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James Tillman Sanford ALLRED (10203100)
Allred Progenitors: (James, William, Thomas)
Born: 03/28/1825 Bedford Co., TN
Died: 03/28/1905 Spring City, Sanpete Co., UT
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 04/19/1999
JAMES T.S. ALLRED
Brief History
I, James T.S. Allred, son of James and Elizabeth Warren Allred,
was born in Bedford County Tennessee, March 28, 1825, and at the
age of five years removed with my father to the State of
Missouri, in Monroe county which was five hundred miles. Here we
settled down and in September of 1832, my father and mother were
baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints by
Elder George M. Hinkley, and I was blessed on the same day,
which was Sept. 10, 1832. There were a number of my brothers and
sisters baptized on or near the same day, and a large number of
my relatives joined the church at the same place. A large branch
of the Church was built up at Salt River and was called Salt
River Branch.
In June 1834, the Prophet Joseph Smith arrived at my father’s
house on his journey up the upper part of Missouri with a
company of two hundred of the brethren on their journey up the
upper part of Missouri in order to redeem Zion as they thought,
or to reinstate a portion of the saints who had been driven from
their homes in Jackson County Missouri, and the winter of 1835,
father’s family, Uncle Isaac and Uncle Wm. family moved up to
Clay County, Missouri and in the winter of 1835, I was baptized
by Wm. O. Clark and confirmed by Martin C. Allred. In the spring
of 1837, father and his family moved in Caldwell County, where
the saints began to gather and build up a stake of Zion. The
Prophet Joseph Smith also gathered here with his father’s
family.
In the autumn of 1838, times began to be very troublesome, the
citizens of the adjoining county raised all manner of false
accusations against the Latter-day Saints and more especially
the leaders of the church. So that the Governor of the State
ordered out several thousands of men to either exterminate or
expel us from the State of Missouri and by laying down our arms
and giving up the Prophet Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum and
several others of the heads of the Church and also agreeing to
leave the State of Missouri in the spring of 1839, they spared
our lives and accordingly in the spring of 1839 the Church
members left the State of Missouri and moved into Illinois and
most of the relatives went to Illinois too and lived in
different parts of the State. Father settled in Pittsfield, Pike
County and one of my brothers and sister and brother-in-law
settled in the same place.
My father’s family consisted of eight sons and four daughters.
At this date five of his sons and three daughters were married.
The names of family are as follows: Wm Hackly, Martin Carrel,
Hannah, Sally, Isaac, Reuben Warren, Willy Pane, Nancy Curry,
Eliza Marie, James Tilman Sanford, John Franklin Layfayette,
Andrew Jackson. His son-in-laws names are: Andrew Whittack
married Hannah, and John Newton Burton married Sally, who died
at Salt River, Monroe County, Missouri in the year 1834, Dec 2.
She left one daughter Leone. James Gregg married Nancy. Father
lived here one summer and in the course of the summer my
youngest sister Eliza Marie married George T. Edwards. And in
the fall of 1839 he moved to Hancock County, Illinois to a place
that was called Commerce and afterwards to Nauvoo. Here the
saints began to gather to build up another Stake of Zion and
they commenced to build a temple in 1841. My second brother died
May 2, 1840 and his wife died in July of the same year, leaving
eight children whom my father took and raised. We lived here a
short time and prospered fine considering all the difficulties
that we had to pass through. In the year of 1842, my younger
sister Eliza Marie, died in my father’s house on the 30th of
July. Nancy died in the State of Indiana, each leaving two
children.
I was ordained a Seventy in 1842, and made a member of the
fourth Quorum of Seventies at the same time. By this time the
saints began to be persecuted very hard, especially the leaders
of the church. On June 27, 1844 the Prophet Joseph Smith and his
brother Hyrum were murdered in the Carthage Jail, Hancock County
Illinois, by a mob of the citizens of Illinois and Missouri.
President Brigham Young then took lead of the Church. In
connection with the Twelve Apostles, he went building upon the
foundation that the Prophet Joseph had laid. Persecution began
to rage again with awful fury, and in 1845 the mob commenced
burning houses.
On November 23, 1845 I was married to an English girl by my
father. Her name was Eliza Manwaring. The following winter the
saints commenced to prepare to leave the United States and go
west into the wilderness. In January 1846, I received my
washings and annointings in the Kirkland Temple of the Lord with
my wife. February 9, 1846 my father, mother, and two brothers
started west with the leaders of the church and others. On the
20th of May, three of my brothers, one brother-in-law, myself
and our families started west through the Iowa territory and
overtook father at Mt. Pisaga. We traveled together to Council
Bluffs. On July 16th I enlisted in the Mormon Battalion and
started to Mexico by the way of Fort Leavenworth and from thence
to Santa Fe and then to Pueblo on the head of the Arkansas River
where I wintered and in the spring we renewed our journey
westward and arrived in Great Salt Lake Valley July 29, 1847. My
wife and I suffered a great deal on our journey. We were just
one week behind the pioneers.
