RNT Family History

Notes


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Matches 451 to 500 of 990

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
451 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Taylor, Afton Reyanne (I1284)
 
452 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Simon, Clyde Earnest (I23437)
 
453 Alsee is another name for Alice Brownson, Alsee (I23659)
 
454 Also known as the "Cherokee Revengers Hardin, Thompson (I23714)
 
455 Alternate information

Event(s):
Birth: 30 May 1659
Windsor, Hartford, Connecticut
Christening: 2 Sep 1660

Death: 31 Jan 1694
Northampton, Hampshire, Massachusetts
Burial: 1694
 
Strong, Hannah (I1956)
 
456 Alternate information:
Birth: 31 DEC 1883 Hooper, Davis, Utah

Christening:
Death: 23 SEP 1899

 
Burnett, Fanny Elizabeth (I23316)
 
457 An artist and published poet, collector of fine dolls and porcelains. Kunkel, Nellie May (I23526)
 
458 An interesting fact:

Series: T623 Roll: 1722 Page: 4


Surname GivenName Age Sex Race Birthplace State County Location Year

HAYMORE WILLIAM 96 M W VA VA PITTSYLVANIA CHATHAM 1900

***I don't know when William died, but I find it amazing he lived this long. Also, living with him was his daughter, Martha age 61. 
Haymore, Harding Wilson (I893)
 
459 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Moulton, Reva Maxine (I3636)
 
460 Ancestral File Number: 99JK-JN
!Birth/Marr/Bapt: Certificate file with Deaun Moulton Weed End: Film 184075, (2) S. L. Male Endowments, 3 Mar 1941-28 Sep 1950
 
Moulton, Rex (I3639)
 
461 Ancestral File Number: 99JK-T7
!Birth: D7354-6335, Pt. R, Liv. No. 23955, Heber 2nd Ward Members 1903-1921, Pg. 632
Marr: Certificate file with Deaun Moulton Weed
Bapt: Archive Record and Certificate File
End: Film 184082, Liv. Female End., SL Temple, Bk H, 1941-50, Pg. 939, Index Card No. 19718

====
Spouse: DELMER WESLEY MCDOUGAL
27 Aug 1948 SL Temple

Buried in Valley View Memorial Park
Location: J 180-2

=========================
1. Evelyn Moulton McDougal "Wonderful Mom"
Salt Lake Tribune, The (UT) - March 31, 2003 Save this Article
Salt Lake Tribune, The (UT) - March 31, 2003
Deceased Name: Evelyn Moulton McDougal "Wonderful Mom"
Evelyn Moulton McDougal, our beloved mother, grandmother, sister and friend, passed away March 29, 2003 after a two year battle with cancer.

She is survived by her three sons, Gary (Karen), Bryan (Denise), Curtis (Lori); two daughters, Marlene (Ron) Barbano,

Sharon (Greg) Arnoldus; 17 grandchildren; and two great-grandchildren. Evelyn was preceded in death by her lifetime companion, Delmer W. McDougal, whom she met at BYU, 1945. They were married Aug 27, 1948, Salt Lake LDS Temple.

She was a faithful lifelong member of the LDS Church. Evelyn was born in Heber City, UT July 6, 1920 to Hyrum and Lillian Cummings Moulton, the fourth of 11 children.

She is survived by four of her brothers, Floyd, E. Jay, Rex, Dale; and sisters, Maxine Own Webb, Mardene Folkersen Provost. Her sisters Norma, Fern, Deaun; and brother, Duane, preceded her in death.

During World War II, she worked at Ft Douglas and also spent many years with the Kirton and McConkie law firm. She believed in hard work, education and devotion to family, all principles she passed on to her family.

The family would like to express their heartfelt appreciation to Evelyn's sister, Maxine, for her loving care of Mother during the past two years. Also, special thanks to Jeannie Morris for her loving care and kindness.

Services will be Tues. April 1, 12 noon McDougal Funeral Home, 4330 S. Redwood Rd, where friends may call Mon. 6-8 p.m. and Tues. one hour prior to the funeral. The family suggests a donation to the Huntsman Cancer Institute in lieu of flowers.

