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James ALLRED (010203)
Allred Progenitors: (William, Thomas)
Born: 01/22/1784 Randolph Co., NC
Died: 01/10/1876 Spring City, Sanpete Co., UT
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 03/29/1999
JAMES ALLRED: A BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH
J. Terry Walker
Brigham Young University
March 1974
(This biography of James Allred was originally written for a
history class at Brigham Young University. It is not a
definitive biography but will give the reader a fairly complete
history of James Allred. In the future, the author hopes to add
more to this history such as the recent finding that James
Allred left Kanesville, Iowa in late May or later of 1851. The
author’s interest in James Allred stems from the fact that he is
a great-great-great-great-grandson of his through his son James
T.S. Allred and his grand-daughter Eliza Maria Allred Munson.)
The life of James Allred covers almost a full century and spans
the history of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
from its earliest years to near the end of Brigham Young’s
tenure as Church President. James Allred held many leadership
positions in the communities in which he lived as well as in the
Church and was one of the founders of several of the earliest
communities in the Sanpete Valley. He lived to a ripe old age
and much deserved the title of “Father Allred,” which he was
very often called.
He was born on January 22, 1784 in Randolph County, North
Carolina to William and Elizabeth Thrasher Allred.1 On November
14, 1803, he married Elizabeth Warren (born on May 6, 1789 to
Thomas Warren and Hannah Cothen in South Carolina) in Randolph
County and shortly thereafter moved to Franklin county, Georgia
where their first son, William Hackley Allred was born in 1804.
Sometime before 1806, the family moved to Warren County,
Kentucky where a second son, Martin Carrell Allred was born in
1806. Then they moved to Yellow Banks on the Ohio River, and a
third child, a daughter, Hanna Caroline Allred was born in 1808.
Early in 1811, the family moved once more and settled in Bedford
County, Tennessee where they remained for nineteen years and
where eight more children were born. The names and birth dates
of these children are as follows: Sally, April 13, 1811; Isaac,
June 28, 1813; Ruben Warren, November, 1815; Nancy Chummy,
September 10, 1820; Eliza Maria, October, 1822; James Tillman
Sanford, March 28, 1825; and John Franklin Lafayette, June 26,
1827. In 1830, the family moved to the *Salt River in Ralls
County, Missouri. The county was divided shortly thereafter, and
the Allred’s were in Monroe County. This settlement on the Salt
River became known as the “Allred Settlement” because of the
large number of Allred kindred living there, and it was here
that the twelfth child, a boy, Andrew Jackson Allred was born to
James and Elizabeth.2
It was at Salt River, Monroe county in 1831 that the Allred’s;
James and his family, some of his older sons and their families
and Isaac (brother of James) and his family came in contact with
L.D.S. missionaries, Hyrum Smith and John Murdock.3 On September
10, 1832, James and many of his relatives were baptized in the
Church by George M. Hinkle, and the Salt River Branch was
organized.4 In 1834, the Zion’s Camp march to western Missouri
under the direction of Hyrum and Joseph Smith stopped at the
Allred Settlement for several days. James, two of his sons, two
sons-in-law, and five others joined the Camp in the march
westward.5
After living five years in Monroe county, the families of James,
Isaac, and William (another brother) moved to Clay County.6
James moved again in 1837 to Caldwell County where he was
elected county judge and President of the Southern firm.7
Because of the continuous persecution of the Saints, the
families of James, one son, and one son-in-law moved to
Pittsfield, Pike County, Illinois in 1839.8 James was still in
Pittsfield on September 27 when Brigham Young and Heber C.
Kimball stayed overnight at his house while they were en route
to missions in England.9
Sometime thereafter, James moved his family to Nauvoo where he
purchased Lot I of Block 148.10
(Note in Joseph Smith’s Day Book, James Allred purchased Lot 1
of Block 147 for $250 but the Hancock County Tax Records show
him paying taxes on Block 148.) Block 148 in Nauvoo is just one
block north of where Joseph Smith lived in the Homestead. This
close proximity to the Prophet probably developed into a close
relationship between the two men and is shown by the civic and
church associations that James Allred had with Joseph Smith.
