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Tales of a Traveling Genealogist
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Joseph Newell ALLRED (01020511060101)
Allred Progenitors: (Joseph Newberry, Edsil Myron, Joseph Anderson, Isaac,
William, Thomas)
Born: 01/15/1915
Died: 07/29/1997
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 05/19/1999
JOSEPH NEWEL ALLRED
January 15, 1915
Little Abe
Nostalgic memories were triggered by Dr. Knowles in his romance
of horses to a time and place when a man bought a horse to help
support himself vs. buying horses to relieve frustration. Little
Abe was born to see both. We called him Little Abe because his
sire was Little Man by Oklahoma Star and because the neighbor’s
kid envied him so.
At three years Little Abe was a mighty handsome quarter horse,
but because he had more muscle than bone and interfered
somewhat, I gelded him and sent him up to my kid brother, Tex (Edsil),
to be introduced to range work. Tex worked on a desert range in
Northwestern Arizona and the few mountains that broke up the
terrain had been run over by prospectors for a hundred years but
about all that was left now were the mounds and empty shafts and
a few descendants of their pack burros. Little Abe was still
green that fall day when Tex, on a routine circuit, spied one of
these descendants, a two year old mule, upwind a short piece in
a small clearing in the cholla cactus and mesquite.
Now a range mule, properly broke, is a right valuable critter
and Little Abe needed experience, so Tex leaned over and
tightened the cinch, uncoiled his old nylon (by gosh, all he had
left was 20 feet), eased Little Abe up to the edge of the
clearing and broke in on top of that wild mule like a half ton
bolt. Before the jack could get into the brush a neat little
loop sailed over his big ears, but before the noose swished over
his long nose, that wild mule lifted his forelegs like a bird in
flight and by the time he had reached the end of the rope, Tex
had a wild mule by one hind foot.
Now this was downright inconvenient for he could not drag him
ten miles to the corral by one leg and he would have to be hog
tied to get the rope up on his head but to get that mule
stretched out long enough to get him tied proved to be quite a
problem..for half a dozen times Tex and Little Abe drove by and
jerked him off his feet and swirled him through the air like a
rock on a string, but each time that jack would land with at
least one foot on the ground, violently kicking against the
nylon and beating a hot line of welts along Little Abe’s right
side and Tex’s leg. By now Tex thought it might be better to get
loose from the mule and he tried giving him slack and running
the rope off but he had a figure eight over the fetlock and the
old rope wouldn’t spring loose, so he started looking for
another way out, and seeing a small sturdy old mesquite with a
fork about shoulder height, he drug that jack over by the
mesquite and, with a little maneuvering, got the rope flipped
through the fork, and with Little Abe on one side of the tree
and the jack on the other, he pulled him up to where that jack’s
hind end butted up to the mesquite trunk and his hind leg was
firmly lodged in the fork. Now, it was only a matter of easing
Little Abe up the rope while he reeded in the slack until he had
that mule’s foot dallied up to about one foot of the saddle
horn, then, by releasing the horn loop, Tex got down, and with
the free end of the lariat, haltered a much subdued wild mule.
While Tex caught his breath, and before cutting the rope loose
from the foot, he took in the picture--a foam-streaked, green
colt with a quarter of a wild mule up in his face, leaning
through a fork of a mesquite, rolling his nostrils and flicking
his ears to and fro, holding a taut line. He grinned, “Little
Abe, you got the makings of a rope horse!”
For a Horse
This tale begins in February 1981. Roberta had flown to
Sunnyvale to be with Marlin and Lisa to help indoctrinate our
newest granddaughter, Melissa, into family life. Loneliness
started when I returned home from the airport and by the third
day my yearning for something new was getting strong. (Winter
weather limited outdoor activities.) Then, out of my solitary
reminiscing, came thoughts of Max Nichols.
Max was a classmate in veterinary school and I hadn’t seen him
for years. I didn’t even know if he
was alive. I had heard that he had had a heart attack and was
living in Sanpete County. Max was two years ahead of me in vet
school and a very likeable Mormon boy. Occasional rumors over
the past 25 years indicated that Max had abdicated his
veterinary career goals to raise and show horses. Perhaps a
visit with Max would help ease the weight of loneliness.
