USA > Pennsylvania > Luzerne County > Wilkes-Barre > A history of Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania : from its first beginnings to the present time, including chapters of newly-discovered early Wyoming Valley history, together with many biographical sketches and much genealogical material. Volume VI > Part 22
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ASA ERNEST LEWIS, a capable and consci- entious official, thorough-going in all his duties, holds an important place in the civic life of Pennsylvania as referee, in Work- men's Compensation for the Ninth Compen- sation District of the State, having been ap- pointed to this position in 1920 by Governor Sproul. In the capacity of referee he has proved himself an adjudicator of exceptional ability; painstaking in the interests of the employee, the employer and the State, and an able executive in his dealings with the problems of his office.
Mr. Lewis was born May 17, 1873, in a log house on a farm in Ross Township, Luzerne County, among the foothills of the Appala- chian Mountains. He is the son of William and Catherine T. (Sandys) Lewis, both of whom are now deceased. His father was born in New Jersey, a son of Thomas and Ada (Hovens) Lewis, also natives of that State. This branch of the Lewis family settled in Connecticut, and were among the first Welsh settlers in New England. Mrs. Catherine T. (Sandys) Lewis, the mother of the man with whom we are chiefly concerned. was the daughter of Jacob and Angeline (Thomas) Sandys, natives of Philadelphia: her father, Jacob Sands, or Sandys, was a direct descendant of Sir Edwin Sandys, the great liberal statesman who became Gover- nor of the Virginia Colony in 1619, and suc- ceeded in procuring the Great Charter of Virginia which established the first Consti- tutional State with a Representative Govern- ment, in America. William and Catherine T. (Sandys) Lewis were the parents of eleven children: Henriette E., Martin S., Mary E., Josephine, Angeline, Charles T., Edward A., Harry, George C., Asa E., of whom further; and Frank H., all of whom attained maturity except Harry, who died in infancy.
The region in which Asa Ernest Lewis was born is in the vicinity of what is now known as Sweet Valley, Luzerne County, Pennsyl- vania, where his brother, Frank H. Lewis, still resides. He attended the public schools of his native township where the only edu-
cational opportunities afforded him at that time were those of the ungraded country school. Because of the moderate circum- stances of his family and the limited advan- tages offered by the schools of the com- munity, he was deprived of an opportunity to attend high school, hut he possessed an ambition that would not be denied; and, de- termined to carry out that ambition, he ac- quired, by intense application, and private tutelage attained through self-sacrifice, a fund of knowledge which later qualified him to become a leading educator in the public schools of the Commonwealth of Pennsyl- vania. When only seventeen years of age, Mr. Lewis started to teach school in his native township. His first teaching experi- ence was in the Little Red Schoolhouse at the cross roads, in the vicinity of his birth- place. For fifteen consecutive years he con- ducted a Summer Normal School for Teachers, in what was then known as Pleasant Hill Academy, where he himself had attended while receiving his own education. For more than twenty years he was a teacher in the schools of the county, and with the years he gradually rose in the school system until he became assistant county superintendent, in which capacity he served until 1920, when he was appointed to his present position as Referee in Workmen's Compensation, an office which he has filled with enviable tact and usefulness to his community and State, and in which he has won the esteem and respect of his fellowman.
Politically, Mr. Lewis is a staunch sup- porter of the Republican party, its policies, and candidates. He is a leader in the counsels of this political organization in his respective community and in the State. At the same time he is active in social and fraternal affairs. He is a member of all the Masonic bodies, in which his affiliations are with George M. Dallas Lodge, No. 531, Free and Accepted Masons, of Dallas; Dieu le Veut Commandery, No. 45, of Knights Templar of Wilkes-Barre; Caldwell Consistory of the Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite of Blooms- burg, and Irem Temple of the Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine of Wilkes- Barre. He is a member and Past Exalted Ruler of Wilkes-Barre Lodge, No. 109, of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; a member of Osage Lodge, No. 712, of the In- dependent Order of Odd Fellows of Lehman; and a member of Pleasant Hill Council, No. 390, of the Junior Order of United Mechanics of Sweet Valley. He holds membership in the following clubs: The Kiwanis Club of Wilkes-Barre, of which he is the president; the Craftsmen's Club; the Westmoreland Club, and the Shrine Country Club.
The World War record of Mr. Lewis was conspicuous. During the American partici- pation in that conflict he was a member of all the different war boards, and personally directed the indexing of all local service men. He had charge of the Boy's Working Reserve in Luzerne County, and at the conclusion of hostilities disposed of the equipment of the reserves under appointment by the adjutant- general.
