Er ist verheiratet mit Emily Amilla Jane McFerson.
Sie haben geheiratet am 11. Januar 1856 in Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA, er war 33 Jahre alt.
Kind(er):
Reddick Newton Allred | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1856 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Emily Amilla Jane McFerson |
Reddick Newton Allred
Birth name: Reddick Newton Allred
Gender: Male
Birth: Twin
Birth: Feb 21 1822 - Nashville, Bedford, Tennessee, USA
Marriage:
Marriage: Spouse: Lucy Hoyt - Nov 26 1843 - Nauvoo, Hancock, Illinois, USA
Marriage: Spouse: Amelia Jane McFerson - Jan 11 1857 - Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA
Marriage: Spouse: Calysta Ward Warrick - Jan 5 1861 - Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah, USA
Immigration: LEVI W. HANCOCK/JEFFERSON HUNT/JAMES PACE/ANDREW LYTLE COMPANY (1847) - 1847
Immigration: ALLEN TAYLOR COMPANY (1849) - 1849
Immigration: WILLIAM MCBRIDE COMPANY (1855) - 1855
Immigration: July 21 1855 - Utah, USA
Residence: 1850 USA Federal Census - 1850 - Great Salt Lake, Utah Territory, USA
Residence: 1850 - Pottawattamie, Iowa, USA
Residence: Apr 1851 - Salt Lake Co., Utah
Residence: 1860 USA Federal Census - July 6 1860 - Spring City, Sanpete, Utah, USA
Residence: July 6 1860 - Spring City, Sanpete, Utah
Residence: June 18 1870 - Spring City, Sanpete, Utah
Residence: 1880 - Chester, Sanpete, Utah
Residence: June 9 1900 - Spring City, Sanpete, Utah
Death: Oct 10 1905 - Chester, Sanpete, Utah, USA
Burial: Oct 13 1905 - Spring City, Sanpete, Utah, USA
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Additional information:
Twin: Redden AlexanderAllred
Burial Plot: BURIAL PLOT @ Spring City Cemetery, Spring City, Sanpete, Utah, BLOCK 4, LOT 7
LifeSketch: Allred, Reddick Newton, Bishop of Chester Ward, Sanpete County, Utah, from 1877 to 1887, was born February 21, 1822 in Bedford County Tennessee. [The son of Isaac Allred and Mary Calvert.] He was baptized in 1833, and in 1840 he moved to Nauvoo Illinois, where he remained with the Saints until their expulsion in 1846. He was ordained an elder in Nauvoo, by Seymour Branson in 1840 and ordained a Seventy in 1842, when he also filled a preaching mission in Indiana. In 1843, while living in Nauvoo, he married Lucy Hoyt, who survived him. After the exodus from Illinois, he enlisted in the famous Mormon Battalion and marched to California and back to Winters Quarters in 1846 through 47. He came to Utah in 1849 in charge of a company of 73 wagons and located in Salt Lake County. In 1852 - 55 he filled a mission to the Hawaiian Islands, presiding part of the time over the Maui conference. Upon his return home he removed to Kaysville, Davis County, Utah where he remained until “the move in” 1858. In 1856 he went out to meet the handcart companies, and in that same year he was ordained a high priest by Bishop Edward Hunter and set apart to act as a counselor in the Kaysville Bishopric.In 1858 he located at Nephi, Juab County, remaining there one year; thence he removed to Spring City, making his home there in the fall of 1859. From that time until his demise he was a resident of Spring City and Chester. He took the most active part in the Blackhawk war in Sanpete County and served as a Col. in the Nauvoo Legion. In 1867 he was ordained a Bishop by President Canute Peterson and set apart to preside over the Chester Ward; he held that position for 10 years. He was ordained a patriarch by Apostle George Teasdale, May 15, 1898. In 1857 he married Amelia J. McPherson and in 1861 he married Celestia W. Warwick. By his several wives he became the father of 20 children and because of this families relations he served a term of 60 days in the Utah penitentiary in 1888. He filled many positions of honor and trust beside those already mentioned. Thus he served as justice and postmaster in Spring City, served five terms in the Territorial legislature, was a member of the first city Council in Spring City, etc.
This principle avocation in life, however, was that of a farmer in all his associations Col. Allred won the respect and esteem of his fellow men among which he was a natural leader. In all his labors his integrity to the truth, his humility and purity of life and his obedience to proper authority were characteristic of his nature, Dad exactitude the respect and admiration of all. He died in Chester, October 10, 1905, leaving numerous posterity, among who are 70 grand children and 40 great-grandchildren, all of the whom are proud of the life record of their illustrious father.
Twin:
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