Through the telephone I located Mary Nichols, his wife, and
found where Max kept his chariot racing team and when he would
be apt to be there at a friend’s in northeast Mt. Pleasant. I
had a nice, pleasant visit with Max who, seemingly, had made a
remarkable recovery from open-heart, by-pass surgery two years
before. He told me of his efforts in chariot racing and their
hopes to raise $7,000.00 to buy one-fourth interest in a
“Futurity Colt” with someone in Salt Lake. He also mentioned a
neighbor, Tom Brotherson, who had a surplus of half-Tennessee
Walker colts for sale. Now this interested me more than race
horses and I told Max that if he would trade for a Walker I
would buy it from him. I saw Max at the Payson race track the
next Saturday and he informed me that Tom wouldn’t trade but
would sell cheap, so I called Tom and made an appointment to
meet him at his pasture between Fairview and Mt. Pleasant the
next week
The visit to Tom Brotherson’s pasture was somewhat of a trial.
It took two hours to get most of the mares and colt herd into
his makeshift corral and to catch three of his half-wild,
unbroken colts. We waded around in six inches of melting snow
with buckets of grain and flakes of hay, trying to coax them
through three fields and into his barn lot. The first two colts
were for a buyer in Salt Lake who would pick them up later. The
third one, the best of the rest, I could have for $450.00.
Well, I didn’t care much for this one-half Appaloosa and mostly
white with chestnut marking --but he was the only one of age and
size to start breaking and so I agreed to take him. The only
thing I liked about him was his sire, a nice large Tennessee
Walker. Tom was to deliver him after the next Saturday horse
sale at which I hoped to sell old Cinnamon for about $600.00.
Tom delivered the colt he called Chief, Saturday afternoon, and
I paid him $450.00 and then rode down to the sale barn in
Spanish Fork and, to my dismay, collected only $375.00 for
Cinnamon. The price of horses had dropped drastically in the
previous week and I was embarrassed and chagrined. I had picked
up Roberta at the airport the night before and had hoped for a
pleasant surprise for her as I hoped that Chief would make a
pleasure horse “par-excellent.”
Chief turned out to be wilder than a deer. I had to leave a long
rope trailing from his halter to catch him and it was nearly two
months before I could get up to curry or pet him. Then I saw a
horse trainer of Payson advertise, “Break and train for $35.00
per week, plus feed.” I sent Chief and Dolly, a filly from my
brother Earl, to Bob Davis to be gentled and ridden. After
$200.00 and feed for them, I brought them home with the
responsibility to keep riding them to keep them gentle. This we
managed to do fairly well. I had them shod two times during the
summer and even got Roberta to ride Dolly a time or two. She
seemed to be the most gentle and stable of the two. Chief was
still flighty, especially with children and strangers, and so I
usually rode him.
In August, while Roberta was in Farr West, helping Emmalou
indoctrinate Alisa into the Penrod and Allred families, I stayed
to do chores and attend BYU Education week. Glancing thru the
evening Daily Herald I saw an old horse van for sale for
$575.00. As the van was in American Fork, I phoned Bob and asked
him to check it out for me and if he thought it a good buy to
phone me back the next night. “It’s a good buy,” said Bob, so by
phone I agreed to put a down payment to hold it until the end of
the week. (I didn’t want to miss any Education Week classes.)
But first I called Roberta to tell her of my intentions. She
seemed agreeable. It sounded like a bargain. Horse trailers were
in the neighborhood of $2000.00.
The next week Roberta and I drove to American Fork to pick up
the van. It was a 1951 Ford, one ton, truck with a homemade van
with three horse stalls built on it, a genuine antique to drive.
It’s vintage and two-tone color of blue and white gave it such a
character that we dubbed it “Old Blue.” By the time I had it
licensed in my name and a safety check it cost another $200.00.
Trips to Maryland and Arizona in October and cold weather
terminated my horse activities until January when I noticed in
the Nebo School District’s Continuation Education Bulletin a
class in Dressage that was being offered. This was the stimulus
I needed to get me working with the horses again and so I
inquired by phone and finding us eligible to enter the beginners
class, I enrolled Chief and myself for eight once-a-week classes
of one hour for $30.00, to begin in February. I took Chief
because he seemed to be the better of the two to load in Old
Blue and also the better to learn and remember. I had fixed a
loading chute next to the corral and had fed the ponies in Old
Blue several times.
It took a lot of work to get Old Blue to start for we were
having occasional sub-zero nights, but by worry and recharging
batteries and placing a light bulb next to the battery at night
I was able to get Old Blue to run. The first two mornings I left
with the temperature in the mid teens and it hasn’t been above
freezing since. I leave by 8:00 a.m. each Saturday morning and
drive to the Spanish Fork Fair Grounds for the lessons and
return between 10:00 and 11:00 a.m. My instructor is Mrs. Mary
Ann James, a mother with at least two sons, a teenager and a
pre-schooler. She is a lover of horses, dedicated to learning
and riding. She has been in Dressage learning and riding, for
three or four years, but has ridden horses all her life. As a
teacher she is very patient and pleasant and quick to encourage
and praise when the horse or you “do it right.”
