Thomas’s Early Life Leading Up to His Marriage
To tell the story of Thomas Wand’s life, we must first look at the autobiography of James Finlayson. James Finlayson was a member of the Glasgow, Scotland Conference of the church (ordained a teacher and a priest there in 1851 and 1853 respectively). He married a 56 year old widow, Jane Wand (nee Malcolm), a woman many years his senior, in Glasgow on 13 Aug 1852. The marriage was performed by Elder Robert Campbell. She had a number of grown children; one was a 32-year old son, Andrew Wand, who was born in 1820.
There was a marriage in Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland on 15 Sep 1846 between an Andrew Wand and Cecilia Brown Ramsay. It is thought that this Andrew is the above mentioned son of Jane Malcolm Wand.
James Finlayson’s autobiography notes that Jane’s son, Andrew, died of consumption on the 21st of June 1853, that Andrew’s wife had died of consumption in 1850 and that they left a young son, “about 6 years old”, named Thomas whom James and his wife, Jane, immediately adopted.
James, Jane, Jane's youngest son William Wand (age about 18), and our Thomas “about 9 years old” emigrated to the United States from Liverpool and arrived in New York, 18 February 1855. James was a millwright and from 1855 to 1857 moved his family around as he found work in New York City, Hoboken N.J., Detroit Michigan and St. Louis Missouri. It was in St. Louis that Jane died on the 3rd of February, 1858. At this point William, an adult, must have gone off to start his own life. (Perhaps he was the William Wand who died in St. Louis in 1903. That might be interesting to research.) According to James’s autobiography, James Finlayson and Thomas Wand boarded at various places in St. Louis and James also did work in neighboring Illinois following Jane's death before the two of them moved to Florence Nebraska on the 26th of May, 1859 and departed from there a month later to emigrate to Utah. In James’ words, “I again went to work for Mr. Raith and Coy Summerfield, Illinios, on Feb. 16th fixing the engine and flouring mill until April the 22nd when I finished and started to work the engine and mill, after which I returned to St. Louis to prepare to take my ddeparture for Utah which I did on the 18th of May accompanied by Mrs. Alexander and two daughters, Mary and Sarah also Thomas Wand.”
Other Thomas Wands
At this point there is a matter that needs some explanation in order to prevent confusion. Jane Malcolm, as I had mentioned, was a widow with many children when she married James Finlayson. Her husband, Thomas Wand, a joiner by profession, died sometime between the 1841 and 1851 census. Her third child and oldest son was Andrew Wand, father of the young orphaned Thomas who accompanied James and Jane Finlayson when they sailed to America in 1855. Her eighth child, and fourth son was born 17 May 1832 in Dollar, Perthshire, Scotland and named “Thomas Wand” after his father. And this Thomas Wand also emigrated from Scotland to America. He undertook his journey in 1854. Unlike the Finlaysons, his ship landed in New Orleans where he took a steamer first to St. Louis where he worked for a while then traveled to Chicago where he worked for before moving to Kankakee, Illinois in the spring of 1856. He was a tailor by profession. In the fall of 1856 he moved 95 miles south of Chicago to Onarga, Iroquois County, Illinois, which lies about 225 miles northwest of St. Louis. There he worked as a tailor for a little over a year and then, in 1858, established a merchant-tailoring business. In October 1857, while this Thomas was in Onarga, James, Jane and young Thomas Wand arrived in St. Louis and Jane died there on the 3rd of February 1858. So, in 1858-59 there are two Thomas Wands, uncle and nephew, living within 250 miles of each other. The younger Thomas Wand stayed with James in St. Louis. James’s biography specifically mentions living at three different addresses in St. Louis with young Thomas before the two of them departed for Florence, Nebraska and then on to Utah.
