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Mary Diantha ALLRED (010206041403)
Allred Progenitors: (Edward Warren, John Jones, William, William, Thomas)
Born: 08/18/1894 Northrup, Washington Co., UT
Died: 03/28/1972
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 11/30/2001
MARY DIANTHIA ALLRED ASA Y (2-3) 1894-1972
(Daughter of Edward Warren Allred and Rebecca Alvrean Lemmon
Allred)
The third child born to Rebecca Alvrean Lemmon and Edward Warren
Allred was a daughter, whom they named Mary Dianthia Allred. She
was born August 18, 1894 in Northrup, Utah, a small community no
longer in existence which was located near Springdale. She was
known by her siblings and peers as May all her life and
established her identity as Mary D. Asay in her later years.
She attended school in Springdale, Utah until her eighth year
when the family moved to Wyoming. Mary was a diligent student
and graduated from the Lovell Schools. She attended the Big Horn
Academy, an LDS Church School in Cowley, about four miles north
of home. This required boarding in town during the week to avoid
the long commute distance, in those days, on horseback. She
would have chosen to pursue further education but her father,
typical of the thinking of the times, considered the destiny of
young women was to prepare to marry and raise a family.
Mary Dianthia Allred married Amos Earl Asay in Lovell, Wyoming
on November 13, 1912. She was just over eighteen years of age
and Earl was twenty-three. They lived all their remaining lives
in the Lovell area. Their union was sealed in the Salt Lake
Temple on September 5, 1923. Eleven years after their marriage,
Earl died on their farm from Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever from a
bite of an infected tick. After her husband's death, Mary moved
into the home Earl had established in town. It was two small
shacks joined to form an "L " , located four blocks from main
street in Lovell. Her father, brothers and brothers-in-law, made
a significant addition to the house resulting in an
accommodating modernized home. This served as home for the
maturing years of the family and her remaining years.
Mary was left with seven children at the depth of "The Great
Depression." They were Archie, Vida, Orvin, Maurice, Clinton
Ted, Anna Mae and Carmen. Mary worked for Fred Snyder in his
store for many years to provide for her family along with doing
laundry and janitorial duty at AThe Relief Society Hall" of the
Lovell Ward Relief Society. She wrote a neat and precise
penmanship and served as secretary to various organizations in
the church. Her records were neat and complete.
Lovell, typical of early Mormon settlements, was laid out for a
subsistence type economy with large lots and provision for
irrigation water to serve home gardens and livestock. An
irrigation ditch ran alongside the family home and served as the
lifeblood of the nourishment of the family. There was a corral
where two cows were kept, a pigpen for fattening out a hog each
year and a chicken coop and run on the back corner of the lot.
These served as the family "food factory." Each spring the
ritual of getting the lot plowed and planted was a major family
undertaking. Uncle Floyd Allred took care of that for many years
until the tractor replaced his horses. A section of the lot was
carefully laid out for "Mama's Flower Garden," which she tended
with great care each summer. The summer was a beehive of
activity for the family to plant, irrigate, hoe, weed and
harvest an abundance of crops for canning. The kitchen was
filled with steaming kettles of cooking vegetables and resulting
jars of nourishing food. There was always something to do, not
just for the sake of the activity but it was absolutely
necessary in the family economy. The family was well fed. Mary
struggled with steadfast faith to provide her family the
substance of life and a testimony of the gospel. She provided
for the needs and comfort of her children as her prime endeavor
during their maturing years.
World War 11 brought some stability to the family and all her
sons served their country in time of need. Her youngest son,
Carmen, was killed in a car accident just a month after his
discharge from the Korean War. The proceeds from his military
life insurance served as a major source of his mother's support
for many years following.
Mary had her physical burdens as well. She suffered from asthma
and hay fever. She also had periodic "spells", possibly
epilepsy. They were sometimes quite severe and frightening to
the children in the family. However, after a day or two of rest
she would be back at the tasks of life necessary for the family
needs. Her mother, Grammy, was not too sympathetic attributing
it to emotional causes. There was no money for doctors,
hospitals or dentist. Home remedies, sheer stamina or faith were
the provisions for health needs. The effects of age took their
toll. Showing symptoms of Alzheimer's, in early 1972, Mary died
on March 28, 1972. -
--written by Clinton Ted Asay, her son.
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