Dowling Family Genealogy

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  • ID: I186063
  • Name: James ALLEN
  • Sex: M
  • Birth: 14 FEB 1821 in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
  • Census: 1850 Page 184, Baring, Washington Co., ME
  • Census: 1860 Page 130, Half Moon, Eau Claire Co., WI
  • Death: 24 JUN 1904 in DeLand, Volusia Co., FL
  • Burial: Lakeview Cem., Eau Claire, WI
  • Event: Pic James Allen
  • Note:
    James Allen was born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, February 14, 1821. His father
    was an Irishman, an officer in the English army stationed at Halifax. His
    mother was an English lady. His parents died when he was a small boy and at
    twelve years of age he began to make his own way in the world, and in 1833
    he drifted to Maine, where at Calais and Baring he grew up to manhood,
    working in the mills, the woods and at farming and fishing. His schooling
    was limited. He was possessed of great vitality and strength and hardly
    had a sick day in his life and was always industrious and a hard worker.
    In 1842, in Calais, Maine, he was married to Emily Gertrude Pond and settled
    at Baring, Maine, where they lived until 1850. There were born to them in
    that place Edward Wellington, January 15, 1843; Emily Maria, 1845, and James
    Frederick, February 15, 1847. During these years he accumulated considerable
    property and was running a hotel. One Sunday morning in 1849 his little son,
    Edward, built a fire in the manger of the barn to "warm the chickens," as he
    said, resulting in the loss of the barn and most of its contents as well as
    the hotel. He had made all arrangements to go to California as gold had been
    discovered there shortly before, but this disaster prevented.
    In 1850 the Allen and Pond clans living in and near Baring emigrated to
    Wisconsin and settled in Sheboygan. Here Cora Ella Allen was born November
    13, 1856. About 1858 the family moved to Two Rivers, Manitowoc county, and
    there, June 3, 1858, Charles Levi Allen was born. During these nine years
    from 1850 to 1859 James Allen was engaged most of the time in lumbering, as
    were his brothers-in-law Levi W. and William S. Pond. In the fall of 1859,
    with his family and five children, moved to Eau Claire and lived in a rented
    house for several years at the corner of Seventh avenue and Menomonie street,
    just across the avenue from where he built his home during the early years of
    the war, which home remained in the family until after the death of his wife
    and himself.
    In the fall of 1859 James Allen and Levi W. Pond made a two years' contract
    with the owners of the West Eau Claire saw mills to control the logs in the
    Chippewa river so that they would float into the sorting works just above
    the river end of the log race to Half Moon lake, where those belonging to
    Eau Claire would be sorted from the down river logs and saved for the home
    mills. Others had tried by different kinds of booms to control the logs,
    but had failed. A successful boom had to be opened easily and quickly, to
    allow the passage of rafts and steamboats and as quickly closed again to
    control the logs, and such a boom was not known that would work equally well
    in the low water with few logs as in the swift current of high river filled
    with rapidly running logs. Out of these two years of struggle with a swift
    river bearing millions of dollars' worth of the finest white pine logs ever
    known came this wonderful sheer boom which was afterwards patented by Mr.
    Pond and which revolutionized the logging industry of America. (The success
    of these two men with the boom is described at length in the "History of the
    Chippewa Valley," by Thomas E. Randall, and published in 1875, pages 90 to
    94.) At the expiration of this contract Mr. Allen contracted with Ingram &
    Kennedy to raft all the lumber of their mills and later for the mills of the
    Empire Lumber Company, and from 1861 to 1890 he had charge of that important
    phase of the lumbering operations of those great concerns. In 1890 he was
    badly injured ina railroad wreck in Florida, from which he never fully
    recovered, and had to give up heavy labor and was unable to withstand the
    severe northern winters, so he made his home in De Land, Fla., and became a
    partner in the furniture business with his son, James Fred Allen, who had
    gone South in August, 1875. On the morning of June 24, 1904, he was found
    dead in his bed in De Land, having passed away in the night and without
    preliminary sickness. His body was brought to Eau Claire and laid beside
    that of his wife in Lakeview cemetery.
    James Fred Allen enlisted for service in the Civil War February 29, 1864, in
    Company K, 36th regiment, Wisconsin Volunteer infantry, before he was
    seventeen years old. He was captured at the battle of Cold Harbor, June 3,
    1864, and lay in Andersonville prison, suffering with his comrades as few
    prisoners have ever suffered in civilized warfare until April 28, 1865.
    General Lee had surrendered his army April 9, and General Johnston April 26,
    and the Civil War was over. A prisoner who had escaped from that horrible
    prison had reported to Edward W. Allen, an officer in Sherman's army, that he
    had seen his brother Fred carried out to be buried, and all at home believed
    that he had succumbed to the privations and sufferings of that hell on earth
    -- Andersonville prison. His funeral sermon was preached by Rev. Mr.
    Hamilton, of Eau Claire, shortly after the news had been received of his
    death. It was with great rejoicing in the Allen home that a letter from
    Fred was received one May morning that he was alive and on his way home.
    Myron Briggs was the bearer of that momentous letter, bringing it from the
    postoffice on the east side to the Allen home on Menomonie street and giving
    it to Mrs. Allen, laying sick on her couch. His homecoming was a veritable
    return from the grave. Fred never fully recovered from that eleven months
    of prison life. After the war he kept books for Noah Shaw in his foundry
    near Ingram & Kennedy's mills, for many years, until he went South in search
    of health in 1875. He is now (1914) living in De Land and engaged with his
    son Gus in the furniture business. While living in Eau Claire he married
    Miss Kitty Norton, niece of John P. Pinkum, October 8, 1872. Cora E., his
    sister, was married to J. F. Ellis in the fall of 1875 at Eau Claire. The
    eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Allen -- Maria E. -- died in 1861.
    William A. Allen, after finishing his education at the State University in
    1884, went to Florida and with his brother Fred opened the first drug store
    in that city. He is still (1914) living there in the same business and is
    the postmaster of the city of De Land.
    --- "The History of Eau Claire County, 1914, Past & Present", Page 636




    Marriage 1 Emily Gertrude POND b: 21 JUL 1825 in Calais, Washington Co., ME
    • Married: 1842 in Calais, Washington Co., ME
    Children
    1. Has Children Edward Wellington ALLEN b: 15 JAN 1843 in Baring, Washington Co., ME
    2. Has No Children Emily Maria ALLEN b: 1845 in Baring, Washington Co., ME
    3. Has No Children James Frederick ALLEN b: 15 FEB 1847 in Baring, Washington Co., ME
    4. Has No Children Adelaide ALLEN b: ABT 1849 in Baring, Washington Co., ME
    5. Has No Children Cora Ella ALLEN b: 13 NOV 1856 in Sheboygan Co., WI
    6. Has Children Charles Levi ALLEN b: 3 JUN 1858 in Two Rivers, Manitowoc Co., WI

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