Asa Leonard Allen (January
5, 1891 – January 5, 1969) was an educator,
attorney, and a member of the United States House of
Representatives from the state of Louisiana
. He served eight terms as a Democrat from 1937-1953,
having represented the now defunct Eighth Congressional District,
centered about Alexandria
.
Allen was
born in a log cabin near Winnfield
, the seat of Winn Parish
, to Asa L. Allen and the former Sophronia
Perkins. He was a younger brother of Governor
Oscar Kelly Allen.
He was educated in the
Winn Parish public
school and received a bachelor's
degree from Louisiana State University
in Baton
Rouge
in 1914. The next year, he married the
former Lottie Mae Thompson, and they had two sons, Harwell L.
Allen, who became a district judge, and Lyndon Blaine Allen.
Allen taught in the
rural schools of
neighboring
Grant Parish from
1914-1917.
He was a principal in schools in Georgetown
and Verda near Montgomery
. Thereafter, he became the superintendent of
the Winn Parish system, 1917-1922. He studied law on his own, was
admitted to the bar in 1922, and practiced in Winnfield, where he
was city attorney for a time.
Allen was a prominent
Baptist, who served a
stint as vice-president of the Louisiana Baptist Convention. He was
a Scottish Rite
Mason and a
Shriner. He died in Winnfield on his 78th birthday
and is interred at Winnfield Cemetery.
While he first ran for Congress, Allen was also a delegate to the
Democratic National Convention in 1936, which renominated the
Franklin D. Roosevelt and
John Nance Garner ticket, an overwhelming
winner in Louisiana and nationwide as well. In Congress, Allen
served as chairman of the Committee on the Census. A loyal member
of the Long organization, he did not seek a ninth term in Congress
in 1952. Instead, he deferred to
George
Shannon "Doc" Long, the older brother of the legendary
Huey Pierce Long, Jr., and
Earl Kemp Long, who desired to run for
Allen's Eighth District seat.
In
1943, Allen was among the US representatives
that opposed the repeal of the
Chinese Exclusion Act.
In 1994, Allen was
posthumously
inducted into the
Louisiana Political
Museum and Hall of Fame in Winnfield. His brother had been an
original inductee a year earlier. Allen died on his 78th
birthday.
References
"Asa Leonard Allen,"
A Dictionary of Louisiana Biography,
Vol. 1 (1988), p. 9
http://bioguide.congress.gov/scripts/biodisplay.pl?index=A000114
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=7204108
http://www.cityofwinnfield.com/museum.html