Allen Wardner Explained

Allen Wardner
Order1:Vermont State Treasurer
Term Start1:October, 1837
Term End1:October 1838
Predecessor1:Augustine Clarke
Successor1:Henry Fisk Janes
Office2:Member of the Vermont Governor's Council
Term Start2:1834
Term End2:1836
Predecessor2:Samuel C. Loveland
Successor2:None (Position eliminated)
Office3:Member of the Vermont House of Representatives from Windsor
Term Start3:1842
Term End3:1843
Predecessor3:Carlos Coolidge
Successor3:Horace Everett
Term Start4:1831
Term End4:1834
Preceded4:Thomas Leland
Succeeded4:Carlos Coolidge
Birth Date:December 13, 1786
Birth Place:Alstead, New Hampshire, US
Death Place:Windsor, Vermont, US
Restingplace:Old South Church Cemetery, Windsor, Vermont
Spouse:Minerva Bingham (Married 1814, died 1841)
Children:George
Edward
Henry
Helen
Charlotte
Elizabeth
Martha
Profession:Businessman
Banker
Party:National Republican
Anti-Masonic
Whig
Republican

Allen Wardner (December 13, 1786 – August 29, 1877) was a Vermont banker, businessman and politician who served as State Treasurer. He was also the father-in-law of Attorney General, Secretary of State and United States Senator William M. Evarts.

Early life

Allen Wardner was born in Alstead, New Hampshire on December 13, 1786.[1] His family moved to Windsor, Vermont in 1800 and Wardner was trained as a store clerk and merchant.[2] He is presumed to have attended the United States Military Academy in 1809, but there is no record at the school of Wardner having attended. One possible explanation is that he attended sessions with a tutor in preparation for taking the entrance exam, but did not take the exam. Whether he attended West Point or was educated elsewhere, he returned to Vermont in 1809 or 1810 to begin a business career.[3]

Military service

In 1810 Wardner joined the Jefferson Artillery, a Windsor militia unit made up of Democratic-Republicans, in anticipation of the War of 1812. In 1825 the Jefferson Artillery took part in the parade and reception for Lafayette during the stop he made in Woodstock, Vermont as part of his tour of the United States. Wardner served in the unit for several years, and attained the rank of Captain. Afterwards, he was frequently referred to as "Captain Wardner."[4] [5] [6]

Business career

Wardner operated a successful store, first as the junior partner of Dr. Isaac Green, and later as the senior partner of his brother, Shubael Wardner. He also became involved in banking, including serving on the board of directors of the Windsor Bank, and President of the Ascutney Bank.[7] [8]

In addition to his mercantile and banking interests, Wardner was involved in several other ventures, including constructing the Ascutney Mill Dam to supply water power to mills and factories in Windsor, woolen mills, and construction and operation of the Cornish–Windsor Covered Bridge between Windsor and Cornish, New Hampshire.[9] [10] [11]

Start of political career

By now an Anti-Mason, Wardner served in the Vermont House of Representatives from 1831 to 1834.[12] [13] [14] [15]

In 1832 he was appointed to the committee which oversaw construction of the second Vermont State House.[16]

In the 1830s he was also a member of the committee which oversaw operations at the Vermont State Prison in Windsor, and served as one of the state's Commissioners of the Deaf & Dumb, responsible to ensure that those with physical and mental disabilities who required assistance at state expense received it.[17] [18]

From 1834 to 1835 Wardner served on the Vermont Governor's Council.[19]

In 1835 Wardner was an original incorporator of the Connecticut and Passumpsic Rivers Railroad.[20]

State Treasurer

In the 1837 election the incumbent State Treasurer, Augustine Clarke, received the most votes, but fell short of the majority required by the Vermont Constitution. Clarke was an Anti-Mason and his party's popularity was on the wane. In cases where no candidate receives a majority, the Vermont General Assembly is empowered to elect a candidate.[21]

The legislature was split between Democrats, Whigs and Anti-Masons, and failed to choose a winner. Governor Silas H. Jennison, an Anti-Mason who had run with Whig support, then appointed Wardner, who served from October, 1837 until October, 1838. He was succeeded by Henry Fisk Janes.[22] [23]

Later life

Wardner remained active in business and banking, and also served in government positions including a term in the Vermont House in 1842 and a position on the board of directors of the Vermont State Prison.[24] [25]

In 1848 Wardner was an incorporator of the New Hampshire Central Railroad.[26]

Following the death of his wife he began to withdraw from active management of his business ventures, turned over their management to one of his sons and retired in the late 1840s.[27] He became a Whig after the Anti-Masonic Party dissolved, and joined the Republicans when that party was founded in the 1850s.