Also, late in 1839, James Allred’s name appears on a petition
(along with most other Church members) to the state of Missouri
for $2000 for the recovery of lost property.11
In Nauvoo, James Allred did business with Peter Haws and Oliver
Granger and on January 9, 1840 purchased eighteen pounds of meat
and some other items.12 Throughout the Nauvoo period, James also
made many purchases from Joseph Smith’s Store.13
A major acquisition for the Allreds took place in 1840 when
Martin Carrell Allred and his wife died and left eight children.
James and Elizabeth then took the children into their home and
raised them.14
Another event in 1840 James Allred was involved in was the
“Tully Affair.” The following account is a summary of the
information found in the “Journal History” on July 13, and
August 21, 1840 on this event. It appears that a group of from
eight to twelve Missourians crossed the Mississippi River into
Illinois in search of stolen goods and Mormons who were the
suspected culprits. On July 7 near Lima, Hancock County, they
captured and bound James Allred, Alanson Brown, Benjamin Boyce,
and Noah Roers. They took them back to Tully, Lewis County,
Missouri, put them in a room overnight, and finally took them
out the next night. They then put a rope around Brown’s neck,
hung him until he was almost dead, then whipped him. Allred was
stripped of his clothing, tied to a tree, and threatened with
whipping but released because of his age (he was fifty-six).
Rogers and Boyce were individually tied to trees with ropes
around their necks and were severely whipped and beaten. Brown
escaped back to Illinois on Friday the 10th, and Allred was
released with a passport which gave him permission to leave
Missouri on the 12th. On the 13th, Allred and Brown appeared in
the court in Nauvoo before Justice of the Peace Daniel H. Wells
and told their versions of the episode. As a result of the
actions of these Missourians, a town meeting was held in Nauvoo,
and a committee was chosen to write Governor Carlin of Illinois
to seek justice and freedom for the Saints. The names of the
Missourians involved in this affair were: William Allensworth,
H.M. Woodyard, William Martin, John H. Owsley, John Bain, Light
T. Tait, Halsey White and three others known only by the names
of Monday, Huner, and Una.
Another version of this episode and the ensuing events comes
from the Masters thesis15 of Cecil A. Snider entitled
Development of Attitudes in Sectarian Conflict: A Study of
Mormonism in Illinois in Contemporary Newspaper Sources and
which for these events simply presents them as they were written
in the “Quincy Whig” by S.M. Barrlett during June, July, and
September of 1840. According to Bartlett, Brown was seen in
Tully, Missouri the night before the goods were stolen and was
found with Boyce hunting horses in Illinois near where the
stolen goods and the boat used to transport them were recovered
(pp. 44 and 51). Then Allred and Rogers were taken from a wagon
and accused of attempting to pick up the goods which Allred knew
nothing of according to Rogers (pp. 51-52). Bartlett describes
James Allred as “a very respectable old gentleman, whose gray
hairs should have protected him from insult” (p. 51). When the
four men were taken to Missouri, confined, and tortured, James
apparently spoke his mind (p. 42) and “behaved with such
resolution and pointed out to them (the Missourians) so clearly
their injustice and inhumanity, that after stripping and
fastening him to a tree, and taunting him with epithets of the
foulest character, they took him down and finally set him at
liberty.” Brown was apparently not beaten either, confessed to
stealing the goods, and finally told the Missourians where the
rest of the loot was (p. 52).
At this time, the “Quincy Whig” was quite pro-Mormon, and Sam
Bartlett vigorously defended the Saints. After Governor Carlin’s
man investigated the affair and reported to the Governor, Carlin
agreed with Governor Boggs of Missouri to exchange Joseph Smith
and Sidney Rigdon for several of the guilty Missourians. This
really upset Bartlett, and he wrote several editorials in
September condemning the action of the two governors and the
possible extradition of Smith and Rigdon to Missouri because he
did not expect the Mormons to get a fair trial due to the
persecutions they had suffered there before (pp. 53-59).
