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Our Current Newsletter Spring 2012
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Brazilla Caswell ALLRED (CP010104011307)
Allred Progenitors: (Claiborne, John, William, William or Wilhelm, John
Dieder)
Born: 03/10/1849
Died: 11/05/1935
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 01/29/1999
Family history recollections, written by Rev. Brazilla
Caswell Allred in 1922, and submitted by William Franklin
Mendenhall of Long Beach, California. The Reverend was his great
Uncle “B.C.”, brother of his Grandfather William Franklin Allred
of Randolph County, North Carolina.
My great-grandfather, William Allred, was born and reared to
manhood in Pennsylvania. In early life he came to North Carolina
and entered a large tract of land in one and a half miles and
settled down (there), where he lived to a good old age and
reared his family. The time of his coming to North Carolina was
about 1740 or 1750. His house was built within about fifty yards
of the creek, near a spring which came form under a large rock,
which was about 20 feet high and at least 100 feet long, and 50
feet or 60 feet wide. There was an abundance of fine fish in the
creek and river, and lots of game in the woods, such as turkey,
deer, wolves, and an occasional bear or panther.
My grandfather, John Allred, was born and reared in this same
house. In the same home my father, Claiborne Allred, who was the
youngest son of John Allred and Sarah Spencer, his wife, and my
mother Orpha Russell, settled when they first married and most
of their family of seven children were born.
When the revolutionary war came close, my grandfather, John
Allred, shouldered his flintlock rifle and fought for the
freedom of the American Colonies to the end of the war. The fact
of my grandfather’s fighting against the British aroused the
anger of Col. David Fannen, the leader of the Tories or British
Sympathizers, and he and his band of men went to my
great-granddaughter’s in search of John, my grandfather, who
happened to be at home, saw them coming, snatched up his gun and
secreted himself in the attic, and it so happened that they did
not go up there to search for him. My great-grandfather also saw
them approaching, took up his gun and ran out northwest of the
house and lay down behind a large rock. I have seen the rock and
played around it many times when I was a boy. He could see
Fannen and his men from his hiding place when they went out to
his crib, later opened the crib door and let many barrels of
corn run out, did the same at another log crib, then turned
their horses loose in the lot to eat and trample and corn into
the red mud. When they had eaten all they wanted them to have,
they saddled them up and started on toward the western part of
the county.
My great-grandfather had a sprightly Negro by the name of
Kiltyre whom Fannen took with him. The first night they spent at
the widow Kindley’s near the river, who had a good many slaves.
Kiltyre seemed so delighted with his new friends that Fannen
told him to go down to the Negro cabins and spend the night; but
Kiltyre never got to the cabins and the next morning was at
home, where he remained until the old Master’s death. In the
division of the estate, Kiltyre fell to my grandfather, where he
spent the balance of his life. My grandfather and all the
children thought a great deal of Kiltrye, and built him a little
home in the lane, about 200 yards north of his own house, and
allowed him a great many privileges that he did not allow his
other slaves. Kiltyre spent many of his last years in that
little log cabin in the lane, and from it his spirit went out
into the Great Beyond. I never saw him, for he died several
years before I was born, but I heard my father and mother speak
of him so often that I feel like I ought to know him.
My grandfather, John Allred, married Sarah Spencer, and settled
about one and half miles southeast of his father, where he
reared a large family and lived to be about 97 years old. He and
his wife and several of his children were buried in Trogdon
graveyard across Deep River and south of his home. My father was
the youngest of 18 children born unto him and his wife. Four
sons and eight daughters lived to be grown and most of them to a
good old age. One daughter died when nearly grown. The other
five died in infancy or early childhood. They all, with Uncle
William Allred and aunt Vicie Dougan, sleep with their father
and mother in Trogdon cemetery.
My father, Claiborne Allred, in early manhood married Orpha S.
Russell, daughter of Samuel and Leah (Brugess) Russell, and
settled at his grandfather’s old home on the hill near Bush
Creek. There most of his children were born. Later he built
about a half mile north of his father’s house. In that house I
was born, and in that house my mother and father both died. Also
my little sister Elizabeth, who died of measles when a bit over
two years old.
