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Myrtle Ira ALLRED (010203100608)
Allred Progenitors: (James Tillman Sanford Jr., James Tillman Sanford,
James, William, Thomas)
Born: 02/03/1893 Spring City, Sanpete Co., UT
Died: 09/24/1985
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 02/28/2000
MYRTLE IRA ALLRED HANSEN
(Written by Quneth Dean Hansen)
Myrtle Ira Allred was born on Feb. 3, 1893 at Spring City,
Sanpete County, Utah. She was the youngest of eight children
born to James Tillman Sanford Allred, Jr. and Boletta Christena
Anderson Allred. Her father died Aug. 11, 1902 at Mt. View,
Canada, nine years after our mother was born. She and her next
older sister, Cedina Catherine Allred grew up as the two little
sisters of the family. Their widowed mother, a tiny little woman
of immense spiritual strength and independent determination,
raised her dependent children frugally. However, none of them
ever went hungry or without warm clothing.
Mother says she was the ugly duckling of the family and had
inherited her grandfather James Tillman Sanford Allred’s large
nose. However, her nose was not large at all, unless you
compared it to the very small noses of her two sisters,
Elizabeth Elmira (or Aunt My) and Cedina Catherine (our Aunt
Dena), both of whom Mama thought to be very pretty.
Mothers adolescent years were troubled with several allergies.
At times she would suffer from boils and would want to scratch
them which would only make them worse. As she grew older she out
grew them and was never bothered with allergies again.
She attended the local school and enjoyed learning. She
especially enjoyed writing stories and composing poems, a talent
she should have developed. She enjoyed reading poetry and would
cut out poems form newspapers and magazines. She also attended
Snow College for a time, just how long we don’t know.
One day, while riding bareback with her friend Elsie Billington
Carlson, she met and was introduced to our father, Joseph Harry
Hansen, who was home for a visit with his parents. Although she
had several other boyfriends, She soon scraped them and started
dating our father. Our father told us, once he came to know our
mother, he knew she was the one he wanted.
They were married on Nov. 19, 1913 in Salt Lake City. Our father
had not been paying his tithing to the church and he felt he
would be a hypocrite to ask the bishop for a recommend to be
married in the temple, as due to his work, he had not been
attending church either. Mother tried to get him to get him to
go to the Bishop anyway but he was too stubborn. She married him
anyway when he promised and they were sealed to together in the
Manti Temple Oct. 9, 1914. All of their five sons were born
under the covenant. There were no girls.
Following their marriage, they lived in Spring City and our
father farmed the Black Hills Farm. This is where mother gave
birth to Galen Harry, her oldest son. Some time later they moved
to Price, Utah, where dad and his brother Lloyd, farmed the
Marathon farm.
The Marathon farm home was located near the railroad tracks.
Many of those who rode the rails found it to be a good place to
drop off and find a free meal. No one was turned away, as dad
had told mother to feel anyone who came to the door. Much of the
time our father was away in the fields tending to the crops and
mother was alone in the house with Galen, who was just a baby.
Mother felt uneasy about this arrangement because some of those
who came to the door frightened her a little, nonetheless,
dutifully she fed them.
One day, a big ugly man with a shaved head came to the door.
Feeling more uneasy than usual, mother took him in and had him
sit at the kitchen table while she prepared him a meal. All the
while, his shifty eyes kept darting every which way, making
mother more uneasy than ever. She had just churned some cream
and had a nice round pat of butter, which she set on the table
with the rest of the food. The man looked at the butter, not
recognizing what it was, then with his knife he reached over and
cut off about half of the round mound of butter and placed it on
his plate. All the while he had not said a word. Then he scooped
up and spoonful of the butter, not suspecting what it was until
he tasted it. Without a change of expression, he turned to the
rest of his meal, wolfing it down, all the while giving the
impression of some hunted animal. Then, without a word, he got
up from the table and disappeared out the door, much to mothers
relief. With this relief came a flood of laughter at how the man
had forced himself to gulp down the butter rather than leave it
on his plate. The next day another man on a big black hose rode
up to the house. This time dad was there. The man had two six
guns, one on each side, and a rifle sticking out of his scabbard
on his saddle. He had a picture he wanted our parents to see.
Immediately, mother recognized it as a picture of the man she
had fed the day before. With this, the man then turned to dad
and said “Mister, you can thank your Maker that nothing happened
to your wife and child for this man is one of the most vile of
creatures.” They then learned the man was an escaped convict and
the man on the horse was after him to bring him back to the
prison. From then on, dad had mother keep the door locked when
he wasn’t there and she was to feed only those who came while he
was with her.