In 1841 when the Nauvoo Legion was organized, James Allred was
chosen as a member of Lieutenant General Joseph Smith’s staff as
an Aid-de-Camp and a guard to the Prophet. His rank at this time
was Captain of Infantry.16
In February of the same year, the Nauvoo Agricultural and
Manufacture Association was formed, and James Allred was a
stockholder and Trustee. The purpose of the association was to
promote agriculture and husbandry and to manufacture flour,
lumber, and other useful articles that were needed by the
people. The capital stock was $100,000, and the individual
shares were $50. Joseph Smith, Sidney Rigdon, and William Law
were the Commissioners to distribute the stock which was sold at
10% down and the rest in later payments. There was to be twenty
Trustees, a President, a Secretary, and a Treasurer who were
elected the first Monday of September for one year terms.17
At April conference in 1841, James Allred was appointed to the
Nauvoo High Council to replace Charles Rich who had been chosen
as a counselor in the Stake Presidency. James remained on the
High Council for the next five years until the Saints left for
the West.18
Late in 1841, James joined the Nauvoo Masonic Order but it is
uncertain how long he remained a member because his attendance
at meetings was not very good.19
Elizabeth Allred, the wife of James, was also busy in the
Church. When the Relief Society was organized in 1842, she was
one of the first members and joined the Relief Society at its
second meeting on the 24th of March 1842.20
As a member of the High Council in 1842, James was chosen as an
arbitrator in a land dispute along with William Marks, Alpheus
Cutler, George W. Harris, and a Brother Johnston. The committee
was to listen to the claims of Alexander Stanley and others and
Brother Pierce and then make their decision. At the same
meeting, the High Council charged a man with “illicit
intercourse” with a girl who was pregnant, for the teaching her
that the heads of the Church practiced such conduct, and that
the time would come when men would have more than one wife.21
Apparently the doctrine of plural marriage was leaking
somewhere, and at least one person had attempted to practice it
without proper authority.
In 1843 (no date is given), James Allred, his wife Elizabeth,
and four of their sons (James T.S., John Franklin Lafayette,
Ruben Warren, and Andrew Jackson) lived in the Nauvoo Fourth
Ward. Four other Allred’s are listed with James’ family (Sally,
Elizabeth, James R., and George M.), and they were probably
James’ grandchildren from his son Martin who had died in 1840.
Also in the same Fourth Ward were many Church leaders such as
Brigham Young, John Taylor, Heber C. Kimball, George Miller,
Edward Partridge, Joseph B. Noble, and Hyrum Smith.22
For the next three years, the available information on James
Allred is pretty scanty. He is mentioned in the Nauvoo City
Council Proceedings though, and on February 11, 1843, he was
elected Supervisor of Streets by the City Council for a two year
term.23 He was re-elected to the same position two years later
on February 8, 1845, and at the same time, he petitioned the
Council for $35 in back pay which he received as well as an
extra $75 for extra services rendered.24 In the position of the
Supervisor of Streets, he must have been fairly busy because
many proposals were brought before the City Council to widen,
extend, or construct new streets, but James’ name is not
mentioned personally in those proposals.
James Allred is next mentioned at the time of the murder of
Joseph and Hyrum Smith. According to two of the histories of
James Allred (Munson and Osborne) when the Prophet was put in
the Carthage jail, he gave his sword to James and said, “Take
this you may need it to defend yourself.”25 I have been unable
to verify this story through other sources and question its
veracity because James T.S. Allred does not mention it in his
diary. There is the possibility of its truthfulness though
because James and Joseph were neighbors and because they had
several community jobs and interests together. The day after the
murder, James is still listed as one of the Prophet’s bodyguards
in the Nauvoo Legion.26
Five days later on July 2, 1844, James helped bring John Taylor
back from Carthage. In Carthage it was decided that John Taylor
was in too poor of condition to bring back in a wagon because he
had lost much blood from his wounds. They then attached a sleigh
to the back of James’ wagon and pulled John Taylor back to
Nauvoo. 27
At the General Conferences of the Church in Nauvoo held in 1844,
1845, and 1846, James Allred was sustained as a member of the
Nauvoo Stake High Council.28
On January 21, 1845, James Allred and Peter Haws as secretaries
and Henry G. Sherwood were held and bound to Newell K. Whitney
and George Miller as Trustees in Trust for the Church for $2000.
Sherwood had been appointed an agent for the Church to collect
funds for the building of the temple and for other donations and
tithes in all places he went, especially Louisiana and
Mississippi. Apparently Allred, Haws, and Sherwood made a trip
to the southeast of the U.S. to collect money from the Church
members in the first three months of the year because the bond
had a three month limitation on it. The bond was signed by
Sherwood and Allred.29
The capstone of the Nauvoo Temple was laid on May 25, 1845, and
James was in attendance at the ceremony as a member of the High
Council.30
Also in connection with the temple, the Munson and Osborne
histories31 tell an interesting story which I have as yet been
unable to find anything more on in order to substantiate it.