2. Evelyn Moulton McDougal "Wonderful Mom"
Salt Lake Tribune, The (UT) - March 30, 2003 Save this Article

3. Obituary: Evelyn Moulton McDougal
Deseret News, The (Salt Lake City, UT) - March 30, 2003

http://pioneer.utah.gov/access-sltribarchives.html 
Moulton, Evelyn (I3627)
 
462 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Moulton, Floyd Chase (I3637)
 
463 Andrew WARD married: by 1628 Hester SHERMAN (Dau of Edmund SHERMAN; her will dated 27 Dec 1665; her estate inventory dated 30 Jan 1665/6); will made 8 Jun 1659, estate inventory dated 18 October 1659; May be son of Richard of Gorleston, Co. Suffolk England


Hester's will of 27 Dec 1665 (proved 28 Feb 1665/6) leaves £ 5 "to my son William", 40 shillings "to my daughter Mary Burr". "Sons Andrew and Samuell" received £ 8 each, "daughter Abigail" £ 10 and "the children of my daughter Anna Nichols nine pounds to be equally divided among them"; "my grandchild Hester Ward" received £ 9 and "son John's children" received the same amount. "My grandchildren Sarah Burr and Nathaniell Burr the children of my daughter Sarah nine pounds to be equally divided among them". Her wearing apparel was to be divided between daughters Ann, Mary, Sarah and Abigail. She appointed sons William Ward and Andrew Ward as "executors and residuary legatees and also gives "Daniell Bur and Hester Burr ten shillings apiece". And finally, "to my son William .. my great Bible and if Andrew outlive him then Andrew shall have it." The inventory of her estate, was taken 30 Jan 1665/6 and amounted to £ 139.

Sources: The Great Migration Begins by Robert Charles Anderson - 1995; Pioneers of Massachusetts by Charles Henry Pope - 1900; Families of Early Guilford CT by Alvan Talcott - 1984; History of Guilford and Madison Connecticut by Steiner - 1897; Various Ancestral Lines of James Goodwin and Lucy (Morgan) Goodwin of Hartford CT by Frank Farnsworth Starr - 1915 (Family of James Boosey); Commemerative Record of New Haven County Connecticut - 1902

 
Sherman, Hester (I2195)
 
464 Andrew WARD married: by 1628 Hester SHERMAN (Dau of Edmund SHERMAN; her will dated 27 Dec 1665; her estate inventory dated 30 Jan 1665/6); will made 8 Jun 1659, estate inventory dated 18 October 1659; May be son of Richard of Gorleston, Co. Suffolk England

Most authors credit Sussex as the cradle of our Ward immigrant. He arrived in New England aboard the Arabella in 1633 and is noted as a freeman in Boston in 1634 and as a member of the Watertown church in May of that year. He was granted a ten acre homelot in Watertown @ 1633 which he apparently either sold or granted to his Sherman in-laws (Edmond, either father or brother) when he removed to Connecticut.

On 3 Mar 1635/6 he was one of 8 commissioners assigned by the Massachusetts General Court to govern the colony of Connecticut for the ensuing year. In order to perform his assigned duties, he settled in Wethersfield in 1635. On the 24 Mar 1640 land inventory he is listed as owner of eight parcels:

Homelot - 4 acres
Great meadow - 14 acres and 2 "roods"
Great meadow and swamp - 4 acres and 3 "roods"
Backlots - 2 acres and 3 "roods"
Dry swamp - 8 acres
Wet swamp - 6 acres
West Field - 54 acres
East side of the Connecticut River - 264 acres
While in Wethersfield, Andrew was named "Connecticut Assistant" April 1665 - May 1637 which made him one of the first judges in the colony. He served as Deputy to the General Court for Wethersfield from November 1637 to the term served by his last appointment there in January of 1640 at which time he moved his family to Stamford CT. From Stamford, he again served as Deputy to the General Court in April 1644 and was a judge at New Haven in October 1646. In 1648 he made his final move, settling at Fairfield CT from which he continued his public service having been appointed Deputy to the General Court from May 1648 to October 1658.