The other Thomas (uncle, b. 1832) remained in Onarga., married a woman named Mary Fickle on the 27th of September 1859 (less than a month after James and young Thomas arrived in Salt Lake) and raised three children in Onarga named Andrew Wand, Mary Wand, and Thomas C. Wand. He later served as mayor there and was an active member of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Onarga. The date of his marriage makes it improbable that he is the Thomas Wand that accompanied James Finlayson to Florence, Nebraska and then on to Utah.
And finally, there was another Thomas Wand in St. Louis in 1871, born in 1852, who married a woman named Margarite Guigie there in 1871. This is also not the Thomas Wand who moved to Utah as this Thomas is not only too young but he also remained in St. Louis for decades, showing up in the subsequent censuses with his wife and children at least through 1900 while our Thomas Wand, born in 1847/48 showed up in censuses in Utah.
The Journey to Utah
While in Florence, Nebraska, on June 1st, 1859, James Finlayson married Mary Ada Alexander, whom he had met and known in St. Louis, and he, his new wife, her mother and sister, and young Thomas Wand (now about age 12) travelled together, arriving in Salt Lake on the 29th of August, 1859. After this there is no further mention of Thomas Wand in James Finlayson’s autobiography. However, Margaret Finlayson Maxwell’s biography of James, “James Finlayson, Man of Destiny”, mentions that Thomas Wand was with the family when they rented a home from a Brother Wells in the Seventeenth Ward, northwest of the Temple Block for $6.00 a month and also was with them later that year when they relocated to Sugarhouse where James had contracted to assist in the construction of a nail factory and later to install the machinery for a paper mill. In the spring of 1862 the family, which by then included a two year old son and an anticipated second son due that summer, moved to Payson where James worked as a millwright and cabinetmaker the rest of his life.
By 1862 Thomas Wand would have been 15 years of age. It is unknown whether or not he traveled to Payson with the family. If he did, he likely did not stay with them long as he was near the age when a young man, especially one with no biological connection to the family with whom he lived, would be inclined, in that era, to start to work and live an adult life.
Thomas’s Later Life and Marriages
Thomas Wand shows up again, eighteen years later in the 1880 census. There is listed Thomas Wand, age 32, single, a sign painter, living in Star Precinct, Beaver County 140 miles south of Payson, with his birth location listed as Scotland.
Subsequent to the 1880 census Thomas moved north to the small town of Yost, on the Utah-Idaho border, possibly due to a painting contract, where in 1886, he married the widow, Katherine Schneider and became the stepfather to her young children. The wedding took place on October 24, 1886 in Yost, Utah when he was 38 years of age. His bride, Katherine (or Catherina or Catherine) Diamon Schneider (aka Katherine Diamond) was 35. Catherine had been born in Frankfurt, Prussia on January 15, 1851, was the widow of John Schneider (1827-1884) and at the time of her marriage to Thomas had four living children; Ekbert (1872-1960), Mary Louise (1879-1906), Viola (1881-1907), and William, (1882-1962). Two other of her sons had died previously at young ages. Thomas and Katherine subsequently had two sons there together: Thomas Webster Wand, born October 30, 1887 in George Creek, Idaho (which is what the town was called on the Idaho side of the border), and Scott S. Wand born December 10, 1889 in Yost, Utah. The family subsequently settled in Logan in time for the 1900 census. By the time the census was taken the only child from Catherine’s first marriage who was still living in the household was fifteen-year-old Viola.
It may be that Thomas and Katherine also had a daughter who died young in Logan as there is an unmarked, undated grave listed in the Logan City Cemetery records for a person named "Catherina S. or Catherine Wand" which at least one researcher has tentatively dated as late 19th century or early 20th. It is separate from the plot where Thomas's wife, Katherine was later buried. But more research will need to be done to determine whether or not this Catherina was Thomas's child.
The 1900 the census again shows Thomas Wand but this time living in Logan, married with his wife, two sons Thomas W. and Scott and a step-daughter, Viola, still working as a painter, with Scottish-born parents but this time his birth location is changed to St. Louis, MO, the city where he spent two years of his childhood before emigrating to Utah.
