George Allen (26 March 1832 – 5 September 1907) was an English craftsman and engraver, who became an assistant to John Ruskin and then in consequence a publisher.
The son of John and Rebecca Allen, he was born on 26 March 1832 at Newark-on-Trent, and was educated at a private grammar school there.
He became a skilled joiner, and was employed for three and a half years in that capacity on the woodwork of the interior of Dorchester House, Park Lane.
[1] On the foundation of the Working Men's College in 1854, Allen joined the drawing class, and became one of Ruskin's pupils there.
His publishing establishment was first his cottage at Keston, and later an out-house in the garden of his villa at Orpington.
[1] Allen was brought further into connection with Ruskin by marrying (25 December 1856) the latter's mother's maid, Anne Eliza Hobbes.