William Boyd Allison was an American lawyer, state Republican Party leader, U.S. representative, and longtime U.S. senator.
Background
William Boyd Allison was born on March 2, 1829, in Perry County, Ohio, United States; the second of three sons of John Allison, and Margaret (Williams) Allison. His parents had moved to Ohio from Pennsylvania, part of a larger long-term Scots-Irish westward migration.
Education
Allison was educated at Wooster Academy in Danbury, Connecticut United States. Afterward, he spent a year at Allegheny College in Pennsylvania, United States, then graduated from Western Reserve College, and located in Hudson, Ohio, in 1849. He studied law and began practicing in Ashland, Ohio, United States.
Career
Allison’s youth was shaped by at least three major family commitments: Whig politics, Presbyterian religion, and the pursuit of “success.” His father, a Whig stalwart, served several terms as a justice of the peace. The family regularly attended Mount Hope Presbyterian Church. Allison decided to leave Ohio for Iowa, in 1857. His elder brother Matthew had preceded him and established an insurance business in Dubuque, in 1855.
While still in Ohio, the young Allison’s social aspirations and political interests became apparent. He gained formal education at two different academies, enough to prepare him to teach school briefly, followed by a year of study at Western Reserve College. Probably with an eye toward establishing himself in politics, Allison then began to prepare for a career in law. After admission to the bar, he began his own law practice in Ashland.
As the Whig Party dissolved, Allison, firmly antislavery and probusiness, sought to be a part of whichever party would replace it. In 1855 he was a secretary to the Ohio Republican Party convention, but he was also an Ohio delegate to the national Know-Nothing Party convention, early in 1856. Later that summer, however, Allison left the Know-Nothings and ran as the Republican candidate for county attorney. His defeat in the fall elections was apparently a major factor in his decision to join his brother in Iowa, in 1856.
Settling in 1857 in Dubuque, a stronghold of the Democratic Party, might seem unwise for an aspiring Republican politician. It did not prove so, however. Joining a local law partnership and affiliating with a Presbyterian congregation, Allison quickly rose to leadership in Iowa’s young Republican Party. In 1859 he was a delegate to the Republican State Convention. In 1860 he was a state delegate to the party’s national convention. Also in 1860, he diligently and dutifully campaigned for the state and national Republican tickets.
The Republican victories of 1860 led William to seek a political appointment. Others gained the posts he wanted, but the Civil War brought new opportunities. In 1861 Governor Samuel J. Kirkwood appointed him as one of his military aides, with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Allison proved a competent manager of the transportation, billeting, and medical needs of Iowa volunteers for the Dubuque area.
The Civil War was a factor in opening elective office to Allison. After the 1860 U.S. Census, Iowa’s congressional seats increased from two to six. The seat of the redrawn district that included Dubuque was held by William Vandever, a Republican who had been reelected for a second term, in 1860. In 1862 Vandever was endeavoring to hold his congressional seat and an officer’s commission in the Union army at the same time. Allison used his Iowa record and growing political connection, which included Governor Kirkwood and railroad entrepreneur Grenville M. Dodge to win both the Republican nomination and the general election to the House seat of Iowa’s Third District.
Allison served four successive terms in the U.S. House of Representatives, from 1863 to 1871. As a representative, he joined the Radicals in opposing President Lincoln’s Reconstruction policies. Rising quickly among congressional Radicals, during his second term he became a member of the Ways and Means Committee. He began to gain a reputation in his party for his expertise on tariffs and railroads. Compared to other Radicals, he was for moderate tariffs that benefited agriculture. He did much work on behalf of railroads, to the point of being accused in 1868 of obtaining a change in the route of the Sioux City & Pacific Railroad that was more for his personal benefit than that of Iowans. The evidence was circumstantial, and the charge faded.
Still young and a widower, Allison did not purchase a house in Washington, D.C., but instead roomed at the home of Iowa’s Senator James W. Grimes. The two Iowa Republicans found themselves on opposite sides during the impeachment and trial of President Andrew Johnson-Allison voted with the House Radical Republicans to impeach, while Grimes voted with a Senate Republican minority against conviction-yet Allison never broke with Grimes.
Allison was a party loyalist, but never an ideologue. Neither was he a compelling orator or a notable thinker. He was adept at connecting himself with the politically powerful, and he was attuned to various intraparty factions as well as to the Iowa electorate. A colleague in the Senate later characterized Allison’s political skills as “a genius for attaining the attainable.” Attaining and maintaining political power and a flexible status quo with a minimum of acrimony-became Allison’s forte.