This fudging on birthplace at the turn of the century was not that uncommon. Between 1850 and 1906 immigration and naturalization laws became more bureaucratic and complicated and expensive. Many immigrants who had come to the United States as young people in the earlier era where immigration laws were simpler found, as the century progressed, that the process of naturalization had become increasingly complicated and difficult to document, involving finding and producing records from the state in which they had disembarked and documenting residency in each place where they had lived over the previous decades, a complicated and expensive and not always successful process considering the means of communication and the vagaries of record keeping. So many, knowing that records were hard and expensive to verify, and not wanting to go through the long legal process involved, simply began to cite the first place they remember living in the U.S. as their birthplace when the census takers asked. And, as long as they never needed a passport, there were usually no further complications regarding the issue.
Thomas and his wife moved to Salt Lake City around 1906 and then to Hyrum, Utah by 1911 according to reports in the newspaper, The Logan Republican. When Thomas Wand died in Logan, Utah in 1923, he was a widower. He had been married twice. His first wife, Katherine, died of heart failure at the age of 54 on October 13, 1905 in Logan, leaving Thomas with their two sons, then ages 15 and almost 17. Viola had married and moved away in 1902. He subsequently married another widow, Mary Eleanor Plant Williams on January 22, 1906, in Logan. He was 57 years old. She was 54. She was born April 11, 1852 in England and was the widow of William Williams Jr. (b. 1827) who had died and been buried in Hyrum four years earlier. She was the mother of eleven children ranging in age from 14 to 37 when she married Thomas.
Sixteen years after this marriage the 1920 census shows Thomas, with his wife, Mary, still living together in Logan. Thomas and Mary Eleanor (aka. Mary Ellen) continued their lives together until she died about three years later in Logan, on September 27, 1923, at the age of 71. She was buried near her first husband, William, in Hyrum, Utah. Thomas did not survive her long. He died November 1, 1923. He was 73 years old. The cause of his death was listed as “senility”.
Thomas had supported his family for many years in his chosen occupation while he was physically able. His death certificate lists his occupation as “painter, retired”.
It is interesting that this is about all his death certificate states about him. His birth date is listed as “unknown” as are his place of birth, the names of his parents, and their birthplaces. The only further information on the document is his race, his marital state (widowed), his gender and his place of residence.
Much of what we know about his early life might have been completely lost if his step-grandfather, James Finlayson, hadn't taken the time to write his own brief autobiography before he died in 1908.
News Items from the Newspaper, the Logan Republican, That Mention Thomas Wand or His Family Members
Logan Republican, March 19, 1904
“Of the dozen who were before Justice Cardon
Wednesday afternoon on a charge of gambling, only one, Thomas Wand was
fined.
He was convicted of running a
gaming room and was fined $35.00.”
Logan Republican, February 1, 1905 “The sign writing "The Little
Tycoon," to be given soon by the MusicDepartment of the Agricultural
College Is attracting considerable favorable comment. The figures on the
billboards were painted by Herbert M.Stoops, the A. C.'s. cartoonist. Theyare
nothing short of excellent and rolled great credit on the young man's artistic
sense. The lettering, built along the Japanese style, was done Tom Wand, of the
Preston, Pyper Co., and in its way is as artistic as the figures. The whole
makes a combination that, attracts general attention and proves a surperb ad
for the show.”
March 25, 1905 Thomas
Wand is listed as a member of the “Commercial Club” and one of the men of that
club who volunteered to be a part of the Decorating Committee for that year’s
June 9 and 10 Celebration in Logan.
July 15, 1905 Thomas
Wand is listed as having received $3.00 for his services as a judge of
elections in the Annual Statement of the Receipts and Disbursements by the
Board of Education of Logan City.
October 14, 1905
“Mrs. Wand, wife of Thomas Wand of the Logan First ward died yesterday
at 12:30 p.m., the result of dropsy and heart trouble.”
December 9, 1905, Messrs.
