Robert Allen (25 April 1920 â 18 April 2007) was an English farmer and poet from Northumberland.
Allen was born in Northumberland on 25 April 1920. After completing his military service, he gained farm experience at a farm near Prendwick (11 miles west of Alnwick), Northumberland. In 1950, he moved to Redesmouth Farm, Redesmouth, near Bellingham, which was owned by his father, Colonel Allen of Haydon Bridge. That same year, he married Angela Mary Hall (née Grey; 1918âÂÂ2007) in Northumberland.
When he retired, he and his wife moved into a new house named "The Glebe" in Bellingham. Allen always had an interest in his local dialect, which he called "big hoose terk", the gentle and polite dialect used when talking to the vicar, rather than the more common and normal "village talk" and also in poetry, and his retirement allowed him the time to put the two together and write down the results.
He produced three audio tapes of his poems "The Canniest Place on Earth", "Ridin' High" and "The Lang Pack", and eventually, in 1994, he published the whole in a book Canny Bit Verse, illustrated by local poet/illustrator and neighbouring farmer Henry Brewis.
Robert Allen died in Northumberland on 18 April 2007, at the age of 86. His wife, Angela, had died earlier that same year, in Northumberland, at the age of 88.