According to various extracts of his will, which was written 8 Jun 1659 and proved 2 Nov 1659 he called himself "Andrew Ward of Fairfield" and bequeathed to:

"Ester my beloved wife .. £ 40 and one third part of all my lands & housing in Fairfeild during her widowhood"
"my son John .. £ 50 at age twenty-one"
"my daughter Sarah .. £ 40 within one year after her marriage"
"my daughter Abigail .. £ 40 at age eighteen"
"sones Andrew & Samuel" .. all the rest of his property when they attain the age of 21.
"Item 7 .. And for the rest of my children, they have received their full portion all ready except my son Edmond, who if he come to this place my will is that out of my two youngest sons Andrew and Samuel's portions there may be paid £ 20".
Fairfield Probate Records indicate that the inventory of Andrew Ward's estate was taken 18 Oct 1659 and amounted to £ 242 10s including "house and lands" valued at £ 80.


Source:http://members.aol.com/janau/ward.htm#2064

Sources: The Great Migration Begins by Robert Charles Anderson - 1995; Pioneers of Massachusetts by Charles Henry Pope - 1900; Families of Early Guilford CT by Alvan Talcott - 1984; History of Guilford and Madison Connecticut by Steiner - 1897; Various Ancestral Lines of James Goodwin and Lucy (Morgan) Goodwin of Hartford CT by Frank Farnsworth Starr - 1915 (Family of James Boosey); Commemerative Record of New Haven County Connecticut - 1902


?Ward, Andrew, born 1597, died 1659

OLD CEMETERY
Fairfield Beach Road
Fairfield, CT
Copied November 1934


Retyped for the web by Coralynn Brown
Surnames N to W
 
Ward, Andrew (I2194)
 
465 Andrew, Junior settled in Killingworth in 1668 and is included on the 1669 list of freemen there. He paid £ 1 in March 1687 as part of the settlement of the land dispute with Saybrook.

Sources: History of Middlesex County, Connecticut, with biographical sketches of its prominent men by Beers, J.B. - 1884; The Great Migration Begins by Robert Charles Anderson - 1995; Pioneers of Massachusetts by Charles Henry Pope - 1900; Families of Early Guilford CT by Alvan Talcott - 1984; History of Guilford and Madison Connecticut by Steiner - 1897; Commemerative Record of New Haven County Connecticut - 1902; Killingworth Vital Records

http://members.aol.com/janau/ward.htm#2064 
Ward, Andrew (I2183)
 
466 Ann married Vincent Meigs, son of Lawrence Meigs and Anne Woods, in 1606 in Weymouth Dorsetshire England. (Vincent Meigs was born c. 1583 in Bradford Paverell Dorsetshire England, died on 12 Jan 1658 in Guilford CT and was buried in Dec 1658 in Hammonassett Madison New Haven CT.)
 
Churchill, Ann (I2219)
 
467 Another Spouse: Barry Damato, Angelina Bell (I23875)
 
468 Antietam
War: American Civil War
Other name(s): Sharpsburg


Date: 17 Sep 1862
Location: Maryland , US
Outcome: Union strategic victory Decisive battle

Principal
Commanders: Confederate: Robert E. Lee
Union: George Brinton McClellan
Confederate: George Burgwyn Anderson

Overview: On September 16, Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan confronted Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia at Sharpsburg, Maryland. At dawn September 17, Hooker’s corps mounted a powerful assault on Lee’s left flank that began the single bloodiest day in American military history. Attacks and counterattacks swept across Miller’s cornfield and fighting swirled around the Dunker Church. Union assaults against the Sunken Road eventually pierced the Confederate center, but the Federal advantage was not followed up. Late in the day, Burnside’s corps finally got into action, crossing the stone bridge over Antietam Creek and rolling up the Confederate right. At a crucial moment, A.P. Hill’s division arrived from Harpers Ferry and counterattacked, driving back Burnside and saving the day. Although outnumbered two-to-one, Lee committed his entire force, while McClellan sent in less than three-quarters of his army, enabling Lee to fight the Federals to a standstill. During the night, both armies consolidated their lines. In spite of crippling casualties, Lee continued to skirmish with McClellan throughout the 18th, while removing his wounded south of the river. McClellan did not renew the assaults. After dark, Lee ordered the battered Army of Northern Virginia to withdraw across the Potomac into the Shenandoah Valley.
Source: US National Park Service, CWSAC Battle Summaries

