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Ann was born Aug. 11, 1806 in NC,
married John Allen (born 1794ca) about 1826 in Bedford Co., TN and died
about 1850. However she is listed with the family in the 1850 Hardeman
Co., TN census (#576-215) and is not listed in the 1850 Haredman Co mottality
schedule. John was born May 15, 1794 in Warren Co., NC and died about 1881
in Hardeman Co., TN. John Allen is listed as Admr. to the estate of Sarah
Odeneal in a court record that also lists James Grant, Jan. 17, 1842. In
the 1850 census both Mary and Vincent have left home but could not be found
in the 1850 TN census or 1850 TX census.
The following information about John
Allen is from a letter his grandson, James W. Allen, sent to The Warren
Report, Warren Co., NC for a newspaper article by T. J. Taylor.. The letter
was dated Oct. 30th, 1917 from Nashville , TN. It appeared in the November
9th, 1917 edition.
John Allen was the grandson of Charles
Allen who was reared near Culpepper, VA. Charles Allen was a strong personal
friend of President Washington, and served two enlistments in the Revolutionary
War, and during the last, was Captain of his company at more than fifty
years of age. His company was brigaded with Gen. Ashe and he was in the
battle of "Brier Thicket," "Alamance Creek," and "Guilford Court House."
John Allen was the son of Vincent Allen, who bore his mother's maiden name,
and who was also in the Revolutionary War from a Virginia Regiment, under
Lieutenant-Colonel Posey. John Allen himself, served a short enlistment
in the "War of 1812," in a company of North Carolina Militia of which ????
was Capt. and drew a pension from the United States Government for this
service to the time of his death. He was born May 15, 1794, and died Janary
12, 1881, on the plantation that he cleared himself near Whiteville, TN,
and is buried in the family graveyard at that place. He moved to Whiteville
in 1835, 12 years after the treaty with the Indians providing for the purchase
and settlement of West Tennessee.
While teaching school in the early
part of his life, he found it necessary to supply a number of the children
with shoes in order to keep them in school, and in orderr to do this he
was compelled to make them himself, supplying them without cost to any
of the pupils wishing him to do so.
He was married about 1821 to Miss
Nancy Caroline Morton, of one of the most prominent families in this section
at that time. She was the daughter of John Morton and his wife, Miss Caroline
O'Dineal (Odeneal),. who lived near Triune in Williamson County. His children
were Mary Allen, Thompson Allen, Vincent Allen, Caroline Allen, Ada Allen,
John Allen, Joe Allen and Amanda Tate Allen.
Mary Allen married Caswell Coates,
Bolivar, Hardeman County, TN, and moved to Texas soon after that state
was admitted to the Union. She only had one daughter, Alma, who married
a Mr. Hester, and Alma only had one child by the name of John Hester. They
are both living, at Columbus, Texas, and are in a good financial condition.
Thompson Allen married Miss Araminta
Wilson, near Bolivar, Tenn., and a Miss Newsom, near Fayette Corner, TN,
and died about 1892 without heirs. He was buried with Masonic honors at
Goodwin, Arkansas, where he owned a plantation. He joined E. Company, Forrest
Old Regiment, and was shot down at the Battle of Shiloh, which was the
first battle he was ever in. His horse was killed by the same bullet,and
this wound was the cause of his death.
Vincent Allen went to Texas when he
was a young chap with his sister Mary, and married a Miss Wilson near Alleytown,
in Colorado county, and raised a family. One son, Gussie, the oldest, lives
in Montana and Mrs. Traylor and Mrs. Leeds live at Wharton, Texas. Miss
Pearl Leeds, one of the daughters, is quite a prominent school teacher
in that section.
Caroline, Jane and Ada Allen died
when they were in their teens and were ever married.
John Allen married Miss Louisa Harwood
near Trenton, TN, and left two children, Orion and J. W. Allen (James Walter,
myself). My brother, Orion Allen, lives at O'Donnell, Texas, and is engaged
in the cattle business. He left Tennessee in 1881 for his health, which
was restored by the refreshing breezes, of the Panhandle country. He has
three children. Glenn Allen, who is married and settled near his father;
Fern Allen, who is in the National Army and Ora Allen, who married a Mr.
Miles and is settled near that point. John Allen lost his wife in February
1861 and he immediately joined Company E. of the 7th Tennessee Cavalry
which was brigaded with Gen. Forrest's old Regiment throughout the entire
Civil War. He was wounded at Union City, Tenn., and, again, at Harrisbutg,
MS. These wounds superinduced his death in 1866. He was a lawyer by profession.
James W. married Miss Flora Hamel
November 23, 1881. She descended from a long line of Indian fighters who
came to Tennessee from North Carolina in the early part of the eighteenth
century. She died on,June 7th, 1916. Our children are as follows: Mrs.
A. A.. Bailey, Chicago, IL; Mrs. 0. A. Burbank, Chicago, IL; Mrs. W. A.
Dyer, Washington, D. C,- J. W. Allen, Jr., New Orleans, LA; W. T. Allen,
Chicago, IL; Morton P. Allen, Chicago, IL; Forrest' F. Allen, Nashvillee,
TN; and Mary Graddy)
The following is from Barbara Gunn
Ryon "History of the Matthews".