LaMar was born while they lived in Price, Utah on the 5th of
December 1917. Shortly after this, dad and mom, with their two
little boys, moved back to Spring City. Just how long they were
in Spring City at this time is unclear. However, they were there
long enough for Sheldon A. to be born on Mar. 21, 1920 and until
Sheldon died on Oct. 13, 1921 of pneumonia.
Sometime after Sheldon’s death, mom and dad moved to Helper,
Utah. It was in 1921 or early 1922 because they were in Helper
during the coal miners strike of 1922, when John L. Lewis, head
of the coal miners union in many of the Easter States, was in
Utah stirring up the coal miners to join the union and go on
strike. The strikers and non-strikers became so violent, the
U.S. Army was called in to establish peace.
While in Helper, Dad became a private contractor, doing
excavation work and hauling freight about town for the local
lumber yard and others. It was in Helper that mother gave birth
to two more sons; on March 18, 1923 to Quneth Dean Hansen and
eighteen months later to Kenneth Coy Hansen on October 18, 1924.
Early in the year 1828 or 1829 our Uncle Orlando Hansen came to
Helper to urge our father to join with him and lease the Crane
Ranch near Evanston, Wyoming from the Deseret Livestock Company.
They were to raise orphan lambs (bums) gathered from the sheep
herds belonging to the Deseret Livestock company. Hundreds of
these bumming lambs died every season and this was supposed to
be a profitable way to save lambs that would otherwise die.
Mother was not at all that eager to pull up roots and leave
friends and neighbors for the uncertainties of farming and
ranching but she knew where her husbands heart was. Loving him
as she did, she could not stand in his way. So, in the spring,
Dad and my brother Galen, set off with a horse drawn wagon
loaded with much of my families belongings. Their destination
was the Crane Ranch located near the southwest corner of Wyoming
close to Evanston, Wyoming, but still within the state of Utah.
Mother had heard some pretty wild tales about the City of
Evanston, so, it was with some misgivings she loaded Lamar,
Kenneth, and myself onto a passenger train headed for Evenston.
Kenneth must have been four years old and Lamar around eleven,
because I had turned six in March.
Living on the Crane Ranch was different than life in Spring City
or any of the other places she had lived. The nearest neighbors
lived in the Union Pacific Section homes at Old Wyuta and New
Wyuta, fourteen miles away. She had no electricity and water had
to be carried in buckets from a spring that had been cemented
around. Three miles of unimproved dirt road lead to the ranch,
from a graveled road. And the shadows of night would fall we
could hear the lonesome call of the birds who inhabited the
nearby swamps settling in for the night. The croaking of frogs
in their swampy homes as they feasted on the swarms of
mosquitoes filled the night air. From nearby hills we could hear
the cry of coyotes as they sang to each other, that gargling,
barking sound was so strange to our mother’s ears.
A whole new way life had been thrust upon her but being the
trooper she was, she soon took it all in stride. Before long
there were several hundred newborn lambs to be nursed on bottles
both day and night until they were strong enough to get by with
being fed three times a day, then two times a day; until finally
they began to eat grass and could get be with less milk. While
doing all this she had a family of boys and a husband to care
for. She prepared meals, scrubbed clothes on a washboard, and
cleaned and painted the inside of the big frame house. She was
never satisfied until every corner of both the upstairs and
downstairs had been given her very best exacting attention. Then
she would go into the hay fields to help harvest the hay.
Driving old Joe, the horse, she helped with the stacker as the
hay was stacked. Still all the while, she managed to be an
attentive mother and a loving wife to her husband.
As the school year approached our parents tried to enroll three
of their boys in the Evanston school system. Much to my parents
surprise, the school board refused to allow them to attend
school there because they lived across the state line in Utah.
However, the school would allow the boys to attend there if a
seventy-five dollar fee was paid for each of the boys, a total
two-hundred and twenty five dollars. This was a great deal of
money for her family. So again mother found a way to educate her
sons. She arranged with her mother, Grandma Stana Allred, to
take three of her boys so they could attend school in Spring
City. So then what should happen, here comes our Aunt Dena and
wants mother to let her take LaMar to live with her in Aurora,
Utah. At first she didn’t want to split her boys up, but she
finally yielded to Aunt Dena’s tears. Aunt Dena was childless
and LaMar was the apple of her eye.