Content source: US National Park Service


 
Walton, Greenwood (I23520)
 
469 Appears on the:
FIRST LIST OF TITHABLES OF PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY, VIRGINIA

YEAR 1767

The History of Pittsylvania County
by Maud Carter Clement
 
Blanks, Henry (I3472)
 
470 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Taylor, Benjamin Jack (I415)
 
471 as it appears in "Genealogical History of the Redfield Family in the
United States", by John Howard Redfield, 1860. It is located between pages 42
and 43 (plates in the book are not numbered). 
Source (S102)
 
472 Aunt Euggie's records show her first husband as Dodson Cole, not Dobson. Dodson was a prevalent last name in Pittsylvania County.


 
Collins, Mary (I561)
 
473 Author: Harry Walden Date: 27 Oct 2003 9:42 PM GMT
Surnames: Hopkins, Kelsey, Dudley
Classification: Query
In Reply to: Bethia (Bethiah) Hopkins by: GaleGroup Library
Post Reply | Mark Unread | Report Abuse Print Message
First of all, I believe that it has been proven that the wife of William Kelsey was not Bethiah Hopkins. In Volume II of The Great Migration Begins by Robert Charles Anderson, it is suggested that her name was possibly Hester ? On page 1118 it has:
MARRIAGE: By 1634 ____ _____, who was "born about 1613 and liveing in Hartford in December 1666" [TAG 68:213-14]. (Several false leads regarding the identity of the wife of William Kelsey have been carefully examined and discarded by George E. McCracken and Gale Ion Harris [TAG 37:38-42, 68:211-14]. Based on onomastic evidence Harris suggests that her given name was Hester.)

The first wife of Stephen Hopkins was not Constance Dudley. The given name of his first wife was Mary. His second wife was Elizabeth Fisher. Source: Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Volume Six, Third Edition, Stephen Hopkins.
 
Hopkins, Bethia (I1779)
 
474 B. Harriett Marie Turner (500 East & Main). Original Pioneer. One of the 1st eight deaths in the valley. Burial relocated from Fort Field Cemetery. (Found in history of the Provo City Cemetery)


 
Turner, Harriet Maria (I2369)
 
475 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Moulton, Sydney (I409)
 
476 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Hardin, Rebecca Cosette (I23524)
 
477 Baptized 7 MAY 1905 by O. D. Hadlock
Confirmed 7 MAY 1905 by O. D. Hadlock



 
Burnett, Naoma (I434)
 
478 Baptized 3 Mar 1935, by Charles A. Lloyd, Confirmed 3 Mar 1935, by
Charles A. Lloyd 
Rutledge, Flem Thomas (I23398)
 
479 Baptized 3 Mar 1935, by Charles A. Lloyd, Confirmed by Ardell W. Phillips, 3 Mar 1935 Watson, Mattie Gray (I680)
 
480 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Taylor, Lettitia (I416)
 
481 Baptized by George H. Whitley,
19 Apr 1933, and Confirmed by John E. Paget, 29 Apr 1933.
 
Hardy, Oleen (I694)
 
482 Baptized in the summer of 1861

TIB # 4622 Book G p. 152  
Taylor, John Wardell (I451)
 
483 Barry Wride acting as proxy did a baptismal ordinance in the St. George Temple 28 NOV 1882
(Information listed George as being born in England in 1795 and dying in 1878)***  
Strawson, George Smith (I1578)
 
484 BDavey7231@aol.com Source (S152)
 
485 Beheaded FitzAlan, 8th Earl of Arundel Edmund (I1920)
 
486 Biographies Source (S37)
 
487 birth also listed as 14 Dec 1797

 
Stubbs, Mary (I1597)
 
