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James Christopher ALLRED (010203050414)
Allred Progenitors: (James Martin, Isaac, James, William, Thomas)
Born: 04/09/1871
Died: 09/25/1951 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., UT
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 04/19/1999
JAMES CHRISTOPHER ALLRED
James Martin Allred born 14 February 1838 at Far West, Caldwell
County, Missouri. In the year of 1862 he moved to Fairview, Utah
with his wife Mary Francis Vance whom he married on the 27 of
March 1860. Daughter Martha Ellen was born 23 April 1861.
He purchased a 15 acre farm and built a house, he also had a
brick house in town. On October 9, 1866 he married his second
wife Christiana Gustave Anderson. Both marriages were performed
in the endowment house in Salt Lake City, Utah.
On the 9 of April James Christopher Allred was born to James
Martin and Christiana Gustave Anderson. Name of James came from
his Great Grand Father James Allred and Christopher from his
Grandfather Andrea Christopher Anderson from the maternal side.
James was the second child, the first boy of a family of 11
children, seven boys and four girls. James grew up with the
children of the community attended school and church where he
obtained four years of formal education.
As it seems, work to obtain a living was more important than an
education so James helped on the farm. An additional sixty acres
was purchased much of it had to be cleared of rock and brush.
It was not all work and no play for James or Jim as he was
called. He was quite athletic and entered in most all sports of
his day, being very good at the broad jump using weights which
were rocks or bricks whichever was the handiest to obtain.
He also worked away from home to obtain money to help support
the growing family. The country was developing and especially
the town. A railroad came through the town and Jim worked in the
mountains cutting ties, mining also was developing and needed
props to shore up the loose rocks in the roof. A flour mill, a
creamery and a saw mill was established. These all helped to
bring in money for the needs of the community.
Jim’s early years at this writing is very vague as he never
confided with his family of his younger years.
There lived a family not far from the Allred home who had a
daughter about Jim’s age, he fell in love with her and at the
age of twenty years married the lovely daughter of Elias Willis
Howell and Mary Jane Sanderson. Her name was Mary Marzetta, they
were married in the Manti Temple on the 28 day of October 1891.
Jim was a hard working young man. He had a brick house built on
a corner lot just one block from his father’s home and a block
from Marzetta’s father’s home. In this house all but one of his
children were born. Child number 7, Willis was born at Winter
Quarters, Carbon County, Utah.
What Jim did in his early years of marriage is not known until
about 1903. A section of land north of Fairview known as
Indianola was homesteaded by several families of Fairview. At
this time reservations were being established and the Indians
were being moved onto them. There were a few that refused to be
moved but they were friendly and caused no trouble only to beg
for food. But they sure scared the tar out of the young ones.
While there we lived in a tent, occasionally an Indian would
show up from somewhere and ask for food then disappear. As there
was no water for irrigation the homestead was given up and the
family moved back to Fairview.
The 24 day of April 1901 brought the first great sorrow to Jim
and Marzetta as their 5th child lived just a few hours. Then in
the Spring of 1903 an epidemic of Diphtheria hit the Valley and
again death took another daughter, their 3rd Lavella Elizabeth.
This was a sorrowful time as no one could go to a gathering so a
box was made for the child and taken to the cemetery in a wagon.
Again death hit the family on the 7th of August 1913, at the age
of 20 years James Loren their 1st child was taken, caused by a
broken appendix.
In 1904 Jim moved his family to a town called Winter Quarters.
This town was a coal mining town where he had employment
operating the power plant for the United States coal mine. On
March 11 1905 child number 7 Willis Emanuel was born. In the
summer of 1905 Jim moved his family back to Fairview taking the
new baby boy with them that was adopted by Marzetta’s half
sister Zabe Hansen.
Around this time Jim borrowed money to buy 40 acres to farm land
in the Birch Creek area, upon this land he built a farm house of
sawed logs which was the family summer home, here the work was
carried on instead of from town, which was one mile away. In
town he had a large barn where the cows were milked. The milk
was sold at the creamery for the butterfat, the skim milk was
returned and mixed with bran and other parts of wheat (after the
flour was taken out) and fed to the pigs.
In the fall of 1905 Jim having his family back at the family
home in Fairview went into the meat business.
He constructed a slaughter house in the barn then he bought and
raised animals and butchered them himself. Then early the next
morning he would pack it in the wagon and would head out for
Winter Quarters and Schofield arriving there before night fall.
