Ohio History Journal

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OHIO STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL

OHIO STATE ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL

SOCIETY

 

REVIEWS, NOTES AND COMMENTS

BY THE EDITOR

 

 

A LIFE OF WILLIAM ALLEN

William Allen, A Study in Western Democracy. By Reginald

C. McGrane (Columbus, Ohio: The Ohio State Archaeolog-

ical and Historical Society, 1925. 279 p.)

William Allen was one of those political luminaries who never

quite attained the brilliance of a star of the first magnitude in

the political firmament of his state and nation. Very nearly, but

never quite, achieving the coveted heights of national greatness,

Allen nevertheless was so important a factor in the political life

of his time that no apology need be made for such a detailed and

extended record of his life as Dr. McGrane has produced.

From the early years of the century, when as a youth of 16 he

walked across the Blue Ridge and tramped into Chillicothe, to

his last political venture in the late 1870's, Allen was the fiery and

sometimes brilliant exponent of western democracy and its many

shibboleths. Here is the dominant theme of his long and inter-

esting career, and it is never forgotten, even for a moment, as

Dr. McGrane's narrative carries us swiftly along through the

political events of half a century.

It was at the close of Jackson's first administration that young

Allen first tossed his hat into the political ring. After one of

those rough and tumble campaigns so characteristic of the fron-

tier of Jackson's time, Allen entered Congress as the spokesman

of the Seventh Ohio District, and delivered himself of just two

speeches, one dealing with the Ohio-Michigan boundary dispute,

and the other a typical western swashbuckler's harangue on the

French claims. Defeated for reelection to the lower house, he

was sent to the upper by an Ohio legislature which had insured

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