Sometime during the Nauvoo period, Joseph Smith went to
Elizabeth Allred because she was a seamstress and wanted her to
make some garments like he had seen on the Angel Moroni. They
used unbleached muslin, and after the third try, the Prophet was
satisfied with the garments, which were bound with turkey red
and were collarless. Emma Smith preferred a collar worn on the
inside, and Eliza R,. Snow introduced a wider collar of finer
material, which was to be worn on the outside. The garment
reached to the ankles and the wrists.
In the Allred household at this time was a young English girl by
the name of Eliza Bridget Manwaring. She had worked as a cook in
the Mansion House for three years prior to the Prophet’s death.
In the Allred family, she met James T.S. and married him on
November 23, 1845.32 James and Eliza are mentioned because there
seems to be a very close bond between James and his son James
T.S., and when they went to Utah, they had many experiences
together.
Again in 1846, James Allred’s name is found with the activities
of the High Council. This time his name appears on the circular
that was issued by the High Council that gave the order for the
Saints to prepare to leave Nauvoo for the West.33
The Allreds are among the first people to leave Nauvoo when they
crossed the Mississippi River on February 9, 1846, and in James’
group were two of his sons and their families. On May 20, 1846,
James T.S. Allred and his wife, three of his brothers and their
families, and one brother-in-law (probably George T. Edwards who
had married Eliza M. Allred who had died in 1842 in Nauvoo34
left Nauvoo and caught up with Father Allred at Mt. Pisgah.35
In the exodus from Nauvoo to Council Bluffs, James Allred was in
John Taylor’s group. Specifically, he was in George Miller’s
company of 100, John Taylor’s 50, and with Captain Charles C.
Rich.36 For this group of fifty, he was the “distributing
commissary” whose duty it was to “make a righteous distribution
of grain, provisions, and such articles as should be furnished
for the use of the camp.”37
When the Camp of Israel reached Garden Grove on the Grand River
on April 26, 1846, a settlement was to be established. The
various men were assigned different jobs to do, and James Allred
was put in charge of ten others in building fences for the new
settlement.38
Several days later on May 2nd, James went with Mrs. Benjamin
Jones and Green Taylor to Pleasant Point, Iowa to get Benjamin’s
belongings and take them to Council Bluffs.39 The camp of Israel
reached Council Bluffs in mid-July. A day or two after the
Allreds arrived, James T.S., Redick Newton Allred and James
Riley Allred (sons of James’ brother Isaac, and Reuben Warren
Allred (son of Martin C. Allred and a grandson of James)
enlisted in the Mormon Battalion.40 James T. S. took his wife,
but they went only as far as Santa Fe with the rest of the
Battalion. Then they went to Pueblo and on to Salt Lake where
they arrived on July 29, 1847, only five days after the main
group of Saints had entered the valley.41
Back at Council Bluffs, James Sr. held several important Church
positions. First of all, on July 17, 1846, he was chosen as a
Bishop to help take care of the families of those who had left
with the Mormon Battalion and of those who had gone back to
Nauvoo to help the Saints there. These Bishops were in charge of
getting people settled in Council Bluffs and handling all
property transactions.42
Next, he was chosen by Brigham Young as a member of the High
Council on July 21 with Isaac Morley as President. The High
Council was to “preside in all matters spiritual and temporal”
and take over some of the responsibility the Bishops previously
had. The Council was to see that all the Saints were located
before winter, including those who would be coming from Nauvoo,
that schools were established for the children, and that
everyone took care of their own stock first.43
Finally, Father Allred became President of the Pottawatamie
Lands High Council on September 26 with the departure of Isaac
Morley.44 He was sustained by the Saints living in Council
Bluffs at Conference on December 25, 1847. The Conference was
held in the Log Tabernacle at Miller’s Hollow (later called
Kanesville) with President Brigham Young in attendance. The Log
Tabernacle had been built in less than three weeks, measured
forty feet by sixty feet, and would hold one thousand people. At
this Conference, the Saints voted to give the High Council full
municipal authority and power until the laws of Iowa were
extended to that part of the state.45
The Saints were apparently very eager to have all the municipal
conveniences they had previously enjoyed in Nauvoo because in
January of 1847, they sent a petition to the Postmaster General
of the United States requesting a post office “in the vicinity
of the Log Tabernacle, “ and James Allred signed it. James did
not become the Postmaster though.
