In “Spring City: A Look at a Nineteenth-Century Mormon Village,” the Allred family is closely connected to the community’s early settlement, leadership, and long-term stability. Members of the Allred family were among the original Mormon pioneers who helped establish Spring City in the 1850s, taking on key roles in both civic and ecclesiastical life. Most notably, John P. Allred served as a bishop and community leader, influencing not only religious life but also town organization, economic cooperation, and social order. The Allreds were involved in farming, irrigation projects, and local governance, reflecting the typical Mormon ideal of blending spiritual duty with practical labor. Through intermarriage, church service, and sustained residence, the Allred family became woven into the social fabric of Spring City, illustrating how a small number of extended families could shape leadership, continuity, and identity in a nineteenth-century Mormon village.
