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Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Edward Lloyd Parry's Organ

This is the organ Edward Lloyd Parry purchased at an auction. Family tradition holds that the organ was originally intended for the Manti Temple chapel, but it was determined that it did not produce enough sound for the chapel. It was auctioned off and ELP purchased it in a closed bid. However, he didn’t keep the organ for long; by 1891 he had given it to Charlotte Edmunds Parry, the wife of his son Edward Thomas Parry.

On February 27, 1944, Winnifred Parry Brooks (daughter of Edward Thomas Parry, who was the oldest son of Edward Lloyd Parry) gave the organ to her daughter, Barbara Dean Brooks, with this letter:

This organ belongs to Barbara Dean Brooks if she learns to play it well. 

(signed)
Winnifred Parry Brooks

P.S. My father Edward Thomas Parry bought it for $90 from his father, Edward Lloyd Parry, over 60 years ago. Take good care of it, Bobby.

Witness -
Samuel Brooks

 (click on photo to enlarge)

Edward Lloyd Parry's Armoire

According to family tradition, Edward Lloyd Parry purchased an organ and an armoire at an auction in Manti, likely in the late 1880s. Here is the armoire:



(click on each photo to enlarge)

Thursday, July 12, 2012

Edward Lloyd Parry's stonemason tools at the Church History Museum

A tool box filled with Edward Lloyd Parry's stonemason tools is on display at the LDS Church History Museum in Salt Lake City. The museum is directly west of Temple Square. As one enters the museum, the tour leads to the right and snakes through various displays. About 3/4 of the way through the tour, one comes around a bend and on the right there is a display called "Adorning Temples" (see the photo below). The panel in front has a picture of ELP. Behind the mural in the glass case is Parry's toolbox: 

(click on each photo to enlarge)

Here is an excerpt from the panel in front:

And here is a closeup of his toolbox:

The next three pictures are closeups of each of the three compartments within the toolbox, from left to right:
In this last picture, note the longer, chisel-shaped tool leaning to the left and seemingly propping open the lid. While my camera couldn't pick it up, it clearly has the initials "JLP" engraved on its handle. That tool, then, belonged to John Lloyd Parry (1864-1916), Edward Lloyd Parry's son. John Lloyd was ELP's fourth child, and one of the three sons who carried on the stonemason business into the twentieth century (the other two being Edward Thomas (1859-1938) and Bernard (1873-1940)).

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Painting: St. George Temple dedication 1877

The LDS Church's Conference Center in Salt Lake City has numerous paintings on display, one of which is a piece entitled St. George Temple Groundbreaking:


If one inspects the above photo closely, a man to the far left of the painting appears similar to Edward Lloyd Parry:


Regardless of whether it is Edward Lloyd Parry or not, we know that he was the master stonemason of the St. George Temple and was present at its dedication. We also know that he knew President Brigham Young personally and was in frequent contact with him regarding the St. George Temple's construction.

The plaque to the side of the painting reads as follows:

St. George Temple Groundbreaking

J. Roman Andrus, (1907-1993)
Oil on canvas, 1942

Brigham Young broke ground for the St. George Temple in southern Utah in 1871 and presided over its dedication shortly before he died in 1877. The first completed in the American West, this temple was built of local materials by the commitment and sacrifice of Latter-day Saints who were struggling to survive on the raw frontier. The artist taught painting and printmaking at Brigham Young University for many years. 

Incidentally, Roman Andrus is my father's first cousin. Both are grandchildren of George Brooks, whom Edward Lloyd Parry adopted when he (George) was an 11-year-old pioneer orphan in 1856. With Andrus' connection to ELP, it seems likely that he would have included him in the painting.

Edward Lloyd Parry picture in the DUP Museum

The Daughters of the Utah Pioneers Museum in Salt Lake City is a treasure trove for written histories and some pictures of Edward Lloyd Parry. A portrait of ELP is on display there. To find it, go in the main entrance, down the staircase on the right, and walk toward the elevator. His portrait is hanging on the left. Here is what you should look for:


(click photos to enlarge)

Daniel H. Wells display - DUP Museum

LDS Apostle Daniel H. Wells (1814-1891) was a close associate of Edward Lloyd Parry. Their paths crossed numerous times throughout their lives, including the dedication of the Manti Temple in 1888.

Today my family and I were touring the Daughters of the Utah Pioneer Museum in Salt Lake City when we came upon a display case of Daniel H. Wells' belongings. We noticed two small stone carvings in the shape of books, one of which has ELP's name carved on it, and both of which came from Manti Temple rock. We wonder if this was perhaps some sort of gift from ELP to Brother Wells at the time of the Manti Temple's dedication. Here are the pictures:


(click to enlarge)

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Video Tour of the Edward Lloyd Parry home in Manti





Additional information comes from descendant Bill Parry who writes the following:

"I recognized most of the architecture from when I was a child living in the home. The back addition with the smoothed stone was constructed by my father Thomas H Parry when I was just a few year old. The stone is remainder from the sawed stone that was used to construct the present Sanpete County Courthouse. In fact, the doors to that addition when I lived there were from the previous courthouse building or so we were told. The stone structure at the back of the lot with the steel I-beam was built by my father, my brother Beven and I. The purpose was to build concrete burial vaults which we sold and installed in graves in cemeteries throughout Sanpete County. The I-beam and chain blocks were used to hoist the vaults and move them from the construction forms to storage and then to the bed of a truck for delivery to the installation site. I'm really surprised to learn that you found a tool box with stone mason tools. I also had found one when my father passed, which I donated to the Manti Temple. The Temple president then was Wilbur Cox, the son of my father's construction company Roy Cox. We moved from that home to the home just to the south, which had originally been built by Bernard son of ELP for his old maid sisters Hattie and Emma. That home was extensively remodeled and enlarged by my father."

Thanks, Bill, for that interesting information!