488 Birth and Christening date conflict*** Johnson, Isaac (I6850)
 
489 Birth month maybe March Ackerman, Lewis (I2349)
 
490 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Nicholes, Stephanie (I790)
 
491 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Taylor, Douglas Henry (I793)
 
492 BIRTH: Bible of Samuel Clay Newcomb, per letter from Geneva Newcomb, Mt
Vernon, Texas to Virginia Frazier, Mar 1993.
 
Newcomb, Adalina (I762)
 
493 Birth: Jan. 27, 1788
Pendleton
Anderson County
South Carolina, USA
Death: Nov. 13, 1870
Spring City
Sanpete County
Utah, USA

Son of William Allred & Elizabeth Thrasher

Married Mary Calvert, 14 Feb 1844, Nashville, Davidson, Tennessee

Married Matilda Stewart, 5 Nov 1852, Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah

Isaac Allred was the second son and fifth child in the family of eight children born to William Allred and Elizabeth Thrasher. Between 1786 and the time of Isaac's birth the family moved from Randolph County, North Carolina to Pendleton, Anderson County, South Carolina, where Isaac was born on 27 Jan. 1788. We have no record of his early life. He may, however, have been employed in Georgia as a young man, or the Calverts may have gone to South Carolina. Whatever the circumstances, on 14 Feb. 1811, Isaac married Mary Calvert, who was born in Elbert County, Georgia. (The distance between these locations in 30 to 50 miles.)

Isaac's older brother, James, had married previously and gone northwestwards to the Ohio River. Then, following Isaac's marriage, the two brothers settled together in Tennessee, near Nashville. The newly-wed Isaac and Mary must have prepared for the move soon after, if not before, their marriage. We might also guess that they spent their first summer traveling, for their first child, Elizabeth M., was born in Bedford County, Tennessee, on 6 Jan. 1812. (She lived only six years.)

They remained in Tennessee until 1830, when both families moved about 500 miles north-westward to Monroe County, Missouri. Isaac's son, William, described the location as, "...on the State Road (with ?) in 3 miles one of the three forks of Salt River..." and son, Reddick, noted in his account, "...Father purchased a home on the great highway from east to west. Today (1982) the three forks of the Salt River are under the Clarence Cannon Reservoir and there does not appear to be any great highway in the area. (This is also very near the birthplace of Samuel Clemens/Mark Twain, born in 1835, the year the Allreds left.)
According to William, they found the climate to be much colder than in Tennessee and Isaac was hard pressed to provide - especially sufficient clothing - for his large family, which by May, 1831, numbered eleven children. He enjoyed one advantage, however. It was the abundance of game animals. William tells of his father going out and bagging two deer before break-fast, and William, himself, killed one at age 12. We may well guess, then, that Isaac's family was largely buckskin-clad.

Reddick has left the best explanation I have seen concerning the coming of the LDS missionaries to the Salt River Settlement (also known as Allred Settlement): "...My parents were members of a school of Presbyterians and brought up their children to reverence a God and were very exemplary in their lives, so that when a new religion was introduced they naturally looked at it with suspicion, having been taught that Prophets and Apostles were no longer needed, so some cried false Prophet. In 1831 two men preached in our settlement saying a new Prophet had organized a new church and introduced a new gospel or rather the old one come again. His name was Joseph Smith. Their names were Hyrum Smith, brother of the Prophet and John Mur-dock. Other Elders were passing every few months from Kirtland to Jackson County - the gathering place for the Saints, and father opened his house for meetings..." I was baptized in Salt River on the 10th of Sept., 1832. There were 19 baptized that day including my Parents and one or two of my sisters..." The Salt River Branch of the Church was organized that same day. William indicates that his father Isaac sold his farm on Salt River in 1832 or 1833 in anticipation of moving to Jackson County, the gathering place for the Church. But when the Saints were expelled from Jackson County, he rented his farm back from the buyer and remained in the area for a time, though the family had to relinquish the house to the buyer and find other accommodations. They stayed there for one more year, during which the Prophet, Joseph Smith, came to their settlement with his "Zion's Camp" expedition in an attempt to reclaim the homes and property of those evicted from Jackson County.

