INTERESTING INCIDENTS
FROM
THE LIFE OF WILLIAM WILCOCK
As related by Simon A.
Matheson of Parowan, Utah and as Samuel R. Wilcock remembers
his Father
William Wilcock was the son of Edward Wilcock II of
New Church, Lancashire, England; and Elizabeth Partington
of St. Ellens, England. He is remembered as speaking
of three sisters, Ann, Martha and Mary. If he had any
brothers, it is not a known fact and he may have had
more sisters. The only known relatives he spoke of were
Thomas and Israel Knowles.
He was born in a little town of Ince, near Wigan, Lancashire,
England, on October 10, 1830. There is very little known
of his childhood surroundings and home conditions.
He was the first Wilcock to join the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints that we have record of,
being baptized September 22, 1857, at the age of 27.
William had a strong testimony of the truthfulness of
the Gospel, But being no preacher he did his worshipping
in song and prayer. The food prepared in his home was
blessed and thanks returned to the giver of all good.
No doubt family prayers as well as secret ones were
uttered daily. He stopped smoking his pipe, which he
always used while working, which proves he believed
in the Word of Wisdom.
He was a member of the Parowan Choir and for many years
served as its leader. When conference time arrived the
choir members would make themselves as comfortable as
possible in upholstered seats in air-conditioned wagons
behind steam of horses with floating power engines and
they would journey to Salt Lake City. One time while
they were camped near American Fork, people from the
town joined them, and a jolly time ensued. A comic song
contest was sponsored, Wilcock and a man by the name
of Laycock were the singers. First one then the other
would make his contribution, finally Laycock sang a
song that set the whole crowd roaring with laughter,
Wilcock followed with the song, "I Couldn't Help
Laughing; It Tickled Me So. " It was such a fitting
climax that all agreed Wilcock won the contest.
He was an expert ice skater and introduced the sport
in Parowan. He made many pairs of skates for the younger
people and taught them the art.
Due to his heavy work on the turning lathes and large
machines in the machine shops, William leaned to one
side as he walked. However, as a young man his five
feet and eleven inches was admired by the young girls.
While living in England an old maid occupied a room
in the same boarding house as he. She was terribly afraid
of electrical storms. One night as the lightning flashed
and thunder roared, terrified screams of a maiden in
danger were heard coming from her room, William rushed
to the scene and consoled the maid and she screamed
no more.
He must have like the name "Elizabeth"-anyway
he loved women by that name. At Warsborough, Yorkshire,
England, on November 5, 1851, he married Elizabeth Sharp.
Joseph Sharp performed the ceremony. She was born December
16, 1826, at Newark, Nottingham, England. To this union
were born five sons. They are: Edward, born January
31, 1852, at Warsborough, Yorkshire, England; Christopher,
June 9, 1854, at Newton, Le Willows, Lancashire, England;
Henry Sylvester, June 15, 1856, at St. Ellens, Lancashire,
England; William Sharp, February 22, 1861, at Salt Lake
City, Utah; and John Joseph, August 14, 1864, at Parowan,
Utah. The mission of this good woman ended on this earth
February 26, 1867, at Parowan, Utah.
On March 4, 1833, at Bolton, Lancashire, England, Elizabeth
Brown was born. William chose her for his next help-mate.
They were married June 16, 1867 at Parowan, Utah. Four
sons came to bless their happy home. They are: Ebenezer,
born February 25, 1869; Samuel Richard, January 19,
1871; Thomas Israel, April 17, 1873; and Ralph James,
June 21, 1876. All were born in Parowan, Utah.
Elizabeth Brown was a good mother as well as a womanly
woman. Friends who knew her say she was very kind and
considerate to the children of Elizabeth Sharp's as
well as those of her own. She died in Parowan on May
9, 1893.
William Wilcock was endowed and had his wives and children
sealed to him in the Old Endowment House at Salt Lake
City, Utah.
