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Floyd Lemmon ALLRED (010206041407)
Allred Progenitors: (Edward Warren, John Jones, William, William, Thomas)
Born: 04/23/1906 Lovell, WY
Died: 11/22/1980
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 11/30/2001
FLOYD LEMMON ALLRED (2- 7) 1906-1980
(Son of Edward Warren Allred and Rebecca Alvrean Lemmon Allred)
Floyd, the seventh child of Edward Warren and Rebecca Alvrean
Lemmon Allred was born 23 April 1906. He loved his good farm
home where children were taught the art of life's values. He
loved and respected his parents, spending most of his early life
working the farm with his father. His greatest love of the farm
animals was for the horses. He used "Prince and Snip" to help
haul dirt to bank up the old West Ward Chapel in 1924. His
skillful handling of "the best team" resulted in pride and
accomplishment in this welfare project. His favorite, "Dart"
refused to be broken as a farm horse so was used as a saddle
horse and "was she a dandy." Dart died of a disease while Floyd
was in the mission field.
Sugar Beet Harvest: "We would load our wagons the night before,
arise at 4:00 A.M. to feed, water, harness the horses, have our
own breakfast, hitch the team to the wagon and be on our way to
the beet dump. We were usually half way there by the time it was
daylight. Dad would get in the lead with his wagon and another
faithful team would follow him to the scales where he would
unload, then send the first team home on their own while he
unloaded the second wagon. Then he would drive this outfit home.
I stayed in the field and continued with the harvest while Dad
was gone to the beet dump. I would watch for this lone team and
when they arrived I would load them up again. Sometimes we would
get the team started on their way home and lie down in the wagon
box to rest. People marveled that the team knew where to go,
which road to take, which gate to turn into, the yard or the
beet field."
"Team: ' Rat and Sam ' got old so Dad turned them out to run
free on the river bottom. Sam would come to the gate and whinny
to come back to the old correl. He would hang his head over the
fence and beg to come back home. One day when the family was
eating, Veda heard him whinny again - it wrenched their hearts.
Vera couldn't stand it so she jumped up from the table to go let
him back in the correl. Dad's heart was just as wrenched and he
on that occasion made no effort to stop her. They would throw
hay over the fence for them but they were lonesome for their
home. One day both horses disappeared and it was guessed that
someone took them for hunting bait."
Floyd enjoyed school, he was never spelled down. "I did my best
to have my lesson work in good order. With friends we used to
swim in the river and canals. Our swim would be our Sunday
bath.... When Angus and I wanted to ride our horses to the show,
the chores had to be done first. We would take a cup to the barn
at milking time and drink fresh warm milk for our supper.... I
would ride horseback the last Saturday of the month to gather
fast offerings - it took all afternoon."
Floyd loved to dress in his good suit to represent the Lord for
all of his varied church callings. The Allred boys often sang
together in church. Floyd kept good records, regarding farm
animals, church sustainings and ordinations for all relatives
and his own life story, from which all of the above was quoted,
and too interesting to omit from this brief narrative.
Floyd married Marcella Graham, 3 April 1930 in the Salt Lake
Temple in a double wedding with Angus and Elen. To this union
were born twins, Arvella and Arletta, Paul (died in infancy),
Robert, Ruth, Ray, and Dorthy. They served the Lord together in
many capacities and were a friend and neighbor to all they knew.
They spent many years doing genealogical research together, also
as Stake Era directors, on a Stake Mission; Floyd served three
stake missions. For a time they were tourist guides at the Cody,
Wyoming Chapel. Floyd often pondered over his experiences then
penned many a verse of heart-felt poetry for his family members.
Unable to labor on the farm, any longer, his health failing, in
the spring of 1949 they moved into the town of Lovell leaving
the farm Floyd had so long loved. He went to work as a custodian
for the school district. Floyd and Marcella spent their retired
years visiting their married children, always sharing their
canning and talents, and literally all they had. Floyd left
mortality on 22 November 1980. B submitted by Arletta Lombardo,
his daughter.
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