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Arlin Richard ALLRED (010205050709)
Allred Progenitors: (Medwin Newton, William Moore, Isaac, William, Thomas)
Born: 07/15/1891
Died: 08/16/1976
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 06/09/1999
THE LIFE HISTORY OF ARLIN RICHARD ALLRED
It was about the middle of the year of 1891 when I was first
permitted to see the light of a beautiful summer day in the hill
country of St. Charles, Idaho. I do not remember the first few
years of my life on account I was so young, but the first event
I can clearly remember must have been at the age of 2 years when
we lived on the Provo bench in Utah Co. The wind was blowing
hard and I was afraid the house would blow over so I pushed with
all my strength on the back of the house. It didn't blow down.
The next remembrance is of the old 1 room dirt roofed house 1/2
mile east of Fairview Wyoming where we lived for a short time
while father and the older boys were building our two room log
house which was to house father, mother and nine boys, one
younger than myself. I recall only a few instances where I
remember my father clearly, one time especially he came home
with some stick candy and with the long stick in his mouth I
tried to grab it while he would dodge my hand by turning his
head. I remember following his foot steps from the old dirt
covered house to the new one. Then one day while we were at play
we saw uncle Orson Allred run from his house (about 1/2 block
away with a bottle in his hand which contained consecrated oil,)
to our house for the purpose of administering to father who was
suddenly stricken very ill with a heart attack. He lasted only a
few days at most till he passed away leaving a widow and nine
boys, the youngest about 2 years. I was 4 when father died.
So life began early for us, we had nothing but a team of horses,
a few cows and 10 acres of almost dry land on the Salt River bed
which did not produce much. The older boys were faithful in
providing for mother and the younger ones. In the summer we had
to drink water from the flat ditch which ran open for five or
six miles, and in the winter we hauled water in barrels from
crow creek 1 1/2 miles, until finally the boys dug a well about
40 or 50 feet deep which supplied us with good fresh water drawn
up with a bucket on the end of a long rope.
As I grew older I went to the canyon to help haul wood, as that
was all we had to burn so it meant we must pile up large piles
of wood in the canyon in the fall after hay and harvest, and
haul down in the winter when the snow would fall 2 to 3 feet in
the valley and 6 to 8 feet on our wood piles in the canyon. When
I was about 15 or 16 years I had my own canyon outfit and sold
wood by the cord 128 ft. for $5.00 or $6.00 per cord. Some days
I could haul 2 to 2 1/2 cords, and others less than a cord, so
altogether it was not very profitable, but there was nothing
else to do unless you had a milk hauling job which took all day
to make a round trip of about 10 to 15 miles with horses or
mules and get $1.50 or $2.00 per day.
While hauling wood from dry creek canyon we often encountered
snow slides which were common after a heavy fall of snow or
after midwinter when the weather began to warm and soften the
snow, one day my brother Ed and I were after a load of wood from
our pile, (it was a warm day and the snow was deep). We had
loaded and gone down the canyon a mile or so when Albert Olson
caught up riding one of his horses with the harness on and said
that his half brother, Wm. Harrison, had been caught in a snow
slide, we tied one team in a safe place and rode the others back
to the spot to hunt for Wm. He had climbed the mountain side to
cut down a dry tree and his weight had started the snow to break
and come down covering him. We searched as best we could to
locate him by poking shovel handles into the snow, finally he
was located about 2 ½ feet under the snow, which had smothered
him. We tried for some time to revive him, but to know avail, so
we carried him to the sleigh and hauled him home on a load of
wood, this was indeed a sad day of experience.
One other experience with a snow slide I will never forget. Our
bishop, A.M. Nelson of Dry Creek ward, was at his mine with Olof
Hoakensen from Grover, Wyo. and another partner, east of Dry
Creek. Nelson and Hoakensen went up the hill of the opposite
side of the canyon from the mine, to cut a dry tree for fire
wood in the cabin which was located in the bottom of the gulch,
the partner remained in the mine which was up the side hill, on
the north. He heard a terrible rumble and came out of the mine
to see that the snow had slid from the south side of the canyon
for a block or more up and down the canyon, which covered the
cabin 12 to 15 feet under snow and came within a few yards of
the mine opening. This slide of course caught the two men and
carried them for some distance, so it was impossible to know
where to locate them. Men and boys from the valley answered the
call to help find the bodies, we were obliged to go on snow
shoes and skis for 2 or 3 miles to the place and start digging,
the plan first was to uncover or dig down to the cabin by making
a stair way in the snow and then station men about 4 to 6 feet
apart and dig from one side of the slide toward the other so we
could poke shovel handles from one trench to the other to feel
the bodies. We worked by candle light which made a ghostly
spectacle. This was carried on for one evening and all night
without success. I spent the first night and went home in the
morning for rest, preparing to go back for another shift. About
mid day or later on the second day the bodies were located and
brought out on a stretcher made on skis or sleds. This was
another sad day of mourning.
