William Outis Allison

William Outis Allison (1849 – December 18, 1924) was the first Mayor of Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey after it split from Englewood, New Jersey in 1895 and served four terms in office.[1][2]

Biography

Allison was born in 1849 in Undercliff (now Edgewater, New Jersey).[1]

His home burned to the ground in November 1903, resulting in a loss estimated at $75,000.[3]

He died on December 18, 1924, at his apartment at 115 West 16th Street in Manhattan.[4] He was buried in Brookside Cemetery in Englewood, New Jersey. His estate was worth over $3,000,000.[5]

gollark: There are a bunch of things I could *try*, but they have the potential to... break things more.
gollark: So this thing's stock room boots fine, but I have no idea how or why.
gollark: There seem to be some things missing.
gollark: ```Armor_X5_Q:/ $ ls /dev/block/platform/bootdevice/by-name/ boot cache expdb frp gz2 lk2 md1img metadata nvdata otp persist preloader_b protect1 recovery scp2 seccfg sspm_1 super tee2 vbmeta vbmeta_vendor boot_para dtbo flashinfo gz1 lk logo md_udc nvcfg nvram para preloader_a proinfo protect2 scp1 sec1 spmfw sspm_2 tee1 userdata vbmeta_system ```
gollark: So I tried flashing a generic system image from fastboot. Guess what? Apparently the system partition doesn't exist. That cannot possibly be standard-compliant.

References

  1. "Allison Park". www.njpalisades.org. Archived from the original on 2013-03-29. Allison Park is named for William O. Allison (1849-1924), who had an estate at this location. ... He became the first mayor of Englewood Cliffs, and sold some riverfront property to the Carpenter brothers for their quarry operation.
  2. Bobbie Bouton-Goldberg (1998). Englewood and Englewood Cliffs. Arcadia Publishing. p. 31. ISBN 9780752413242. Born in 1849 in Undercliff, Allison rose from the foot of the cliff to the top. ... Defeated in his bid for road commissioner, Allison sued Englewood disputing the voting rights of female landowners and the service ...
  3. "Mayor Allison's Home Burned; Englewood's Chief Executive and Family Fled tor Life -- Loss, $75,000". The New York Times. November 8, 1903.
  4. Staff (December 19, 1924). "William O. Allison Dies" (PDF). The New York Times.
  5. "Allison's Will". www.njpalisades.org. Archived from the original on 2011-11-06.
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