There he would sell the meat to the miners and butcher shops.
This was done in connection to operating the farm with help from
the family. In the winter the meat was shipped by train which
took two days. Jim would ship his meat one day and early the
next morning he would have one of the boys take his horse back
up the mountain road as far as the horse could go in the deep
snow. Then he would start over the mountain using barrel staves
as snow shoes and ski to receive the meat the next day.
Seems like Jim liked pigs as he always had a bunch of them
around. Sometime around 1910 he quit the meat business and tried
other things. He purchased a herd of sheep and after about a
year this failed as he couldn’t get range for them. Jim always
worked hard. His father was growing old and retired from farming
as his family was all grown, they had moved away or had families
of their own. So Jim purchased his land East but close to the
summer home. This gave Jim 120 acres. 80 acres farming land the
rest was pasture.
In the year 1915 Jim heard of a place in the eastern part of the
state called the reservation where people were moving. Spring of
1916 he decided to sell his holdings and move his family there.
His oldest daughter was now a young woman, she married Lawrence
Henry Larsen on the 2nd of June 1915. Jim had arranged for land
in the Tridell area, so the mules and cows were herded across
the mountains by the two older boys. The teams were used to haul
furniture, family and machinery. They arrived in the summer to a
two room log cabin with a dirt roof. The ground was good for
gardens. Jim had rented 40 acres and had planted it to wheat
before going after the family leaving the 40 acres for the two
boys to irrigate the wheat. Not being used to that kind of soil
the crop was a near failure. What the family lived on for the
next year is a mystery, but they never went hungry.
Time went on and Jim borrowed money to purchase more acreage.
His family was growing up. They lived about 4 miles from school,
they had to ride horseback to obtain their education or live in
another town to go to High School.
This is just a small story in Jim’s life when he was really
frightened and worried. In one of his 40 acres a deep wash ran
through it and most always had a small stream of water in it. He
had a scraper or slip as we called it, and was filling or
damming it up to use the water, with one of the boys riding the
horse to pull the scraper. The water was coming in a littler
faster than the dam was raising, he just about had the water
going in the ditch when the grey mare fell with her back in the
water (which was about 10 feet deep.) The rider was in the water
tangled up in the harness and the horse laying on his leg so he
couldn’t get out. I was so scared I never thought of anything
only the condition of things. (Jim couldn’t do anything) I
comforted the horse so she wouldn’t struggle, unbuckled the
harness so the rider could get out and the horse was free. Then
a few words of comfort and she struggled out, everything was
fine except some scared people and a broken dam.
A few years after the arrival to the reservation Jim purchased a
plot of ground in LaPoint he said some day he would build a home
there. Things went on in the normal way of farm life in a new
country. Some lean years and others of plenty. Jim’s family was
growing up.
On the 8th of October 1919 Jim’s oldest daughter at home married
Steven Loren Ross of Tridell and they moved to their home in
Tridell. Then on the 15 of June 1922 the oldest boy Douglas
married Grace LaVon Caldwell. Then in line, Willis married Eliza
Jane Palmer 8 September 1924. Harold married LeaVon Atwood 5
August 1931. Linden married Wilda Mary Morrell 8 April 1931.
Zelda married Lowell Hogkinson 10 October 1929. Mildred married
Elmer Lavon Morrell 6 January 1932.
Somewhere in between these marriages Jim constructed a home on
the lot in LaPoint and moved in it.
The boys had now grown up and Jim couldn’t handle the farm alone
so he retired.
On the 29 of March 1939 a great sorrow came to Jim. His beloved
wife and helpmate passed away and on the 3rd day of April 1939
she was buried in Fairview in the family plot. Services were
held in LaPoint and Fairview. Now Jim was alone. Later on he
sold the home and moved to Salt Lake City and worked in the
Temple. In Salt Lake City he met and married Annie Matilda
Gerber on the 10 April 1940 for time only. Some time later he
developed a cancer which took his life on the 25 September 1951
at a hospital in Salt Lake City. On the 29 of September 1951 he
was buried beside his wife and his family that had passed on
before him.
I have tried to write this as I have seen his life, and from
records I’ve obtained. Not as I the writer but just telling his
life story as I have known it. Number 4 in the family.
Douglas L. Allred |
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