I started courting quite young. I was 14 when I met Irene Call
at dance in Afton. and of course she wouldn't let me be until
she had persuaded me that she was the one I wanted (cause she
tho't I was cute). After 5 years of visiting and corresponding
we decided to get married if my ma would let me.
In the winter of 1908 I attended school at Logan Utah at the B.
Y. C. I studied mainly in mechanics or black smithing. I learned
to do some good work, and went home in early spring and started
in business for myself in black smithing at Afton Wyoming. I
could do a very good job of shoeing horses, shaping and fitting
the shoes. I lived with my brother Alvin for about 1 1/2 years,
then I thought if I could handle my own business, I should be
able to handle a wife to cook for me. So I made it a point to
see if Irene would be willing to be my cook, I don't remember
weather I asked her to be my wife or if she would come and cook
for me, any way she knew what I meant by the look on my red
face. So she said, "I'll have to ask mama," So she did and the
next time I saw her she said it was OK. It didn't take her long
to make up her mind, then I got scared and was afraid I wouldn't
be able to take good care of her. I did not have any money, and
no place to live so what could I do with a wife to support? So I
told her we had better wait for a while, but that didn't seem to
work out, so we decided to be married in Dec. We started to
Montpelier by team and sleigh on about the 18th of Dec. 1910, it
took nearly 2 days to get to Montpelier, we had to transfer from
sleigh to buckboard in Montpelier canyon. At Montpelier we
transferred again to a ludlow to go to Paris to see my brother
Darrel who was sick and staying at Uncle Marvin Allred’s home.
Mother was there to take care of him. The road was cut into deep
ruts so the hubs of the wheels would drag the ground then up and
down again. The trip was tiresome as the road was bad all the
way so the horses could not go faster than walk. Next morning we
retraced the same way back to Montpelier, and rode the train to
Salt Lake City which was a relief. Irene was suffering from a
sore on her right hip bone which was very painful and the
bouncing of the ludlow was hard to take.
Arriving at Salt Lake City we went to the court house to obtain
a marriage license, I was informed that I could not have one
without a written consent from my mother who was in Paris Idaho.
I phoned her to send her consent and we decided to go to the
temple and get our endowments. After going through the temple we
were unexpectedly called up. The consent had come to the court
house, so we went and got our license and were married the same
day. Just how this all happened in such a short time has always
been a miracle to me. So we were married unexpectedly that day
in the temple, the 22nd of Dec. 1910.
Four or five days previous to our marriage Irene had been
operated on for the trouble in her hip and this turned out to be
a decayed bone which took a long time to heal.
While still at Salt Lake after our marriage 2 or 3 days. I
received a letter from home in Afton Wyoming from the Ward
Authorities asking me to come home to help replay a drama which
our group had previously played. "Under the American Flag" which
of course I did, leaving Irene at Aunt Jane Calls place. Her
mother being with her. She remained there in Salt Lake most of
the winter and I in Afton, which turned out to be a fine romance
without kisses and a great honeymoon without the honey.
When she finally came home we set up housekeeping in one of the
upstair rooms in Father Calls house, the south east room. We
were happy and financially skimp but did not realize it enough
to be hurt or embarrassed.
Mother Call paid for the gold band we got while in Salt Lake
because I did not have any money. Now you see again why I wanted
to put off the marriage, but then I think it was wise that we
decided to go because if the marriage had been postponed the
operation also most likely would have been put off, and the
results might have been disastrous as the bone decay was
creeping slowly to the hip joint and could have been the means
of crippling Irene for life, so we thanked God and still do
thank Him for His help in our behalf. We have always
acknowledged His help in our lives and hope and pray that we
always will.