The Saints were also interested in politics because James Allred
and many others attended a meeting in the Log Tabernacle which
was a political caucus. They listened to the Reverend Sidney
Roberts, a delegate from the central Whig committee of Iowa,
campaign for his party and especially for Zachary Taylor.47
At Conference in April and in which the First Presidency
consisting of Brigham Young, Heber Kimball, and Willard Richards
was in attendance, James Allred was sustained again as President
of the High Council.48
The expected absence of James was possibly due to employment
with the government to drive teams, and James was one of them.
He had some trouble with some boys who refused to work for him
as wagon master. He was about to quit when the post commander
from Ft. Kearney happened by and told him that if he quit, he
would be arrested and put in jail. The commander also said that
if James’ men would not serve, he was to “put them over the
river.” The account in the “Journal History” then concludes with
“It is probable the old man has been rather severe; but we heard
no complaint since the above.”49
In 1849, James continued to preside over the Conferences of the
Church at Kanesville and addressed the people on their conduct
at one of these conferences.50
From a letter written in 1850 by Franklin Richards to Orson
Pratt in England,51 one gets an idea of either the esteem of
James Allred or possibly who some of his good friends were.
Franklin Richards mentions in the letter that he had seen
“Brother Allred.” Either James was held in high esteem by the
leaders of the Church or possibly Franklin, James, and Orson
were good friends, and Franklin was telling Orson that James was
still around and doing fine. Whatever reason he had, it is
interesting that he does mention James in the letter.
In December of 1850, James Allred was busy in the Church and met
with High Council twice that month. On December 7, he addressed
the brethren on tithing and told them that “if there is iniquity
among the branches it is best to nip it in the bud.”52
Father Allred’s time in the Midwest was spent by the summer of
1851. He left Council Bluffs in the spring and was in Salt Lake
City by October Conference. 53 In Salt Lake, he spoke at the
Bowery on the program with Brigham Young on Sunday the 5th.54
For sure he was gone from the Pottawatamie Stake by then because
at October Conference there, he is no longer on the High
Council.55 At Conference in Salt Lake, Brigham Young established
the setting for the rest of James’ life when he told James that
he wanted him “to select a place for settlement where he could
locate with his numerous posterity and kindred and preside over
them.”56
It is probable that Father Allred had been in contact with his
son James T.S. and other relatives and intended to settle with
them. James T.S. had come to Utah in 1847 and along with several
other Allred’s had gone to Sanpete Valley (Manti) in 1849 with
the first group of settlers there. With the counsel of President
Young in mind, Father Allred joined his kindred there in the
fall of 1851.57
In March of 1852 and in accordance with the advice and counsel
of Brigham Young, Father Allred, James T.S. Allred, Andres J.
Allred, Charles Whitlock, George M. Allred, and James F. Allred
and their families along with several other families moved
sixteen miles north of Manti and founded what is today Spring
City. James T.S. brought his house with him in his wagon in the
form of planks and logs and assembled it when they arrived. The
first house in Springtown was thus built by James T.S. Allred.
Brigham Young visited the new colony in April, only one month
after it had been founded.58
The Allreds lived at Springtown (Spring City) until the Walker
War broke out in July of 1853. The settlement of Pleasant Creek
(now Mt. Pleasant) just to the north of Springtown was attacked
by the Indians in early or mid-July. The settlers fled to
Springtown for protection, and the combined groups of settlers
commenced to build a sort of stockade for protection from the
Indians by bolstering the space between the houses. This
protected them no doubt, but on July 29, a group of Indians
attacked the settlement and drove off almost all of their stock.
The one hundred and eighteen settlers, including the Allreds,
moved back to Manti.59
Father Allred attended April Conference in Salt Lake City in
1853 and was there ordained as the first Patriarch of the
“Sanpete” Stake.60 It was practice of the time to ordain as
patriarch the oldest man in the area, and James Allred was no
doubt (he was sixty nine), but also, he had distinguished
himself through many years of service as a Church leader to
merit the call.
