Hannah Elizabeth Buck Hart was born in Ogden, Utah on January 5, 1868. A daughter of Charles Buck and Hannah Chantry Buck, she being the 4th child of a family of 11 children.
She went by Elizabeth or Liz most of the time, since her mother's first name was Hannah as well.
When her older sister died at the age of nine, seven-year-old Liz was left as the oldest daughter in the family. She worked and helped her mother and father on their farm.
She married Walter Hart on March 28, 1888 in the Logan LDS Temple. They had eight children: four boys and four girls, though one daughter was stillborn.
Elizabeth received her certificate as a Midwife and Nurse in August of 1893. She would go in all kinds of weather to help the sick and to deliver babies in the area. Whenever somebody needed her help, Liz was always there.
When she was around 40 years old, Elizabeth began to develop severe Arthritis, eventually getting to the point where she could no longer walk, and was in a wheelchair for the last nine years of her life.
At the age of 62, she had a stroke. She lived for five days before finally passing away on March 20, 1930.
Hannah Elizabeth Buck Hart was born in Ogden, Utah on January 5, 1868. A daughter of Charles Buck and Hannah Chantry Buck, she being the 4th child of a family of 11 children.
She went by Elizabeth or Liz most of the time, since her mother's first name was Hannah as well.
When her older sister died at the age of nine, seven-year-old Liz was left as the oldest daughter in the family. She worked and helped her mother and father on their farm.
She married Walter Hart on March 28, 1888 in the Logan LDS Temple. They had eight children: four boys and four girls, though one daughter was stillborn.
Elizabeth received her certificate as a Midwife and Nurse in August of 1893. She would go in all kinds of weather to help the sick and to deliver babies in the area. Whenever somebody needed her help, Liz was always there.
When she was around 40 years old, Elizabeth began to develop severe Arthritis, eventually getting to the point where she could no longer walk, and was in a wheelchair for the last nine years of her life.
At the age of 62, she had a stroke. She lived for five days before finally passing away on March 20, 1930.
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