William M. Allyn
William M. Allyn is a sterling
representative of an honored pioneer family given to
Clayton county by historic old New England, and holds
prestige as one of the vigorous and upright citizens who
aided in laying broad and deep the foundations for the
fine superstructure of civic and industrial prosperity
now in evidence in this attractive division of the
Hawkeye State. He whose name initiates this paragraph has
been a resident of Clayton county for more than sixty
years and is now one of its venerable and highly esteemed
citizens, the while he has not only been a prominent
figure in connection with the development of the
agricultural resources of the county, but his also is the
distinction of having been one of the gallant patriots
who represented Iowa as a soldier of the Union in the
great civil conflict through which the nation's integrity
was perpetuated. Though he has relegated to others the
more arduous and I exacting labors and responsibilities
that were long his portion as , one of the world's
productive workers, he still resides on his fine
homestead farm of 280 acres in section 2, Garnavillo
township, and his residence is within easy access of the
village of St. Olaf, from which he receives service on
rural mail route No.2. William M. Allyn was born in New
London county, Connecticut, on the 28th of December,
1828, and in that staunch commonwealth of New England his
parents, Abel and Polly Allyn, passed their entire lives,
both having been representatives of fine old colonial
stock.
Of the eight children Mr. Allyn is the younger of the two
now living, and his sister, Margaret, is the widow of
James Billings, and now a resident of New London county,
Connecticut. Mr. Allyn was reared and educated in his
native state, where he gained his early experience with
the work of the home farm and where he continued his
residence until he had attained more than his legal
majority.
In April, 1859, when 32 years of age, he came to Clayton
county, Iowa, where he secured a Mexican soldier's claim
in Garnavillo township, and on this original place he has
continued to live and labor during the long intervening
years, which have been marked by his faithful stewardship
and by his successful achievement in connection with the
basic industries of agriculture and stockgrowing. His
financial resources when he came to Iowa were merely
nominal, and through his own well ordered endeavors he
has gained large and worthy success, as indicated by his
ownership at the present time of a valuable and specially
well improved landed estate of two hundred and eighty
acres. It is a far cry to revert to the primitive log
cabin which he erected for his original abiding place to
the fine modern residence which he now occupies, and all
other permanent improvements which he has made on his
farm are of the best type. When the dark cloud of civil
war cast its pall over the national horizon, Mr. Allyn
was one of the loyal and patriotic citizens of Clayton
county who subordinated. all other interests to go forth
in defense of the Union, and his service during the great
fratricidal conflict was such as to reflect perpetual
honor upon his name and memory. In the spring of 1862 he
enlisted as a private in Company E, Twenty-seventh Iowa
Volunteer Infantry, with which he proceeded to the front
and in which he rose to the office of sergeant. His
regiment was assigned to the army of Tennessee and within
his service of nearly three years he took part in
numerous engagements, including a number of the
sanguinary battles marking the progress of the war. In an
engagement at Pleasant Hill, Louisiana, he received a
severe wound in his left foot, and after having been
confined to.a hospital for several weeks he was mustered
out and received his honorable discharge. He then
returned to his farm and during the long years that have
since elapsed he has here continued as one of the staunch
and influential representatives of the agricultural and
live-stock interests of Clayton county, with inviolable
place in popular confidence and good will. He is a
stalwart in the local camp of the Republican party and
has shown a loyal interest in all things pertaining to
the communal welfare, but he has had no desire for public
office, his only service having been that of school
director, of which office he was the incumbent for
several years. Soon after his service as a soldier in the
Civil war had been terminated Mr. Allyn wisely girded
himself the better for the active duties and
responsibilities of life by taking unto himself a wife.
He wedded Miss Juliette Eddy, who was born in the State
of Vermont, as.. were also her parents, Joseph and
Celeste Eddy, with whom she came to Iowa in the pioneer
days, her parents passing the remainder of their lives in
this state. Mr. and Mrs. Allyn shared with mutual
solicitude and loyalty the joys and sorrows of life, and
their ideal companionship found its greatest glory in the
gracious evening of their lives, the silver cord of their
devotion being severed in 1901, when Mrs. Allyn was
summoned to eternal rest, her memory being revered by all
who came within the sphere of her gentle influence and
her mortal remains resting in the cemetery at
Kandallville, Winneshiek county, not far distant from her
old home. She is survived by two children, William, who
has practical charge of the old homestead farm, and
Juliette, who remains with her father and presides over
the attractive home; she is popular in the social life of
the community and was graduated in the high school at
McGregor.
source: History of Clayton
County, Iowa; From The Earliest Historical Times Down to
the Present; by Realto E. Price, Vol. II; pg. 21-23
-submitted by S. Ferrall
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