In 1835, in response to the call of the Prophet to assemble at Clay County, Missouri, Isaac and his family moved. From Reddick's account," ...in 1835 father moved up to Clay and located on Fishing River where he raised one crop, and the influx was so great that the old settlers became alarmed and the mob spirit began to raise, which was checked only by a compromise by which the old settlers were to buy out the Saints, and were to move into a new county adjoining called Caldwell County.

"1837 Father preempted and on Long Creek where he hoped to be able to build and inhabit - to plant and eat the fruit in peace thereof. This was eight miles from the newly laid out city of Far West. On the 14th of March 1838 the Prophet and other leading men came in from Kirtland and settled in Far West and the Saints began to gather and spread out so that two counties had to be organized, Caldwell and Davis were two Stakes of Zion was organized.

William's account tells us something about the circumstances and results: "...We lived there about two years and was getting a pretty good start. Broke ground for a temple in 1837. My father had quite a large family, in all nine boys and four girls, the oldest girl died before I was born, and we suffered considerable from persecution and exposure..." Isaac and Mary's oldest son, John, married in 1833. This left William (age 19 in 1838) as the oldest unmarried son. But William fled the area after it was learned that the Missourians were seeking him because he had been involved in the battle of Crooked River and in the defense of Far West. This left Isaac and his daughters and youngest sons - with only one or two ox teams which had not been either stolen or destroyed - to transport family and goods in the wintertime exodus from Missouri. At length the family reached Illinois and were reunited. Isaac rented a farm a few miles down the Mississippi River from the town of Quincy. The family resided there until the Prophet, Joseph, made his escape from Missouri and founded Nauvoo, on a bend in the Mississippi on the Illinois side. Isaac moved his family there in 1840. We have little information about him from then until the exodus from Nauvoo. Isaac's family were not among those leaving there early. William noted that it was in the spring of 1846. Reddick's record is that as he returned to Nauvoo after assisting some of the early movers to camps in Iowa, he found his family (Isaac, Mary and children, and his wife, Lucy) on the Iowa side of the Mississippi awaiting his return so they could resume the journey. He noted that weather conditions had improved so much that they actually had a pleasant trip across Iowa to Council Bluffs (a great contrast to the experiences of those who left Nauvoo early. It appears that most of the quite numerous Allred clan - Isaac and James now being the patriarchs of large posterity's of children and grandchildren - settled about five miles east of Council Bluffs at what became known as Allred settlement. According to Reddick, it was at "Little Pidgeon" (probably a stream). A branch of the Church was organized there.

About the time they reached this camp two of Isaac's sons, Reddick and James Riley, en-listed in the Mormon Battalion. Reddick's wife and baby remained with Isaac's family. These soldiers' pay was received by the Church and helped the families financially, but the great strength of the two sons was missed. Isaac, with other remaining family members, began making preparations to over winter there.
After Reddick's return in December of 1847 (James Riley remained in California), preparations to move west were hastened. The journey was commenced in the spring of 1849. Reddick was a captain of 50. Isaac and family traveled with him. They arrived at the Salt Lake valley on 16 Oct. and remained in Salt Lake City that winter. In 1850 they located near the mouth of Big Cottonwood canyon. The next year Isaac had the sorrow of Mary's death - on 16 Sep 1851, at age 58. The cause of her death was apparently not recorded.

Isaac married Matilda Park, a widow with three children, on 1 Mar 1852. Thus, at age 64, after having raised a family of 12 (two of whom were still teenagers), he began raising a second family. A daughter was also subsequently born to this marriage. They apparently then moved to Kaysville, as that is where Reddick noted finding his father when he returned from his mission in 1855. Reddick's words "...they were quite destitute having lost their crop the two successive seasons as also many others throughout the territory, especially the last season."