A major way Allison learned to “attain the attainable” was through building strong personal networks and alliances. With the backing of the retiring Senator Grimes and Grenville Dodge, Allison ran for Grimes’s Senate seat, in 1870. However, the candidate of Senator James Harlan’s faction, James B. Howell, won. Allison thus found himself out of Congress, in 1871. In 1872, though, Allison’s alliances helped him attain the Republican caucus’s nomination to the U.S. Senate, which guaranteed election by the Republican- dominated legislature by one vote. He unseated his rival, Senator Harlan. Moreover, he and his ally Dodge managed to avoid any political damage from their associations with the Crédit Mobilier of America, a dummy construction company established for the financial benefit of the Union Pacific Railroad and publicized as such in 1872–1873, well after the election.
Allison was a U.S. senator from Iowa for six terms, from 1873 to 1908. He was elected for a seventh term, but died before serving. Within Iowa, Allison’s alliances and his hold on his Senate seat enabled him to be at the center of the “Des Moines Regency,” the name for the small group that came to dominate the Iowa Republican Party after 1873. Besides Allison, others included Joseph W. Blythe and Charles E. Perkins of the Burlington Railroad and James S. “Ret” Clarkson of the Iowa State Reg- ister. Allison and the Des Moines Regency could exert a decisive influence through county, district, and state conventions on who would be the party’s candidates for Iowa’s other congressional offices, the governor’s office, and the legislature. Once admitted to the Senate in 1873, Allison married Mary Nealley.
Allison became wedded to the security of his office partly by inclination, partly by necessity. Three times he turned down offers to join presidential cabinets, of Garfield, Harrison, and McKinley. Twice he was a contender for the Republican presidential nomination, in 1888 and 1896. By the time of his death, he was the most senior member of the Senate. He was not only chairman of its Republican caucus, he was also a member of its Committees on Appropriations and Finance. He continued to exert influence on matters of concern to railroads, such as moderating regulation, and on tariffs, about which he became increasingly protectionist. A new area of influence that Allison developed once in the Senate was monetary policy. The Iowa electorate not only supported railroad regulation, but elements were also sympathetic to calls for monetary inflation through “greenbacks” and the “free”, unlimited, coinage of silver.
Silver coinage was halted by an act of Congress in 1873, the year Allison joined the Senate. In 1875 he helped craft a compromise bill that, when enacted, authorized the federal redemption of greenbacks with gold and silver coins in 1879. That bill was followed by the Bland-Allison Silver Purchase Act, an 1878 measure modified by Allison in the Sen- ate that allowed for the limited coinage of sil- ver dollars. This made Allison an important “bimetallist” in a party known more for its support of the gold standard. In 1890 Allison was among the U.S. delegation to the Inter- national Monetary Conference at Brussels.
By 1907 the nearly 80-year old senator was in obvious decline, from prostate cancer. He nonetheless stood for renomination in Iowa’s first direct primary in 1908. The contest pitted “Insurgents” progressives in the party, led by Governor Albert B. Cummins, against Allison and the “Standpatters” conservatives. Allison avoided campaigning as much as possible, letting his personally loyal colleague in the Senate, Jonathan P. Dolliver, stand in for him. Victory for Allison came in June, but death came for him in August in his Dubuque home. His was the optimism of a practical American politician who could assume Republican regimes in Iowa and the nation because he had helped construct them.
Achievements
Politics
William became a prominent member of the nascent Iowa Republican Party. As a congressman and member of the House Ways and Means Committee, he pushed for higher tariffs. In January 1870, he was an unsuccessful candidate for election by the Iowa General Assembly to the United States Senate seat for 1871–1877, losing to Iowa Supreme Court Justice George G. Wright.
Allison chaired the 1884–1886 Allison Commission, a bipartisan joint congressional committee "among the first to explore the question of whether federal intervention politicizes scientific research". It considered the charge that parts of the government were engaged in research for theoretical, not practical, purposes. The majority report favored the status quo, and Congress upheld it. In 1885, the Commission's finding of misuse of funds at the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey led to the dismissal of several officials but exonerated Charles Sanders Peirce.
In 1896, William became a dark-horse candidate for the presidency. However, support for his candidacy faded when it became clear that McKinley would be nominated on the first ballot.
Views
Quotations:
“I am one of those who believe that the world is growing better and purer, as the years roll on”.
Personality
Quotes from others about the person
"Allison is the man of experience, " an admiring reporter wrote in 1906, "the sage old pilot of the Senate.
Connections
In 1854 William married Anna Carter. In 1860 his wife’s death. They had no children. In 1873 Allison married Mary Nealley. She was some 20 years younger than Allison, and they had no children. Severe mental depression eventually enveloped her, and despite nursing care, she drowned herself in the Mississippi River in 1883.
The Biographical Dictionary of Iowa
Iowa has been blessed with citizens of strong character who have made invaluable contributions to the state and to the nation. In the 1930s alone, such towering figures as John L. Lewis, Henry A. Wallace, and Herbert Hoover hugely influenced the nation’s affairs.