By trade he was a machinist and mechanic. He served
seven years in England as an apprentice to learn the
trade. He was a very efficient workman and was exceptionally
useful in the early settlement of Utah. He worked in
the first Sugar Factory that was built in Utah. This
factory was located in the Sugar House Ward in Salt
Lake City, Utah. He worked under a man by the name of
Nathan Davis. As tools were scarce at that time and
had to be imported, William was in great demand, If
he didn't have the tool or machinery he needed, he melted
cast and made it from raw material.
Soon after his arriving in Salt Lake City, and because
factories were so badly needed and shafting so hard
to get. he received permission from Davis and Howell
Foundry Company to make a steel turning lathe in their
plant. He made the wooden forms exactly as the piece
of machinery he needed; then firm sand was tamped around
the form. After the form was carefully removed molten
metal was run into the impression and the castings were
thus made. His lathe was made in this manner. On this
lathe he turned out the shafting that was so badly in
need, and many other nieces of machinery that could
be turned out on the lathe. He also made and tempered
the cutting points that were used in turning wrought
iron.
He was called by President Brigham Young to go to Iron
County with Ebenezer Hanks, and take charge of the Iron
Foundry there. Their first attempt was a poor grade
of iron, making the attempt unsuccessful. Later, however,
the foundry at Iron Springs was successful.
He next worked in a small foundry at Enoch, run by some
English people by the name of Jones. They cast wheels,
grates for stoves and other small articles. After this
he went to Parowan about 1863, and there resided the
remainder of his life.
Johnson's Army had been sent to Salt Lake City to settle
the Mormon Question. When the army was called back and
disbanded they threw their cannon balls and large government
wagons into some old wells at Fort Douglas. The iron
in Iron County being of poor grade and a turning lathe
to turn articles from steel being needed at Parowan;
William went to Fort Douglas, hoisted the cannon ball
and other iron castings on the wagons from the wells,
and freighted them to Parowan by oxen teams. Here he
made another but smaller turning lathe for turning steel,
from this iron. This lathe is still in existence today,
and is in perfect mechanical condition. It is owned
by Simon A. Matheson of Parowan. The only cannon ball
that can be told of what it once was, is a cannon ball
used as a weight to hold a lever in gear. He made and
used a chaser guide to turn threads on shafting and
bolts. He could turn any given number of threads per
inch, by guiding the chaser guide by hand and sight.
A feature, it is safe in saying, no one can do today.
He also made and tempered steel tools that would polish
metal to mirror brightness,
He made several other turning lathes for different
companies; two of which were made for turning wood.
William remodeled the wooden tub and bucket factory
in Parowan and built a complete cotton factory, duplicating
every part of it from raw material, molding all castings,
turning all shafting and tempering all steel used in
the factory. In this factory was used a water wheel
of center vent type, to furnish the power. It is not
known whether or not he designed this wheel, but he
was the first to introduce it to this country. It was
set vertical instead of horizontal, and water under
pressure was let in from an opening in the side striking
the blades whirl pool like. When the power of the water
was spent, it released from the bottom around the center
of the container. This type of wheel produced more speed
and about the same power as did the over and under shot
wheels.
The Cotton Factory was finally made over into a cabinet
shop. Simon Matheson worked and was in charge of it
for years. He has a chair in his home he made in this
factory, on William's wood lathe.
William Wilcock, just for his own amusement made an
all brass locomotive, so small it would set in the palm
of your hand. It was a perfect model of locomotives
used on railways at that time and would run around on
the floor by its own power. It generated its own steam
and used a cylinder. This locomotive is in the museum
at St. Louis, Missouri. He also made a tiny up and down
cylinder, stationary steam enginer, so small it would
set on a 50 cent piece, but it would still produce power.
