|

Home
About
Us
Frequently
Asked Questions
Join The AFO!
Support
our Research and Buy Cool Stuff!
Board of
Directors
Newsletter
Reunions
East
Coast Allred Family Association
Rocky Mountain
Allreds
Tales of a Traveling Genealogist
| |
Calvert Lorenzo ALLRED (0102051303)
Allred Progenitors: (Sidney Rigdon, Isaac, William, Thomas)
Born: 05/12/1864 Spring City, Sanpete Co., UT
Died: 08/14/1932 Safford, UT
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 01/09/1999
CALVERT LORENZO ALLRED
Calvert Lorenzo Allred was born in Spring City, Utah, May 12,
1864, to Sidney Rigdon Allred and Lucy Ann Allred, the third
child of a family of 16 - 8 of whom died in infancy. He spent
his youth in Spring City and Chester, Utah.
On May 31, 1888 he married Gertrude Maria Jensen. She had come
to Spring City with her family from Tolne Hjorring, Denmark in
1880. She was 18, he was 24. They were sealed in Manti Temple
December 12, 1888. To this union 10 children were born.
On October 25, 1890 he married Andrea Jensen, a sister of his
first wife. They were married and sealed by A.F. McDonald in
Colonia Diaz, Chih. Mexico. Andrea was endowed in the Logan
Temple 17 July 1890. They had seven children.
This family was among the first pioneers in Mexico and helped in
building up the Mormon Colonies. They lived in Dublen a year
then settled in Colonia Juarez, 15 miles south. They had many
thrilling experiences. Andrea remembers one summer when living
in the mountains at a sawmill they got word that their
neighbors, the Thompson family, had been killed by Indians. All
the families got together in one place and the men stood guard
all night. The next day they went back to their homes where, for
several days and nights, the men kept guard.
They lived across the street from President Anthony W. Ivins for
eight years and enjoyed their love and friendship. They built a
large red brick double home across the river. Cliff and Cal tell
of carrying bricks for this.
Calvert freighted with his teams and wagons. He also had a
contract with the Mexican government to haul the mail from
Pearson to Juarez.
Ada Allred Lucas, the last living child of Andrea and Calvert,
writes some memories of Mexico. “I remember every nook and
corner in our big beautiful, seven bedroom, red brick house.
What a good cook Mama was, her suet pudding, red mush, sweet
soup, bread dumplings. She made noodles and such good light
bread and cinnamon buns.”
“We carried water from the river for everything. Dad had a well
started, but not finished. We had a nice orchard. Papa would
raise enough beans from one year to the next. Thrashing them by
hand. There were two or three hundred pounds of peanuts, pop
corn, and hundreds of two quart bottles of fruits and berries.
We kids would go pick berries at Brother Pearson’s and they
would make us stick out our tongues to see if we had eaten any.”
Bessie: “I remember when your Mother and Dad got married. I went
all over town and took invitations, your Grandma Sevey made a
big dishpan of doughnuts. There was so many people. I guess
everyone in town. We opened up the big sliding doors between the
front room and dining room, it looked like one big room. The
rooms were all big anyway. So your Mother and Dad moved in the
front room. When Cal got married he moved in the front room on
the other side.”
“When Myrl was born your Mother had blood poison. They made a
bed in a wagon and took her to Pearson to the Doctor. We just
had a midwife, Sister Seville, who delivered her. Papa, Mama,
and Theresa went with your folks, they got a lady to come stay
with us and cook. When they got back your Mother didn’t have any
milk. So Mama would take Myrl about two blocks away to this
Mexican lady to nurse her. I’d go with her. I remember her big
black breast, anyway, Mryl got along fine. I even remember her
name - Nichannor. We kids ate at the Mexican place lots of
times. They were nice.
“Mama had a Mexican lady come and wash every week. The boys
would carry the water
and turn the washing machine by hand and she would eat with us.
Mama would always cook beans when she came and she put sugar on
them. We bought sugar by the 100 lbs. sack, all cubes.
“Papa, Mama and Aunt Maria would all go to Church walking, it
wasn’t far, they had to cross the river. Mama and Aunt Maria in
their black skirts and white blouses and Papa so tall and
strong.