In the spring of 1858 most of the Salt Lake valley settlers moved south to the Utah valley and beyond at the approach of Johnston's army to Salt Lake. Reddick tells us that he remained with the rear guard and sent his family on ahead. It may be that he sent them with Isaac. Then he states, "I came to my family in Nephi and instead of going back I sold my home worth $500 for one yoke of oxen worth $100. Whether Isaac had already sold out at Kaysville or whether he also made a sacrifice trade rather than return we have not been informed. All we know for certain is that he must have proceeded on to Sanpete valley immediately, because later that year he was selected as a committee member for a study of the feasibility of making a settlement at Pleasant Creek, near the north end of the valley. (Isaac's brother, James, and others had been called by Brigham Young in 1851 to settle the Sanpete valley, but had serious Indian problems the entire time. They had a stronghold at Manti). The committee made the survey and reported favorably. Then Isaac was chosen as one of the committee to present the proposal to Brigham Young. Whether he met with President Young is in some doubt, as there is some indication that he was replaced by someone else. It may be that the Allreds had decided against settling there. Whatever the circumstances, Isaac and Reddick did not settle at Pleasant Creek (Mt. Pleasant), but at Spring City, a few miles to the south. Reddick claimed to have built one of the first cabins there in the fall of 1859 (though this was where his Uncle James had settled earlier only to be driven out by Indians. The settlers' houses were burned). He states that his father, Isaac, and a number of other Allred families, as well as others soon settled there.

Thus, Isaac, at age 72, was still extending the western frontier, building upon the ashes of home sites burned out by the Indians. Nor were the Indian problems over. One night they killed every pig and chicken in the settlement. But Indians were not the only predators. The wolves killed so many cattle that the settlers sharpened their horns that they might better protect them-selves. There is indication that this measure lessened the losses, but did not stop them entirely.

In spite of Indians and wolves, Isaac remained at Spring City until his death on 13 Nov. 1870. He was 82.




Family links:
Children:
Nancy Weakley Allred Earl (1815 - 1904)*
Sarah Lovisa Allred Taylor (1817 - 1879)*
William Moore Allred (1819 - 1901)*
Redden Alexander Allred (1822 - 1900)*
Redick Newton Allred (1822 - 1905)*
Mary Caroline Allred Egbert (1824 - 1880)*
James Riley Allred (1827 - 1871)*
Paulinas Harvey Allred (1829 - 1900)*
Joseph Anderson Allred (1831 - 1891)*
Isaac Morley Allred (1835 - 1916)*
Sidney Rigdon Allred (1837 - 1911)*
Sanford Allred (1848 - 1900)*
Samuel Allred (1851 - 1932)*
Matilda Stewart Allred Robinson (1853 - 1889)*
Orson Allred (1856 - 1934)*

Spouses:
Mary Calvert Allred (1793 - 1851)*
Matilda Stewart Allred (1808 - 1900)*

*Point here for explanation


Burial:
Spring City Pioneer Cemetery
Spring City
Sanpete County
Utah, USA

Maintained by: Todd Schott
Originally Created by: Utah State Historical So...
Record added: Feb 02, 2000
Find A Grave Memorial# 146675
 
Allred, Isaac (I2365)
 
494 BIRTH: Will of Henry Blanks, Wills and Deeds of Pittsylvania County, Film
0033267, 1794-1797, Book 10, FHL. (Will lists William as his son.)
 
Blanks, William (I3486)
 
495 Blessed 4 SEP 1898 by Robert Morris
Baptized 1 AUG 1906 by E. A. Jardine
Confirmed 6 AUG 1906 by L. J. Garner
Ordained:
Deacon 29 JAN 1912 by F. E. Mitchell
Teacher 3 FEB 1913 by Myron B. Child
Priest 25 JAN 1914 by O. D. Hadlock
Elder 21 SEP 1918 by John J. Burnett

 
Taylor, Adrian John (I433)
 
496 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Hardin, Elliott Glenn (I24085)
 
497 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Taylor, Michael Norris (I410)
 
498 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. McClure, Victoria Lynne (I1)
 
499 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Taylor, Rachel Naomi (I1281)
 
500 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Taylor, Aaron Joseph (I1280)
 

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