Since January 30, 1920, the date of his appointment as Referee in Workmen's Com- pensation, most of Mr. Lewis' work has been in the Department of Labor and Industry of the State Government; and it has been in this field that he has been eminently suc- cessful. The Ninth District, which comes under his jurisdiction, consists of the counties of Luzerne, Columbia, Montour and North- umberland. The number of cases that have come before him for hearing and determina-
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tion since his appointment runs into the thousands, and, while several hundred ap- peals have naturally heen taken from his decisions, reversals by the Compensation Board and by the higher courts have been very few in number.
THOMAS J. MAYOCK, D. D. S .- For many years Dr. Thomas J. Mayock has been a practicing dentist, for a time turning his attention from professional matters to the development of real estate. He is the son of Michael and Bridget (Ruddy) Mayock, who are both deceased. Michael Mayock and his wife were both natives of Ireland and came to America when quite young. It was here that they met and married and settled in Luzerne County. They were the parents of nine children: 1. Mary, who married Nich- olas S. Burns of Parsons, Pennsylvania, now part of Wilkes-Barre. 2. Dr. John F., a well known dentist of Wilkes-Barre. 3. Patrick, who died in infancy. 4. James C., a merchant conducting business at the same stand where his father founded a business over fifty years ago, at Miners Mills. 5. Michael, who is asso- ciated in business with his brother, James C. 6. Dr. Peter P., who is a well-known physician of Wilkes-Barre. 7. Dr. Thomas J., of whom further. 8. Sister Mary-Charles of the Order of the Sisters of Mercy at Wilkes-Barre. 9. Frank, who is associated with his two brothers, James C., and Michael, the in general merchandise business. Michael Mayock, Sr., died in 1909 at the age of seventy years, and his wife, Bridget (Ruddy) Mayock, died in 1911, at the age of sixty-eight years. During the fifty years that Michael Mayock conducted a general merchandise business at Miners Mills, Lu- zerne County, Pennsylvania, he was one of the most highly respected citizens and the trade that he established has continued to keep the business going since it has been in the hands of his three sons.
Thomas J. Mayock was born at Miners Mills, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, August 25, 1885. He received his education in the public schools and the Wyoming Seminary, and graduated from the Georgetown Univer- sity at Washington, District of Columbia, in the class of 1909, with the degree of Doctor of Dental Surgery, after which he returned to the city of Wilkes-Barre, where he entered upon the practice of dentistry which lie fol- lowed until 1921. Owing to ill health, he gave up his profession and entered the real estate business which he conducted success- fully until July, 1928, when his health was fully restored and he again began the prac- tice of his profession. In politics, Dr. Mayock is a Democrat; and he is a member of the St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church, at Wilkes- Barre. He is also a member of the Wilkes- Barre Lodge, No. 109, Benevolent and Protec- tive Order of Elks, and a member of the Luzerne Dental Society and was its first president. Dr. Mayock nas been very promi- nent in the Community Welfare Confedera- tion since its inception and has acted in the capacity of chairman. In sports he has been one of the directors of the Wilkes-Barre Basehall Club of the New York-Pennsylvania League.
On January 15, 1916, Dr. Thomas J. Mayock married Kathryn C. Ward, a daughter of the late John M. Ward of Wilkes-Barre, who for many years was one of the leading merchants of this city, and Alicia (Neison) Ward, also deceased. Dr. and Mrs. Mayock have three children: Thomas J. Jr., Kathryn, and James.
EDWARD B. SMITH-AS president of Smith-Bennett Corporation of Wilkes-Barre, Edward B. Smith is the head of the largest manufacturing stationers in Northeastern Pennsylvania.
The concern is a combination of two well established business concerns and includes the old and well-known bookbinding busi- ness of the Raeder Company, organized in 1881. At the present time, the corporation now operates a plant in Harrisburg, Penn- sylvania, and Newark, New Jersey.
Mr. Smith is a member of the Wilkes- Barre-Wyoming Valley Chamber of Com- merce; Kiwanis Club; Franklin Club; Wyo- ming Valley Country Club and Westmore- land Club.
CHARLES HAROLD LAYCOCK is rapidly becoming one of the foremost figures in financial circles of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsyl- vania, where he conducts a bond and broker- age business, with offices in the Miners' Bank Building. His father, Charles Wilbur Lay- cock, has been president of the Miners' Bank since 1924, and father and son have both become identified with the financial welfare of this section of the State.