One of my first experiences after our marriage showing the Lords
care over me was in the spring of the year 1911. I went with my
two older brothers Alvin and Bert to set up a shearing corral
etc. in the hills east of Raymond in Thomas Fork Valley. On our
return trip we were riding in a wagon with double bed box and
driving 4 head of horses. On a good fast down grade, we were
sitting on bedding or sacks of grain in the lower part of the
box, suddenly the left front wheel struck a boulder at the side
of the road, tipping the wagon over like a flash against a
perpendicular cliff on the right side of the road. The horses
stopped immediately and the wagon lay on its side with just room
enough between the box and the cliff for us to squeeze out. We
righted the wagon and found that the left wheel was badly sprung
out of shape so it wobbled home but did not break down. No body
was hurt, except for a few scratches and slight bruises, it
could have dashed our heads against the rocks. When we reached
home Mother asked what was the matter. She knew something had
happened and said about the same time we had tipped over, she
had felt there was something wrong and she went in her bed room
and prayed to the Lord to protect us, which He surely did and I
have always referred to this incident as a revelation and an
answer to a mothers prayer for the safety of her sons.
Soon after our marriage I took John Sizemore as a partner in my
shop. We worked together for a year or two, then I sold to him
and bought 1/2 interest with Dave Williamson who had a shop on
the east side of the main block in Afton about the middle of the
block. Then I sold out to Dave.
Then we moved to Fairview, Wyoming to live and built a small
shop in partnership with Eldon Allred my cousin, I worked there
only a short time when I made a deal for 40 acres of land 1/2
mile east of Fairview where we build a small 1 room house a cow
stable and then a bigger and better barn also dug a well 45 feet
deep with the help of Henry Jensen and others, we had one baby,
Delsa who was our pride and joy. Our hopes were to build a
house, but finances again were lacking. We were happy but did
not realize how poor we were financially, I could not meet the
payments on the place so I traded with Dave Williamson again, my
equity in the farm for his blacksmith shop. I was always able to
make a good living in the shop but could not save any money. I
moved the shop off the block (it was rented ground) to a lot 1/2
block south and 1/2 block west on the street behind the old
Roberts Store. Then Dave came back and wanted to be a blacksmith
again so we worked together again. I rented the shop to him and
we with two children went to the homestead in Salt Canyon to try
our luck, which turned out again to be a poverty adventure but a
lot of fun.
Alvin and Bert also had a homestead, there they set up a steam
engine and saw mill, so after they had given up their venture I
used the mill to saw logs (square) which I had gleaned from the
country round (far and near) and built a house, 1 room of square
logs which we were very proud of. While there I herded sheep a
flock made up of small bunches from the valley which was quite a
job to keep such bunches together.
One day I decided to follow the sheep to the top of the hills
for better food so I packed the tent and bedding and food on one
or two horses with wife, Delsa and Norma about 4 and 2 years
old. I set the tent up loosely, without enough stakes to hold it
down in a storm, then I went after the sheep. While away a storm
broke and the wind blew furiously, when I returned Irene was
setting on the tent side trying to hold it down. It would lift
her up and almost got away. The babies were covered in the
bedding to keep the dust out of them. We decided to move camp
again and found a lower place where the wind did not strike so
hard.
One time we ran out of food except some sour cheese and we began
to wonder what we would eat when the mail rig brought us a sack
of vegetables which my brother Ed and Sadie had sent to us from
their garden. Only once in my life have I been so broke for
money that I did not have a penny and only once have been so out
of food as we were at that time.
Once very soon after this occasion we were driving back to the
camp from Afton when I saw a purse in the road, I stopped and
picked it up, it had $15.00 in bills which was certainly a gold
mine to me. There were no settlers, and no travelers except
perhaps a sheep herder who might have dropped it from his
pocket, there being no way to hunt an owner in the wilderness, I
made use of the money.
After the way we had been doing for so long I got uneasy to see
something else and to do bigger and better things. So we decided
I should go by train to Logan and see if I could find a job,
Automobiles were beginning (I bought a model T ford in 1917) I
don't know how I paid for it but I did. The winter of 1918 I
went to Logan and found a job in the Cache Auto Co. Bishop N.W.
Merkley manager. He said he could use me as a service man, about
the 1st of April. I hurried back home with the news that made
Father and Mother Call feel sad (My mother had previously come
to Logan and married Christopher Merkley). In March of 1919 we
packed all our belongings in a 1916 ford with four girls Delsa,
Norma Josephine and Phyllis and started for Logan. The Lord was
surely with us for we did not have as much as a flat tire as I
can remember. We were pulled over the snow ice road from the old
half way house on the Crow Creek route, which was nothing but a
dirt road to the top of (Cravenes retreat) named after Cravene
who got that far with his load, with horses and wagon or sleigh
and had to retreat and go back, then we were on the south slopes
toward Montpelier. The snow was all gone after that. I remember
on one steep hill in Logan Canyon we found a suit case with
clothes in it. When we got into Logan we were able to find the
owner, I don't remember how but they were prepared to go to the
temple.