After getting her boys finally settled in school, she returned
to dad and her youngest child Kenneth Coy; they spent her winter
on the Crane Ranch. Galen, LaMar and Quneth Dean went to school
in Utah. Fortunately, the following year a friendly store keeper
in Evanston prepared a petition requesting Evanston School Board
to allow her boys to attend school tuition free. The man’s name
was Mr Barber and when our family and Uncle Orlando conducted
all their business in Evanston, all the business there
benefitted. Mr. Barber was able to convince everyone who came
into his store to sign the petition, adjust about everyone in
Evanston came to his store sooner or later. So he had a lot of
names of the petition which he took to the school board, they
relented and Evanston became their hometown.
From that time on, until her boys graduated from school, mother
divided her time between two homes. One rented a home in
Evanston while her boys attended school and the ranch home where
her husband stayed. She cooked and cleaned and made sure no one
went hungry or went uncared for. This became the pattern for
mother’s life until her sons graduated from school.
With the stock market crash of 1929, Wall Street went broke and
many people became financially ruined, a great depression
engulfed our entire nation. Factories shut down, commerce came
to an abrupt stop and millions of people found themselves out of
work with no means of support. And to complicate matters even
more a drought settled over much of the nation’s farm land. It
was known as the great dust bowl; thousands of acres of good
farm land were blown away due to unwise farming practices. And
many of the nation’s farmers went into bankruptcy.
Mother was anchor to which, along with dad and the efforts of
our oldest brother Galen who left school and went to work to
help support the family, we all clung to. Mother was the one
sure thing or you might say glue that kept us all together.
With the depression came financial difficulties, especially with
the death of our Uncle Orlando and his wife and baby at the
railroad crossing on the old highway. Dad and mom were left with
all the indebtedness of both dad and uncle Orlando, while the
prices being paid for animals fell down to nothing. There was no
money to be made raising sheep or cows; no one had money to buy.
Our family had to leave the Crane Ranch with what few animals
they could salvage. Later dad leased the Yellow Creek ranch and
over the years purchased it and it became our family home of
many years. Money was scarce then and most everyone in Evenston
was poor including all the farm families in the area.
In later year when economic times were better, mother had a good
laugh when LaMar said to her one day, “Mom, I wish you would
cook some of the good dishes you cooked when we were poor; like
the big pies you made, they were so good.” This remark delighted
mother because it was a real compliment to her abilities. During
those trying depression years she became good at making
delicious and savory meals and could stretch the menu and still
fill the appetites of fast growing boys. She laughed at LaMar’s
statement, “when we were poor” because in her mind we were never
poor, not real poor like some. As farmers we always had meat,
milk, cream and eggs. Mother would sell some of the eggs to the
Blyth and Fargo store and receive credit for other things. She
always managed some way to see we had the necessities by sewing,
cooking
and carefully managing what little money she had. So in a very
real way we were never poor, not with a mother like her, in
fact, you might say we were rich.
Ours was a happy family, you hear of dysfunctional families
today. Back then we didn’t even know the meaning of
dysfunctional. With mother at the helm of our family ship of
state there was hardly ever a quarrel and never any fighting
between us boys. Yes, we wrestled and tussled but it was all in
fun and mom and dad kept us so busy working on the farm that we
never had time to get in any trouble.
To shorten up what has become a long story, in later years our
parents bought a home in Salt Lake City and retired there when
dad turned seventy years old. Mom and dad lived there for over
twenty years.
Dad died in 1980 at the age of 91 years and mother could never
quite reconcile the fact that he had to go before her. She had a
lasting love for him that will go on forever. She had been
married to this man for 66, going on 67 years.
On September 24, 1985 she too left this mortal life at the age
of 92 years. We miss and love her and hope some day to join with
her and dad in the eternal world.
Children of Myrtle Ira Allred Hansen and Joseph Harry Hansen:
1. Galen Harry Hansen, b. 25 Jan 1915, m. Gwendolyn Norris
2. LaMar J. Hansen, b. 5 Dec. 1917, d. Aug 1984, m. Marie Wright
3. Sheldon A. Hansen, b. 21 Mar. 1920, d. 13 Oct 1921
4. Quneth Dean Hansen, b. 18 Mar 1923
5. Kenneth Coy Hansen, 18 Oct 1924, m. Zona Saxton
[Taken from family history book, “From Allred to Allred” put
together by Venna Severance]
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