
The name is found as Waddrupp, Wadrup, Wadrop, Wardrup and Waddup in
Hayford and its
surrounding districts in Oxfordshire and as Waddoups in Northamptonshire
and Buckinghamshire.
Waddup originated as "Wadrobe", a name given to a court official who
looked after the court
wardrobe and was a somewhat higher official position.
The root name anciently appears on the records in Dumbartonshire,
Scotland. The family was
of Boernician origin before the year 1100 AD.
Also: A record in the early thirteenth century, Robert de Warderob,
which was dated 1210,
Registrorum Abbaie de Aberbrothoc (Scotland) , during the reign of
King William the Lion,
Ruler of Scotland 1165 - 1214.
Also: A record of a Ralph de Waddops in the Assize Rolls of Herbfordshire in 1327.
Also: A record of the marriage of John Waddoppe and Ann Herbigh on January
23rd 1580, at St.
Stephen and St. Benet Sherehog. John Waddoppe’s son was christened
at St. Peters West Cheap,
London On Dec 4th 1586.
Also: A record of William Waddrop has sons Symon and Edward christened
at St. Batolph Bishopsgate,
London on January 1st 1610 and Dec 27th 1612 respectively.
And: Our own Richard Waddoups born May 14th 1721, he is the first
ancestor on our Waddoups
family page on this website. His decsendants are found in England,
the USA, New Zealand and Australia.
On the UK electoral roll at the end of 1998, there were 92 addresses
for people with the "Waddoups"
surname. There are addresses in the Midlands as is expected, Kent,
Essex, Derbyshire, Yorkshire and
one address in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
Please, if you have any other information for this section contact us by e-mail.
No attempt is made here to write a history. I leave that task
to more competent people. I
apologize for personal references to myself, being unable to find another
way to put on paper
some of my memories, which I have been requested to do.
Thomas WADDOUPS was born March 14, 1816 at Aston Lee Wells, England.
He
arrived in the Salt Lake Valley August 24, 1868. With him came his
wife Elizabeth Porter and
children Hannah, Elizabeth and Mark. William and Mary Ann emigrated
first in 1864 and
Thomas came in 1866. Four of their children, Joseph, Nathaniel, Edmond
and James died in
England in infancy. Grandfather was a tenant farmer in his native England
on the farm of a Mr.
Izatt. Grandmother died at Centerville, Utah August 25, 1884. Their
home was of adobe
construction, containing two rooms in front and a lean-to of two rooms
in the back. Later
grandfather married Elizabeth Knighton, a widow. They occupied the
home in Centerville. He
was a well built man of about five feet ten inches and weighed about
170, was straight backed,
trim, with powerful shoulders.
On the way to the valley they were met by Wallace W. Willey on
the plains of Wyoming.
He had been sent by Anson Call to exhume and bring to Utah the body
of his son, Vosco, who
died while en route home from a mission to England. A box was prepared
in which to place the
remains, which, with the help of several men, were duly placed therein.
Wallace, because of the
stench, became violently ill and was placed in a bed in one of the
wagons. Grandfather drove
Vosco’s remains to Utah. He was forced to remain about one half mile
in the rear of the rest of
the wagon train because of the stench of the box's contents. I am sure
this was punishment
because grandfather had a very sensitive stomach. I have frequently
seen him empty his stomach
if he contacted any disagreeable odor. No doubt he did a lot of retching
on the way across.
Grandfather was an industrious, kindly man, a staunch friend of
young people. At his
funeral service in October 1900, B. H. Roberts publicly said, “That
man has done more to keep
me out of trouble than any other man”. Grandfather was a student of
human nature and though he
didn't know the name for it, he was a psychologists during our close
association and we were
working side by side nearly every day on the farm of my father. I admired
his sterling qualities
and he seldom made a mistake in disciplining me and I was not easy
to handle. He would me
over someone else's shoulder. He couldn't have punished me worse, and
it was done without
resentment on my part. He was a plodder, never fast. It was difficult
for him to adopt new
methods of doing things. He'd say “That wasn't the way he did it in
England”. He was a staunch
friend and a potent enemy, with an abiding faith in his religion. In
constant attendance at church
services, too modest to want public acclaim. I am told, however that
at one time he was a Sunday
School teacher, a Ward teacher always. I have been told by John T.
