Allen was the eighth of thirteen children born to Jesse
and Hanna (Tallman) Scott. All children were born in New York,
but most moved to Iowa in the 1850s and settled on a farm
about two miles north of Manchester in an area known as
Delaware Center.
On April 12, 1861, Confederate guns fired on Fort
Sumter. War followed. Major battles were fought and a war that
few anticipated quickly escalated. In 1862 the government
called for 300,000 volunteers and, on July 9th, Governor
Samuel Kirkwood received a telegram indicating Iowa had been
given a quota of five regiments. Soon thereafter, three of
Scott brothers enlisted in what would be Company H of the
state’s 21st Infantry - Allen and Cornelius on July 21st and
Aristides on the 26th. A fourth brother, Demosthenes, was too
young at the time, but joined them as a new recruit in 1864.
Another brother, John Scott, had stayed in New York, served in
the 121st New York Infantry and moved to Iowa after the war.
Allen was born on May 6, 1839, and was twenty-three
years old (although his age was listed as eighteen) when he
was enrolled at Manchester by local merchant James Watson. At
5' 8", Allen was of average height and was described as having
dark hair, a dark complexion and black eyes. On August 13th
they were ordered into quarters at Dubuque’s Camp Franklin
and, on August 23rd, were mustered in as company with a total
complement of ninety-three men. Infantry regiments were
composed of ten companies plus staff officers. When all ten
companies were of sufficient strength they were mustered in as
a regiment on September 9, 1862.
On September 16th men marched through town, crowded on
board the Henry Clay
and two barges tied alongside, and started south. Due to
low water at Montrose, they were forced to debark, take a
train to Keokuk and then board the
Hawkeye State for
the balance of their journey to St. Louis. Bimonthly company
muster rolls reflected the presence or absence of the soldier
as of the last day of the period. Allen Scott was one of the
relatively few men in the regiment who were reported “present”
on every muster roll from enrollment to discharge with no
“remarks” indicating any furloughs, detached duty, illness,
wounds, hospitalizations or stoppages on pay (e.g. for
transportation or for a lost canteen, mosquito bar or other
equipment).
During the 1863 Vicksburg Campaign, Allen was present
for all of the regiment’s battles and assaults. He
participated in the May 1st Battle of Port Gibson and was
present during the May 16th Battle of Champion’s Hill when the
regiment was held in reserve by General John McClernand. He
then participated in the May 17th assault at the Big Black
River, the May 22nd assault at Vicksburg, the siege of
Vicksburg that ended on July 4th, and a subsequent expedition
to and siege of Jackson. During that time, from May 1st
through July 21st, the regiment’s rolls reflected 32 men
killed in action, another 34 with wounds that proved fatal and
more than 100 who suffered non-fatal wounds. Another 36 men
died from illness (e.g. chronic diarrhea, typhoid fever,
sunstroke, tuberculosis).
After returning from Jackson to Vicksburg, the regiment
was allowed to rest and recuperate for three weeks before
boarding the Baltic,
going downstream, and camping at Carrollton, Louisiana. They
served in southwestern Louisiana until November 23, 1863, when
they left New Orleans, traveled across the Gulf of Mexico and
went ashore in Texas where they had little to do.
There were no military engagements, although two died
from illness and five were captured while scouting near Green
Lake. Early fascination with saltwater and sea shells gave way
to boredom as, in the words of Colonel Sam Merrill, they were
nothing more than "guardians of the sacred drifting sands of
Texas.”
The regiment returned to Louisiana the following June
and saw subsequent service in Louisiana, Arkansas and
Tennessee. On September 11, 1864, they were in St. Charles,
Arkansas, when Company H was ordered to perform fatigue duty,
a chore that often involved heavy labor and was universally
disliked. Allen was ordered by his commanding officer, Captain
James Noble, “to fall into the ranks, utterly refused so to do
and openly declared that he would not fall in.” In a court
martial proceeding he pled guilty to disobeying orders and was
sentenced “to be confined at hard labor for the period of
thirty days” but the court, “in view of the fact that this man
had only been a few moments relieved from a tour of guard duty
lasting 24 hours and believed himself to be the victim of
injustice” appealed to the reviewing officer for mercy. The
officer remitted the sentence and “ordered that Private Allen
Scott be released from arrest and restored to duty.”