Around 1880, William bought a steam sawmill from his
son Edward and a man by the name of Johnson. It was
a 25-horsepower stationary steam engine. He located
it in Parowan's second left hand canyon, in such a steep
place that he had to build a chute down the mountain
side, a mile or more, to convey the lumber down. He
placed brakes in the chute to slow the lumber down while
descending the mountain, so that it would not be broken
to bits at the bottom. He worked at saw mills in the
lumber business a great deal of the time from then on.
He took Mr. Matheson when he was but a boy of sixteen
years old and taught him the trade. Simon was his constant
companion, help mate, and student from then on. A very
quick and efficient student he must have been too, for
the help he gave William in his later years.
In the boilers of that time if the water got below
the crown sheet, the crown sheet would get red hot and
generate steam so fast that the boiler would explode.
William had one mill blow up this way and a man was
killed, so for the safety of his mill and men he invented
a safety plug for the boiler. This safety plug was made
of lead run into a hole in the crown sheet; when the
water got below the crown the lead would melt out releasing
the pressure in the boiler and the water and steam would
put the fire out. William made this plug only for the
protection of his own mills and didn't get a patent
for it. However, an Easterner saw it and took out the
patent for it for which he received a large sum of money.
Now all boilers are equipped with this same safety plug.
In Parowan's Old Church Building, now used as the Daughters
of the Pioneers Building, William sawed and turned out
the nine wooden posts supporting the roof. This work
is as beautiful as any turned out on modern machinery
of today.
William was a very efficient and accurate person. There
wasn't anything in his trades he couldn't do. If anything
came up he didn't know how to do, he made a way and
did it. This was proven many times by things many others
had tried to do but failed and finally brought to him.
He did the jobs very satisfactorily. A knife that was
used to cut shingles was burned and the temper lost.
Many tried to temper it but failed. It was in the end
brought to William. He tempered it and today it is still
cutting shingles. He also tempered steel drills that
would drill through circular saw steel as if it were
soft metal.
To make a long story shorter, we can truly say that
William Wilcock was the best and most complete machinist
and mechanic who crossed the Atlantic Ocean.
While working in England a minute piece of metal flying
from the cutting point of a turning lathe, claimed the
sight of one of William's eyes. A small triangle of
wood thrown by the saw, while sawing pickets robbed
him of his other eye, leaving him totally blind. Now
Simon Matheson was no doubt appreciated more than ever
as he was William's eyes. And as Mr. Matheson adds,
"Wilcock was the brains. " William did much
work even in his blind condition and could tell by the
sound of machinery what the trouble was .
Ashton and Whitney got the idea of perpetual motion.
William laughed at them, but after he was blind, he
got to thinking about it and even had a plan. He went
so far as to have a small model made but his ideas never
materialized.
Honesty was the policy of this good man, which is proven
by the fact that when the Bank at Pioche, Nevada, over
paid him, he returned their money. He was not wealthy
in a material sense, but he did provide his family a
comfortable living.
One time he and his blind friend, William Morris, were
walking along and came upon a ditch. Mr. Morris asked,
"William, can you see the reflection of the sun
on the water?" "No," was the reply. They
turned to cross the bridge and Wilcock hit his shin
on the rail. Splash! he was in the ditch, water up around
his waist! Believe it or not he never even lost his
hat and blind Mr. Morris fished him out with a cane.
Children loved him and called him the candy man for
in his pockets were always peppermints, which he gave
them to lead him across the streets. Today, in Parowan
peppermints are called "Wilcock Candy."
William was active up to a short time before he passed
away, Horrace Thornton ordained him a Seventy February
22, 1865. Thirty-one years later, June 22, 1896, he
was ordained to the office of High Priest by Apostle
F. M. Lyman.
His earth's work being completed, William was called
home on September 5, 1906. Burial was made in Parowan
September 7.
Those who knew him best say he was never too busy to
impart freely of his knowledge to others. He was indeed
very helpful. We can truthfully say that the world is
better for his having lived. To the "Wilcock Family:
What a wonderful heritage is ours! May our Father in
Heaven help us carry the torch of Progress Forward."