About Jack Allen

Jack Allen
April 18, 1925 - June 24, 2002

Jack Allen was a lifelong farmer, the sixth-generation to work the 1861 family farm.
When he retired in 1974 he began a unique collection of antiques.
The old dairy barn soon began to fill with antique tractors, washboards, pot-bellied stoves,
 milking machines and more, a wealth of historic objects rescued from obscurity.
At one time the barn was open to the public and Jack especially loved showing his collection to children.
Rising insurance costs forced its closure, but Jack's dream was to one day reopen
 his museum to share the past with others.
Jack Allen passed away in 2002, leaving a wonderful legacy.
His family and friends established a non-profit corporation in his memory
 to restore the old house and outbuildings and create a public museum.
 

In Early 1999, Jack Allen was interviewed by Leslie C. McDaniel of Farm Collector Magazine.
In the article, Jack explains how he began collecting farm memorabilia, and how his collection grew to what it is today.
By reading the article, you'll get an idea of just a small part of the collection that is to be the heart of the future
 Jack Allen Memorial Early Country Living Museum.

Here's the article:

'Hobby' Takes on a Life of Its Own:
Dairy items at the heart of extensive collection

By Leslie C. McDaniel
       
Jack Allen ran a dairy farm for nearly 30 years. Now retired, he collects dairy items. But it's a little more complicated than that. He also collects typewriters. And old sweepers. And potbellied stoves. And cultivators. And plows. "I had a stroke when I was younger," he said. "After that, my wife said I should get a hobby. She probably thought I'd take up needlepoint, like Rosie Grier." Then, too, there was the matter of the barn to deal with.       
        "When we sold the cows, my son was an auctioneer, and he set up an auction barn in the old cow barn. But the upper half was still empty. Then he moved to a different barn on the farm, and the whole barn was left empty," he said. "Well, when a barn's left empty, when if s not used, it'll go to pieces. So I started collecting things." An obvious starting point? Dairy Items.
        "In the old milk house, we have 35 or 40 butter churns, all different," he said. "There's glass churns, and wood, and the kind you'd sit in a rocking chair and rock. Some of them date to the 1890s. And we have half a dozen cream separators."
... and six different kinds of gas pumps ... ice cream dippers ... egg beaters ... herb grinders ... apple peelers ... cherry fitters ...
       
Jack's dairy collection also Includes milk testing equipment and milking machines. The testing equipment dates to the late 1920s.
        "It's what would have been used by the tester who made the rounds of all the dairy farms," Jack said. "It worked by centrifugal force. It'd make the cream come to the top, and then they'd test the butterfat content."
        Jack's first hands-on experience with a milking machine was in the '30s, with a McCormick-Deering. Then we went to a Surge in '43-45. Then, when we had milking power put in, we got a DeLaval, a Herringbone system," he said. "That's what we ended with."
... and signs for butter and ice cream ... a device that cut 'pats' from a quarter-pound of butter... papers to wrap butter in ... milk bottle caps and bottles ...
        His collection of milking machines includes a Rightway, a Surge, a Universal, and a Hinman that he'd like to restore. "The Hinman (which is not complete) is the oldest. It goes back to the '20s," he said. "It was one of the first few out. I've only met one other guy who had ever used one."
The early milking machines - typically made of wood and tin - were far from user friendly.
        "Compared to what they have now days, and what we used to have, the old stuff is complicated," Jack said. "Most of the time, they'd just milk one cow at a time. You might have one that you'd run three or four cows on at once. Now they do 20 at one time." The real trick, he said, was getting the idea off the ground.
        "I think farmers were kind of afraid of the milking machine at first," he said. "They had to be sold on the idea. But after they got it perfected, it was really a timesaver." Today, he said, there's a lot of interest in old milking machines, particularly pieces made before 1930.
        "They're hard to find," he said. "But if you're interested in it, the price doesn't mean anything."
... and a potato planter... treadmills ... hay­forks ... well drilling equipment... vegetable dryers ... washing machines ... pedal cars ... horseradish grinders ... pig equipment, down to and including sausage staffers ...
        Jack's collection goes well beyond dairy items. " I specialize in everything," he said. "The old milk parlor, for instance, has been set up as an old-time school house. It has a potbellied stove, blackboards, cupboards and hardwood flooring from an old school, and vintage lights from an old church. Neat rows of old desks with cast iron sides recall days long since gone. A hand-crank eraser cleaner is a unique touch. "I've only seen one other like it," he said, "and it was in a museum."
        And there's more, much more. "I have all the stuff for a tinsmith shop, and for a blacksmith shop," he said. "I have 10 different forges, and all the equipment that goes with 'em."
        He's recreated an old country store on a flatbed trailer, for display at the county fair. When a nearby bank closed, he got a hold of some of the original furnishings.
        "I got the first counter (the bank was built in 1863), complete with the cage," he said. "It may be cherry; it looks pretty good. And we got some of the old equipment , a money counter, check writer, ledgers ... that kind of thing."
... and cranberry sorters, scoops and boxes ... an ancient hand-crank dishwasher... an old telephone booth ... seed coun­ters ... old oak refrigerators ... 3S-4O sleds ... old bikes ... doc­tor's equipment... bag holders ...
        For some, a collection of this magnitude would be overwhelming. For Jack, it's just plain fun. "And my wife enjoys it all, too," he said. "We enjoy going to sales; that's where we get most of this stuff." The pieces in his collection are a reminder of the past, which he is happy to keep at arm's length.
        "I like the old stuff, but I don't want to have to pump water, cut wood or chum butter," he said. "I just like the old equipment. When it comes to the computer age, forget it. I keep records on everything I have, but I do it on paper." Those records detail the collection's sheer size.
        "If I were starting over, maybe I wouldn't have so much of one thing," he said. "I've got 40 corn shellers, 40 washing machines ... maybe I'm spread too thin. Maybe I should have specialized more.
        "I'm to the point where I don't know what I'm going to do with it all," he said. "Should I leave It to my children, or grandchildren, or have a sale?"
Decisions for another day.

