|

Our Current Newsletter Spring 2012
Back
Issues of the Newsletter are available
Home
What's New?
About
Us
Frequently Asked
Questions
Support
Our Research - Join The AFO!
Board of
Directors
Newsletter
Reunions
East Coast
Allred Family Association
Rocky
Mountain Allreds
Family Histories
and Stories
Being Updated
| |
Mary Adell JONES (01020104120407)
Allred Progenitors: (Martha TWIN, Willis Winfield, Elizabeth, Sarah,
William, Thomas)
Born: 03/28/1911
Died: 07/29/1995
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 05/24/1999
HISTORY OF VIRGIL RAYMOND/RAY ALLRED AND MARY ADELL JONES
ALLRED
VIRGIL RAYMOND/RAY ALLRED - - 3 APRIL 1908
HIS PARENTS JAMES EMSLEY ALLRED / ADA LOUISIA HENDERSON
CHILDREN
OSCAR / MAMIE / EDGAR LEE / ELSIE MARY ETTA GOODNER / VERNON
RAYMOND / ODELL BLANKENSHIP / EULALIE LOUISIA / JIMMIE QUIROZ
MR. WEBSTER
MR. CROUCH
VIRGIL RAYMOND/RAY / MARY ADELL JONES
ROY ELDON (BILL) / MARY REEDY
ROBERT LINDON / ARVELLA WOOD
MARY ADELL JONES ALLRED - - 28 MARCH 1911 - 29 JULY 1995
HER PARENTS HYRAM PENDELTON JONES / MARTHA ALLRED
CHILDREN
SARAH (INA) / WILLIAM J. KILLINGSWORTH / BERTHA / (DIED WHEN A
BABY)
GRACE PEARL / JAMES McDANIEL /
WILLIS HYRUM / ELIZA RIZENHOVER
VIRGIL / GRACE SMYTH
EARL / (DIED WHEN 5 YEARS OLD)
MARY ADELL/VIRGIL RAYMOND ALLRED
ROBERT / HESTER LEE LONG
CHARLES (SONNIE) / MILDRED ELDRIDGE / WANDA LOVELAND / NANCY
NELSON
VIRGIL RAYMOND/RAY ALLRED’S CHILDHOOD
When Virgil was a baby, the Allred family moved from Holly
Township, Van Buren County, Arkansas, to Oklahoma in a covered
wagon. The family lived in Davenport, Chandler, and one other
town in Oklahoma. Virgil said that they lived in five different
houses in Oklahoma. He remembers his mother running a boarding
house in Davenport, Oklahoma.
When Virgil had the measles, his brother Oscar brought him a
white mouse.; but when his mother saw the mouse, she wouldn’t
let Virgil keep it.
His older brothers would go coon hunting at night with their
dogs, but they didn’t want Virgil to go with them because they
thought he couldn’t keep up. He decided to put bugs, bees,
spiders, and snakes in their beds while they were hunting. Then
they decided it would be better for them if they took him
hunting (he did keep up). His brothers also taught him to swim
by throwing him in a stream of water.
Virgil said that he would go to the pond where hunters had been
shooting and would pick up the empty shot gun shells. He would
they cut the paper off and take the copper heads to the store
and sell them so he could buy candy (licorice was his favorite).
Virgil got his first dog from his older brother Edgar’s dog’s
litter. He trained this dog to chase the mule out of the corn
field whenever the mule jumped the five strand wire fence and
got into the corn. Virgil would stand on top of the cellar where
he and the dog could see the mule and then he would tell the dog
to sic-um. The dog would chase the mule out of the corn, thus
saving Virgil the job of going into the corn field after the
mule.
Virgil told about his father and older brothers going on buying
and selling trips into Arkansas and Texas. They would buy horses
and cattle and resell them - sometimes the next day. Those that
were not in the best condition they would fatten up and then
sell them at a profit. Virgil would try riding the young bulls
that were brought home.
At times, Virgil went to church, which was sometimes held in the
school house. He had a Bible Story Book which he remembers
reading several times. Also, Virgil remembered his father
playing the fiddle at dances.
The first airplane Virgil saw was when he was picking cotton in
the field. He laid down on the cotton sack and watched the
airplane till it was out of sight. Virgil said that the first
car he remembers seeing was a 1917 Model T Ford.
He remembered well the flu epidemic of 1917. He didn’t get the
flu, but most of his family did and his brother Bill almost
died.
Virgil said that his Grandpa Henderson, who had been in the
Civil War, lived with them in Oklahoma the last few years of his
life. He died in 1920 or 1921.
