JULIA HILLS JOHNSON
Born September 28, 1763 in Upton Massachusetts
Died May 30, 1853 in Council Bluffs Iowa
Married Ezekiel Johnson January 12, 1801 in Grafton Mass.
Her father died when she was young from tuberculosis. Her
mother married Enoch Forbush. She was from a substantial New England
family, being a descendent of the early Massachusetts
settlers, intelligent, and reasonably well educated. She was a staunch
Presbyterian and taught her children to read the bible and pray. Her oldest
son, Joel H. went to Anerherst where he was baptized, She sent him a letter
warning them of the "Mormons". He wrote back and said he'd already
been baptized and sent a copy of the Book Of Mormon. She read it with family
members and close friends, and when Joel and the missionaries came, she was
secretly baptized in the middle of the night. When Ezekiel found out, he was
very upset, he had been considering baptism also, but because she did it
without discussing it first, he was turned away from the Church. She was the
first mother-in-law of plural marriage. Her daughter Almera became the
Prophet's 1st plural wife and also the first plural wife in the church. Julia
made hats, neckties, and did needle work to help make ends meet and later to
help with building the Kirkland Temple. She wrote the hymn THE JOY AND THE SONG
which Emma Smith requested be put in THE FIRST BOOK OF HYMNS FOR THE RESTORED
CHURCH. Because Ezekiel wouldn't join the church and had left the home for
good, Julia was advised to be sealed to John Smith. She was a member of the
first Woman's Relief Society of the Church. She trusted fully in the Lord. When
writing to her half sister of the death of her four children, she said
"What can I say, but the Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away." In
all she did she was faithful. She traveled with "Kirkland Camp" to
Missouri. During the trip, near Springfield, Illinois, Samuel Hale and his wife
died leaving a ten year old daughter. Julia adopted her and raised her as one
of her own. While they were in Springfield, Julia and her son George Washington
contracted typhoid fever and nearly died. She was a very strong member and
loved the church very much. When the great migration west started, she stayed
in Council Bluffs, Iowa, where she died. She was a very loved and highly
thought of person.