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James Henry ALLRED (0102051001)
Allred Progenitors: (Paulinus Harvey, Isaac, William, Thomas)
Born: 01/10/1849 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., UT
Died: 05/22/1936 Salt Lake City, Salt Lake Co., UT
Submitted by: Larry Cooke Allred 03/27/1999
JAMES HENRY ALLRED
By J. Urban Allred
My father, James Allred, given here as James Henry, never used
his middle name but was known as James Allred or some times his
family called him James H.
James Henry Allred was a pioneer family, inherited pioneer
conditions and surroundings. He was among the first children
born in Salt Lake City on what now is pioneer park, 2nd West
between 3rd and 4th South Street, January 10, 1849, when Salt
Lake was less than two years from the arrival of the pioneers,
of whom his father, Paulinus Harvey Allred, and his grandfather,
Isaac Allred, were in the first company. He saw pioneer life in
every phase and could adapt himself to fit conditions as they
arose.
He was born possessing a strong vigorous well-proportioned body,
six feet high in his stocking feet and weighed from 240 to 260
pounds according to how the law of supply and demand operated.
He had a rugged constitution that scarcely knew what a sick
moment was until after 85 years. His mind was vigorous and
active. He loved the out-of-doors, was not afraid of hard honest
work, cheerfully met the rough side of life and never tired in
his untiring service to his family and to his church in which he
served with unwavering faith and devotion.
James H. Allred was, therefore, by nature and by circumstances a
pioneer in doing a good work in redeeming the barren desert at
hand and he lived to view with keen satisfaction the rise of an
inland empire, the pride of his people and joy of a nation.
Eleven years after the coming of the pioneers, when Johnson’s
army sent by the President of the United States to subdue or
exterminate the Mormon people for their supposed insurrection,
Salt Lake City was entirely deserted by every family and the
people fled for safety in what was known as the move of 1858.
This included Grandfather Paulinus Harvey who married Melissa
Norton, an early pioneer from Indiana, and his father, Our
Great-grandfather, Isaac Allred, who married Mary Calvert, a
great-granddaughter of Lord Baltimore who founded the state of
Maryland. These, with James and William Allred, brothers of
Isaac, are the for-fathers of the Allreds of Church membership
today.
The Allreds never returned after the move, but remained in Lehi
and the southern part of the State. Today a great and widely
scattered family. James Allred continues as a prominent pioneer
in helping lay the foundation of the beginning of Lehi and to
see it grow into a prosperous city of a happy liberty-loving
people.
My father loved the soil and was truly a son of the soil; he
never worked for the other fellow; he responded untiringly in
his work of redeeming the land, building homes, schools and
churches.
Fearless and outspoken he sometimes seamed abrupt; was never
outwardly demonstrative yet he possessed a heart of gold and
possessed the inward emotion of a child. He was always true blue
to his family and his sacred obligations,an honest
man--therefore was the “noblest work of God.”
As father of a large family of 10 children - eight boys and two
girls - he was ever solicitous and watchful and ready to direct
their lives, not only by advice, but by his own potent example
which was most effective in his own family and his own
community.
He performed a wonderful mission in the State of Virginia during
the years of 1894 - 96.
His life’s work was not, nor could be of man alone for he needed
and was nobly sustained by a noble companion and helpmate. Our
father was most fortunate when he met Kate Jones in S. R.
Thurman’s school in Lehi, whom he married June 16, 1873 in the
old Endowment House on the northwest corner of the temple block,
by Daniel H. Wells. James Allred was most happily married, and
therein lies the story of his success. He married my mother - a
slender, small woman - when she was 19 and weighed less than 100
pounds. This was a most important occasion, the beginning of a
new life, the bounds of which are beyond time and even now
cannot be fully comprehended.
Our Father was a public spirited man who never sought public
office. He did serve one term as a City Councilman of Lehi. He
was fearless in the discharge of his duty and would fight
quickly, if necessary, to defend the truth. I know that the Lord
loved and sustained him. But two brief instances:
John Cardon, a missionary companion of father’s in the state of
Virginia in 1894-95, and who at present is a co-officiator of
mine in the Logan Temple, says: “Your father was a wonderful
missionary and was faithful in all things. He could bathe
without a flinch in the coldest water of any man I ever saw. On
one occasion we were without a place to sleep, having been
refused by many. We asked at the last house before we were to go
over a rugged mountain and it was dark. The man who refused to
give us entertainment, showed the path and told us to take it.
We felt our way along the path and the path became worse.
Finally your father said, “stop! We are in danger; we must have
a light,” when suddenly a bright light came from heaven, and we
discovered we were on the edge of a great precipice and another
step forward would have cost us our lives. We cautiously
retraced our steps back to the home that had directed us and
slept in his straw pile the first and only night we slept out.”
I recently talked with President Goates of the Lehi Stake who
told me that when he was 5 years old his fathers family was
stricken with scarlet fever. His only sister, age 7 years, had
died and the doctor had given up all hopes on his recovery. Our
father, who was a close friend to his father, came down and
boldly broke the quarantine, walked into his bedside, then
administered to him and promised him he would get better and
live. Pres. Goates said, “I am here today because of that
blessing.”
James H. Allred was a man that everybody knew because of his
short visits to the homes of his neighbors. He had a broad
understanding of the gospel and liked to talk of the same. He
was full of charity and many a widow and needy home has found a
sack of flour at their back door step when no one knew from
whence it came except one man. He remained close to the soil
which he loved and of which he owned a considerable. He also
owned three homes in Lehi and one in Salt Lake where he moved in
the closing years of his life to do, with mother, temple work
for his kindred dead; a beautiful climax to a beautiful life.
An important part of his life must not be overlooked. He did
valuable service as a guardian of the safety of the community
against the Indians of early days. He was a member of the w. H.
Winns Co., and as such gave valuable service on many occasions
in using armed forces to quail the Indians. His father, Paulinus
Harvey, known as Colonel Harvey, and who could talk the Indian
language at one time, with father met the Indians in the West
Mountains and they together persuaded them to disperse and go
back in peace.
An important and far reaching phase of father’s life was his
move into Alberta, Canada. Having lost all his irrigation water
(tapped by artesian wells driven by Salt Lake City on the
opposite side of the river) on his big ranch on the west bank of
Jordan River, three miles west of Lehi, which had been our home
for many years, he looked for new opportunities such as were
offered in the new comm\unity of Raymond, Alberta, Canada, where
father went in 1902 and bought 2 ½ sections of land , 960 acres
of the Knight Sugar Co. He located most of his boys here, part
of which members of the family still own. Having accomplished
this, father came back to his home in Salt Lake having raised
two large crops of wheat in Alberta.
The hopes of the future were realized: to these humble, but
richly endowed homes came eight sons and two daughters,
manifesting rare talents as future teachers, missionaries,
bishops, temple officiators, etc. They were: J. Urban - 1874,
John G. - 1876, James - 1878, Minerva - 1879, Clarence - 1881,
Rodney C. - 1883, Buell - 1885, Aaron - 1888, Elijah Hugh -
1892, Odessa - 1896.
Father passed away at the home of Minerva A. Wade, Salt lake
City, may 22, 1936 in his 86th year.
As we pause tonight and scan over the road which we have trod
and the pit from which we have emerged, we can but exclaim,
“Surely a Devine hand has been over us and shaped our destiny
and preserved our lives.”
Taken from the diaries of J. Urban Allred
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