        For the time being, Jack's happy revisiting another era, surrounded by his treasures."Some people call it a museum, I call it a junk collection," he said. "I won't tell you what my wife calls it!"

 

In March of 2005, Paul Leakan, Burlington County Times reporter assigned to
 Southampton Township, interviewed Coles Roberts and Jean Allen
 about the Jack Allen collection and the plans for the
 Jack Allen Memorial Early Country Living Museum:
 

By PAUL LEAKAN
Burlington County Times
 

SOUTHAMPTON - Jack Allen spent decades collecting thousands of artifacts from banks,
 barnyards, schoolhouses and, seemingly, anywhere and everywhere else.
The late township farmer had a dream for his massive collection -
one that will become a reality, thanks to the love and devotion of his family and friends.
Allen had always wanted to give the entire community a chance to see his collection,
 especially the children who had never had to milk a cow or churn some butter.

Allen died from cancer three years ago, but people such as his wife,
 Jean Allen, and his longtime friend and fellow farmer, Coles Roberts,
 are making sure the items will be put on display.

Part of the Allen family farmstead on Landing Street will become the
 Jack Allen Memorial Early Country Living Museum,
 a place where people can view the artifacts and learn about how many of them were once used.

"It was his dream," Jean Allen said, "and I did not want sell all of this stuff."
The Allen family hopes to convert a building on the farm into a museum that will house the various objects.

Money for the museum will be raised during the upcoming Farm Fun Day at Allen's Auction.
 Jack's son, Richard, runs the auction, which is located across the street from the farm.

The event is scheduled for April 30 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and for May 1 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
 It will feature pig races, butter making, corn shelling, apple peeling,
 weaving and spinning and a "wagon back up" contest, among other things.

Jean Allen said the plan is to open part of the museum to the public sometime next year.

Roberts, a farmer who once operated an apple farm called Jersey Jerry's
 on Church Road, has been busy volunteering his time to catalogue the objects.

"This is a fabulous collection," Roberts said. "He's doing all this just because of the love he has for Jack,
 and we love and appreciate it," Jean Allen said.

The items, which were used in the early 1800s to late 1900s, are being
 stored in a sprawling complex of barns at the Allen farmstead.

The roughly 6,000-item collection includes a foot-powered vacuum cleaner,
 a scale to weigh live chickens, hand-cranked dishwashers,
 a vintage doughnut filler, a jail door and chisels used to engrave tombstones.

It also features historic pieces such as the wooden front counter of the former
 First National Bank of Vincentown, metal boxes used for sorting mail
 at the Medford Post Office and a display case
 from the former Allen's Department Store in Vincentown.

Of course, there's an extensive collection of farming equipment,
 such as tractors, tools, grinding stones, potato and cranberry sorters
 and a machine that enables a dog or sheep to power a treadmill
 that turns a crank and ultimately churns butter.

All of the items have been insured, Jean Allen said.

Many volunteers have offered to move the artifacts to the building when the museum
 is ready."We're going to hold them to it," Jean Allen said.


March 26, 2005 9:43 AM