Colonel Robert Thomas Pircairn Allen (CSA)

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Robert Thomas Pircairn Allen

Also Known As: "R.T.P. Allen"
Birthdate:
Death: July 08, 1888 (72) (drowned)
Immediate Family:

Son of Richard Nunn Allen; Richard Allen and Sarah Allen
Husband of Julia Allen and Julia Ann Bond Allen
Father of Major John Howard Allen and Major Robert Dickinson Allen (CSA)
Brother of Dorothea Allen

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Colonel Robert Thomas Pircairn Allen (CSA)

Robert Allen, military instructor, was born in Maryland in 1813 and graduated fifth in his class at West Point in 1834. After brief service in the Seminole War, he resigned his commission to become, in turn, a civil engineer; a Methodist minister; and a professor successively at Allegheny College in Pennsylvania, at Transylvania University in Kentucky, and at Kentucky Military Institute. He moved to the Far West in 1849 and worked as a special agent for the United States Post Office Department in California and Oregon. He later owned and published the San Francisco Pacific News before moving in 1857 to Texas, where he established Bastrop Military Institute. There the cadets reportedly "loved and honored him."

With the outbreak of the Civil War Allen was placed in charge of Camp Clark, a camp of instruction on the San Marcos River near Martindale. He briefly commanded the Fourth Texas Infantry regiment of what was to become the famed Hood's Texas Brigade, but "although a man of thorough military education," according to the regiment's chaplain, Nicholas A. Davis, Allen "was not acceptable to either men or officers." In fact, the high-spirited Texans literally drove him from their camp because of the reputation as a "Rarin', Tearin', Pitchin'" martinet that he had attained while supervising their training at Camp Clark.

Allen returned to Bastrop and on February 26, 1862, recruited the Seventeenth Texas Infantry Regiment of John G. Walker's Texas Division, which he commanded until November 1863, when he was given charge of Camp Ford, a prisoner of war camp near Tyler. After the war Allen returned to his old position as superintendent of Kentucky Military Institute, where he continued to serve until 1874. On July 9, 1888, he drowned while swimming in the Kissimmee River in Florida.

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Robert Thomas Pircairn Allen was born in Baltimore County, Md., September 26, 1813, and is a son of Richard and Sarah (Hughes) Allen, both of Ireland. Gen. Allen graduated at the military academy at West Point in 1834; went into the Third Artillery, but served with the topographical engineers one year, until the Florida war; served as lieutenant of artillery in Gen. Scott's campaign against the Seminoles, when he resigned to go as a civil engineer in the government service, building harbors on Lake Erie, where he was engaged until the fall of 1838. He then resigned and became professor of the chair of mathematics and civil engineering in Alleghany College, at Meadville, Penn., where he remained until 1841, when he was appointed to the same chair of Transylvania University, Lexington, Ky., which he remained until 1845. In the fall of that year he established the Kentucky Military Institute, continuing until 1849 as superintendent, when he was appointed by President Taylor to take charge of the post office department of California and Oregon, which duty he performed until 1851. He then resigned and came back to Kentucky, to Franklin County, and resumed the position of superintendent of the Kentucky Military Institute, which he retained until 1854; then resigned and went to Cleveland, Ohio, and engaged until 1857 in general business, but principally in the coal business. In 1857 he went to Texas and established the Bastrop Military Institute; continued as superintendent of the school until the late war, when he closed the school and raised a regiment for the Confederate Army and went into the field in 1862. He remained two years and was then appointed to take charge of the prison camp near Tyler, Tex., where he remained one year; then resigned and took charge of the school in Texas again and remained until 1866; resigned and came to Franklin County, Ky., and resumed charge of the Kentucky Military Institute and continued as superintendent until 1874. Then his son, Col. Robert D. Allen, became superintendent, and the General became professor of the chair of mathematics, and continued until 1877, when he resigned and moved to Florida. There he engaged in orange culture until 1884, but in the meantime, from 1877 to 1884, was engaged in steamboat transportation between Lakes Tohopokaliga and Ocheechobee, Florida. In 1884 he returned to the Kentucky Military Institute and became professor of natural science. His son, Col. Robert D. Allen, was the superintendent, and John T. Gray the business manager. Gen. Allen was married July 8, 1834, to Julia A. Dickinson, of Nashville, Tenn., daughter of Jacob T. and Patsy (Bond) Dickinson, and great-granddaughter of Fell, who once owned the eastern part of Baltimore, Md. Two children blessed this union: Robert D. Allen, whose first wife was Miss Laura Sims, of Texas, by whom he had four children, of whom one only survives. Miss Minnie Green, of Louisville, Ky., is his second wife. Maj. Robert Sims Allen, the only surviving child, is now commandant of cadets at the Kentucky Military Institute. John Howard Allen is the general's second son, and is now practicing law in Orlando, Fla. He married Miss Sallie Bell, of Texas, and has five children: Howard J., Jay Cooke, Walter, Mary B. and Percy. Mrs. Sallie B. Allen died in 1886. Gen. Allen and wife are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church South, and he has been an elder for a number of years. He is also a Knight Templar. The secret of Gen. Allen's success in both public and private life rests in his stanch adherence to principle, his energy, his accuracy and a thorough performance of every duty. He is modest with regard to himself, unselfish and thoroughly amiable in disposition.