In 1921, when Virgil was 13 years old, his mother moved part of
the family to San Bernardino, California. Virgil’s father
remained in Oklahoma.
Virgil bought a bicycle in California with money he earned from
selling newspapers. He then had to learn to ride it on dirt
roads while carrying 40 pounds of newspapers to his customers.
His mother acquired a Model T Ford touring car as payment for
board and room from a boarder. Virgil learned to drive this car
at age 14 and to be an auto mechanic by age 15. He told of being
one of the first to get a California drivers license with no
expiration date.
To help bring in money, Virgil would take parties in the big
touring car to various parks and resorts. He parked cars and did
mechanic work at Thousand Pines Garage. He also set bowling pins
at the Elks Hall in San Bernardino.
Virgil attended Sturges Jr. High School where he played on the
State championship basketball team. He and his friends
dismantled a wagon and assembled it on the roof of the school
house one Halloween Night. They had the tongue of the wagon
sticking out over the edge of the roof and hung a dummy from it.
Virgil went back to Oklahoma to work in the oil fields. While in
Oklahoma, he enjoyed playing catcher on a baseball team which
was primarily made up of Indians.
MARY ADELL JONES ALLRED’S CHILDHOOD
When Adell was about two years of age, her family rented a farm
between Seminole and Shawnee, Oklahoma that had a pecan grove on
it. She remembers the pecan trees. She told about the day while
they lived on this farm, her mother went to town and left her
home alone or so she thought. She was very unhappy with her
mother and cried most of the time her mother was gone.
Adell remembers (when she was about four) that the wagon got
stuck in the mud. When she was told to get out of the wagon, she
became angry, upset, and cried. In fact she threw a fit because
she did not want to get her new black shoes with red tops dirty.
She did not get out of the wagon!
At age six, Adell was helping to carry water from the well to
water the sweet potatoes and got hit on the head by the pump
handle. The handle cut her head and knocked her out. She said
she was wearing a sun bonnet, which she didn’t like to wear,
when the accident happened. She believes that if she had not
been wearing it she could have seen the handle and not got hit
on the head.
Adell told about her mother having bread dough rising and
telling her to watch it while her mother went to do something.
When she returned, the dough was all over the stove. Her mother
said, “I told you to watch it”, and Adell said, “I did; it just
bubbled out of the pan”. Adell’s mother was a good cook and
could make very light fluffy cakes that would melt in your
mouth.
When the family members were at the table, Adell said that if
her father would point at what he wanted instead of asking for
it her mother would say “point Pendleton, point”.
Adell remembers that her mother had a good singing voice. Also,
she remembered her father playing the fiddle. She said he didn’t
play well but his brothers played the fiddle well.
Adell told about the first train she saw in Seminole, Oklahoma.
It had a “big” steam engine and she was afraid of it. She said
that it was the biggest blackest thing she had ever seen.
She also remembers going to Shawnee, Oklahoma, in a wagon. They
stayed in the wagon yard overnight and returned to the farm the
next day.
Because they lived on a farm so far from town, Adell didn’t get
to go to church very much. Her mother read the Bible to the
family and taught them what was right.
If Adell saw a snake go into a pile of brush along the side of
the road she would move the brush and kill the snake (she didn’t
like snakes). She would then wait for its mate to show up and
would kill it too. However, she must have liked squirrels
because she climbed up a very tall tree to set some. She brought
the baby squirrels home in the skirt of her dress, but her
mother made her take them back to their nest. When Adell got
back, her mother was waiting outside and scrubbed Adell and her
clothes with coal oil to kill all the lice.
Adell’s father had a 12 gauge shot gun which none of the
children were allowed to touch. When she was about 12, she tried
to shoot at some ducks on the pond and ended up on her back
side. Adell said that her father never did find out she had shot
the gun.
An Overland Touring Car was the first car that her father
bought. Adell said the first silent movie she ever saw was “Moby
Dick”.
Adell remembers the day they got word that her Grandmother
Allred had died. When they arrived at her grandparent’s home,
her grandfather was sitting in the rocking chair, rocking back
and forth, still holding her grandmother in his arms.
During the Flu Epidemic most of Adell’s family were sick, but
she did not get it. Since her mother had it, Adell said that her
father had to do the cooking.
Adell liked to go to Indian Stop Dances. One night after
attending a dance, she was riding her pony home alone and it
sensed something and bolted. As the pony ran down the road, she
heard a mountain lion scream.
VIRGIL & ADELL ALLRED’S LIFE TOGETHER
They met at a party in Oklahoma when she was 14 and he was 17.