At the same April Conference, James learned that a large group
of Danish immigrants had arrived in Salt Lake recently. He
talked with President Brigham Young about them and persuaded him
to send them to the Sanpete Valley to strengthen the Allred
Settlement. Then in October, just three months after the first
Indian troubles, Father Allred and his posterity and many Danish
families again attempted to settle on Canal Creek at Spring
Town. The attempt failed again, and in December, everyone moved
back to Manti.61 In this last attempt, the Allreds included
James and his family, three of his sons and their families,
James T.S. Allred’s brother-in-law (Richard Manwaring) and his
wife, and Margaret Manwaring (Eliza Allred’s sister) and her
husband Richard Roberts. Three years later in 1856 and after
Roberts had died, Margaret became the second wife of James T.S.
Allred.62
Brigham Young was not content to leave Father Allred without a
settlement where he could be with his posterity because he again
counseled James to move, and in February of 1854, the Allreds
moved again. This time the move was seven miles north of Manti
to Cottonwood (or Pine) Creek. This effort involved about fifty
men, and they built Ft. Ephraim which became the present town of
Ephraim. Pine Creek had been previously settled a few years
before but only by several individuals and not a large group.
These new settlers of the area no doubt had learned their lesson
with the Indians and built a substantial fort to protect
themselves. The fort was built of stone and mud and had ten-foot
high walls.63
Sometime in 1854, James Allred was in a meeting somewhere where
the following was recorded:
“At a meeting of the High Council in Nauvoo Sept. 23, 1943 Br.
Hyrum Smith read the revelation relating to plurality of wives,
he said he did not believe it at first it was so contrary to his
feelings, but he said he knew Joseph was a prophet of God, so he
made a covenant that he would not eat, drink, or sleep until he
knew for himself, that he had got a testimony that it was true,
that he had even heard the voice of God concerning it. This is
what James Allred related on the night of the 15th of October
1854.”64
Apparently James was recounting some of his experiences in
Nauvoo at this time. Nothing more is known about this document,
so what the actual circumstances behind it are, remain shrouded.
The rest of James Allred’s life is not well known, but he
appears here and there in various records mainly because someone
saw him somewhere or he attended a gathering somewhere.
The next few accounts of him come from the diary of James T.S.
Allred. He records that on Tuesday January 22, 1856, a birthday
party was held for his father. It included a dinner with a dance
in the evening. All the relatives (or “connections” as he calls
them) were invited from Ft. Ephraim where it was held.65
One week later on the 29, 30, and 31, James T.S. mentions that
he hauled hay for himself and his father.66 The third mention of
Father Allred at this time was on Sunday March 9 when he helped
James T.S. confirm his oldest daughter Eliza Maria a member of
the Church.67
In 1857, James attended a large dinner on December the first in
Nephi. The “Sanpete Company” had just returned from the Utah War
and so the atmosphere was quite festive.68
Back at Ft. Ephraim in 1858, James was relieved as Postmaster by
Hans F. Peterson.69
On the 5th of October, “Patriarch James Allred” blessed his
newest grandson, John Richard Allred. He was the son of James
T.S. and his second wife, Margaret.70
On November 14th, James blessed their grandson, William Hackley
Allred, who was the son of James T.S. and his first wife,
Eliza.71 This date also happened to be the fifty-fifth wedding
anniversary of James and his wife.
Approximately six weeks later, 200 soldiers camped at Ft.
Ephraim through the influence of Benjamin L. Clapp. James
Allred, James T.S. Allred and several others protested against
quartering the troops, and Clapp then told them it would be
treason to not do so and suggested that they flee to the
mountains to escape arrest for treason. Captain Turley (who did
not like Brigham Young and Mormons and who had been using “very
abusive language” towards them while en route to Sanpete) took
the names of those who opposed the admittance of the troops to
the fort and threatened to take them to a judge. This issue
apparently was dropped, but Clapp caused more trouble when he
protested to Bishop Snow who said that the brethren should be
selling hay at $25 - $30 a ton instead of $15 and wheat at $3 a
bushel instead of $1.30. Clapp called Bishop Snow an
“oppressor,” cut a Seventy off from the Church for opposing the
entry of the soldiers into the fort, and was subsequently cut
off from the Church (both in Salt Lake and Manti) himself for
his actions.72
James T.S. Allred held a dinner for his father’s seventy-fifth
birthday on January 22, 1859.73
The next record of James comes when he went to Salt Lake City on
October 10, 1864. He attended a Zion’s Camp reunion there which
was held in social Hall. It was the first time in thirty years
that the Camp had been together. Brigham Young was the main
speaker and was followed by Joseph Young and Orson Hyde. The
group sang “Hark! Listen to the Trumpets” and the “Marsellaise.”