Their final campaign of the war was in the spring of
1865. An 1864 a bombardment by Admiral Farragut had silenced
the guns on two forts guarding the entrance to Mobile Bay, but
the city itself was still in Confederate hands. The Scott
brothers were with their regiment as part of a large army that
moved slowly north along the east side of the bay, drove
Confederates out of Spanish Fort and Fort Blakely, and entered
the city on the 12th of April, four years to the day from when
Confederate guns had fired on Fort Sumter. The soldiers camped
at Spring Hill until May 26th when they started a return to
New Orleans.
After brief service in southwestern Louisiana, they
were ordered to Baton Rouge where muster rolls were updated.
On July 15th they were mustered out of the service and on the
16th they boarded the
Lady Gay and started upstream. At Cairo, they debarked and
then traveled by rail to Clinton where, on the 24th, they were
discharged from the military and free to return to their
homes.
Aristides, Cornelius and John lived in Delaware County
after the war while Demosthenes moved to Ohio. Charlotte
Scott, their older sister, also stayed in Delaware County
where she married George Acers and had a daughter named Attie.
Attie married James Noble, the same man who had accused Allen
of disobedience during the war. By virtue of the marriage,
Captain James Noble became the nephew-in-law of Private Allen
Scott.
Allen left the area about 1870 and, according to a
descendant, was not heard from again. He was living in Kansas
when he married Anna (Peterson) Vanhorn whose first husband
had died in 1873. Allen had no children but Anna, according to
a woman who had been a little girl while living next to the
Scotts in Burrton, Kansas, reportedly had a daughter who lived
“back east.” “We always called them ‘Uncle Scott’ and Auntie
Scott,” the woman said in a letter written in 1980. Allen
engaged in farming, worked for a railroad, had a “railroader’s
watch” and “always seemed to have ready cash.” He also “had
one of the few cars in the neighborhood,” a car with three
doors, none on the driver’s side. “I wish to say he was a
wonderful man and friend. He was liked by every one.”
Allen’s good health followed him during his postwar
years. When the war ended, invalid pensions for veterans had
to be based on an illness, wound or injury incurred in the
line of duty. Allen didn’t qualify but, in 1890, the law
changed. Veterans who had served at least ninety days,
received an honorable discharge and had permanent disabilities
(not due to “vicious habits”) that prevented or limited their
ability to do manual labor were eligible. By then, Allan had
rheumatism and heart trouble and a $6.00 monthly pension,
payable quarterly, was granted.
On September 29, 1913, Allen was near Dodge City when,
“in getting out of wagon, he placed his foot on the hub and it
slipped off and his leg striking the hub was broken and was
broken a second time upon striking the ground.” In November,
listing his profession as “railroad engineer” and referencing
his recent injury, he applied for a pension increase that was
approved five months later at a rate of $8.00. When age-based
pensions were approved he applied and, by 1925, the same year
his wife died, was approved for $72.00 monthly.
On May 5, 1938, The Burrton Graphic advertised corn
syrup at $.27 for five pounds, Vanilla Wafers at $.15 per
pound, bacon at $.25 per pound and six pounds of bananas for
$.25 and announced that “‘Uncle’ Charlie Will Be 99 Friday.”
Allen, also known as “Nick, the Dead-Shot,” had been “a good
hunter, fisherman and trapper, killing 700 buffalo in the year
of ‘73.” As an engineer, he “had the unique experience of
running the first engine through Burrton.” He had retired in
1897, worked as a handyman, “operated a threshing machine
until he was 85" and drove his car, a Model T Ford, until
1936. He had gone to school only three weeks in his life, but
was taught to read and write by his mother and had no formula
for longevity “unless it is the fact that he has slept out of
doors almost half of his life and has led a general rough and
tumble existence.”
On the 6th he celebrated his birthday and on the 7th he
died. Allen was buried in Burrton Cemetery with full military
honors.
|