John Rowe Moyle

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The Handcart Pioneer Monument. Moyle's likeness was used for the adult male in the creation of this stature.

John Rowe Moyle (22 February 1808,

stonemason for the Salt Lake Temple, and was the carver of the inscription "Holiness to the Lord" on the temple's east side.[2][3]

Biography

Moyle was born in Cornwall, England, to James and Elizabeth Rowe Moyle.

tin mines of Cornwall, and later became a stonemason, learning the trade from his father.[1][6] He and his family converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) in 1851. Moyle travelled to Utah Territory with the first handcart company in 1856, settling in Alpine two years later.[1][6]

Both a farmer and a stonemason, Moyle traveled to Salt Lake City frequently to serve on the temple construction.[3] Moyle installed the Temple's circular staircase and carved the inscription "Holiness to the Lord" on the east side of the Temple.[1][3] In 1863, Moyle built a chapel in Alpine. He also built an Indian fort to protect his family during the invasion of Salt Lake City by federal troops.[7]

Moyle suffered a compound fracture of the leg when he was kicked by a cow, necessitating the leg's amputation by his family and friends. Moyle subsequently carved a wooden leg for himself and learned how to use it. After the accident, he would again walk to Salt Lake City and work on the temple.[1][2][3]

Moyle was married to Phillippa Beer, who was born in

James Henry Moyle, a prominent Utah politician, and the great-grandfather of Henry D. Moyle, an apostle of the LDS Church.[6][9]

Legacy

Torleif S. Knaphus used Moyle's likeness (along with several others) as the inspiration for the father's face on the Handcart Pioneer Monument on Temple Square.[10] Moyle is the subject of the 2008 short film Only a Stonecutter, directed by T. C. Christensen and starring Bruce Newbold.[11][12]

References

  1. ^
    LCCN 98-72414
    .
  2. ^
    LDS Church
  3. ^ a b c d e Lindquist, Rusty (5 October 2008). "Holiness to the Lord, the story of John Rowe Moyle". Mormon Conversations. Archived from the original on 23 July 2012. Retrieved 3 January 2013.[unreliable source?]
  4. ^ "John Rowe Moyle". Ancestry.com. 2013. Retrieved 6 January 2013.[unreliable source?]
  5. (1952). Treasures of Pioneer History. Vol. 6. Compiled by Kate B. Carter. Daughters of Utah Pioneers. p. 233.
  6. ^ .
  7. ^ Todd, Arthur Cecil (1968). The Cornish miner in America: the contribution to the mining history of the United States by immigrant Cornish miners—the men called Cousin Jacks. Western lands and waters. Vol. 6. Barton. p. 239.
  8. OCLC 4995807
    .
  9. ^ Uchtdorf erroneously refers to Henry D. Moyle as John Rowe Moyle's "grandson".
  10. ^ Lloyd, R. Scott (7 February 2009), "Sculpture bound for Norway", Church News, ... [G]randfather used a number of models for his work, but for the father in the handcart sculpture, he used, among others, the likeness of John Rowe Moyle, a handcart pioneer and a stonecutter who worked on the Salt Lake Temple.
  11. IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  12. .

External links