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Our Current Newsletter Spring 2012
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Vera ALLRED (010206041406)
Allred Progenitors: (Edward Warren, John Jones, William, William, Thomas)
Born: 12/28/1902 Lovell, WY
Died: 06/08/1990 Lovell, WY
Submitted by: Sharon Allred Jessop 11/30/2001
Vera Allred Brinkerhoff (2-6) 1902-1990
(Daughter of Edward Warren Allred and Rebecca Alvrean Lemmon
Allred)
In Vera's own words she stated that her parents went to Wyoming
from Southern Utah because of drought and because her father's
brother and mother were already living there.
Vera remembered, "We traveled in a covered wagon, mother and
five children rode white father walked. (Mother was pregnant
with me at the time.) Along the journey, one day, something
startled the horses and they began to run. Father tried calming
them and running after them. When he realized that he couldn't
catch them and mother was in trouble, Father fell to his knees
and said, 'Dear Father, please save my family." Suddenly the
horses stopped and no one was hurt. They reached Lovell, Wyoming
in June and I was born on December 28, 1902.
Since some of the older brothers and sisters worked away from
home, I helped father in the fields. After harvest one year he
gave me $10.00. I was delighted and sent away in a catalog for a
coat and skirt for myself, and a potato masher, egg beater, 4
loaf pans, and some curtain rods for my mother (before this our
curtains were put up with string). All this for $10. I was
delighted.
We grew and stored our own food. Mother made most of our clothes
so it wasn't a surprise to have our panties made from old flour
sacks. The printing on the sacks didn't wash out and we would
tease each other that our panties said, "Snyder's Special" or
"Money back if your not satisfied".
I was a fast runner and always ran the races on the 24th of
July. One holiday dad gave us each 50 cents to celebrate the
day. I lost mine down the crack in the board sidewalk. I crawled
down under but never found it, so I won some races and earned my
money back.
I wasn't afraid of spiders, mice, or little water snakes, but
Chasty my sister was afraid of everything. I would chase her
with a mouse holding it barely above her hair. She would holler
"Vera, I'm going to kill you". We had a lot of fun in our
family. We were very musical, we played ball games, swam in the
canal and river, and danced.
I met Max Shields at a dance and we were married Nov. 22, 1922
by H. Cash Carlton. My first home as a wife was a tent, then
into an little shack, where my first cupboard was a box nailed
to the wall. Max was not a member of the church and over time we
were incompatible, later we divorced. We had one child, Maxine.
My little daughter and I lived with my parents.
When our neighbor's wife Josephine Clark Brinkerhoff died, the
whole town mourned her passing. I remember the hearse going
through town on Christmas Eve amid the shoppers. I helped my
widowed neighbor and his daughter with the large family. We
canned, baked and sewed. Josephine left him with 11 children;
six of whom still lived at home. This name was Warren
Brinkerhoff and we were married in July of 1926. He was 18 years
older than me. We had ten children of our own. All of our
children were born at home except for the last two little girls,
they were born in a hospital costing $35 each. We had lots of
good times, and some bad times.
Total, Warren was the father of 21 children. He died on April 1
, 1949. Our farm was not paid for and we had no insurance but
the children all pitched in and we made it work. Three of my
sons filled missions and all are sealed in the temple. While
Warren was living we were never sealed in the temple, so 37
years after his death our family made the decision to be sealed
in the Salt Lake Temple by Elder H. Burke Peterson on April 3,
1986. I had lost my oldest daughter Maxine and my son Ellis.
Ellis's wife Maxine stood in for my daughter Maxine, and my
son-in-law Chris Simonsen stood in for my son Ellis. My step-son
Lavel Brinkerhoff stood in proxy for his father, my husband
Warren. It was a wonderful day, now all my children and I are
sealed for eternity."
Singing was important to Vera. She loved to hear her children
sing and insisted upon it whenever there was a get-together. She
had a beautiful alto voice. Gardening was a great joy for her.
She enjoyed giving produce away, canning and working with
plants. She had boundless energy. You could always get something
to eat at Vera's. Her children would tell you that if she asked
for something to be done, it should have been yesterday. She was
stubborn and determined; she had to be.
Vera Allred Brinkerhoff lived a long and fruitful life. She was
a stalwart to her family keeping them close to her and each
other. There was a lot of love in her home. She passed away on
June 8, 1990 at her home in Lovell, Wyoming. She is interred in
the Lovell Cemetery next to her husband Warren and his first
wife, Josephine Clark Brinkerhoff. -autobiographical with
additions by Glenda Asay and Karen Simonsen, her daughters.
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