The Laycock family, one of the oldest in the State, dates back to the early history of Pennsylvania. The great-grandfather of Charles Harold Laycock, the Rev. Shadrack B. Laycock, was a Methodist preacher of many years standing. He married Susan Bowman, a niece of Bishop Bowman, who took such a prominent part in the history of the Meth- odist Episcopal Church in Pennsylvania. Among their children was Adam Clark Lay- cock, born near Berwick, Pennsylvania, who married Clarissa Millard. They had two children, Mary Amanda, wife of Lewis K. Powst, and now deceased, and Charles Wilbur Laycock, of whom further, and the father of Charles Harold Laycock.
Charles Wilbur Laycock was born in Fair- mount Township, Luzerne County, Pennsyl- vania, October 3, 1860 and when he was only six years old his parents moved to Shick- sl. inny, Luzerne County. He was educated in the public schools of Luzerne County and at Wyoming Seminary, Kingston, where his parents moved when he was nineteen years old. At the end of his seminary course, he became a clerk in the mercantile house of Pringle and Laycock of Kingston, where he remained until 1882, when he began his life- long association with the banking business by entering the employ of the Second National Bank of Wilkes-Barre, in the same capacity. He became cashier of the Miners' Bank in 1913. He married Jennie Clapp, June 5, 1890 and they have four children: 1. Nesbitt E., who died in childhood. 2. Charles Harold, of whom further. 3. Robert Clark, manager of the Wilkes-Barre store of F. W. Wool- worth & Company. 4. Millard Day, also man- ager of one of the Woolworth stores.
Charles H. (C. Harold) Laycock was born in Kingston, March 15, 1893, went to the public schools of his native town and was grad- uated later from Wyoming Seminary, King- ston. He spent the next two years as a student at Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut, then returned to Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, to complete a commercial course at Wyoming Seminary. He had deter- mined to enter the business world and only waited to finish this course, before becoming a bookkeeper at the Wyoming National Bank, Wilkes-Barre.
President Wilson's Declaration of War against Germany, in April, 1917, found him,
Harold Laycock
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like so many other young men throughout the country, eager and anxious to join some branch of the country's service. He went to Washington, District of Columbia, and entered the office of the Alien Property Cns- todian, where he remained until January, 1918, when he joined the aviation section of the Navy and served until the close of the World War, in November, 1918. He returned to Wilkes-Barre and became the local rep- resentative of a New York bond firm, Green, Ellis & Anderson. He has since built up a bond and brokerage business of his own and is considered one of the most progressive young business men in the Wyoming Val- ley.
He is a Republican and a communicant of the First Presbyterian Church in Wilkes- Barre, besides being associated with a num- ber of fraternities. He is a member of Land- mark Lodge, No. 442, Free and Accepted Masons; the Royal Arch Masons; Dleu le Veut Commandery, Knights Templar; Cald- well Consistory, Scottish Rite Masons of Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania; Irem Temple, Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine; the Irem Country Club, the Wyoming Valley Country Club, the Westmoreland Club, the University of Washington Club and the Psi Upsilon Fraternity, which he joined while at Wesleyan University. He is also a trustee of Wilkes-Barre Academy.
Mr. Laycock married, June 10, 1915, Esther F. Weckesser, daughter of F. J. and Anna S. (Hammond) Weckesser. They have two children, Mary Anna and Charles Frederick.
SHERMAN RICHARDS SCHOOLEY, M. D. -Born in Trucksville, Kingston Township, Luzerne County, on April 19, 1899, Dr. Sher- man Richards Schooley acquired his medical education in Philadelphia, after which he re- turned to this county and located in Shaver- town, where he has established an extensive and lucrative practice.
Dr. Schooley was born in Trucksville, April 19, 1899, the son of Ziba F. and Mary (Rich- ards) Schooley, both natives of Luzerne County, the former born in Kingston Town- ship in 1859, and the latter in Wilkes-Barre in 186S. The father of Dr. Schooley is a re- tired farmer and president and a director of the Merchants' and Miners' National Bank of Luzerne. Dr. Schooley's mother passed away July 4, 1926. The early education of Dr. Schooley was obtained in the public and high schools of Kingston Township, and he gradu- ated from the latter institution in 1916. He then went to the Wyoming Seminary, gradu- ating in the class of 1919. He received his pre-medical training in Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Union County, in 1923, and in 1925 Jefferson College of Philadelphia, con- ferred upon him the degree of Doctor of Medicine. For a year he worked as interne in the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital, after which he located in Shavertown, where, as stated, he enjoys an excellent practice. He is a member of the county and State medical societies, as well as of the American Medical Association. Politically, he is a Republican, but has taken no very active part in local politics to date. He is a member of the Mt. Greenwood Kiwanis Club, and his religious affiliations are with the Shavertown Metho- dist Episcopal Church.