In the 1850s Wardner was active in the American Colonization Society, which opposed slavery and advocated having African-Americans relocate to communities in Africa and South and Central America.[28]

Death and burial

Wardner died in Windsor on August 29, 1877.[29] He was buried in Windsor's Old South Church Cemetery.

Family

In 1814 Wardner married Minerva Bingham, who died in 1841.[30] They had 12 children, seven of whom lived to adulthood. They included: George, Edward, Henry, Helen, Charlotte, Elizabeth, and Martha.[31]

Helen Wardner was the wife of William M. Evarts.[32]

Several descendants named their sons after Allen Wardner. These namesakes include Allen Wardner Evarts (1848-1920), a New York attorney. He was the son of William M. Evarts and Helen Wardner.[33]

Allen Wardner's descendants also included another son of William M. Evarts, Maxwell Evarts. Maxwell Evarts (1862–1913), was a New York City and Vermont attorney, banker and business executive.[34]

Notes and References

  1. The Banker's Magazine, Death notice: Allen Wardner, October 1877, page 328
  2. Hamilton Child, Gazetteer and Business Directory of Windsor County, Vt., for 1883-84, Volume 1, 1884, page 280
  3. Society for Industrial Archeology, Industrial Archeology magazine, Volumes 1-6, 1975, page 56
  4. Jay Read Pember, A Day with Lafayette in Vermont, 1912, page 6
  5. Gazetteer and Business Directory of Windsor County, page 283
  6. Benjamin Silliman, The American Journal of Science and Arts, Volume V, 1822, page 323
  7. Katherine E Conlin, Wilma Burnham Paronto, Stella Vitty Henry, Chronicles of Windsor, 1761-1975, 1977, page 122
  8. Gazetteer and Business Directory of Windsor County
  9. Vermont General Assembly, Acts and Laws Passed by the Legislature of the State of Vermont, 1833, page 76
  10. William Henry Child, History of the Town of Cornish, 1911, page 216
  11. Lewis Cass Aldrich, Frank R. Holmes, History of Windsor County, Vermont, 1891, page 329
  12. Henry Swan Dana, History of Woodstock, Vermont, page 261
  13. Vermont General Assembly, Journal of the Vermont General Assembly, 1831, page 4
  14. E. P. Walton, Records of the Governor and Council of the State of Vermont, Volume VIII, 1880, page 161
  15. Ulster County (N.Y.) Whig, Voice of Vermont: Democratic Anti-Masonic State Convention, March 16, 1836
  16. Zadock Thompson, History Of Vermont, Natural, Civil And Statistical, 1842, page 130
  17. E. P. Walton, Records of the Governor and Council of the State of Vermont, Volume VIII, 1880, page 189
  18. E. P. Wardner, Records of the Governor and Council of the State of Vermont, Volume V, 1877, page 437
  19. E. P. Walton, Records of the Governor and Council of the State of Vermont, Volume VIII, 1880, page 161
  20. Vermont Supreme Court, Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the Supreme Court of the State of Vermont, Volume 24, 1853, page 466
  21. Vermont Secretary of State, Vermont State Treasurers, 2011, page 1
  22. Vermont General Assembly, Journal of the House of Representatives of the State of Vermont, 1837, page 130
  23. Vermont Secretary of State, Legislative Directory, 1896, page 164
  24. Bishop & Tracy, Printers, Vermont General Assembly, Journal of the Vermont General Assembly, 1846, page 257
  25. Chronicles of Windsor, page 245
  26. Boston and Maine Railroad, Boston and Maine Railroad System, Volume II: Statutes of Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont Relating to Boston and Maine Railroad, 1902, page 703
  27. Gazetteer and Business Directory of Windsor County, page 280
  28. American Colonization Society, The African Repository, Volume 50, page 320
  29. Vermont Vital Records, 1720-1908, death record for Allen Wardner, retrieved January 10, 2014
  30. New Hampshire, Marriage and Divorce Records, 1659-1947, marriage record for Allen Wardner and Minerva Bingham, retrieved January 10, 2014
  31. History of Windsor County, Vermont, page 919
  32. American Bar Association, Annual Meeting Proceedings, Volume 24, 1901, page 624
  33. Yale University, Sixth Biographical Record of the Class of 1869, 1895, page 59
  34. New York City Bar Association, Year Book, 1914, page 197