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Born April 4, 1899 in Mound City, SD
Died November 25, 1974 in Minneapolis, MN
Claude was the third of seven children born to Harry Jay Allen and Hattie Mae
Hankins. He grew up in Mound City, SD, attending rural schools
there. His father was deputy sheriff and town marshall and also drove
the mail, bought and sold cream, and clerked at a store. At an early age
Claude was strongly influenced by watching a court trial, and resolved
to become a lawyer. When only sixteen he moved to Alden, MN where he
worked in a bank. After a couple of years in Alden he moved to St. Paul
where he found a job in the probate court. While working there he
attended the St. Paul College of Law at night, graduating in 1924. He
also took high school and college courses finishing all of this academic
work in four years.
In November 1922, he married Anna Jensen whom he had
met while working in the bank in Alden, MN. Anna held a secretarial job after
their marriage which also helped support them. The couple had two children, John
born in 1925, and Doris born in 1929. In 1925 he was appointed assistant county
attorney of Ramsey County. During that period the great clean up of the criminal
element in St. Paul was underway, and Claude tried many criminal cases. One of
the convicted defendants threatened to kill Claude when
released from prison, and the police insisted that he have a
gun. The threat came to naught and the gun was never used.
Claude remembered starting up his law practice in 1931, in the depths of
the Great Depression. His office was on the 14th floor of the First
National Bank of St. Paul. Since he had such a small income the bank
allowed him to use the space, rent free, until such time as his income
increased. He shared the office with F. Manley Brist, a law school
classmate. He mainly did corporation and probate law.
Claude shared his father's love for the out of doors. He loved to hunt
and fish. The family spent summers at various lakes. In about 1940 they
purchased a cabin in the Boundry Waters Canoe Area of northern
Minnesota. The cabin was on West Bearskin Lake, located 30 miles up the
Gunflint Trail from Grand Marais. They spent a lot of time there. They
had an aluminum canoe and a one horse outboard motor. Claude and Ann
traveled in, and fished from, this canoe many times - often portaging the
canoe to other lakes. Claude also hunted ducks and pheasants with three
other men. They had a hunting camp in Swift County, north and west of
Appleton, MN. Ann became a great wild game cook. Many were the duck
dinners which she served to friends and family.
Claude served in the Minnesota legislature for 28 years -
20 years in the House of Representatives and 8 years as senator. During most of
his years in the House of representatives he was chairman of the powerful
appropriations committee. All spending bills had to pass his
scrutiny. Because of his cautious approach to spending he was
labeled "The Watchdog of the Treasury." In his farewell
address to the Minnesota Legislature, Governor Harold Stassen referred to him as
the "hard working and conscientious Claude H. Allen."
He had three coronary heart attacks by age 60 from which he recovered well.
Death came at age 75 from kidney cancer.
Claude was an elder in the House of Hope Presbyterian Church in St. Paul.
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