|
Gen. Thomas S.
Allen, editor and soldier, was horn in Allegheny County, New York,
On July 26, 1825, and was the son of Rev. Asa S. Allen and Lydia
Kingsbury. His life was a most eventful one and only an outline can
here be given. He received a substantial primary education and before
sixteen years ears old had acquired a practical knowledge of the
printer’s art, by means of which he paid his expenses while taking a
collegiate course of study at Oberlin, O. Owing to serious trouble with
his eyes he was obliged to leave college before graduating. Recovering
his eyesight sufficiently, he taught school in his native village, but
soon gave that up, worked his passage down the Ohio and up the
Mississippi, to reach Chicago, where he obtained a position as foreman
on a daily newspaper, in which capacity he remained until his father’s
family came west. In 1847 he moved with them to Dodgeville, where he was
soon engaged in mining, surveying and teaching. From 1850 to 1852 he was
clerk of the Dodge County Board of Supervisors, and in 1857, he having
become a citizen of Mineral Point, was elected to the Legislature from
that district.
In 1860 he was
appointed chief clerk in the United Status land office of Madison, and
retained that position until April, 1861, when he enlisted as a private
soldier in the military company organized in that city, known as the
“Governor’s Guard,” which later was merged into the “First Wisconsin
Regiment.” The Mineral Pointers having raised a company —“Miner’s Guard”
—would have no one but Mr. Allen as leader, he was therefore
commissioned as such by Governor Randall and mustered into service at
the beginning of the war as captain of Company I of the Second Wisconsin
Volunteer Infantry, which hit later became famous in the Iron Brigade.
The command was in
reserve at Blackburn’s Ford, and in the rout on the third day it was the
last to retreat and displayed its pluck in manner that attracted the
attention of the authorities even in that situation of disaster and
dismay.
The organization of
the Second Was preserved at Bull Run and brought from the field in good
order under Captain McKee and Captain Allen, the latter conducting the
rear guard.
Captain Allen was
promoted for his gallant conduct, and in August, 1862, became Major of
the regiment and shortly afterward Lieutenant-Colonel of the same
regiment. In January, 1863, he was commissioned Colonel of the Fifth
Regiment Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, and was mustered out of service
in March, 1865, as Brevet Brigadier-General.
General Allen
participated in several of the most sanguinary engagements of the war
and became conspicuous for his gallant and heroic conduct. He was twice
wounded in the battle of Gainesville when he was Major of the Second
Regiment, but did not leave the field; and was again wounded at Antietam
while commanding the regiment in the absence of Colonel Fairchild. In
that engagement he had his arm broken.
In the famous charge
if the Third of May, 1863, on Maryes Heights, where General Burnside had
lost 5,000 men in a former engaged, giving it the name of “Slaughter
Pen,” Colonel Allen led his men of the Fifth Wisconsin with the Sixth
Maine and Thirty-first New York. The brave commander walked among his
men, inspiring them to the hazardous deed. “My boys,” he said. “do you
see those works in front? We have got to take them. Perhaps you think we
cannot do it, but I know we can. I am confident of it. When the order to
advance comes, you will trail arms and move forward on the
double-quick. Do not fire a gun and do not stop until you get the order
to halt. You will never get that order.”
Mr. Thwaites, in the
“Story of Wisconsin,” writes the following: “The order ‘to forward’
came. From the riflemen behind the stone wall flanking the roadway,
from the houses along the base, from the batteries on the heights above,
was poured upon these devoted men a terrible storm of iron and lead.
Grape and cannister mowed their ranks. They were in the grand highway to
death; still they pushed in and on over stone wall, through brier and
bramble, over the slippery places, up among the rolling bowlders (sic),
clutching to bushes, scrambling on all fours, digging, pitching and
climbing over heaps of dead and wounded, overcoming line after line of
redoubts, the men who were not to halt finally reached the summit.
There were wild hurrahs, the gleam of bayonets, the roar and smoke of
the cannon, the shrieks of the dying; then the enemy turned and ran, and
Colonel Allen’s men- such of them as were left- were the victors of
Maryes Heights. The Southern-sympathizing correspondent of the ‘London
Times’, writing from Lee’s headquarters about this terrible assault
declared: ‘Never at Fontenoy Albuera, nor at Waterloo was more undaunted
courage displayed.’ And Greeley wrote: ‘Braver men never smiled on
death than those who climbed the Maryes Heights on that fatal day.’ The
Confederate commander told the Wisconsin Colonel, as he handed him his
sword and silver spurs, that he had supposed there were not troops
enough in that entire army of the Potomac to carry the works, and
declared that it was the most daring assault he had ever seen.”
At the charge at
Rappahannock Station on November 7, as his regiment was crossing the
parapet of that redoubt and taking possession, his hand was so badly
shattered by a bullet as to render him unfit for duty. He was
complimented for his gallant service in that action in general orders by
Major-General H.G. Wright, commander of the Sixth Corps.
After the time of his
regiment has expired, he returned to Wisconsin, raised seven new
companies and returned with them to the seat of the war, where they
served in the campaign of the Shenandoah Valley under General Sheridan.
In the charge of the
enemy’s works at Petersburg, April, 2, the Fifth Wisconsin and the
Thirty-seventh Massachusetts were led by Colonel Allen, and he again
distinguished himself by his gallant conduct.
General Allen returned
to Wisconsin at the close of the war and was Secretary of State in 1866
and held that office until 1870, when he moved to Oshkosh and began the
publication of the “Northwestern”, a daily and weekly paper. His varied
experiences, which had given him a large fund of general information and
had brought him into contact with many of the leading men of the
country, fitted him well for this position. As a writer he was forcible
and wielded a vigorous pen, not only for the benefit of Oshkosh and its
people, but for the State and country at large as long as he was editor
of the “Northwestern.” His editorials and letters had a beneficial
effect on party leaders, until money then, as now, ruled for right or
wrong as interest lay in the balance. He could not stand for wrong; he
was a man of firm convictions and principles and could not be tempted by
office or money. He was identified with the Republican party from the
beginning, and remained true to it under all temptations for selfish
interest. His favorite quotation was:
“He prayeth well, who
loveth well
Both man and bird
and beast.
He prayeth well,
who loveth best
All things both
great and small;
For the dear God
who loveth us,
He made and loveth
all.:
In 1885 General Allen
sold his interest in the “Northwestern” and became one of the
proprietors of the German newspaper widely known throughout the
Northwest as the “Wisconsin Telegraph,” which did such excellent work
through the McKinley campaign..
He was Commander of
the Wisconsin Department of the Grand Army of the Republic in 1868, and
Commander of John W. Scott Post No. 241 at Oshkosh in 1888- the oldest
post of the city.
General Allen was
married twice, in 1851 to Miss Sarah Bracken, by whom he had one
daughter, Mrs. Francis Reed, now living in San Diego, Cal. In 1866 to
Miss Natalie Weber of Mineral Pointy, by whom he had four sons and four
daughter—only four of whom are living—Mrs. Georgia A. West, Henry Asa,
Mary N. and Edward W. Allen, and also five grandchildren.
General Allen died
December 12, 1905, as he had lived, nobly resigned in God’s will.
|