The party lasted from 1 p.m. to 1 a.m.74
On the roll of those who attended the Zion’s Camp reunion, James
Allred’s address is listed as Springtown. Sometime after January
1859 and October 1864, he moved back to Springtown. Hunter says
that it could not have been before 1859 because that is the date
he gives for the resettlement there,75 and Osborne says it was
in 1860.76
Jumping to 1868, we find James Allred making a few remarks at a
Memorial Service for Heber C. Kimball in Springtown. Orson Hyde
made the key address, and James no doubt related some of the
personal experiences he had with Heber in Nauvoo and
elsewhere.77
In September of the same year, James attended a meeting in
Fountain Green which Brigham Young and Wilford Woodruff attended
also. The “Journal History” account of the day makes special
note of the attendance of many prominent men including:
“Father James Allred, a very Patriarch, whose erect form gave no
indication of his age.
He was born January 11, 1784, in Randolph County, North
Carolina. His wife Elizabeth Warren was born May 6th,. 1786, in
South Carolina. They emigrated from Tennessee to Missouri in
1830, and joined the Church Sept. 10, 1832. They were driven
from Missouri with the Saints and fled into Illinois, and moved
west with their co-religionists when they left the State. This
aged couple, one 82, the other 84 years of age, have shared in
the persecutions of the people of God; but they are here today
in the midst of their numerous descendants remarkably hale and
active for persons of their age. To look at them one would
suspect that they were so advanced in years.78
This account gives James and his wife a great deal of respect by
the recorder for the Church. It also gives an indication of the
reverence that James must have had in the eyes of his
contemporaries.
James returned again to Salt Lake in October of 1870 for another
Zion’s Camp reunion which was held in conjunction with a Mormon
Battalion reunion, and James T.S. accompanied his father on this
trip.79
The final account of James Allred covered in this paper comes
from Springtown in 1874. On July, James Allred and his wife,
along with many others, were baptized into the United Order.80
James and his wife were the first ones baptized in Spring City,
and this event and their place on the list of members who joined
the Order I think shows their continued devotion to the Church
as well as a great deal of prestige.
James Allred died just twelve days short of his ninety-second
birthday on January 10, 1876. He had been married to his wife
Elizabeth (who died three years later) for more than seventy-two
years and strangely enough had not taken a plural wife. They had
reared twelve children of their own and eight orphaned children
of their second son. They had a posterity of four hundred and
forty seven, which included twelve children, and one hundred and
four grandchildren, three hundred and two great grandchildren,
and twenty nine great-great grandchildren.81
James Allred had been a close associate of the Prophet Joseph
and the other early leaders of the Church, he had served
valiantly in several Church positions, including two High
Councils, and had become a revered and esteemed Patriarch by his
contemporaries and his family for his service and longevity.
REFERENCES by number
1. Eliza Maria Allred Munson, “Early Pioneer History.” This
history comes from the diary of
James T.S. Allred. The author has a typed copy of it in his
possession.
2. Ruth Osborne, “History of James Allred.” This history was
typed by Mrs. Osborne before her death, and the author has a
copy in his possession which was obtained from Mr. Osborne’s
grandson V.C. Osborne. The source, of the material is unknown,
but the text is almost exactly the same as the “Early Pioneer
History” of Mrs. Munson, hereafter, Osborne, “James.”
3. Ruth Osborne, “LIFE SKETCH OF JAMES TILLMAN SANFORD ALLRED.”
The original was typed by Mrs. Osborne, and the source is known.
The author has a typed copy obtained from V.C. Osborne.
Hereafter, Osborne, “Sketch of JTSA.”
4. “BRIEF HISTORY OF JAMES T.S. ALLRED.” This is a typed copy of
part of James
T.S. Allred’s diary. The same history can be found in the BYU
Library, Special Collections. The author has a typed copy in his
possession. Hereafter, “JTS.”
5. Munson, a; “Journal History,” June 8, 1834, church archives,
Historical Department of the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-Day Saints, Salt Lake City, Utah. Hereafter, JH and the
date.
6. “JTS,: 1.
7. Munson, 1.
8. “JTS,” 1.
9. JH, September 28, 1839.
10. “Property Purchased by Church Members Inc. Joseph Smith’s”
from “Joseph Smith’s Day Book,” Church Archives.
