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James Tillman Sanford ALLRED Jr. (0102031006)
Allred Progenitors: (James Tillman Sanford, James, William, Thomas)
Born: 02/25/1854 Manti, Sanpete Co., UT
Died: 08/11/1902
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 05/10/2000
JAMES TILLMAN SANFORD ALLRED, JR.
James Tillman Sanford Allred Jr. (Tillman) was the eldest son of
James Tillman Sanford Allred and Eliza B. Manwaring. He was born
February 25, 1854 in Manti, Sanpete County, Utah.
Tillman was born of good parents. They embraced the Church of
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in 18322. Due to the
persecution heaped upon the church and it’s members in Nauvoo,
Illinois they came west, under the leadership of Brigham Young,
to the Salt Lake Valley.
James T.S. and Eliza began breaking ground, cultivating,
planting seed and raising crops. Not long after their arrival in
Salt Lake a delegate in Indians came to President Young and
requested some white men to come and educate the Indians.
Teaching them how to farm and raise crops was to be their
assignment. After listening to their request, President Young
agreed, and stated to the church members frankly that he wanted
good men and women to go who were not in the habit of taking the
Lord’s name in vain. He advised James Allred (James T.S.’s
father) to go down and select a place for a settlement where he
could locate his numerous posterity and preside over them. The
Allred families left the Salt Lake Valley in early fall and
arrived in Manti November 22, 1851.
By report of the Indians it was the most sever winter the valley
had ever known. In the spring they began to make a settlement,
but it was only a short time until their friendship with the
Indians was broken and the settlers in Sanpete were in great
danger. They were compelled to build forts for protection and be
on guard continually.
Tillman was born during those troubled times with the Indians.
Form 1851 until 1866, they lived in constant fear of the
Indians. The Allred families made a settlement in Spring City in
1852, but they were driven from their homes. To Manti’s fort
five times that first year. The settlers in Spring City (or the
Allred settlement as it was known then) suffered a great deal
due to the scarcity of food, cold winters and the hostilities of
the Indians.
When Tillman was only 10 years old his mother, Eliza, died. She
left eight children. Tillmen, being the eldest boy, was expected
to do a great deal. Even before his mother’s death he was
responsible for much of his father’s work while his father was
away from home settling Indian affairs. Tillman’s father was
loved and respected by the Indians and was an Indian
interpreter.
When but a small boy, Tillman saw his companion pierced full of
arrows and scalped by the Indians while he hid in the willows
near by. The Indians saw him and searched for him in vain,
walking over and over past the willows where he quietly lay.
Tillman married Christena B. Anderson when they were both quite
young, both were scarcely seventeen years old. They, with two
other couples, who were Reuben Warren Allred and Clara Robinson,
John Blain and Sorilda Allred; went by team to Salt Lake City so
they could be married for all eternity in the Endowment House
December 19, 1870. It was a very cold but an enjoyable time for
them all.
After they were married, they moved into two room of Tillman’s
father’s home, until they built a home of their own. Shortly
after, they build a two room home two blocks east of James
T.S.’s home in Spring City. Seven of their children were born in
this tiny home before they built a large six room home on the
same lot. One more child was born into their family after they
moved into this home. They lived in the same place seventy-seven
years.
Tillman was a very industrious man but he had very little formal
education because of his family responsibilities; caring for his
younger siblings while his father was away much of the time.
As a young man, he stood guard for Spring City as a watchman
against Indian troubles. He spent many hours also in guarding
the town’s livestock. Those early years were filled with great
danger for the settlers.
Tillman was always busy but never too busy to attend to his
church duties. Many times he was called up in the night to
administer to the sick. As he grew in years, his faith in the
Lord grew and increased. Life had it’s problems for him, it’s
days of discouragement, sorrow and disappointments but they were
softened by the quality of kindness he possessed and his sincere
consideration and respect for others. He cultivated love and
kindness in his brother and sister and all his family, friends,
and neighbors. He was always ready to assist anyone in need,
often at great personal sacrifice for him and his family.
Nothing was too hard for him if it gave others pleasure. He was
very considerate of all his family when they came to visit and
his in-laws expressed that the was their favorite son-in-law.
Each year when the valley emerged form it’s blankets of snow and
ice, and at the first signs of spring; Tillman was ready to
begin his work on the farm. It was located one and one-half
miles east of Spring City, known as the flats. He was always up
at the break of day and during irrigation season remained up all
night to take care of the water. It was the water master’s duty
to operate the water gates with keys; he often trusted Tillman
with the keys knowing he would go by the rules. It wasn’t many
farmers that could be trusted so completely; many were guilty of
using their neighbors water. But Tillman never would consider
such an act.
The spirit of man is the power of life. The spirit of an
individual had the power to heal and restore the physical body
when afflicted with physical ailments or sickness, through the
power of the Holy Priesthood. Tillman held that Priesthood power
and he healed the sick many times. Through it, he was also
healed. He was subject to sever headaches and sever sick spells
but never grew discouraged or complained and always remained
humble.