Nancy Morton
The first trace we found of John and
Nancy in Hardeman County was in 1834 when John bought 640 acres. Over the
years he bought another 528.25 acres, which brought his cotton plantation
up to 1168.25 acres. All of John's land was in the 10th District, Range
5, Section 5.
Tragedy struck the family on 11 July
1835 when John and Nancy's fourth child, four-year old Eliza 0., died.
She had been born 14 Oct 1830, and is buried in the Farley Cemetery.
Nancy's grandmother, Sarah Tate Odneal
(sic); may have been living with the family when she died. John Allen was
the Administrator of her estate. One bed and saddle were sold on 14 Sep
1839 from her estate.
The 1840 Census shows John and Nancy's
family consisting of six children: 1 girl aged 15 20; 2 boys aged 10-15;
2 boys aged 5-10; and 2 girls aged 0-5. These children would be: Mary,
ca 16; Thompson, 14; Vincent, ca 12; John, 7; Joseph, 5; Caroline, 3; and
Jane, 1. (Eliza would have been 10 if she had lived.)
John and Nancy had only been married
17 years so its safe to say that this was all their children, i.e., no
child had left home yet.
Only two more children were born into
the Allen family: Adaline was born ca. 1841, and Amanda Tate was born on
3 Dec 1846.
On 30 Dec 1841, their oldest girl,
Mary, married Caswell Coates. He was the son of William and Mary Coates
of Hardeman County.
The 1850 census shows Thompson at
home farming with his dad, the next five children were "students," and
Amanda was a tyke of 4 years. There must have been a governess or tutor
(or both) in the home as there was no school building in Whiteville until
1856. Vincent was not living at home and was probably married. He and Thompson
belonged to the Bolivar Masonic Lodge in 1850 so he must have been living
in the area.
John Allen's wife, Nancy, died in
late 1850 at the age of 44. Amanda was four when she lost her mother.
Two years later, John married Susanah
Rebecca Johnson, the widow of the Rev. William Johnson, on 24 August 1852.
She was 39 and John was 58 when they married and they did not have any
children.
A published history of Hardeman County
tells us:
"In 1856 the first school building
was erected in Whiteville at a spot now occupied by the John Cross residence.
It was a two story house with an auditorium and study hall on the lower
floor and class rooms on the upper floor. The Jeffersonian Institute, as
it was called, stressed music and art and had special rooms provided for
these subjects.
"The first principal of the school
was Professor Dillard of New York. Miss Wally and Miss Sherwood, also from
New York, were instructors of music and art, this is probably where Amanda
received her training in art and music. Other teachers were Professor N.
E. Wood and Professor Allen who was killed in the Battle of Shiloh."
The husband of the oldest daughter,
Mary, was in Colorado County, Texas, just west of where Houston is today
in October, 1856. He made out a Power of Attorney authorizing John Allen
to handle his inheritance from his parents. Was Mary the first Allen child
to emigrate to Texas?
Rebecca Allen, John's second wife
died on 12 Aug 1860. Thompson and Amanda were the only two children living
at home when she died. Amanda was 14 when her stepmother died; she would
have been the only mother that Amanda remembered.
The Civil War started on 12 April
1861. The 1860 census shows the Allen household consisting of only John
Allen, age 66; Thompson, age 35; and Amanda, age 14. Rebecca, John's wife,
had just died.
John and Thompson were raising cotton
on the family's 1168+-acre plantation with the help of 30 slaves. The Allens
had a two-story antebellum home, and there were seven slave houses on the
property. The value of John Allen's property was $35,760; Thompson's was
$5,600.
(If the information on the 1860 Census
is accurate, the Allens had more than twice as much wealth in land, slaves
and personal property as the Matthews.)
There is a real mystery in the slave
schedule for 1860. ownership of the slaves on the Allen plantation was:
Thompson, 3; John Allen, 2; and Arthur Allen, 25. Who in the world was
Arthur Allen? This was the only mention I found of this name in any of
the county records over a 70-year period.
Amanda had four brothers who probably
fought in the Civil War. Thompson was 36, Vincent was 34 (if he was still
living), John was 28, and Joseph was 26 when the war started.
John and Joseph rode to Jackson on
24 May 1861 and joined the Confederate calvary. They were originally assigned
to Logwood's Battalion in the fall of 1861 and first saw service about
New Madrid, MO. On 10 June 1862 they were attached Company E of the Seventh
Calvary, known as "Hardeman's Avengers," under General Forrest where they
spent the rest of their military careers. Private Joseph F. Allen was "killed
at Denmark Tenn" on 1 Sept 1862. Private John Allen was "wounded and left
in Tennessee" on May 2nd, 1864.
The war was over in the Spring of
1865, and on 29 October 1865 Thompson married Martha Araminta Wilson in
Hardeman County.
In April 1866, John Allen made out
a Gift Deed to his newly married son, Thompson, for 264 acres off the Allen
plantation.
The Allen household on the 1870 federal
census consisted of John Allen, 76; Amanda, 23; Walter, 12; and Orion,
10. These two boys were the sons of either John Allen who died in 1866.
The children of John Allen and Nancy
Morton are listed below:
In the 1860 Colorado Co., TX census Caroline and Adaline were listed with their brother Vincent. After Barbara Ryon had this info she thought it possible they did not all die of TB. It may be Jane died and the other two moved to Texas for their health and died there or , perhaps, married and had families.