Hilary,
I am wondering if the articles you have are those Mira referred to on page one of this thread and contained in a Thomas Allen website?
The majority of them appear to have been published at the time of, or in the years soon after, Allen's death and again I can't help wondering if there isn't a little of the 'gilding of the lily' in their publication, especially as a number of them are attributed to magazines and periodicals, rather than more formal publications. It is understandable perhaps, and only too human, to add to a man's seeming attributes on his death, especially in the case of Allen and his closeness to a famous man. However, I'm not sure that they stand up to close scrutiny.
For example, regarding his nursing Nelson back to health after the loss of his arm, I am not at all sure this is all down to Tom Allen, helpful though he might have been. What about the nursing he received from Fanny, who had to learn to change the dressings, and the directions of at least two surgeons, in Bath and London?
Again, on Nelson's dress it doesn't actually say that Allen insisted his master wear seaman's garb, it says 'modest uniform', which I take to mean his 'undress' uniform. However, wouldn't he have worn this in any case?
I believe it has also been established, both on this site and elsewhere, that Allen was not Nelson's coxswain. He was usually referred to as his 'manservant', which was something completely different. I believe he was rated as an AB on the ship's books, but I would imagine this was for convenience rather than anything else in accounting for everyone aboard, and the NMM describe him as not being a seaman. Even though he may have been quartered at a gun during battle and have, of necessessity, acquired some nautical knowledge, this would not have been enough to enable him to be put in charge of a boat, for which a certain level of seamanship would have been required and where he would also have commanded the boat's crew. I also cite that his irrascible character, for which Nelson pulled him up more than once and which later was the cause of a heated argument between them, would not have been a quality which would have been looked for in any boat's coxswain, let alone that of Nelson.
_________________ Kester.
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