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Our Current Newsletter Spring 2012
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Rebecca Alvrean LEMMON
Born: 09/14/1872 Northup, Kane Co., UT
Died: 06/02/1945
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 06/28/2002
Rebecca Alvrean Lemmon Allred
Written by her son Angus Allred August 1, 1937
Rebecca Alvrean Lemmon Allred was born 14 September 1872 at
Northup, Kane County, Utah, and was the third child of James
Abbot Lemmon and Olavia Dorthea Nielsen. She was of a large,
robust stature, and since there were on boys in her immediate
family, she played the part of a boy, by helping her father in
the field. She harbors a loving memory of that parent who died
when she was only nine years of age. She lived with her parents
at Northup and walked from there to Rockville to school for
three winters, after which she was forced to discontinue because
her mother, after her father=s death, had married another man
who had squandered the small estate left by her father and
because of this fact her schooling, with that of the other
children of the family, was neglected due to the requirement
that parents buy the school supplies for their children and help
to pay the teacher=s salary.
Alvrean, with her husband, has always been an ardent supporter
of the education of her children. She often expresses regrets to
have received so little in her day, yet its absence, (which
sometimes tends to harden the nature of the receiver), has left
her genial nature to radiate naturally to all those who are
associated with her, for she is known be her kind and generous
disposition. She has been a perfect wife to her husband, and a
devoted mother to her children. Like her mother, she keeps a
clean, tidy home and surroundings; not only has she done this
well, but she has often assisted with the work in the field and
has always managed a portion of the chores about the farmstead.
She has always been shy of exposing her talents, but on rare
occasions she would use one in which she was naturally gifted,
that of composing poetry. Following is a quotation from one she
composed for one of her children to be used at the lower-glades=
closing day exercises at school:
AOur school work now is through at last!
We=ve put our heads and hands to work
And done our very best.
Our teachers have been good and kind
When attention we have paid.
And now, I hope that we at last
Have made another grade.@
One of her special talents in which she was very much interested
was that of quilt designing and finishing. She served as head of
the quilt department of the Lovell West Ward Relief Society for
some time.
On October 1, a889 she married Edward Warren Allred in the Saint
George Temple. To them, nine children have been born: four boys
and five girls, all of whom are living today. This couple also
number in their posterity forty living grand-children and one
living great grand child. Alvrean lived at Northup, Utah until
her marriage, after which she, with her husband and family,
lived at various places in Southern Utah where they farmed and
did various sundry labor for a livelihood. These places were:
Northup, Hatch, and Springdale. From Springdale they moved to
Lovell, Big Horn County, Wyoming, arriving June 27, 1902. They
took up a homestead and bought land in connection, on the banks
of the Shoshone River, four miles southwest of the town of
Lovell. Most of the writings of this biography have happened at
this last mentioned place.
A while after Alvrean=s husband bought his first car, a Model T
Ford, she felt confident that she could drive it, so one day as
she neared home from a trip to town, she took control of the
vehicle and proceeded commendably well until she approached a
sharp turn which she would have to make after crossing through a
ditch. In her attempt to meet both demands on her attention she
became excited and turned the car the wrong way, whereupon it
came to a sudden dead standstill, have butted snugly up against
a tree.
A rare moment when good nature deserted her occurred just a
short while after her husband had purchased a small band of
sheep. These sheep were locked in a corral through which Alvrean
had to pass, in gathering eggs. As she paused to unloose the
gate latch, she turned to see a rather disreputable buck sheep
following closely behind making ready to butt her. Without
losing a moment she seized the sheep by the horns and attempted
to lead him to a club with which to pummel him. Not being
successful, she felt that she should not let the creature go
without rendering some sort of inhuman punishment upon him, se
she drew back her fist and with great force let it land squarely
between his eyes. The buck suffered no nervous shock nor skull
fracture, but Alvrean found her hand a bit useless for some
time.
During her life time, she served as a Relief Society visiting
teacher for thirty-eight years. Part of this time she served at
Hatch and Springdale, Utah; the remaining majority was rendered
at Lovell, Wyoming. For ten years she was head teacher for the
rural district of the Lovell West Ward Relief Society, having
been presented with an Aoccasional@ table by the organization as
a compliment to her unfailing efforts. She was a second
counselor in the Relief Society at Springdale, Utah, and for
three years she worked as second counselor to Katherine A.
Monour in the Foster Primary which was a branch of the Lovell
West Ward Primary, located on the Lovell bench three and one
half miles south of town.
She has always been a regular attendant at church services and
has urged the same, together with participation in church
organizations, with each of her children. She with the help of
her husband has kept a good home life for them, for the old home
still holds a nucleus about which their posterity love to form.
It is said of them by some observers that their married life is
one of ideal congeniality. She confirms this observation by a
statement she makes spontaneously, wherein she discloses >that
she wishes to live after her husband so as to be able to give
him her personal care through any affliction of old age.=
Certainly, her part in carrying on deeds as have been mentioned
in this text, is worth of emulation.
(This biography taken from AThe Legacy of Edward Warren Allred B
a Descendant of William Allred |
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