Tillman was a faithful tithe payer and always gave the best
“tenth part” he had. He was ordained a Seventy in the Priesthood
August 1884. He and Christena performed ordinance work in the
Manti Temple during the winter months. Their children were
raised as “Mormon children” and taught by their parents to be
very congenial and considerate of each other. No sacrifice or
effort was to great to keep their children on the right path. He
was ever ready to give his children praise for any good deed and
they also received punishments for their mistakes.
He loved sports, ball playing, hunting, wrestling, horse shoe
pitching etc. He was always fair in a game as he was in his
dealings.
At one period in his life he worked as water master, town
marshal and held the church calling or ward teacher to many
families.
In about 1898 Tillman suffered a sunstroke and contracted
typhoid fever He was not expected to live and never ate any
solid food for over thirty days.
During Tillman’s illness, his son Q moved with his family to
Canada to homestead there. When Tillman recovered he worried
about his son so far away from home and decided to visit him. He
went with another son Oliver. They boarded a train for Canada
July 28, 1902. They had traveled for a few days when Tillman
took very sick, the train’s conductor advised Oliver to take him
off at Lethbridge, Canada and find a doctor. While they were at
the hotel there, some young men originally from Spring City who
had moved to the Lethbridge area, heard of Tillman’s illness.
They immediately got a surrey, made a bed and took them to Q’s
home, a distance of seventy miles. Tillman fell into
unconsciousness on the trip and remained so until he passed away
Monday morning August 11, 1902.
The Relief Society sisters there made his burial clothes and
prepared him for burial. He was laid to rest in Mountain View,
Canada cemetery because it was the law they no body could be
shipped from that country for one year. After that long
Christena did not wish that his body be disturbed. A grave
marker was placed for him in his home town at Spring City, Utah.
Tillman was 48 years 5 months and 16 days old at his death.
Children of James Tillman Sanford Allred and Christena Boletta
Anderson:
1. Margret Eliza Aurelia Allred b. 29 Oct. 1871 d. 19 July 1945
m. Francis C. Madsen
2. George Q. Cannon Allred b. 17 Dec. 1873 d. 20 Feb 1955 m.
Lena Nielsen m. Mamie Elmer
3. Elizabeth Elmira Allred b. 13 June 1877 d. 31 Aug. 1976 m.
Joseph Hyrum Aiken
4. Tilman Oliver Allred b. 23 April 1882 d. 28 July 1903 nm.
5. Clarissa Josephine Allred b. 17 Sep. 1884 d. 19 Jan. 1974 m.
Albert M. Brown
6. James Heber Allred b. 25 June 1887 d. 12 Jan. 1974 m. Albert
M. Brown
7. Catherine Cedena Allred b. 7 July 1890 d. 17 aug. 1953 m.
Daniel M. Cloward
8. Myrtle Ira Allred b. 3 Feb. 1893 d. 24 Sep. 1985 M. Joseph H.
Hansen
9. Lowell Allred (still born)
All Children born in Spring City, Utah
A PATRIARCHAL BLESSING upon the head of James Tillman Sanford
Allred Jr. son of James Tillman Sanford Allred Sr. and Eliza B.
Manwaring Allred. Born February 25, 1854 in Manti, Sanpete
County, Utah. Given by Redick N. Allred on December 21, 1898 in
Spring City, Utah.
“Brother James Tillman, in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ I
lay my hands upon thy head and seal upon thee a patriarchal
blessing that may be and abide with you. That may follow you
through all your life long, and be an abiding witness of the
goodness of our Heavenly Father that may prompt you to duty and
to exercise the powers of the Priesthood that had been sealed
upon thine head for thou art of the promised seed, through the
loins of Ephraim that is coming down through the lineage of the
fathers that shall be extended to thy children through
faithfulness to the laws of the Gospel. Thou art of the promised
seed through which all blessings flow.
Thy heart is set upon doing good, not withstanding the powers of
the evil one that has sought to destroy thee. Let thy heart be
full and give God the Glory. Thou shalt be able to conquer the
array of the evil one that is brought to bear against the
children of God.
Thou hast a testimony to bear to the nations of the earth in the
carrying of the Gospel to the hearts of the honest. Be therefore
faithful, and the God of our fathers will bear thee up and you
shall have a testimony of the Gospel burning in your hear,
whereby you may be able to preach repentance to the people
whether at home or abroad and the hand of our Father shall be
over thee, that you may be able to resist the evil power and I
bless you for the integrity of your heart, for the love that you
bear to the truths of the Gospel.
Your children shall honor you and comfort and bless your heart
in your declining years. The Lord knows your heart and will
bless you with your desires that shall be realized through all
your life long, and when affliction shall seize you, let your
faith be made manifest and God will overrule all things for your
comfort and that of your family.
I seal upon you all the former blessings that have been sealed
upon thy head which shall make you rejoice in the Holy One of
Israel for the deliverance that has been wrought, and shall be
realized in afterlife. All these blessings I seal upon thy head
in the name of Jesus and by virtue of the Priesthood vested in
me as a patriarch in Israel, even so. Amen.
Taken from the original copy in possession of Venna Severance,
also recorded in book A, page 16.
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