“Dorothy and I rode our horses through the Park one day. The
Rebels were there. I saw them cut a calf’s throat and catch the
blood in a bucket and drink it out of tin cups. They were all
drunk and acting awful. It didn’t take me long to get out of
there.”
“One day they came to the house. Papa was there and asked them
all out in the mellon patch while the boys went up to the corral
and drove our horses back in the pasture. Papa kept breaking
melons and talking to them. So when they left they thanked Dad
and went on to the next place and took all their horses. We had
500 acres of pasture land, our house set back from the road,
maybe a block. It had a heart shaped lawn to the little gate and
gravel on each side.”
“It must have been hard on my folks to work so hard and have
things so nice and then have to leave it all. One day Papa went
by Taylor’s place. They were just eating dinner, a knock at the
door, it was the officers. They were after Taylor for stealing
something. The Taylors had a trap door under a trunk and rug.
They got him down there just as the officers were coming in.
Papa saw his empty plate and jumped up and set down in his place
and started eating. They came in, saw nothing and left. Taylor
sure thanked Papa for being so quick to think.”
“I remember your Grandma Severy’s place well, big apple orchard.
Una ran around with Dorothy and she was to our house a lot.”
“When Milt and Joe went back later our poor dog was still there
so poor and worms in his head. He was so glad to see the boys.
They fed him good, but when they left they couldn’t leave him in
that shape so took him down to the cotton wood trees and killed
him. Milt said that was the hardest thing he had ever done. They
packed a big box of dishes and buried it under a peach tree.”
“Papa made our big round cheese and jerky, from a hind quarter
of beef at a time (whole) didn’t know it could be done, but he
did it. We weren’t allowed to touch it. It was hanging in one of
the bedrooms upstairs, but Papa would take us all up there and
cut us a slice.
“President Joseph Fielding Smith said once when he was down
there a lot of these little children will live to see the coming
of the Lord. We were all standing outside by the Church house.”
After 22 years in Mexico. The growth in the colonies was
phenomenal, they manufactured shoes, harnesses, saddles and
furniture, ground the flour, cut vast quantities of good lumber,
which they sent to El Paso. They erected fine homes, picket
fences, lawns and flower beds, orchards, the cattle and horses
fed on long grass, by 1910 they were well settled and happy at
the prospect of a good life in the six colonies.
In 1911 the rumble of the revolution and the threat upon the
colonies caused President Junius Romney to ask for a safe exodus
of the women and children to El Paso in return for the demand of
the Rebels for all the guns. On July 25, 1912 fleeing from
danger, they made quick preparation to leave the homes and
comforts they had worked so hard to achieve.
All rode off leaving their homes just as they lived in them from
day to day. All felt sure that immediate return would be
possible. As a result none took more than one trunk, one bed
roll, and few realized that they were looking at their homes for
the last time. This was more of an adventure, after delivering
their guns to Colonel Ponce. There was soon a stream of wagons
piled high, topped with women and children on their way to
Pearson. All were crowded into one train. When passenger cars
were filled boxcars and even a few cattle cars were used. They
were thankful when night came and darkness hid their plight. In
El Paso, recalling the comfortable homes so hurriedly left, and
here they were forced to accept public charity and it was
anguish to their souls, even tho the city was cordial and
sympathetic.
Ada remembers this experience well. “We came out on the train.
When it got so bad down there the church decided for all the
members to leave. We all met at a certain place in wagons to go
to Pearson to catch the train for El Paso. Mama and Aunt Maria
fried chicken for us to eat on the way. Then opened the chicken
coops and let the chickens out. Mama had 200 white leghorns and
Aunt Maria 200 brown ones. Milford and I went up to the plum
trees to pick a few plums that was just turning red, the wind
was blowing, and we said the trees were telling us goodby. We
got to Pearson and the train was late. I think it was about 15
miles there. The Mexicans were all drunk and cursing and would
take what ever they wanted of the people. I re-member how scared
I was hanging onto Mama. The train finally got there and we were
glad to get on, Papa went with us. All the men folks stayed to
come out overland with what ever they could bring, traveling at
night to keep from being seen. I don’t remember what they
brought but the sewing machine for Mama, wagon and two horses.
