
GEORGE C. VAN ALLEN
George C. Van Allen, deceased, who in the face of opposing
circumstances and unfavoring environment that would have utterly
discouraged a man of less resolute spirit, advanced to a
position of prom-
inence in the business world and was for many years recognized
as a leading and representative citizen of Mount Pleasant, was
born July 6, 1830, on the north shore of Pillar Point, in
Jefferson county. New
York. He was descended from Holland ancestry connected with the
history of the Empire state from colonial days, and he claimed
descent from three Revolutionary soldiers. Increase Child,
Robert Ackerman and Cornelius Van Allen. His parents were
Cornelius and Lory Ann (Ackerman) Van Allen, who in 1831 removed
from the birth place of our subject to a farm overlooking the
Black River bay,
across the waters of which could be seen Madison barracks, where
General Grant was once quartered and the village of Sacket
Harbor, famous in connection with one of the early battles of
the second war
with England, occurring there in May, 1 8 13. The father
purchased this farm and upon the homestead there George C. Van
Allen was reared to manhood. He was one of a family of eleven
children,
nine of whom reached adult life : Martin, who is now deceased;
Sarah H., widow of General D. B. White, also now deceased; Lory
Ann, the widow of George Hoover, and a resident of Chicago,
Illinois; Catherine Grinnell, who married G. G. Grinnell, now
deceased, and lives at Mayfair, Cook county, Illinois; Mrs. C.
M. Beckford, of Hampton, Virginia, the widow of Selwyn E.
Beckford ; Cornelius A., formerly a real-estate dealer of
Effingham, Illinois, now deceased ; William a surveyor of Ukiah,
California; and Florence O., the wife of J. J. Baulch, of St.
Louis, Missouri.
Reared upon his father's farm George C. Van Allen attended the
country schools and at different times worked at the village and
in the ship yards. He was also engaged at intervals at hauling
heavy timbers from the forests to the place of ship building. He
formed a strong attachment for the water for it afforded him
pleasure as a boy and gave him opportunity to earn a living as a
man in the early days before transportation by means of the
water ways was supplanted by the railroads. While still quite a
young man, Mr. Van Allen engaged in teaching in the public
schools of his home locality, and then, anxious to promote his
own education, became a student in Falley Seminary, in Fulton,
New York. He afterward matriculated in the old Wesleyan
University in Middletown, Connecticut, where he was a member of
a secret society organized by a few congenial spirits, including
William and Andrew Roe, O. W. Powers. Mr. Bailey and David J.
Brewer, the names of whom have since become known throughout the
country in connection with successful accomplishment in
different lines. The last mentioned, then a most modest young
man, obtained elevation to the bench of the United States
supreme court.
After having spent a little less than two years as a student in
Connecticut. Mr. Van Allen was obliged to return home. He had
made a creditable record in his classes, and moreover he was a
close and discriminating student forming his own opinions as
based upon the subject matter before him, and his own
intellectual discrimination. A few weeks were passed in
recuperating at his old home at Pillar
Point and then, with the little capital at his command, Mr. Van
Allen started westward by way of the Great Lakes. He found the
trip a delightful one, which gave him broader ideas of the ways
of the world
and its peoples than he had ever obtained from books. Detroit
and Milwaukee were beautiful cities even at that time, but
Chicago was a dirty little village with broken sidewalks and
muddy streets, yet
with a citizenship even then characterized for remarkable
enterprise and achievement. Mr. Van Allen continued on his way
to Dubuque, Iowa, with the expectation of securing employment as
a surveyor there,
but failing in this he accepted the aid of an old friend, George
Rogers, who was instrumental in obtaining for him a position as
bookkeeper in the office of the Dubuque Herald, at that time
published by
J. B. Dorr, afterward colonel of the Eighth Iowa Cavalry. In the
following spring Mr. Van Allen obtained employment with the firm
of Webb & Higby, surveyors, and later was with Charles
Smith, local engineer of the Dubuque & Pacific Railway,
while in July following, through the influence of his brother,
Martin, he secured a still better position in the land
department of the Illinois Central Railroad, which he
represented in Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa. On the first of
January, 1857, he was promoted and sent to Effingham, Illinois,
two hundred miles south of Chicago on the Illinois Central road
to sell the company's lands, and by the first of October had
disposed of realty to the amount of thirteen thousand acres. The
unsettled condition of the state at that time is indicated by
the fact that in an hour's ride on the cars one could hardly see
a dozen houses, save for the few at the scattered
stations.
It was while thus engaged that Mr. Van Allen was married on the
6th of August, 1857, in Scriba, New York, to Miss Jennie M.
Wright, who had been his classmate at Fulton, New York. A ladv
of
superior culture and innate refinement as well as of
intelligence, she made his home a happy one and their married
life was most congenial. In October following their marriage
there came the great financial crash memorable in the history of
the country. Business was largely suspended in all lines, land
sales were discontinued and payments were stopped, and many who
had attempted to establish new homes
in the west were obliged to seek their old places of location.
In this financial disaster Mr. Van Allen's loss amounted to
about six thousand dollars and he found it again necessary to
take up the practice of surveying in order to provide for his
family, but he was ambitious and devoted his leisure hours to
reading law. Removing to Watertown New York, in the fall of
1859, he there spent two years in the office of Judge F. W.
Hubbard, who had recently retired from the supreme bench of the
Empire state. Through the succeeding two years Mr. Van Allen was
for a part of the time a student in the Albany Law School, and
was admitted to the degree of counselor at law before the
supreme court of New York at the regular term in April,
1861.
Attracted by the west and its possibilities, having become
imbued with a strong attachment for this section of the country,
Mr. Van Allen soon afterward returned to Chicago and thence went
to Kenosha but the progress of the Civil war was detrimental to
the establishment of a new business, and after spending a few
months in the office of Judge Petti tt Mr. Van Allen accepted
the superintendency of the high school in Plover, Wisconsin,
where he remained until July, 1862. At that date he went to
Burlington, and was engaged on the survey of the Burlington
& Missouri River Railway, from Ottumwa to Chariton. At tlie
close of the season he located in Mount Pleasant, where he began
compiling records for the examination of title, and from that
time until his death he maintained his residence in this city,
and was a factor in its business life, giving his attention
largely to the abstract business, which is one of the important
branches of the law. In 1883 he suffered a loss of two thousand
dollars through a disastrous fire, but every obstacle and
difficulty in his path seemed but to serve him as an impetus for
renewed labor, and he at once began the arduous task of
re-writing his books.
In 1891 Mr. Van Allen was called upon to mourn the loss of his
wife, who died on the 27th of January leaving a son, Alfred M.
Van Allen, represented elsewhere in this work. On the 26th of
October, 1893, the father was married to Miss Anna L. Watters.
In the social life of the city he has occupied a position of
prominence that is always accorded in recognition of true worth,
intelligence and culture, winning his friends from among the
best citizens of Mount Pleasant. His political allegiance was
given to the republican party from the time of its organization
and although without aspiration for office himself, he labored
quietly but untiringly and efficiently for the interests of
others and for the party's success. Although reared in the faith
of the Methodist church, he became a member of the Presbyterian
church on his removal to
Mount Pleasant, his wife being a communicant of the latter
denomination Associated with various lines of public interest
and activity he gave tangible support to every movement which he
believed would contribute to the general good up to the time of
his death, which occurred on the 4th of September, 1902. He was
a man of action rather than of theory, and yet he took no
important step in life without due consideration. He held
friendship inviolable, the duties of the home sacred and with a
sense of conscientious obligation performed every task which
devolved upon him in connection with citizenship or public
trust.

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