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Boyd (Carrie) Family Papers
MS 924  
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Collection Details
 
Table of contents What's This?
  • Conditions Governing Access
  • Conditions Governing Access
  • Immediate Source of Acquisition
  • Arrangement
  • Biography
  • Additional Collection Guides
  • Preferred Citation
  • Processing Information
  • Scope and Contents
  • Conditions Governing Use

  • Contributing Institution: California State Railroad Museum Library & Archives
    Title: Carrie Boyd family papers
    Identifier/Call Number: MS 924
    Physical Description: .333 Linear Feet 1 manuscript box
    Date (inclusive): 1947-1957, 1968-1972
    Abstract: Contains the familial history of the Boyd family, including correspondence, photographs, and historical narratives regarding Carrie Boyd, John David Boyd Sr, John David Boyd Jr, and other family members. According to the family's lore, Carrie Boyd was an infant at the "Golden Spike" ceremony in Promontory, Utah on May 10, 1869. The collection also includes the historical narrative and timebooks of Arvil Reid, a railroad boomer who married into the family and who was actively working on the ralroad during the late 1960's.
    Physical Location: Statewide Museum Collections Center: I2.212.V5
    Language of Material: English .

    Conditions Governing Access

    Collection is open for research by appointment.

    Conditions Governing Access

    Collection is open for research by appointment. Contact Library Staff

    Immediate Source of Acquisition

    Gift of Becky Dayton, 2023

    Arrangement

    MS 924 is arranged into five series:
    Series 1. Boyd Family Narratives
    Series 2. Correspondence
    Series 3. Photographs
    Series 4. Timebooks
    Series 5. Audio Cassette

    Biography

    John David Boyd, Sr. (1839-1917) was the son of John Boyd and Jane Callister and was born on the Isle of Man in the town of Teal. At the age of 15, he traveled to Salt Lake City. In 1856 he went into Oregon and Washington as a packer for the Hudson Bay Fur Company. Later, he ran a pack train for the government through Oregon and Washington. He left his job and married Victoria Ladosha Hubbard (1844-1929) in Ogden, Utah on April 3, 1864. They had fifteen children: Almeda Jane Boyd (1865-1890), Hulda Theodolia Boyd (1866-1866), Ida Melissa Boyd (1867-?), Ida Melissa Boyd (1868-1866?), Carrie Victoria Boyd (1869-1963), Ephy Collister Boyd (1871-1963), John David Boyd, Jr. (1871-1963), Edward Gracie Boyd (1872-1892), Chester Hubbard Boyd (1874-1879), Nancy Bell Boyd (1875-1967), Ashley Tilly Boyd (1877-1957), Olive Annie Boyd (1879-1906), Ephriam Callister Boyd (1882-1963), George William Boyd (1884-1908), and Eda Grace Boyd (1886-1979).
    In May of 1869, John and Victoria took their children on the first train headed west to Vallejo, California. According to family lore, 3 month old Carrie Boyd is held by one of the women on the passenger car of A.J. Russell's photograph "Engineers of U.P.R.R. at the Laying of the Last Rail, Promontory." They would have been one of the first families to travel West on the first transcontinental railroad. A year later, the family returned to Utah. John and Victoria would raise their kids in the area for several years, with John Boyd Sr. and John Boyd Jr. working in the pack train industry around Idaho and Utah. John Boyd Jr. would help in construction of what is now the Union Pacific Railroad by banking ties that were floated down the streams and rivers nearby the town of Cokeville, Wyoming. John Boyd Sr. would also help the Union Pacific railroad by furnishing beef for it as it continued construction nearby. The family would eventually move to Arizona, and continued their work of pack trains in the area by transporting goods and supplies to various forts in the area through Indian Territory. During this time John Boyd Jr. and Sr. would be attacked. Carrie Boyd would join the family in Arizona, and eventually marry a man named William Fbriling Sleworth, whom she would have a child with on October 17, 1913, named Victor Henry Slewort.
    Further down the family tree, is Arvil Shields Reid, who was born on November 13, 1922 to his parents: Clarence Reid, and Winnie Reid. Arvil would marry Ida Lucile Boyd in 1942 in Utah and have two children with her. He was in the Army during World War Two and fought against the Japanese in the Pacific Theatre. After their marriage the couple worked and ran a Chevron gas station, before his work began for the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad as an enginner and helper around the area of Provo, Utah. He would also pick up work for both the Union Pacific Railroad and the Utah Railway Company, as he was a railroad boomer. He suffered a serious injury in 1972, working on the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad, when a loaded railcar hit Arvil S. Reid, seriously injuring him and killing two coworkers named Rupert Lewis and Aubrey Means. Arvil Sheilds Reid would pass away on April 30, 2020 at the age of 97. He is survived by two children, including Becky Dayton (The great niece of Carrie Boyd), who donated the family's collection to CSRM in 2023.

    Preferred Citation

    [Identification of item], Carrie Boyd Family Papers, MS 924, California State Railroad Museum Library & Archives, Sacramento, California.

    Processing Information

    Many of the original photographs in this collection were taken out and the placed into CSRM's portrait collection. Copies were retained and can be found in Sereies 3: Photographs.

    Scope and Contents

    The Boyd Family Papers contains history of the Boyd family, including correspondence, photographs, and family histories regarding Carrie Boyd, John David Boyd Sr, John David Boyd Jr, Anna Amelia, snf Hulda Theodotia. The collection also includes a historical narrative and timebooks of Arvil Reid, a railroad boomer who married into the Boyd family and who was actively working on the ralroad from the 1940's to the early 1970's. These family histories contain details regarding early migration to the Western part of the United States, life in the early days of the Idaho Territory, as well as details regarding work in the pack train industry. This family was active in and around the Southeastern Idaho Territory from the decades of the 1860's and the 1870's. The discussions found within the family histories include details about Idaho, Wyoming, Utah, and Arizona. These family histories include their journey to Arizona, where the family settled and lived for many years, following their journey there in 1881. Arvil Reid's history includes more modern details about working for the railroading industry around Provo, mainly dealing with the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad from the 1950's to the early 1970's.
    The collection varies in terms of its format. The family history's are copies of the written autobiographies of the family member, and if the history was written in cursive the folders also contain a print version, which was transcribed by Becky Dayton. The collection also contains the timebooks of Arvil S. Reid, and an audio cassette which has contains a family oral history.

    Conditions Governing Use

    Copyright has been assigned to the California State Railroad Museum. Permission for publication must be submitted in writing to the CSRM Library amp; Archives.

    Subjects and Indexing Terms

    Correspondence--Letters
    Transcontinental Railroad
    Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen
    Narratives--personal