Source: History of Boone County, Indiana, by Hon. L.M. Crist, 1914.
THOMAS F. ALLEN Boone county can boast of few more progressive and
successful
farmers and stockmen than the well-known gentleman whose name furnishes
the caption of
this review, Thomas F. Allen, now living in retirement in his commodious
home in
Lebanon. He has long been considered both a leader in agricultural affairs
and stock
shipping, and by his close application and sound judgment has accumulated
valuable
property and a competency, although starting with nothing but willing hands
and a laudable
ambition to succeed. As a citizen he is intelligent and enterprising, combining
within
himself those sterling qualities of manhood that make not only a useful
member of society,
but a leader in the affairs of his community. He has ever had an honest
determination of
purpose and an obliging nature which has impelled him to assist others on
the highway of
life while making plain the prosperity for himself and family.
Mr. Allen was born August 7, 1855, in Putnam county, Indiana. He is
a son of George
and Mary (Watson) Allen. The father was born in Kentucky in 1822, and when
five years
of age his parents brought him to Indiana, thus being among the earliest
settlers in Putnam
county, where the grandfather of our subject developed a farm from the dense
woods. He
served during the war of 1812 and was captured by the Indians during this
war. There
George Allen grew to manhood and received a meager education in the old-time
country
schools. He devoted his life to farming and stock raising and died October
22, 1908. His
wife was also a native of Kentucky, and she died about fifty years ago,
when our subject
was a child. He is the youngest of the family and the only one living out
of five sons and
one daughter, namely: Mary C., William M., John, James and Samuel are all
deceased;
Thomas F., of this review.
Thomas F. Allen grew to manhood on the home farm in Putnam county, and
there he
learned the ins and outs of farming and handling live stock, and he received
a limited
education in the public schools of his native community. When a young man
he began
farming and buying stock, and he came to Boone county in 1880 and worked
out for
seventy-five cents a day at farm work and boarded himself, and later he
began trading in
horses and thereby got a good start in life and has continued stock dealing
ever since with a
large measure of success attending his efforts. He is now owner of two
finely improved
and valuable farms in Washington township, one hundred and eighty-two and
one-half
acres in all, well improved and all tillable. He keeps his land rented
and is living in
retirement in a fine home on East Main street, Lebanon.
Mr. Allen has been twice married, first to Sarah Stewart, on August 25,
1875, in Putnam
county, where she was born and reared; her death occurred July 17, 1886.
To this union
two children were born: Harry E. is deceased, married in 1896 to Jessie
Riley, native of
Boone county. They had two children, Pansy and Carl. They are now living
in Denver,
Colorado; Earle J. is engaged in the buying and shipping of horses at Roachdale,
Indiana.
He was married on October 26, 1909, to Maude Thompson, a native of Putnam
county.
On November 25, 1886, Mr. Allen married Louisa J. Shulse, who was born in
Boone
county April 14, 1858. She is a daughter of John M. and Mary J. (Bowers)
Shulse, and
she grew to womanhood in this county and was educated in the public schools
and the high
school in Lebanon. Her father was born in Kentucky, June 1, 1830, and is
still living on a
farm in Boone county, is well known and highly respected here. His wife
was born in
Tippecanoe county, Indiana, in 1835, and her death occurred March 24, 1864.
This
second union of our subject has been without issue.
Politically, Mr. Allen is a Democrat; fraternally, a member of the Knights
of Pythias in
Lebanon, and he and his wife belong to the Christian church.
ALLEN BOWERS RILEY SHULSE STEWART THOMPSON WATSON
Submitted by Amy K. Davis