Alden (a descendant of Mayflower passenger John Alden) was born in Portland, Maine, on March 5, 1811, and educated there. He went into the mercantile business, and in 1836, he went to New Orleans and worked as a clerk for a merchant there. In 1842 he moved to Wisconsin Territory and opened a general store in the village of Delafield (the first store in the Town of Delafield), which he ran until 1846. In December 1843, in Summit, he married Caroline Fairservice, a native of Oneida County, New York; they would go on to have four children. In 1844, he bought sixty acres of land straddling the Bark River from Milton Cushing (father of Alonzo, Howard, and William B. Cushing), and built a dam to create a millpond between Nagawicka Lake and Upper Nemahbin Lake to power a sawmill; the dam's removal (long after the mill was shut down) would become controversial in the early 21st century.[3][4]
Having returned to Wisconsin after a couple of years in California, he became active in the new Republican Party which had been organized in Wisconsin. He was elected to the Assembly for the 1858 session as a Republican, succeeding fellow Republican James M. Lewis in the new 1st Waukesha County assembly district (Delafield, Oconomowoc and Summit); and was succeeded in 1859 by another Republican, Parker Sawyer.[6] He returned to his old seat for a final time for the 13th Wisconsin Legislature of 1860, and was succeeded by Daniel Cottrell (yet again a Republican). Alden was again elected sheriff in 1864.
Private affairs
Alden continued to farm his 360 acres on the shores of Nagawicka Lake. His wife Carolina died November 8, 1891, at their home in Delafield, and Alden himself died there less than two months later, on January 8, 1892.[7][8]
^Haight, Theron W., ed. Memoirs of Waukesha County: From the Earliest Historical Times Down to the Present with Special Chapters on Various Subjects, Including Each of the Different Towns, and a Genealogical and Biographical Record of Representative Families in the County, Prepared from Data Obtained from Original Sources of Information Madison: Western Historical Association, 1907; p. 345