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The Kentucky Military Institute was established by Colonel Robert Thomas Pircairn Allen, a graduate of West Point, who was experienced in military and education. After graduation in 1834, Allen served as a captain in the Seminole War and supervised military activities on Lake Michigan. He married Julia Bond, niece of President Andrew Jackson, whom he had met while visiting the White House. After his retirement from the Army, Allen served as a mathematics instructor at Transylvania University in Lexington, Kentucky. Allen and Julia visited the Scanlan Spring, or Franklin Springs, as it was sometimes called. He was impressed with the beauty and country atmosphere and thought this would be a good location for a private military school. The property was located on Farmdale Road about six miles south of Frankfort. By carriage it took about an hour to arrive at the springs. In 1845, Allen purchased the property and opened his school as Kentucky Institute. Two years later a charter was granted by the General Assembly to Kentucky Military Institute. The school had a reputation for its excellent instructors, a demanding course of study and strict discipline. It attracted many students from the South and a few from the North. After the Civil War, the school changed its curriculum to prepare students for professional occupations. Robert Allen turned control of the school over to his son, Robert D. Allen. The school fell into bankruptcy in 1887 and closed its' doors, however, reopened the next year. Later KMI left its campus in Frankfort and moved to Mt. Sterling, Kentucky.

Dr. John Q. A. Stewart, superintendent of the Kentucky Feeble-Minded Institute, resigned his position and purchased the abandoned KMI property in 1893. He opened his establishment on September 1, 1893, as a school for the mentally challenged. Today, Stewart Home School remains under the supervision of the Stewart family as a well known and highly regarded facility for special education

In 1896, under the supervision of Charles Wesley Fowler, Kentucky Military Institute was again moved from Mt. Sterling to a campus in Jefferson County, Kentucky near Lyndon. Fowler, in 1906, began the practice of moving students and faculty to a winter campus in Florida during the months between Christmas and Easter. In 1924, the school again closed and reopened the following year under superintendent Charles B. Richmond. According to the city archives, KMI moved to Venice, Florida in 1932. The school prospered greatly under his direction. However, by the late 1960's dissatisfaction with the military and rising tuition cost caused financial difficulties for KMI and other military schools. KMI was closed for the last time in 1973.

Sources:
Capital on the Kentucky, by Kramer
The Kentucky Encyclopedia, by Kleber

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Of Irish descent, Robert T. P. Allen was born in Maryland in 1813. Robert graduated near the top of his class from the U. S. Military Academy at West Point in 1834. That same year he married his wife Julia.

Receiving short notice of the need to deploy with the 1st Artillery, U.S. Army, Robert was sent to Florida to fight in what would be the Second Seminole War. In 1836, 2cd Lt. R.T.P. Allen resigned his Army commission to be with his family.

Robert was a multi-faceted man, working in various positions as an engineer and a college professor, while also becoming a minister. In 1844 he purchased land in Kentucky and opened the Kentucky Military Institute, chartered by the state as a military school. Leaving Kentucky behind a few years later, Robert held civilian and government jobs until approximately 1857, when he moved his family to Texas, where he established the Bastrop Military Institute.

In 1861, Robert Allen dispatched a letter to Confederate President Jefferson Davis, offering his services to the Confederacy. Soon Colonel Allen was training men for Confederate service near Austin. Colonel Allen’s first fighting command with the 4th TX Infantry, later known as Hood’s Texas Brigade, was cut short, as the men under his command chafed under his strict leadership. Robert’s next assignment was recruiting and commanding the 17th Texas Infantry until June 1863 when he was wounded at the Battle of Milliken’s Bend in Louisiana. Following his injury, Col. Allen was appointed Commander of Camp Ford, a POW camp near Tyler, Texas.

While Col. Allen was known for being a strict disciplinarian, he, and his wife, were known for their kindness. In a letter written by Union prisoners at Camp Ford, he was commended for “the kindness and gentlemanly courtesy with which he uniformly treated us”. Another POW, who recommended Col. Allen be given a pardon after the war, noted that “he with his family was untiring in his efforts to better our condition”. Mrs. Allen’s care and ministrations for the prisoners was well received, so much so that the hand-written newspaper published by the Camp Ford POWs, “The Old Flag”, featured a poem dedicated to her. New York-based Harper’s Weekly magazine printed an article on Camp Ford, mentioning the kindnesses afforded the prisoners by Col. and Mrs. Allen.

In 1864, Col. Allen resigned from the Confederate Army and returned to his home in Bastrop, TX. Following the end of the war, military schools were forbidden and the military school at Bastrop was reopened as “Bastrop Collegiate Institute”, with the same teachers but minus the military education component.

In 1866, the Allen family moved back to Kentucky where Robert resumed his leadership of the Kentucky Military Institute until his retirement, leaving his son to carry on at the school. Robert and his wife moved to Orange County, Florida after his retirement. Robert listed his occupation in 1880 as a “fruit grower”. In 1887, Reverend Allen had his book “Immortality of the Soul Voiced by Nature, and Christianity in Accord with Science” published by the Southern Methodist Publishing House. Robert died the following year and was buried in the Greenwood Cemetery in Orlando, Florida.
Venice, Florida city archives

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Colonel Robert Thomas Pircairn Allen (CSA)'s Timeline

1815
September 26, 1815
1836
January 19, 1836
1841
September 4, 1841
Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky, United States
1888
July 8, 1888
Age 72