They didn’t start dating for a while. When they did start seeing
each other, they would go to dances or to the rodeo on Sunday. A
few times when Virgil could get his father’s car, they went to
the movies. They eventually fell in love. Virgil and Adell got
their marriage license in Wewoka, Oklahoma. The marriage was
performed by the Justice of the Peace at his home north east of
Seminole, Oklahoma, on October 9, 1929. They hadn’t told anyone
that they were getting married. Virgil had to go to work that
night after they were married (short honeymoon). They lived with
Adell’s family for a while. Later they moved into a small house
which Virgil’s father owned. They nailed heavy paper on the
walls to help keep out the cold.
At that time Virgil had a job in the oil fields for $12.00 for 8
hours of work. When the stock market fell, 20 days after their
marriage, he got laid off and could only get a job that paid
$.50 an hour.
Soon Adell was expecting a baby. She said she never had been
told very much about things because they were not talked about
like they are now. She bought lawn and flannel material which
she made into baby clothes. Charles was born November 1, 1930,
in Seminole, Oklahoma. A month later they moved to California in
a 28 Chevrolet car because Virgil was able to get work there.
Pauline was born March 12, 1932 in San Bernardino, California.
Adell said that Charles, at about age 6, sprained his ankle when
he did the back flip off the monkey bars at school. Pauline,
about age 5, tried to help him walk home. They both were crying
and would not accept a ride with the cop who stopped to offer
assistance. He followed them home.
In 1938, while Virgil was working for the California State Road
Department, his back was injured. He was not able to work for
the next four years. He was in several hospitals and was told he
might never walk again. Finally a doctor in Los Angeles
successfully operated on his back.
In 1939 or 1940, Virgil and Adell bought 1 1/4 acres in Muscoy,
California (1905 Nolan St.). Adell told about how hard she and
the children worked during this time to keep from losing the
small farm. They raised chickens for fryers and also sold eggs
to a Safeway store. They had ducks, geese, and turkeys. One
turkey became a pet and followed Adell around like a dog. A
large garden was grown each year. Once a sweet potato was
harvested that weighed 18 ½ pounds and part of it had been cut
off when it was being dug up. Adell is noted for her green
thumb; she can take a twig or leaf, plant it, and it grows. She
also got a job at a munitions plant during World War II and
later on worked at Culligan Soft Water Company.
Adell told about having parties at Muscoy for her children and
their friends. She made home ice cream for them.
After Virgil’s surgery, he was able to get a job driving a taxi
in San Bernardino. He then went to Las Vegas, Nevada, and helped
build commercial buildings while his family stayed in
California. Next he bought a dump truck and went into business
for himself. He hauled sand, gravel, and asphalt to Victorville,
California, for the construction of George Air Force Base. Later
he went to work at Ethyl Petroleum Company driving various size
vehicles from San Bernardino to Mojave and back. These vehicles
were used in testing experimental petroleum research products.
He also worked for his brother Bill in Palm Springs, California,
at Hicks and Allred Construction Company. He did all the bids on
jobs they were trying to get.
In 1956, Virgil went to work for Fontana City as a Building
Inspector. In 1957 they bought their home at 9085 Acacia,
Fontana, California.
About 1963 they started going to the Salton Sea to fish and they
enjoyed many trips there. It isn’t clear which one has caught
the most fish, but they both agree that Adell caught the biggest
fish which broke her pole in two and swam away!
Virgil retired in 1973 as the Head Building Inspector for
Fontana, California. Since his retirement he spends a lot of his
time keeping his home and vehicles in good repair. He also
enjoys watching sports on TV.
Adell loves to crochet and has made many granny square
comforters for her family. She also raised song birds and
poodles. She is a very good cook and makes the best lemon pies.
Her corn bread is great too.
On Virgil and Adell’s 50th wedding anniversary an open house in
their honor was held at the elks lodge in Ralito, California.
For their 60th anniversary a family party was held at their
daughter Pauline’s home. Many of their grandchildren and great
grandchildren were present to celebrate the occasion. On 9
October 1994. Virgil and Adell happily celebrated 65 years of
marriage. A dinner was enjoyed by them and their immediate
family at their home in Fontana, California. |
| |
Visit
Us On FaceBook!
Family
History Book For Sale
President
Barack Obama's Allred Family Info
Latest
Research News
DNA
Project
North
Carolina Allreds in the 1750's
Allred
Time Line
1572-1762
North
Carolina History Timeline
Our
British Roots
Allreds
in the American Revolution
Collateral
Families
Tombstone
Project
Ancestor
Photos
|