Pyper, Wand and Phelps have done an artistic piece of work In the establishment
of Baldwln &Harton on Center street. It is second to none In Logan.”
August 8, 1906 The
family of Thomas Wand went to Salt Lake city yesterday to join Mr. Wand who has
contracted for work there.
Logan Republican, August 28, 1907 “Mrs. Thos. Wand came from Salt Lake on
Saturday night to spend a few days in Logan and Hyrum”
September 7, 1907
“Wm. Schneider, the man who beat up J.W. Harry a few weeks, “got his” a
day or two ago, a couple of the Wand boys pounding his head, face and back into
a jelly. [William Schneider was the name
of Thomas’s step son and therefore this Wm Schneider may well have been the
stepbrother of the two Wand boys.] The
Wand boys were fined and in default were sent to jail. Schneider, on a later day, struck another fellow
and was also fined. Geo. Johnson in
attempting to separate the contestants was accidentally struck with a timber in
the hands of a Mrs. Peterson. There’s
more to it but we didn’t get it.”
November 20, 1907
Sheriffs Sale.
In the District court, Cache county, Utah.
James Quayle, James W. Quayle and Joseph E, Cowley, doing
business under the nameof James Quayle & Co., Plaintiffs.
vs
Thomas Wand and Mary E. Williams Wand,
Defendants.
To be sold at Sheriff's sale on the 11th day of December,
1907, at the front door of the court house in Logan, Cache County Utah at 12
o'clock noon of said day as the property of the defendant Mary E. Williams
Wand, the following described real estate in Cache county Utah, to wit--
Beginning at a point 8 rods south of the northwest corner of
lot 4, Block 13, Plat "A'', Hyrum city survey, thence south 12 rods, thence east 13 rods 1 ¼ feet, thence north 12 rods; thence west 13
rods 1M foot to the place of beginning,
T. H. Smith
Sheriff Cache County, Utah,
J.G. Walters, Attorney
December 11, 1907
Mrs. Thomas Wand came to Logan Sunday night to visit her children.
June 17, 1908 “Trial
Calendar for June Term” lists “Thomas Wand and Mary E. W. Wand vs. James W.
Quayle and T.H. Smith, July 16, 10 a.m.
July 18, 1908 “Mrs.
Thomas W. Wand is up from Salt Lake visiting in Logan and Hyrum. Her son Leslie Williams of THE REPUBLICAN
went to Hyrum Wednesday to visit with her.”
May 6, 1911 “Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Wand have returned back to Hyrum after a short stay in Shoshone,
Idaho. Mr. Wand has been working at the
northern town.”
October 21, 1913
Hyrum Oct 18 news Mr. Thomas
Wand our local painter has made a big difference in the looks of things on Main
street. He has been painting the town “red.”
April 12, 1917 Mrs.
Thomas Wand of Hyrum spent her sixty-fifth birthday at the residence of her
son, Mr. Clem Williams, in Logan, Wednesday.
May 1, 1917 Mr.
Thomas Wand of Hyrum spent Monday in Logan.
Mr. Wand is taking treatment from one of the local chiropractors.
January 1, 1918 Mrs.
Thomas Wand and daughter Alice Anderson, of Hyrum, were in Logan yesterday
visiting with relatives. It will be
interesting to the friends of Mrs. Wand to know that her health is better than
it has been for years.
Bibliography
Beckwith, H.H., History of Iroquois County together with Historic notes on the Northwest, gleaned from early authors, old maps and manuscripts, private and official correspondence, and other authentic, though, for the most part, out-of-the-way sources Chicago, H. H. Hill Co., 1880, p. 626
Cache County Death Records
Finlayson, James, “Autobiography of James Finlayson, born 16 October 1830”
Glasgow Conference Church Records, FHL British Film, 104152, item 2
Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland census records, 1841 and 1851
Maxwell, Margaret Finlayson, James Finlayson, Man of Destiny, 1962
Old Parish Records, Marriage Records, Glasgow 1846
Utah Census Records, 1880, 1900 and 1920