1,300 pay respects to Owen Allred
Cars jam Juab town for the funeral of polygamous leader
Jay, Grover and Clark Allred embrace following the funeral for their father in Rocky Ridge.
Keith Johnson, Deseret Morning News
ROCKY RIDGE, Juab County Nearly 1,300 friends, family and well-wishers paid their respects Saturday to the leader of a prominent Utah polygamous group.
Owen Allred, 91, died on Valentine's Day, just 10 days after the leader of the Apostolic United Brethren church broke his hip when he slipped and fell in his Bluffdale home.
Cars and trucks lined the streets of this tiny Juab County town, causing a traffic "nightmare," but the turnout was overwhelming, his son, Carl Allred, said.
"We have a lot of people here who love Owen that had nothing to do with (the AUB)," Carl Allred said. "He was just a God-fearing man who loved his fellowman."
Owen Allred never wanted the responsibility of leading the 5,000-member church. But after his brother, Rulon, was murdered in 1977 by followers of polygamist Ervil LeBaron, Owen Allred shouldered the responsibility and did the best he could, Carl Allred said.
The funeral was closed to the media to "preserve the privacy and reverence for the family," he said.
Six of Owen Allred's sons served as pallbearers for the funeral, with his last surviving brother, Clarence E. Allred, serving as an honorary pallbearer. Over his lifetime, Owen Allred raised 23 children with "more than one wife," Carl Allred said.
Owen Allred was born on Jan. 15, 1914, in Blackfoot, Idaho, where he loved to hunt, fish and enjoy life's beauty in the outdoors, Carl Allred said. He had six brothers and four sisters.
Owen Allred was also an advocate of following all of the laws of the land, except for one polygamy.
"We are not secretive about our beliefs," Carl Allred said. "We consider ourselves just like every other U.S. citizen. Just because we believe a little differently than other people, we get spotlighted."
In the summer of 1998, Owen Allred called a press conference to denounce abuses within polygamous cultures and distinguish his group from others. The then-84-year-old leader wrote letters to newspapers and members of the Utah Legislature, lauding efforts to raise the minimum marriage age from 14 to 16 and reasserting the group's adherence to all laws.
"For 50 years now . . . the rule among our people has definitely been that girls should not even start courting until they are at least 17 years of age," Owen Allred wrote in a letter to the Deseret News.
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