Dressage is diametrically opposed to all my previous experience
and habits and I find it somewhat difficult to learn and do. It
would be wiser to start this training without any previous
experience in riding. Actually, I believe the horse is learning
his part faster than I am, but I believe that this is a more
refined and higher lever of horsemanship and therefore I hope to
continue. It requires more dedication and persistence and offers
a life-long challenge, as they say the best ones are continuing
to improve and it is a horse-rider team which takes six of more
years to even reach the field of competition.
Payson, UT, 25 Mar 1982
An Axe to Grind
I do not remember my first introduction to the axe. It was a
familiar household tool in those days and probably it was
watching Father chop wood for the kitchen stove. Later, having
the chore of carrying in the stove wood and then the struggle of
mastering the axe for it became my assignment to keep the wood
box supplied until I left home to go to college. This chore was
often a challenge, sometimes exciting, sometimes boring, but
always essential, for I never wanted to see my mother trying to
chop wood. It wasn’t so bad to see Father having to knock out a
few chunks of wood in an emergency for he seemed to do it with
ease.
How to sharpen and use an axe as a Boy Scout was a lark for we
all were using the axe at the family woodpile by the time we
entered scouting and our first fund raising project as scouts
was to take the team and wagon into the foothills of the Graham
Mountains and bring back a cord and a half of mesquite wood per
team, to furnish fuel for the Central Grammar School.
Wrestling wood from a mesquite thicket was exciting to us. We
had to learn how to avoid the thorns and reach the larger limbs
and trunks that were dead or dying for they produced the best
wood and were the easiest to cut.
In the valley it was cottonwood trees that furnished most of our
wood. It was plentiful and easy to cut. One Christmas holiday
from college, J.M. Smith gave me the opportunity to trim the
cottonwood trees that grew along the lane to one of his farms.
This gave me ten days at $1.50 and it was sure appreciated. The
limbs fell into his fields where the cows and horses ate the
smaller twigs and the bark from the larger limbs.
The wood that was the most fun to chop was juniper. Each summer
I worked for Uncle Alva Porter in Heber. We would spend the last
ten days hauling in his winter wood. We’d pull the dead juniper
down with a team and haul a wagon load in each day and I would
chop some up for the stove. Juniper is easy to chop and split
and has a most pleasant, fragrant odor.
I still enjoy chopping wood, now, after 45 years. I go each
summer into the forest of BLM lands and bring out four to five
cords of cedar or quaking aspen or oak for our winter fuel. I
try to keep a one year supply ahead. Now I use a chain saw to
cut the wood into stove length but I still use the old single
blade plum axe that I’ve had for over 20 years. It has gone thru
about half a dozen handles. I enjoy working with a good sharp
axe.
If I Could be a Boy Again
If I could be a boy again I’d sure do it different! Growing up
is such an easy thing if we take time to think. I didn’t think
about other people -- they are so important -- I just thought
about myself.
Everybody seemed to like my Dad. He was a wonderful dad but I
didn’t think to ask him what he did or said to make friends
until 50 years later. He said, “You have to be a friend to make
friends.” and many friends are so much fun. I didn’t ask him how
boys grow up to be men or integrity, or how boys should control
or direct the biological urges that make growing up so hard.
If I could be a boy again I would ask him all the questions I
could think of about his parents and grandparents, for now there
is no one to ask about them. How did great grandparents live and
why did they move and move?
If I could be a boy again I would be a “mama’s boy.” Mother’s do
so much for boys but mother’s don’t last long enough. A cheerful
boy that looks for things to do to help his mother brings joy to
more than two and memories of mother are so precious. I would
like them all to be happy ones.
After I graduated from high school I asked Mother to make a
special quilt for me to use like a bedroll. It was made from old
overalls on both sides and filled with old cotton flannel
blankets inside. It was three times heavy. I used it as a saddle
blanket and bed roll on a 225 mile horseback ride. She worked
hard to make it, just for me.
If I could be a boy again I’d try hard to be patient and kind to
sisters. They need a brother for a friend, one who is an example
of the man they’ll want to marry, and sisters grow up to be so
pretty and have such nice nephews and nieces that it makes you
proud to be an uncle. Sisters love you for many years after all
other girls pass out of memory.
Brothers are the best boys in all the world. They can help you
do so many things and they let you help them on some of the most
interesting projects. In 1933 my little brother and I rode
horseback 12 hours a day for a week and never had an unpleasant
or unkind word. Brothers are good companions.
Everybody is an important as anybody to God. He loves them all.