Seven children were born to my father and mother as follows:
Minerva Adeline, who married Alfred E. Smith, and has been a
widow nearly 42 years; William Franklin, who married Mattie
Green (Ed. Note: She was Martisha Caroline Green. Their
daughter, Ida Martisha Allred, married Edward Emerson Mendenhall
1 October 1896, in Randleman, Randolph County, North Carolina,
and they were the parents of William Franklin Mendenhall), and
has been a widower about four year; Lovey Jane, who married
Oliver P. Hays. She died in less than two years, leaving a
little girl, Ellen M., whom my mother raised, and who married
George A. Loughlin, a Methodist-Protestant minister. She lived
only ten years after marriage and now sleeps in the
Methodist-Protestant cemetery at Cedar Falls. My third sister,
Mary Catherine, married Mountaville Jones and has been a widow
many years: Jerome Bonaparte, who married Agnes Griffith of
Indiana; she lived only a short time, and he then came back to
North Carolina, marrying Ann Gibson, who died in Arkansas where
he now lives. (Note: Their other two children were, of course,
B.C. and Elizabeth).
My mother’s father, Samuel Russell, and her mother, Leah
Russell, are buried at old Cool Spring Church in Randolph, also
Uncle William and Aunt Betsy Russell, mother’s brother and
sister, who died young, are buried at old Cool Spring Church,
which is about eight miles north of Franklinsville. That is the
church where mother went to Sunday School and class meeting when
she was a girl, as grandfather lived near there.
Samuel Russell, my grandfather, was reared in Stokes County,
North Carolina, on Dan River. He moved to Randolph County in
early life and married Leah Brugess, living the balance of his
life near the church where he now rests with his fine son and
daughter.
My mother had three brothers and four sisters besides Uncle
William and aunt Betsy: George, who married my father’s sister,
Rebecca, moved to Madison County, Tennessee, and settled near
Jackson; Uncle Howell, married and moved to Obion County,
Tennessee; Uncle Jerome V., married Martha Waisiger of
Fayetteville and settled in Franklinsville, is buried in the
Methodist cemetery at that place; Aunt Polly Russell married
John Bain, and after his death moved with her children to East
Tennessee; Aunt Alva Russell went to her brother George’s and
married a Mr. Edwards, moving to Arkansas; Aunt Lovery Russell
married Wesley Jones of Guilford County, North Carolina, then
moved to Franklinsville in Jones of Guilford County, North
Carolina, then moved to Franklinsville in old age, where they
both died and are buried in the Methodist Cemetery.
My father’s brother, John, married Polly York, and reared a
large family, dying within a few miles of here he was born.
Uncle Elisha Allred married Barbara Spoons, and first settled on
Bush Creek, near he father, but several years before his death
moved about 15 miles below Franklinsville on Deep River and is
buried near Moffitt’s Mill. He reared twelve children.
Uncle William Allred died in early manhood. My father’s sister
married as follows: Vivie married William Dougan and lived on
Caraway Creek, and had a son who died; Jennie married William
Carter, who lived on Richland Creek in the southern part of the
county; Sallie married William Free and moved to Hendrix County,
Indiana, settling near Brownsburg; Rebecca married my mother’s
brother George and moved to Tennessee, as stated: Matsy married
Solomon Free and they lived and died across the river from Cedar
Falls, both succumbing to typhoid fever within a few hours and
were buried in the same grave at Giles meetinghouse; Polly
married Alexander Gray, and they settled about two and a half
miles north of Franklinsville on the road toward Gray’s Chapel,
where they are buried; Uncle Alex was 84 and Aunt Polly was in
her 97th year. Aley and Lavina never married, but spent all
their lives near their place of birth, dying of old age.
Four sons were born to Aunt Polly and Uncle Alex: Robert, who
died in Thomasville; Sandy; Dr. John and Dr. Claiborne. All of
them left large families, except Dr. John. He is buried at
Gray’s Chapel.
So ends, rather abruptly, Reverend “B.C’s” narrative. For over
thirty years he was an itinerant Methodist minister, and died in
November 1937.
He married, first, Sallie Janet Rives, daughter Col. J.F. and
Elizabeth (Marsh) Rives of Chatham County, North Carolina. She
died 3 June 1881. Their children were: Sallie J., who died
shortly after birth; Junius B., who died at about 16; Linville
H. Of Erwin, Tennessee, who married, first, Myrtle May of spring
Hope, North Carolina, and second Ruth Howard of Fayetteville,
North Carolina; Caswell C., who died in early manhood; Jane
Claiborne of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and James Claiborne,
who married Alyse Ellis of Kittrell, North Carolina.
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