11. JH, November 29, 1839.
12. “Daybook of Peter Haws and Oliver Granger - produce and
meat.” Church Archives.
13. “Joseph Smith’s Day Book,” Church Archives.
14. “JTS,” 1.
15. Cecil A. Snider, Development of Attitudes in Sectarian
Conflict: A Study of Mormonism in Illinois in Contemporary
Newspaper Sources, (State University)
16. JH, February 4, 1841.
17. JH, February 27, 1841.
18. JH, April 8, 1841.
19. “Nauvoo Masonic Records.” Church Archives.
20. “Nauvoo Relief Society Minutes, March 17, 1842 to March 16,
1844.” Church Archives.
21. JH, March 23, 1842.
22. “Records of Members, 1841-1845, Nauvoo, Illinois,” Church
Archives.
23. JH, February ll, 1843.
24. “Nauvoo City Council Minutes,” Church Archives.
25. Munson, 2; Osborne, “James,” 1.
26. JH, June 28, 1844.
27. Munson, 2; Osborne, “James,” 1.
28. JH, October 7, 1844; JH, April 7, 1846.
29. Bond signed by Henry G. Sherwood and James Allred, BYU
Library, Special Collections,
Provo, Utah.
30. Andrew Jenson, Historical Record (Salt Lake City, 1889),
VIII. 870.
31. Munson, 1; Osborne, “James,” 1.
32. “JTS,” 1.
33. “JH” January 20, 1846.
34. “JTS,” 1.
35. “JTS,” 2.
36. On the Mormon Frontier The Diary of Rosea Stout 1844-1861,
ed. Juanita Brooks
Salt Lake City, 1964, 144.
37. JH, March 27, 1846, p. 3.
38. JH, April 26, 1846, p. 3.
39. Diary of Hosea Stout, 158.
40. Osborne, “Redick,” 1; Osborne, “Sketch of JTSA,” 1.
41. “JTS,” 2.
42. JH, July 17, 1846, pp 1-2.
43. JH, July 21, 1846, p. 1.
44. JH, September 26, 1846.
45. JH, December 24, 1847; JH, December 25, 1847.
46. JH, January 20, 1848, p. 10.
47. JH, March 27, 1848.
48. JH, April 6, 1848.
49. JH, October 2, 1848.
50. JH, April 8, 1849.
51. JH, January 8, 1850, p. 2.
52. “Pottawattamie High Council Record Minutes July 21, 1846;
January 18, 1851, Church Archives.
53. Osborne, “James,” 2.
54. JH, October 5, 1851.
55. JH, October 6, 1851, p.3.
56. Milton R. Hunter, Brigham Young the Colonizer (Salt Lake
City, 1940), 251.
57. Munson, 3.
58. Hunter, 251; W.H. Lever, History of Sanpete and Emery
Counties Utah (Ogden, 1889, 472.)
59. Hunter, 252.
60. JH, April 7, 1853.
61. Hunter, 252; Osborne, “James,” 2.
62. “JTS,” 2; Osborne, “James,” 3.
63. Osborne, “James,” 2; Hunter, 253.
64. Manuscript, Church Archives.
65. Manuscript, Church Archives.
65. “Diary of James T.S. Allred,” Tuesday January 22, 1856. BYU
Library, Special Collections.
66. “Diary of James T.S. Allred,” Tuesday, Wednesday, and
Thursday, January 29, 30, and 31, 1856.
67. “Diary of James T.S. Allred,” Sunday March 9, 1856.
68. “Diary of Samuel Pitchforth 1857-1868,” p. 70. BYU Library
Special Collections.
69. Ephraim’s First One Hundred Years, p. 118.
70. “Diary of James T.S. Allred,” Tuesday October 5, 1858.
71. “Diary of James T.S. Allred,” Sunday November 14, 1858.
72. JH, December 25, 1858, pp 2-3, 7; “Diary of James T.S.
Allred” December 27-31, 1858, Jan. 1-2, 1859.
73. “Diary of James T.S. Allred,” Saturday January 22, 1859.
74. JH, October 10, 1864.
75. Hunter, 252.
76. Osborne, “James,” 2.
77. JH, June 24, 1868, p. 6.
78. Jh, September 21, 1868
79. Jh, October 10, 1870.
80. “Spring City Ward Record of Members 1860-1884,” Church
Archives.
81. Osborne, “James,” 2.
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