I’d like to be like that. If I could be a boy again I’d try to
be tolerant and friendly to everyone. I’d speak only pleasant
words that would make people feel good, especially those who
seem to be less gifted, more homely, less popular, more bashful
or more peculiar. Sometimes the most homely girls grow up to be
the most beautiful mothers, or teachers, or neighbors and I’d
sure like them to have fond memories of me.
I’d never make fun of a boy because he was different. Years ago
in high school I knew a boy named Walter. Some of the class
didn’t like Walter because they thought he was obnoxious in
class. They called him “the perpetual interrogator” because he
asked too many questions. Forty years later I met Walter. He had
become a great man, highly respected, a real gentleman. I hope I
wasn’t one who made fun of Walter.
Yep, it would be nice to be a boy again. I’d try to think about
other people. Would what I’d say and do today bring happy
memories fifty years away?
Payson, UT, 5 Feb 1985
Summer of 1936
I returned to Central at the end of my senior year at Tempe to
thin cotton on the J.M. Smith farms. This I had done every
spring for the past six or seven years as Father had worked for
Smith and we lived in the old three-room shanty on the old Webb
place. This was a great favor to me as it was the only work that
paid $1.25 to $1.50 a day and was available during the summer to
young men such as I. Father was home, working part time for Mr.
Smith and part time for the WPA with my brother Earl who had
recently married Velma. Mother and the younger brothers and
sisters had gone to Heber, Navajo County, to help take care of
Grandpa Porter who was in his last year of life. Cotton thinning
would last about two weeks and after a week of seeking other
work I would usually go to Heber for the balance of the summer
where I had a standing offer to help my Uncle Alva Porter weed
corn for my board and room, but this summer the college at Tempe
offered a limited number of students the opportunity to come and
work out their fall tuition on the college farm. This was about
ten days’ work.
It was mid-morning in late June when I walked up to the highway
in front of the Grand Central Market to hitch a ride to Tempe.
Traffic was sparse and it took several hours to get a ride.
During this time an altercation between a drunk “Oakie” and the
store manager, Vaughn McBride, developed which ended in a fist
fight and the sheriff appearing on the scene. Arguments and
fights were very distressing and this cast a dark shadow of
gloom over me for two or three days. By dark I had reached Ft.
Thomas and then stood on the corner of the highway in front of
the school house until mid-morning the next day before catching
a ride on a truckload of potatoes going from Verden (New Mexico)
to be peddled in Miami (Arizona). After an hour or two on the
west edge of Miami I was picked up by a Mr. Brown, a car sales
agent in Mesa. He was returning from Detroit with two new
Chevrolet cars. After driving two or three miles he asked me to
drive the car while he rode with his wife in the car behind. On
the desert opposite Queen Creek he took one car and drove out to
his farm and Mrs. Brown dropped me off in Mesa.
Feeling a need for clean clothes and having brought none with
me, I caught a bus to Phoenix to try to get into a discount
store before closing time. At the Tempe stop I saw my girl fried
on the Mesa bound bus. Quickly I stepped off and walked to her
window and asked permission to see her later that evening.
Permission granted, I reboarded for Phoenix, made it in time to
buy a pair of cotton slacks and a T-shirt for about $2.00.
Returning to Mesa I walked out to Uncle Spencer Porter’s home
(three miles east of town), cleaned up and returned to have a
pleasant visit with Roberta.
I stayed with Uncle Spencer for a few days before the work
started on the college farm. During this time he bought me a
pair of tennis shoes to work in, for which I shoveled out his
irrigation ditch -- about two days’ work. Uncle Spencer had lost
an arm in World War I and could not use a shovel for heavy work.
After finishing the work on the college farm I hitched a ride up
to the Roosevelt Council Boy Scout Camp under the Tonto Rim,
with Prof. Martin Mortensen, Jr. We worked at building a mess
hall for the scout camp for a couple of days and then I started
for Heber by walking up Christopher Creek to the rim road. Heber
was about 25 or 30 miles from there and I had hopes of catching
a ride on the rim road. A few miles down the road I came to a
Forest Service lookout tower. The watchman was an old
acquaintance, Burr Webb, who suggested that I stay overnight
with him and as he was going into Heber the next evening for
supplies I could ride in with him. In Heber I found that the
folks had returned to Central two days before. I remained with
Uncle Alva, hoeing weeds, until time to return to Tempe for my
senior year.
The Skunk
(written in Payson, Utah probably 1982)
The skunk is a native American animal sometimes called a pole
cat or a civet cat. They are about the size of the domestic cat
but differ in many ways. They are larger in the hind quarters,
and smaller in the front, and have a large bushy tail that is
carried erect or arches over the back. They are always black and
white. They are most often found in the semi-wild areas around
farms. They eat almost anything -- small rodents, chickens,
eggs, grub worms, garbage -- anything that tastes good.
