Born  7 April 1813 to Zilpha Potter and Robert Montgomery
Married John Russell King 20 April 1836 in Vermont
Hannah-Rose Ellen-Russell-Norma
Died 21 January 1892 in Ohio
Buried in Mantua, Ohio 
1850 Census
1860 Census
1870 Census 
1880 Census 
This comes from the Hatch Family Album and has a little information  about Hannah.  I hope to find or create a more complete  history soon.
Rose Ellen King Hatch's great-grandfather, John  King, lived in Ashfield, Massachusetts, in the 1760s and died in  Bennington County, Vermont, in 1822. His son, Enoch King, was the one  who first joined the Church, in September, 1830, and moved to Hiram,  Ohio. This was during the Kirtland period of Church history and many  Saints were moving to Kirtland, Hiram, and vicinity. Enoch King also  bought land in Jackson County, Missouri, and later near Nauvoo,  Illinois. It is reported that he tried to come west but was unable to  because of his wife's strong objections.
Rose Ellen's mother was  Hannah Amelia Montgomery, who married Enoch's son, John Russell King.  She was John Russell King's second wife, as his first wife had died.  Rose Ellen had twelve brothers and sisters, three of them from the  earlier marriage of her father.
Rose Ellen's father, John Russell  King, farmed. He would often buy pieces of depleted land, replant the  land with legumes, and then plow them into the soil. By doing this over a  period of several years to enrich the soil, he was then able to sell  the land for a profit. He and his family came west shortly after the  first pioneers. They were a prosperous family and did not sell their  home in Ohio. They were able to take many horses west with them.
When  they arrived in Salt Lake City, they visited Jane King Smith, John  Russell King's niece, who was the wife of Judge Elias Smith. While  there, one of the King family had a dream which was interpreted to mean  that only one of the family would remain in Utah. This was later  fulfilled as Rose Ellen King was the only one to settle in Utah.
The  family left the Salt Lake Valley and journeyed north to Brigham City,  and, while there, John Russell King helped to survey Mantua, five miles  east of Brigham City Utah. The Kings were not impressed by the farming  conditions here and decided to return to Ohio by route of Alder Gulch  (Virginia City, Montana) with the intention of doing some gold  prospecting on the way. While traveling, in order to protect themselves  from some roughnecks along the trail, they joined Ephraim Hatch and his  brother who were freighting produce from their farm in Woods Cross to  the miners in Nevada City, Montana.
Rose Ellen and Ephraim fell  in love and later were married in Nevada City. She obtained work as a  cook and Ephraim planted grain on a local farm. He grew a fine crop but  became disillusioned as the owner allowed horses to run over and damage  the grain. The young couple left Nevada City and returned to Woods Cross  where they established themselves permanently. (Writings of Thomas F.  King, Son of Thomas J. King, Treasures 0f Pioneer History, p. 49. Vital  Records of Vermont, F6593 part 1.)
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