American politician
William Allen
|
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|
|
|
In office
January 12, 1874 ? January 10, 1876
|
Lieutenant
| Alphonso Hart
|
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Preceded by
| Edward F. Noyes
|
---|
Succeeded by
| Rutherford B. Hayes
|
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|
In office
March 4, 1837 ? March 3, 1849
|
Preceded by
| Thomas Ewing
|
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Succeeded by
| Salmon P. Chase
|
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|
In office
March 4, 1833 ? March 3, 1835
|
Preceded by
| Samuel Finley Vinton
|
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Succeeded by
| William K. Bond
|
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|
|
Born
| December 18 or 27, 1803
(
2024-12-18
)
Edenton, North Carolina
|
---|
Died
| July 11, 1879
(1879-07-11)
(aged 75)
Fruit Hill,
Chillicothe, Ohio
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Political party
| Democratic
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Spouse
| Effie McArthur
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|
William Allen
(December 18 or 27, 1803 ? July 11, 1879) was a
Democratic
Representative
,
Senator
and 31st
governor of Ohio
.
Early life and family
[
edit
]
Allen was born in
Edenton, North Carolina
. His father was
Nathanial Allen (1755?1805)
. His mother was Fanny Coulston, an enslaved woman who was either owned by his father or had been his mistress. Upon the death of his mother, he and his brother Frances Allen William moved to
Lynchburg, Virginia
. In 1819, he moved to live with his sister in
Chillicothe, Ohio
.
His father made the following arrangements in his will.
[1]
"I give and devise that part of lot # 5 in the new plan of the town of Edenton joining the lots wheron I now dwell and as far as the same is at present under fence with all the improvements thereon to Fanny Coulston her heirs and assigns forever. I also give and bequeath unto the said Fanny Coulston her heirs and assigns such part of my household and kitchen furniture as my executors hereinafter named, shall judge reasonable and necessary, due regard being paid to the situation of my estate and the interest of her children. I give and bequeath unto my three natural sons, Francis, Bonaparte, and William begotten on the body of the said Fanny Coulston, all my wearing apparel, including whatever remains or that left to me by my deceased Uncle Joseph Hewes , Esquire, to be equally divided among them share and share alike. Before the signing and the execution of the above Will, I do hereby declare it to be my further will and desire that the aforesaid Fanny Caulston shall have the use and labor of my negro woman named Penny for and during the term of three years."
Allen and his sister Mary Granberry Allen lived in Chillicothe together. His sister married Reverend Pleasant Thurman, and their son,
Allen G. Thurman
, followed in his uncle's footsteps, becoming a lawyer and politician.
Allen attended Chillicothe Academy before studying law with
Colonel Edward King
. He was
admitted to the bar
in Ohio at age 21.
[2]
He began his career as a politician in the Democratic Party at a young age.
[3]
Career
[
edit
]
Allen served as
United States Representative
from
Ohio
from 1833 to 1835, losing his bid for re-election. He served as
United States Senator
from Ohio from 1837 to 1849, losing a bid for a third term in 1848.
While in the Senate, Allen was one of a group of Western Democrat
expansionists
who asserted that the U.S. had a valid claim to the entire
Oregon Country
, which was an issue during the
1844 U.S. presidential election
. He suggested that the United States should be prepared to go to war with the
United Kingdom
to annex the entire Oregon Country up to
Russian-owned Alaska
at
latitude 54°40′N
. This position ultimately produced the slogan "
Fifty-Four Forty or Fight!
," coined in 1846 by opponents of such a policy (not, as popularly believed, a slogan in the 1844 Presidential campaign).
[4]
Allen supported "popular sovereignty" and the presidential candidacy of fellow-Democrat
Lewis Cass
in
1848
.
[2]
In 1849, Allen retired to his farm, "Fruit Hill", which had belonged to his father-in-law, and fellow Ohio Governor,
Duncan McArthur
,
[3]
near
Chillicothe, Ohio
. Allen identified himself as a "
Peace Democrat
" by
opposing
the
American Civil War
.
[2]
Allen did not return to public service for nearly a quarter century until he served as
governor of Ohio
from 1874 to 1876. He unsuccessfully sought a second two-year term in an 1875 election.
Allen was noted for his loud voice. A friend asked Senator
Benjamin Tappan
if a fellow Ohioan was still in Washington. Tappan replied, "No, he left yesterday and is probably by this time in
Cumberland, Maryland
, but if you will go to Bill Allen and tell him to raise that window and call him, he will come back."
[5]
Death
[
edit
]
At the close of his administration, he retired to private life at Fruit Hill, where he died in 1879.
[6]
Allen is buried at
Grandview Cemetery, Chillicothe
.
[7]
Legacy
[
edit
]
Allen County, Kansas
, is named for William Allen.
[8]
In 1887, Ohio donated a
statue of Allen
to the
National Statuary Hall Collection
, which was exhibited in the
National Statuary Hall
of the
U.S. Capitol
. The statue was sculpted by
Charles H. Niehaus
.
[9]
In 2010, the
Ohio Historical Society
held a statewide poll on the suitability of Allen as a distinguished representative of the state. The poll found that many Ohioans objected to Allen. On August 26, the Ohio National Statuary Committee voted to replace Allen's statue with a statue of Ohio-born inventor
Thomas Edison
. The
Ohio General Assembly
agreed to replace the statue in part because "Allen’s pro-slavery position and outspoken criticism of President
Abraham Lincoln
during the
Civil War
make him a poor representative for Ohio in the U.S. Capitol."
[10]
However, lack of funding for the Edison statue delayed replacement of the Allen statue.
[11]
The Edison statue was completed in spring 2015, and was installed on September 20, 2016.
[12]
The statue of Allen was relocated to the Ross County Heritage Center in Chillicothe.
[13]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
"Join Ancestry®"
.
Ancestry.com
.
- ^
a
b
c
William Allen
at
Ohio History Central
- ^
a
b
Ryan, Daniel J
(1888).
"William Allen"
.
A History of Ohio with Biographical Sketches of her Governors and the Ordinance of 1787
. Columbus, Ohio: A H Smythe. pp. 190?191.
- ^
"William Allen"
. Architect of the Capital
. Retrieved
August 5,
2012
.
- ^
Hunter, W.H. (1898).
"The Pathfinders of Jefferson County"
.
Ohio Archaeological and Historical Publications
.
VI
: 226.
- ^
Renick, L W; Fullerton, M D; Nipgen, M P (1896).
Che-le-co-the, glimpses of yesterday: a souvenir of the hundredth anniversary of the founding of Chillicothe, Ohio April 1896
. Chillicothe: Knickerbocker Press, New York. p.
76
.
- ^
"Grandview Cemetery"
. Grandview Cemetery. Archived from
the original
on November 18, 2012
. Retrieved
July 29,
2012
.
- ^
"Profile for Allen County, Kansas, KS"
. ePodunk
. Retrieved
August 5,
2012
.
- ^
The National Statuary Hall Collection
- ^
Legacy for Ohio
- ^
"Inventive fundraising is called for Edison's statue." Columbus
Dispatch
, January 13, 2013, Page 2B
- ^
"Ohioans can visit statue before it heads to D.C." Columbus
Dispatch
, May 20, 2015, Page 9B
- ^
"Heritage Center gets historic statue" Chillicothe
Gazette
, September 23, 2016, Page A1
External links
[
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]
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External links
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