Skunks have two main enemies: the horned owl who preys upon
young, and the farmer’s boy who traps them for their pelts or
traps them to protect the chicken flock.
Skunks are considered to be the reservoir of rabies -- a most
dreaded disease. People get this disease when they are bitten by
a rabid animal. When skunks become over abundant in an area,
rabies in animals seems to increase.
The most peculiar thing about the skunk is his defense
mechanism. It consists of two scent glands located at the base
on the underside of his beautiful tail. He is able to spray
scent from these glands very accurately and in every direction
for several feet. He can even hit you in the eye when you are
standing in front of him. And the scent is very, very strong and
offensive and penetrates clothing and skin, and it takes many
washings and many days to remove the smell.
My first encounter with a skunk occurred when I was seven years
old. We were moving in a covered wagon from Central in Graham
County to Heber in Navajo County in the spring of 1922. One
night we camped on the edge of the Black River, and Father and I
were sleeping on the ground between the wagon and the campfire.
Mother and the two younger children were in the wagon. We were
just starting to sleep when we heard the pans rattling by the
dying fire. In the fading light, we saw a skunk eating the
remains of the Dutch oven cake Mother had cooked for supper. I
was excited and urged Father to get his rifle and shoot him. But
Father calmly told me to be really quiet and watch but not move
or disturb the skunk. After the skunk finished the cake, he
ambled away, and we heard no more of him. Then Father explained
that had we tried to kill him we would have caused a stinking
mess in camp which would have spoiled the remainder of the trip.
It was a few years later -- when I was big enough to trap skunks
-- that I learned the real value of his advice and found by
experience how long the offensive smell of a skunk can stay with
you to the dismay of your schoolmates, teachers, and family.
As so it is in life. When you listen to your father, you can
avoid some awful stinking messes that may stay to plague you for
a long time. (I have known some boys who refused to take their
dad’s advice and who made mistakes that took years to overcome.)
Christmas, 1975
The Man with the Hoe
When Adam was driven out of the Garden of Eden, the Lord told
him that the earth would bring forth thorns, thistles and
noxious weeds to afflict and torment man and that by the sweat
of his brow he would earn his living. Therefore, one of the
first implements designed by man was the hoe which was essential
to free his gardens and fields from weeds.
The shape and design of the hoe has not changed much in all the
centuries of time. And until the development of chemical
herbicides in the past two decades, the hoe was still used by
man to protect his row crops from being run over by noxious
weeds.
A boy in my generation grew up learning to use the hoe. One of
his tasks at home was to hoe weeds out of the family garden and
around the lot. One of his first jobs to earn money was to hoe
weeds out of the cotton or corn fields.
Now hoeing weeds is a tedious task and requires a little skill
and much energy and persistence. And after eight to ten hours in
the field with a hoe you feel that you have done a good days
work.
From the time I entered junior high school and until the time I
finished college most of my summer employment was working with a
hoe. As soon as school was out in the spring, we went into the
cotton fields to thin the cotton with a hoe. Cotton was planted
so that the plants would be about an inch apart. The job of
thinning would usually last three to six weeks. Then if you were
lucky, you could find occasional work hoeing the Johnson grass
and weeds out of the cotton fields for another month or so.
In the cotton fields we used a heavy hoe nine to twelve inches
wide. Often the hoe was made from an old shovel to give added
weight and strength to stand the wear against the hard Gila
valley soil. We always kept a water jug and file at one end of
the field in the shade of a tree -- if one was available. The
hoe would be sharpened at the end of each round, and we would
get a drink of water and maybe rest a few minutes. The pay for a
man and the older boys was $1.25 to $2.00. a day.
After the hoeing season was over on the Gila, I would go up to
Heber in north central Arizona and work in the corn fields
hoeing weeds for my granduncle, Alva Porter, who would give me a
calf and my board for what usually amounted to one or two months
work. In this way I was able to earn enough money to help with
my education.
Boys don’t like hoeing weeds. It is hard work, and it is tedious
and not the least bit exciting.
But grandpas love to hoe in the garden. It brings back pleasant
memories of youth and gives them the opportunity to reflect on
the lessons of life. A man’s character is like a garden. There
are many weeds in the natural man that need to be hoed out
before his character is beautiful. And boys who do not submit
themselves to the weeding out process become like the garden
that has not seen a hoe. All of the goodness and beauty is
choked out by weeds.
Christmas 1975
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