|

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
| |
Clarissa Josephine ALLRED (010203100605)
Allred Progenitors: (James Tillman Sanford Jr., James Tillman Sanford,
James, William, Thomas)
Born: 09/17/1884 Spring City, Sanpete Co., UT
Died: 01/19/1974 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., UT
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 04/19/2000
CLARISSA JOSEPHINE ALLRED BROWN
(By Beulah Brown Thoresen)
Clarissa was the fifth child born to James Tillman Sanford
Allred and Christena B. Anderson Allred. She was born in Spring
City, Sanpete County, Utah on September 17, 1884. She lived in
Spring City until she was eighteen when she met and married
Albert Marshel Brown on March 4, 1903 in Manti.
After their marriage they lived in many towns and cities. I do
not remember all of them but some would be Castle Gate, Helper,
Price, Scofield, Aurora, Salina, Salt Lake City, and Cedar City,
Utah. They moved around a great deal because of dad’s work as a
carpenter. They went where work could be found. Some out of
state cities where they lived were Pasadena, California, Ruth,
Ely, and Macgill, Nevada, Evanston, Wyoming and Pocatello,
Idaho.
Clarissa was a loving mother to four children; three of which
are still living. Claude is in Brush Prairie, Washington, Iyone
is in a rest home in Centerville, Utah and I live in Salt Lake
City, Utah.
One of the fun recollections of my mother was at a Halloween
party at my Aunt May’s. Mom was dressed in my dad’s clothes and
she didn’t want anyone to know who she was. She told my not to
call her mom while she was at the party, but accidently the
first words out of my mouth was “mama” She had to go home and
change her costume again so the others would not know who she
was.
Later in life my mother became much in demand as a live in nanny
or I should say grandma to several well to do families. She
loved to help raise children and teach them to love the Lord.
She also lived and shared a home with her daughter and
grandchildren and enjoyed their company.
She was a member of the Richards Ward Relief Society for many
years.
Clarissa loved her sisters and brothers and they loved her,
their’s was a very close family who spent as much time as they
could together, even in later years. Her heritage was important
to her.
Clarissa made a nice home wherever her family went and she was a
good seamstress and a good quilter.
She had ten grandchildren and about thirty great grandchildren.
I don’t know how many great great grandchildren.
Clarissa passed away January 19, 1974 in Salt Lake City. Her
husband preceded her in death in May 1951. They are both buried
in Salt Lake City.
Children of Clarissa Josephine Allred Brown and Albert Marshal
Brown:
1. Christena Lavon Brown b. 19 Feb. 1905, d. 14 aug. 1993, m.
Ernest LaVern Dunton, George Wilson
2. Olive Ione Brown b. 20 Apr. 1908, m. John Edgar Austin
3. Albert Claude Brown b. 4 Feb. 1910, m. Ruth Lucille Gudmunson
4. Beulah Brown b. 5 Mar. 1918, m. Joseph Van Tippets, Ray J.
Thoresen
Remembrances of Grandma Brown
(by John T. Austin)
The first recollection that I have of Grandma was when I was a
small boy (age 4 or 5). I went with my family (father, mother,
etc.) To visit her in Spring City, Utah. Behind or by the side
of the home that she lived in was an apple tree. Most of the
apples had been picked, but Grandma said we could have what was
left. My brother Pat Austin and cousin Jerry Dunton and I then
climbed the tree and ate as many apples as we could. This
resulted in all of us getting quite sick. My father was really
mad and was going to lick us; but Grandma stood between him and
us and told him if he did, then she would in turn come after him
with the same stick. This was not the last time I stood behind
her comforting and protecting skirts.
She always seemed to have fresh cookies to eat or almost
finished baking. Later when I was ten my father died and we
moved from McGill, Nevada to Salt Lake. We lived with Grandma
and Grandpa Brown at the Pierpont Apartment where they were
managers. Soon after we all moved to a house at 1820 Lincoln
Street in Sugarhouse. This was the home which my mother
purchased after dad’s death. It is where Grandma and Grandpa
Brown lived the rest of their lives. Grandpa converted the old
home into a duplex with part for he and Grandma and the other
part for my mother and kids.
From the age of ten I grew to adulthood with her there as a
presence of love, concern and interest. She was always
interested in what was going on in my life and was a source of
counsel, guidance, inspiration and love, as well as an example
in my making decisions which determined that path I took in my
life. She had a strong testimony of our Savior and the Prophet
Joseph Smith. I didn’t realize until I was well into my adult
years, how hard her life had been.
I know she appreciated her home on Lincoln St. because she
constantly mentioned how nice her living conditions were. Our
home had a good sized garden she would work in; she loved to
garden. (It wasn’t my favorite activity). I missed more than one
or two baseball games because my gardening chores were not
completed.
She had strong beliefs in education and constantly improving.
She was always a reminder to me of doing the best one could and
the value of hard work. Grandma Brown was and is a profound
influence on my life. She was the daughter of a pioneer and she
carried that pioneer spirit with her throughout her life. I was
fortunate to be part of her life and to have known her. |
| |
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
|