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Stephen H. Allen |
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Stephen H. Allen, farmer, section 36, Burdell Township, was born Feb 22, 1818,
in Kentshire, Eng. At the age of 16 he
entered the British sailing service and became a sailor on the Atlantic and
Indian Oceans. During the 20 years in which
he was a seaman, he was engaged 12 years as a marine, and in the naval
military service during the war with china in
1840-1, and was on the coast of Africa five years, engaged in the capture of
slave vessels. He sailed on all the seas
and oceans of the Eastern continent and visited all the European nations that
had a seaboard.
He came to the port of New York in 1852, where he was soon after married to
Eliza Conway. They have had seven children:
William E. was born Feb. 15, 1853; Joseph P., Nov. 1, 1855; Edward E., Sept.
26, 1861; Stephen, Feb. 22, 1862.
Stephen H. (1st) John and Mary are deceased. Mrs. Allen was born in County
Roscommon, Ireland, Dec. 5, 1832, and lived
in her native country until her marriage.
After that event Mr. Allen established a mercantile business in Brooklyn, and
also operated as a ship-rigger, carrying
on both branches of business until 1859, the year of his removal to the West.
He located first in Chicago, where he
resided three years. Among his experiences in the Garden City were two
disasterous fires, which involved heavy loss and
inconvenience. He came thence to Plymouth, Ind., where he was variously
employed four years. He removed his family in
1874 to Kalamazoo, where he left them and came to Osceola County. He located
a homestead claim of 80 acres, on which he
made some improvements and returned to Kalamazoo. The Grand Rapids & Indiana
Railroad was then in process of
construction, and he became an employee of the corporation, and worked on the
line until it reached the vicinity of his
home, where he brought his family for the first time. There the first opening
in that part of the county was made at a
time when Reed City was but little more than begun, and Cadillac had no
existence, either in fact or fancy. His place
is now nearly all improved and has suitable and good farm belongings. Mr.
Allen continued to work on the line of
railraod as it extended north until it reached Rapid River, when he returned
to his farm labor.
He is a Democrat in political persuasion, and is an Episcopalian in Church
connection; Mrs. Allen is a Catholic. He has
been Justice of the Peace nine years and held the various school offices.
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