Richard Allen [Texas] (1830-1909)

January 22, 2007 
/ Contributed By: Merline Pitre

Richard Allen

Public Domain Image courtesy University of Texas at San Antonio Special Collections

Richard Allen, politician and civic leader, was born a slave in Richmond, Virginia, on June 10, 1830.   He was brought to Texas in 1837 and ultimately to Harris County, where he was owned by J.J. Cain until emancipation in 1865. While a slave he earned a reputation as a skilled carpenter and was credited with designing and building the mansion of Houston mayor Joseph R. Morris.  After emancipation Allen became a contractor, bridge builder, and saloon owner.   He built the first bridge over Buffalo Bayou in Houston, Texas.

After the Civil War Allen became an agent for the Freedmen’s Bureau and a controversial registration supervisor in the Fourteenth District in 1868.  Such a job served as a catalyst for his interest in politics.  An orator who could sway an audience to his will, Allen was elected to the Twelfth Legislature to represent Harris and Montgomery counties in 1869 at the age of forty-three.  As a political leader, Allen occasionally took unpopular positions.  In 1879, he broke with most other black Republican leaders in Texas and became a spokesman for the short-lived Exodus Movement, which told blacks that they would never enjoy educational or economic opportunity in Texas and therefore should move to Kansas.

Though he served only one term in the Texas Legislature, Allen remained active in politics for all of his adult life.  From 1872 to 1900 he was a delegate at nearly every Republican convention–local, state, and national.  Allen held several public and private offices including Houston street commissioner, member of the Board of Directors of The Gregory Institute, second Grand Master of the Colored Masons of Texas, and secretary of the Colored Baptist Missionary Association of Texas.  He and his wife had five children. Allen died in Houston in 1911 at the age of 81.

Author Profile

MERLINE PITRE is a professor of History and Dean of the College of Liberal Arts & Behavioral Sciences at Texas Southern University. She received her Ph.D. degree from Temple University and has published a number of articles in scholarly and professional journals. Her most noted works are Through Many Dangers, Toils and Snares: The Black Leadership of Texas, 1868 to 1898 (a book which was reissued in 1997 and used in a traveling exhibit on black legislators by the State Preservation Board in 1998), and In Struggle Against Jim Crow: Lulu B. White and the NAACP, 1900 to 1957 (Texas A&M University Press, 1999). Pitre has been the recipient of grants from the Fulbright Foundation, Texas Council for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Humanities. She is also a former member of the Texas Council for the Humanities. Currently, she is a member of the Speakers Bureau for the Texas Council for the Humanities and serves on the nominating board of the Organization of American Historians.

CITE THIS ENTRY IN APA FORMAT:

Pitre, M. (2007, January 22). Richard Allen [Texas] (1830-1909). BlackPast.org. https://new.blackpast.org/african-american-history/allen-richard-texas-1830-1909/

Source of the Author's Information:

Merline Pitre, Through Many Dangers, Toils and Snares: The Black Leadership of Texas, 1868-1900 (Austin: Eakin, 1985).

Further Reading