Williams, a young man of the
ward, that Grandfather was frequently called upon to administer to
the sick. John said he would
just talk to the Lord. He was ordained a Patriarch before his death
by President Joseph F. Smith.
The following incident will perhaps tell the kind of man he was
as well as explain why
children loved him. When I was in my early teens, he and I delivered
two loads of carrots to
Bishop Elias Morris at Salt Lake City. While there a hard blizzard
arose, accompanied by severe
cold. Grandfather scoured the neighborhood for something to keep “the
lad” warm on the way
home. He secured an old overcoat and a number of old quilts. I was
put in the overcoat and the
quilts were wrapped tightly around me. Grandfather sat out the storm
clad in just a short coat and
no cover for his knees. His only concern was for my comfort.
As a young man, grandfather lost not only the sight, but one complete
eye, from a gun
bursting when he fired it. He was always clean of body. Grandmother
Knighton saw to that. She
regularly prepared good meals for him. She made his shirts, which he
insisted extend to his ankles.
They also served for night shirts. On Sunday he wore the same kind
of shirt, and a yellow silk
handkerchief was used for a necktie. At one time we were topping sorghum
used for making
molasses. My brother will had the misfortune to cut out a deep gash
in his hand. Grandfather
pulled out his long shirt tail and with his cane knife cut off a yard,
more or less, with which he
bandaged Will's hand, remarking, “I don't know what mother will say”.
I never heard him use a
vulgar word, neither did I hear him swear.
I knew him as an honest, kind Christian gentleman. I have always
said, and I repeat, if my
life could be lived in such a way as to merit the love of my grandchildren
to the extent that I loved
him, I would be entitled to a high place in Heaven. These are some
of my impressions of our
grandfather - a man with a heart



.
LDS Biographical Encyclopedia, Andrew Jenson, Vol. 3, p.274
Waddoups, William, second counselor to Pres. Alma Merrill of the Benson Stake, Cache county, Utah, was born August 19, 1840, at Sowe, Warwickshire, England, the son of Thomas Waddoups and Elizabeth Porter. Becoming a convert to "Mormonism," he was baptized April 20, 1856, by Charles Turner and emigrated to America in 1863, crossing the Atlantic in the ship "Amazon" and the plains in Capt. Rosel Hyde's company. He drove three yoke of oxen from the Missouri river to the Valley, where he arrived Oct. 13, 1863. He settled at once at Bountiful, Davis county, but moved to Lewiston, Cache county, in 1874; where he has resided ever since. He was ordained a Deacon while in England; ordained a Seventy July 1, 1865, by Joseph Young, and was for a number of years a president of the 36th quorum of Seventy; was ordained a High Priest July 5, 1884, by Moses Thatcher and set apart as first counselor to Bishop Wm. H. Lewis of Lewiston; was ordained a Bishop June 30, 1901, by Apostle Marriner W. Merrill and set apart to preside over the Lewiston Ward. Since Nov. 5, 1905, he has acted as second counselor to President Merrill of the Benson Stake of Zion. Bro. Waddoups was the first of his family to emigrate to Utah from England, and he subsequently was the means of emigrating his father's family to the Valley. In 1864 (Nov. 27th) Bro. Waddoups married Martha Page, who bore him six children. In 1883 (Nov. 29th) he married Eliza Jane Stephenson, who bore him fourteen children. Bro. Waddoups has performed three home missions, is by occupation a farmer, and for the past nine years has acted as field superintendent of the Lewiston Sugar Company. In early days in Utah he was a member of the Utah militia, and served as captain of a company for many years. His first wife died Nov. 17, 1912, and his second wife July 4, 1912.





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