You can imagine how Mama and Aunt Maria didn’t know if they
would ever see their sons again. We were watching them leave as
they got up on a hill they all stopped, we thought maybe the
Rebels were coming, but later learned it had started to rain and
they were putting up the Wagon covers.”
“We didn’t have any lights coming out, afraid of the Rebels, and
no water, and the babies were crying. It was light when we got
to El Paso. Cars were waiting to take us to the lumber yard
sheds, where we all had a stall just hung a blanket between each
family. I slept on the floor and the mosquitoes were so bad we
burned green sunflowers to smoke them out. They cooked our
meals. Mama would take a kettle over and get our rations for how
many in the family. Then we had little bottles milk. It was the
first milk I’d ever seen in a bottles and it was cold.”
“Aunt Maria was pregnant so she went on to Utah where Mabel was
born. Cal and Nelia went later.”
“Papa and Uncle Byron soon got a house for us. We all lived
together, slept on the floor, had one small stove. Uncle Byron
went to town to get a wash board. As he came up the steps where
we were all sitting, as it was hot inside, Mama said, “So we
have to buy our washboard here.” He didn’t speak, he dropped
right inside the door, dead of a heart attack. Papa and the boys
soon got a job and we moved to Highland Park.”
They stayed in El Paso almost a year. Calvert used his big team
to do construction work. The boys all got jobs to help, but in
June of 1913 they started for the Gila Valley.
Again Ada remembers this trip. “We came from El Paso overland
and the boys drove the wagon with the sewing machine and what
little else we had. We rode in a beautiful surrey. It was so
pretty, with two seats and lace fringe all around the top, a
lamp on each side at the front that burned kerosene. Papa and
Mama set in the front, Dorothy, Theresa and me in the back
seat.”
“We drove cows, and night and morning we would milk the cows so
we had all the milk we wanted. Mama would put what we didn’t
drink in a bucket with a lid on it, hang it on the back of the
wagon and we would have butter at night. Papa did most of the
cooking, big round flap jacks, an inch thick. It was fun, we
waved at the men on the train every day. It took us two weeks.
We sleep on the ground. One night after we got in Arizona we saw
a big centipede near our beds. In Thatcher we pitched our tent
in Uncle Joe’s fruit orchard. Papa got a house soon and we moved
close to the Church house. He soon sent for Aunt Maria and got
another house for her. She only lived two weeks. Mama was
feeding her water with a teaspoon, she raised up and looked
toward the door and said, “What did Pa do with Byron”. (He’s the
one I told you died in El Paso.) After the funeral we all moved
in one house - 14 all together.
Andrea took the responsibility of raising this large family and
after a year in Thatcher they moved to Safford, north of town
toward the river. The next year they moved to Solomonville to
farm. The older boys helped to support the family, but soon
found wives among the valley girls and started homes of their
own.
In 1916, Calvert found 40 acres south of Safford in the cactus
area where he could raise feed and started a dairy with around
30 jersey cows. Milford was about 10 years old and remembers
well, he said, “The farm was well tended, with alfalfa fields,
grain, corn, melons, a garden, large hay stacks in his clean
yard fences in repair. Papa was a strict, stern man, a
perfectionist, you could go into his tool shed or store rooms in
the dark and find anything, it was always in its place.”
They remodeled and added on to the house making a lovely home
with well tended lawns and trees. They dug a cellar on the back
to store food and meat. etc., hundreds of quarts of fruit and
vegetables were canned each year.
How well everyone remembers the big team, May and June, he
brought with him from Mexico and his big strong stallion, more
than once he pulled a hay stacker out of the river when a team
could not do it!
The 4 a.m. alarm, winter and summer, got the household up to
begin the day - cows to milk, milk to separate, calves and pigs,
chickens to feeds, a farmer’s breakfast and school for the
children.
