This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (March 2024) |
William Allen (né William Griffin Orgain (1828/1829–1875) was an American planter. At age two, he inherited the 26,000-acre (110 km2) Claremont Estate on the James River in Virginia from his granduncle, Colonel William Allen (1768–1831). To satisfy the terms of his inheritance, his surname was officially changed to Allen in 1832.[citation needed]
At the time of his death, newspaper obituaries reported that prior to the Civil War Allen was the wealthiest man in Virginia and one of the wealthiest in the South. His property included Jamestown Island, vast plantations in three Virginia counties, lumber and shipping businesses, and a railroad.
Initially a major supporter of the Confederacy, Allen resigned his military post in 1862, claiming to have already lost $450,000 in goods and material donated to the Confederate cause, as well as plantation property damaged by looters and occupying Union forces.
References
edit- Gregory, Eve S., Claremont Manor: A History, 1990.
External links
edit- Claremont Manor: A History website. Accessed March 28, 2024.