Here we started to put in grain and build a fort for our houses.
The second year we raised quite a bit of produce more than the
first year, but the crickets destroyed a great deal. On February
28, 1848 my first daughter Eliza Maria was born. My wife had
three miscarriages before she had any living child on account of
the hardships. In the spring of 1849, I went back east to the
Platt River to establish a ferry. I was gone on my journey three
months. On my return President Brigham Young called me to go to
Sanpete Valley to make a new settlement. In November 1849, I
left and that winter and the next we had so much snow that it
killed most of our cattle. January 13, 1850 my second daughter
Ellen Aurelia was born. I settled in the south part of Sanpete
County and in the fall of 1850, my father and family arrived in
Sanpete from the States. I had not seen them for five years.
On Feb. 25, 1850 my oldest sister Hannah died leaving a husband
and seven children, and on July 19, 1850 my brother John
Franklin Lafayette died leaving a wife and one child living and
one dead. He died with the cholera. I remained in Manti, Sanpete
County. Until the spring of 1852 when I according to the council
of President Brigham Young moved with father sixteen miles north
and commenced a new settlement. We remained there until July 29,
1853. I moved to a new place according to the council of
President and made a new attempt at settlement. I remained there
about two months and then we were called to vacate the place
again and go to Manti.
We left Dec. 17, 1853 about fifty families most of them Danish
people, and among them were my father’s family two brothers and
their families, my wife’s brother, Richard Manwaring and wife,
my wife’s brother-in-law, Richard Roberts, and her sister
Margaret, who had just come from England the last season. She
was the first of my wife’s relatives that I saw. My wife had
left her relatives in England and gathered in Nauvoo in the year
of 1842, for the sake of the gospel. I remained in Manti during
the winter of 1853, and then was counseled by President Young to
commence a new settlement which was called Ephraim.
On the 25th of March 1854, my third daughter, Elizabeth Diantha,
was born in Manti and on Feb. 25, 1855, my first son, James
Tillman Sanford was born in Manti. We finished our fort wall in
March 1854, which was eight feet high (we afterwards raised it
to ten feet). I moved my family to Ephraim in April 1855, and at
the spring conference I left my home May 8th with a company of
U.S. soldiers. I was an Indian interpreter for them along the
route. I left them at Little Creek, Beaver Co., because they
were so wicked and always cursing the Mormons. While on my
mission, I acted as an Indian interpreter for the other
missionaries. We worked among the Indians and converted and
baptized a large number. I later moved to Spring City where I
lived the rest of my life. April 6, 1855 I was called to go on a
mission to Las Vegas, New Mexico to preach to the Piute Indians
and to teach them the arts and sciences of civilization. I
therefore went to Great Salt Lake and was set apart for that
mission and was blessed by President Orson Hyde.
A blessing upon the head of T.S. Allred given under the hands of
Orson Hyde and Bishop David Evans on Saturday April 28, 1855 in
the Seventies Council Hall at Great Salt Lake City:
“Brother Allred, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, we lay
our hands upon your head and confirm thee all thy former
blessings that they may rest with increased weight and power
upon thy mind, and that thou mayest be full of the Holy Ghost
and also of the light of truth. Grant, our Father, to bless
this, Thy servant, as we now set him apart unto the mission and
calling unto which he is now sent, that he may do honor to Thy
cause and to himself and that he may be useful in the doing of
the things in which he is now engaged, and that he may be a
blessing to his brethren and all with whom he may associate and
we bless them that he may have power to do good (great) among
the red men of the Mountains and make them acquainted with the
knowledge of their forefathers, and that they, through the
favors of Thy servant may quit their ways of darkness and all
their superstitions and come to understand, be filled with the
light of Thy spirit; and may Thy servant be blessed with visions
by day and dreams at night. Oh God, do bless this Thy servant
and every duty that develops upon him with trustworthiness in
thy sight, and finally be crowned by Thee with a crown that will
never fade. We seal these blessings upon thee by virtue of the
Eternal Priesthood and in the name of Jesus Christ, amen.” I.V.
Long, clerk.
I worked with hides, tanning them to make harnesses, ships,
cinches and other things and was noted for braiding ships and
making ropes of hemp and making gloves out of buckskin. I had
four wives and father of seventeen children eight boys, nine
girls. Died on 80th birthday, March 28, 1905, Spring City,
Sanpete Co., Utah. |
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