Allen, Thornton Van Nuys

September 15, 1918 - November 22, 2009

Van Allen, beloved father of Terry V. Allen of Port
Ludlow, WA, and Sarah Lee Allen and her husband
Raymond Poblick of Brentwood, CA, passed away at home
in Pacific Palisades on November 22, 2009 at age 91 of
natural causes. He was the devoted husband of Julia
Dickie Searle Allen, who predeceased him, loving
brother of James Pendleton Allen and his wife Joyce
Dayton Allen of Los Angeles, and cherished uncle to
several nieces and nephews.

Van was born in Los Angeles on September 15, 1918, to
Thornton Van Nuys Allen and Elizabeth Katharine
Connely Allen. He graduated from Los Angeles High
School and Stanford University with a major in
Economics and minor in Poetry, and was a member of
Delta Tau Delta fraternity.

In 1943 Van met the love of his life Dickie in the
control tower while both were working for Pan American
Airways at Treasure Island near San Francisco. Van was
a flight navigator aboard the "China Clipper" sea
planes flying all-night trips from San Francisco to
Hawaii ("hopefully non-stop" as he loved to say). His
flying took him throughout the islands of the South
Pacific and as far west as Australia. Dickie and Van
corresponded while he was on active duty and they
married on December 2, 1944. They moved to Southern
California in 1947, settled in Pacific Palisades in
1957 and celebrated their 60th wedding anniversary
together in 2004.

He was most proud of his lifelong commitment to the
Navy and his service to country. Van was commissioned
an officer in the Naval Air Reserve prior to the US
involvement in WWII. While on active duty he served in
the Pacific Theater as a flight navigator for a sea
plane squadron based at NAS Alameda for the Naval Air
Transport Service (NATS). He continued his military
service in the Reserves for 20 years, with cruises
aboard the USS Hancock (CVA-19), USS Ticonderoga
(CVA-14), and USS Kitty Hawk (CVA-63), and retired as
a Lieutenant Commander.

Van and his brother Jim managed the T. V. Allen
Company, a family business started by their father in
1912 that manufactured fine stationery and
personalized greeting cards. The company furnished
products to retailers worldwide for over 75 years
before being acquired by Crane & Company. Van was
president of the company for 23 years, past president
of the Engraved Stationery Manufacturing Association,
and past president of the Bel-Air Bay Club.

Van loved to entertain people by singing, reciting
poems of Robert Service and Rudyard Kipling, telling
stories in Lancashire dialect, and doing impressions
of Winston Churchill, Maurice Chevalier, and Frank
Sinatra. He also wrote poems about his flying
experiences and a personal memoir entitled "Brown Shoe
Navigator" or "Unheard of Tales of the South Pacific."
He touched the lives of everyone he met and lived up
to the description in his school yearbook as
"Everyone's Friend."

Bravo Zulu, Dad.

A memorial service will be held at St. Matthew's
Episcopal Church, 1031 Bienveneda, Pacific Palisades,
on Sunday, December 6, 2009 at 2:30 pm. In lieu of
flowers, donations may be made to the YMCA.

Published in Los Angeles Times on November 29, 2009