Individual Details

Ellen Neibaur

(16 Sep 1859 - 15 Jun 1942)

Ellen Nelbaur Hayward, mother of three prominent Logan citizens and one of the last surviving pioneers of Bear Lake valley
Mrs, Hayward died early Monday at the home of a daughter, Mrs. George C. Piggott of Bloomington, of causes incident to age. She had been failing in health for the past several months.
Three of her 12 children have become prominent in Logan circles. they are Dr. J. W. and Dr. J. C. Hayward, both connected with the Budge Clinic, and Professor Ira N. Hayward, a member of the USAC faculty and bishop of the Fourth Ward.
Ellen Hayward was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, September 16, 1860, a daughter of Joseph W. and Elizabeth Cranshaw Neibaur. Her paternal grandfather, Alexander Neibaur, had been a personal friend of the Prophet Joseph Smith and settled in Salt Lake valley in 1848, and her father had driven an ox cart across the plains at the age of 14. 
Ellen Hayward's family moved to Paris, Idaho at the request of President Brigham Young in 1864, arriving when the community had been settled less than a year. Her mother died when Ellen was 12 years of age, and she and an older sister took over the duties of managing the pioneer home.
Ellen was married to William Gammon when she was 17 years of age. William was a carpenter and a farmer most of his life, and was instrumental in obtaining irrigation water for the homesteads in the area. He died in 1927.
by dan fackrell

Children:
Joseph William Hayward 1879–1965
Ellen Mary Hayward Stevens 1883–1969
James Clement Hayward 1892–1982
Ira Neibaur Hayward 1896–1974
Charles Lynn Hayward 1903–1998

Events

Birth16 Sep 1859Salt Lake City, Salt Lake County, Utah
Marriage20 Nov 1878Bear Lake County, Idaho - William Gammon Hayward
Death15 Jun 1942Bloomington, Bear Lake County, Idaho
Burial17 Jun 1942Paris Cemetery, Bear Lake County, Idaho

Families

SpouseWilliam Gammon Hayward (1854 - 1927)
ChildGammon Henry Hayward (1889 - 1959)

Endnotes