We rented a place in Logan 2nd ward and I went to work at
$150.00 per month, which was a good wage at that time. We were
very happy till one night we saw the children scratching and on
investigation found bites on them which proved to be bed bug
bites, so we started hunting. The cracks and crevices on the
walls and under the paper were crowded with bugs and mites, then
we had a time of rejoicing over the death of the bed bugs. As
soon as we could find another place we purchased and moved the
last part of June. We planted a garden in July and raised a very
fine garden.
I worked for Merkley for about five years when business slowed
to where I was not needed so on the day before New Years day I
was let go.
We moved to Wellsville where I worked in a garage owned by
Preston Gunnell. Worked for him about 2 months then found work
again in Logan selling and repairing batteries for William
Dautre. While living in Wellsville and working in Logan, I was
on my way home after 6 o'clock. I met Irene with dr. Christensen
from Wellsville, bringing Norma to the Hospital, she had fallen
from a poplar tree in front of the house where we were living,
belonging to Joseph Maughan. She lit on the top of a forked post
and hung till her mother and neighbor lifted her off. We went to
the hospital and watched the Doctors operate. The post had
pierced her stomach and had torn it beyond repair. She died very
soon after being removed from the operating table. This was the
hardest blow we had ever had but we had to thank the Lord we had
3 other fine girls and 1 boy, Richard.
We soon moved back to Logan and rented a house where we stayed
only a few months in the 11th ward, then we purchased a place in
the Logan 6th ward, 1/2 block below the church. Here Lila was
born 28 Dec. 1924. I continued to work for Wm. Dautre till
reverses came and he had to quit business. Then I worked in the
same building on main street for Bishop Merkley again until I
decided to go out for myself. I found a place in Smithfield to
start in Auto repairing, so I drove all summer to work and back
to Logan. In Sept. 1927 we moved to Smithfield and rented the
home we now live in. The 3rd ward Chapel was dedicated soon
after we moved there, we attended the services. President Grant
was the official and dedicated the building.
We were received royally into the ward which had a short while
been divided from the 2nd ward, with Bishop Richard Roskelly, L.
Vern Toolson and Clark Thornley in the bishopric. I was selected
as M.I.A. Supt. and acted there for 4 years, when I was released
and called as counselor to Ellis Doty, Supt. of the Benson Stake
to which Smithfield belonged at that time. Juan, our second boy
and last baby was born here.
I worked with brother Doty until the Stakes were divided and
Smithfield stake was organized I was selected as Stake Sunday
School Supt. for about 2 years then I was selected as councilor
to Bishop Vern Toolson, worked with him for about six months
when he was released, as was I.
I was called to be a stake High Councilor with President Read
Halverson and remained as such with President Hazen Hillyard and
President G.L. Rees.
In March 1953 we were called to Harrison Ark. on a mission where
we remained for 6 months, which we enjoyed very much.
Juan was called to the North Central States Mission in Jan.
1949. So I got an idea to build a house trailer so we could go
east to see him and visit the Church Historical Sites at Palmyra
and other points of interest. In Sept. 7, 1949 we, with my
brother Bert and wife Ella left for the visit. We found Juan and
his companion in Duluth Minnesota doing a good work, we went on
to visit the Hill Cumorah. Passed Niagra Falls, saw the Smith
farm and home, and the room where the Prophet Joseph had his
visitation from Angel Moroni. We visited the sacred grove and
came back by way of Carthage Jail and Nauvoo. We traveled about
4 1/2 thousand miles and enjoyed every foot of it.
In 1956 Jan. 10th we left to spend the winter in Mesa Arizona
with Bert and Ella and the same trailer. While there I made
plans to build a larger trailer, so when we came home in March
1957 I started on it and finished it for a trip to the
Yellowstone Park in July with Bert and Ella. About Jan. 10th
1957 we four took off again for the South through Albuquerque
New Mexico to see our first great grand son, David, son of
Delwin and Bonnie Thompson. (Delwin is the son of our oldest
girl Delsa, and Irwin Thompson.) We went on to California and
enjoyed the winter there, came home in March to find everything
in good shape. At present time summer 1958 I am teaching the
priests in the Smithfield 3rd Ward and I work in the shop when I
want too now as I feel inclined. My health is still good. I
still enjoy hunting, fishing, camping out and plenty to eat. |
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