bristol Township, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, on 3 Oct 1825 to Thomas Sirls and Mary Ann Murkins Terry. Thomas went to work at the age of 7 in a local cotton mill. At 17 he was apprenticed to learn the trade of printing calico cloth.

Thomas first heard of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (Mormons) in November 1841. He was taught and baptized by Joseph Newton on 12 Mar 1842. Thomas was always true to his new faith. On 19 Jun 1847 he began the 1,030-mile journey west, as a teamster, to be with the other members of the church, arriving in the Salt Lake Valley on 25 Sept 1847.

In 1849 Thomas became acquainted with Mary Ann Pulsipher, the daughter of a prominent pioneer family; they married on Christmas day of that year. On 5 May 1855 he took a second wife, Eliza Jane Pulsipher, the youngest sister of Mary Ann.

In October of 1856 Thomas was called to leave his families and farm and go on a mission. He labored in Philadelpha and New jersey. He was released from his mission by Parley P. Pratt and was assigned, as captain, a company of the Saints going west.

In the fall of 1862 Thomas was called to the Dixie Cotton Mission in southwestern Utah. After spending the winter in St. George, he moved his families to Shoal Creek (Hebron), Washington County, Utah. Later he built a ranch and stage station at Moroni Springs west of Hebron.

In 1867 Thomas was ordained a high priest and called as bishop of the Hebron Ward. He served as bishop for 27 years. In 1878 he married his third wife, Hannah Louisa Leavitt. Because of the Edmunds Tucker Act, in 1885 Thomas moved Hannah's family to the Beaver Dam Wash in Washington County.

Hebron was abandoned. Thomas and his family moved to Enterprise where he was called as patriarch of the area.

Perhaps the greatest written statement of Thomas Sirls Terry are his own words of encouragement to his 30 children: "When famine and starvation stared me in the face, and hunger had so weakened my mortal frame, that when at my labor I would have to sit down to rest in order to gain strength...still I hung on to my faith and integrity in the Lord...And when a mist of darkness had darkened the horizon of truth and when the prophets of God, who were slain for the testimnony which they bore, by the wicked friends of Hell, and when destruction seemed to the total overthrow of the whole Church, my faith was still in the Lord, and would serve the God of Israel and would never let anything shake me from my firm position in the commandments of Christ. Therefore, my dear children, let nothing of an evil nature persuade you from a righteous course through life, and always carry out your righteous decrees and be firm in your determination."

Thomas Sirls Terry died 12 Aug 1920 at the age of 95 and was buried in Enterprise, Utah.

Website with more information on either the memorial or the person(s) it is dedicated to: [Web Link]

Location: Enterprise heritage Park

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