EARLY SETTLERS
SUBMITTED BY NORA POULSEN
Andrew Peter Poulsen
one of the early settlers of Plain City, Utah was born June 12, 1842 at Ronne,
Bornholm, Denmark. In his late twenties, he was converted to the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints and with his brother Hans left their beautiful
land of Denmark and came to Utah in 1869.
They worked on the
railroad from the mouth of Weber Canyon to Ogden and then on west of Hot
Springs and north to Promontory Point.
Late in the fall of
1869, Andrew married Sena Benson and their first home was a sod hut at the
northwest part of Plain City. They lived there until they bought land east of
the center of town and built an adobe house. This was a project that relatives
and friends helped with as all the adobe bricks were made by hand.
This house still
stands today having been remodeled and extra rooms built after World War I by
his son Hans Peter Poulsen. Today a grandson Bernard Il. Poulsen lives in the
home.
Andrew Peter Poulsen
loved horses and took great pride in keeping them well groomed. He had two fine
teams of horses, one a white team and the other one a dark pair. For years, he
was active in church and community work and used his "long back"
surrey and fine white team of horses to carry the deceased to the church and
cemetery. He gave freely of his time and money for the building up of the
church and the community. He died September 20, 1922 at his home of stomach
cancer.
Andrew's parents,
Pedra Poulsen and his wife Karen Kirstine Rettrup also came to Utah from their
native Denmark and settled in Plain City in the late fall of 1869. They brought their daughter Andrea Marie
Poulsen with them. She later married
Christine Olsen in 1872.
Iowans Peter Poulsen
was born April 19, 1875, in Plain City, Utah a son of Andrew Peter Poulsen and
Sena Benson. He was the second oldest and only son in a family of four
children, three of whom lived to adulthood. He was educated in the Weber County
schools and also attended Brigham Young Academy where he was on the first
football team of that school. He fulfilled an L.D.S. mission to Denmark from
June 26, 1901 to October 3, 1903. He left his wife and young son at home with
her mother in Ogden, Utah.
Hans Peter or H. P.
Poulsen, as he went by to distinguish himself from his Uncle Hans was a farmer
and dairyman. He was one of the charter members and a director of the Weber
Central Dairy Association. For years, he was a director in the Farm Bureau Association.
Most of his life he was active in church and community work. He was a loving
and devoted father and husband. For over 50 years, he was married to Ellen K.
Maw and they were the parents of seven children.
Hans Peter Poulsen was
the first constable of Plain City, from 1915 to 1920, and was also a Deputy
Sheriff of Weber County. While he was constable one of his first jobs was to
round up several young men for stealing cattle from the towns people and
selling them to the slaughter house in West Ogden.
Traveling in those
days by horse and buggy was much slower than the fast cars of today but within
a short time, the young men were taken into custody and placed in the Weber
County Jail which was located in Ogden between Washington Blvd. and Adams
Avenue on 24th Street.