His youngest son, Reed, added some memories of my Father. “When
I was a boy my father purchased two colts and broke them. At
least he thought he’d broken them. One summer day he took the
team out to mow hay. However, suddenly the young team broke
loose and drug the mowing machine and my father all over the
twenty acre hay field. My father fell off the mowing machine,
but hung on nevertheless until he was finally successful in
getting them stopped. Subsequently, he was using the same team
to plow a field. In part, because my father weighed over two
hundred pounds, he again finally succeeded in stopping the
horses, but needless to say, he sold the horses a short time
later. Also, when I was a boy, my brother and I would often take
a wagon up to the foot of the mountain to get a load of wood,
which we used for heating and cooking. At the place where we cut
the wood there was a small stream with trout in it. There was a
small hole in the stream where we were able to catch the fish
with our hands. One summer day we had cut and loaded the wood
and were having the good time catching trout. However, the time
went by and it was late that night as we were going home, Dad
met us with a good willow in his hand. He used it to convince us
that we should not again stay so late up in the mountains.
He hauled his cream to the Safford Creamery each day always
bringing back a block of ice for ice milk fur supper. In 1921 he
bought a Model A touring car from his son, Ivan. Milford, the
oldest boy at home, remembers he drove it home and had the big
job of teaching his father to drive. Later they bought a brand
new Dodge making the trip to Safford every day a pleasure and on
Sunday driving to Layton Ward for Church.
He was well known and respected by all, a hard working man who
taught his children how to work. He was a law-abiding citizen
and ready to help in every movement that was for the up building
of his country. He was successful in every business undertaking
he engaged in and was a faithful member of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
He passed away in his home on August 14,1932 at the age of 68,
following an hour’s ill-ness, due to heart trouble. He had 17
children - 10 sons and 7 daughters. Mrs. Corilla Jones
(Willard), Calvert, Clifford, Joseph, Ivan, J. Milton, C.V.
(Bert) Lynn, Vern, Milford, Reed, Lucy Allred, Dorothy Creps
(Roy), Thora Foote (Walter, Sr.), Theresa Birdno (Bill), Ada
Lucas (Orville), and Mable Despain (Arlie). He also raised a
granddaughter, Bert’s first child, Viola Allred Brooher (Larry).
He is buried in the Thatcher Cemetery.
The following is from the Safford Guardian:
Calvert L. Allred died at his home in Safford at 10:20 o’clock
Sunday evening, August 14th, following an hour’s illness due to
heart trouble. The deceased was born in Spring City, Utah, May
12, 1864, and lived in that place until he went to Mexico in
1890. Being one of the first pioneers to Mexico, he helped in
building up the Mormon colonies there and made for himself and
his family a comfortable home, which they were compelled to
abandon in 1912, when the Mormon people were driven out of that
country because of a revolution.
In 1913 he came to the Gila Valley and had lived here all the
time until his death. He was well know and respected by all who
knew him. He was a law-abiding citizen and was ready to help in
every business undertaking he engaged in and was a faithful
member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints.
A wife, 15 children, 45 grandchildren and one great grandchild
survive him and all were present at the funeral. The children
are Clifford L. Allred of Gallup, N.M.; Calvert A.S. Ivin, C.V.
(Bert), J. Milton, Milford, Reed, Mrs. Theresa Birdno, and Mrs.
Ada Lucas, all of Safford; Joseph Allred of Thatcher, Vern and
Lynn Allred of Los Angeles, Mrs. Thora Foote of Solomonville,
Mrs. Dorothy Creps of Superior, and Mrs. Mable DeSpain, of
Phoenix. He was proceeded to the Great Beyond by a wife, two
children and eight grandchildren.
Funeral services for the deceased were held Wednesday afternoon
in the Layton ward church and were conducted by Bishop Clarence
Naylor. The speakers were President H.L. Payne, M. Mickelson and
Lafe Nelson. Special musical numbers were given by the Layton
ward choir and by Mrs.Viva Morris.
Internment was made in the Union cemetery.
|
| |
New Items
For Sale!
Latest Research
News
DNA Project
North
Carolina Allreds in the 1750's
Allred Time Line
1580-1762
North Carolina
History Timeline
Our British Roots
Allreds in the
American Revolution
Collateral
Families
Tombstone
Project
Ancestor Photos
|