On October 23, 1926, Dr. Schooley married Dorothy Farr, a graduate nurse, daughter of Henry C. and Mary Farr, of Wilkes-Barre. Mrs. Schooley graduated from Wilkes-Barre High School in 1921; graduated from Wilkes- Barre General Hospital and night superin- tendent of nurses, 1924-26. Dr. and Mrs.
Schooley reside in a very charming house in Shavertown, where they are the center of a circle of devoted friends.
OLIVER ERNEST HAWKINS-Nearly a quarter of a century has elapsed since Oliver Ernest Hawkins entered into association with the Kingston Coal Company, of Kingston, as assistant secretary, a post he filled with such satisfaction that his promotion was a natural sequence and, as its full secretary, he has still further given evidence of his complete quali- fication in the exacting office. Endowed with a genial personality and possessed of a sincere regard for the benefits to be derived by all in honest cooperation of effort, he has conducted the affairs of his office in such manner as to win the high regard and esteem of all with whom he has been in any way associated, an estimable citizen and a man of unblemished reputation in every field wherein his activities have functioned. In civic mat- ters he has served his fellow-citizens as ably, while in his fraternal, religious and social work he has made a host of admiring and staunch friends.
He was born in Siegfried's Bridge, North- ampton, Pennsylvania, March 31, 1873, a son of Edmund Millard Hawkins, a locomotive engineer, born in 1847, deceased in 1880, and Mary (Oliver) Hawkins, born in Boonton, New Jersey, in 1850, deceased in 1895. His education was acquired in the public schools at Catasauqua, where he was graduated from high school and also studied at night for special instruction. His first work was with the Union Foundry & Machine Company at Catasauqua, Lehigh County, where he re- mained for two years, then going to the Lehigh Valley Coal Company and remaining with that organization for another eighteen months at Hazleton and at Centralia, Colum- bia County, for two years, having been made chief clerk. In 1904 he accepted an invita- tion to become assistant secretary of the Kingston Coal Company and in 1905 became its secretary, a position he still retains. In politics he is a Republican, in religion he is a Methodist, being a trustee of the Kingston Methodist Episcopal Church, while for four years he served as a member of the Kings- ton School Board. He belongs to the Frank- lin Club of Kingston and is fraternally affil- iated with Kingston Lodge, No. 395, Free and Accepted Masons, as well as with Caldwell Consistory, of Bloomsburg, Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite Masons; Irem Temple, Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows.
Oliver Ernest Hawkins married, in 1900, Ira Thomas, of Catasauqua, Pennsylvania, daughter of William R. and Martha Thomas. Their children are: 1. Richard Arthur, born December 11, 1902, a graduate of Lehigh University in the class of 1924 and a me- chanical engineer. 2. Helen Mary, born Janu- ary 7, 1905, a graduate of Sargent College, Cambridge, Massachusetts. 3. Oliver Ernest, Jr., born July 8, 1907.
GEORGE W. CARR, M. D .- With his repute and standing as a physician long established in city and county, Dr. George W. Carr is without a peer in the specialty in which he has had life long study and practice, that of eye, ear, nose and throat, his record as an ophthalmic surgeon in particular having dis- tinguished him throughout the State. Of a family of physicians of attainment, he has worked along his own lines of thought and practice, and has the regard and confidence of his associates and the general public.
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Dr. George W. Carr was born October 28, 1872, at St. Clair, a son of Dr. Andrew Philip and Jane (Dungan) Carr, both parents now deceased. Dr. Andrew Philip Carr, for many years one of the leading physicians of St. Clair, was surgeon for the Philadelphia and Reading Railroad; and his children were all practicing physicians: Dr. Charles Dungan Carr, and Dr. William H. Carr, both deceased; Dr. George W. Carr, the third son, after grad- uation from the Pottsville High School in 1890, was matriculated at Jefferson Medical College, where he was graduated in 1895, with the degree Doctor of Medicine. He then took post-graduate courses at the Polyclinic and at Wills Eye Hospital and St. Agnes Hospital, both in Philadelphia, and in 1897, he established himself in Wilkes-Barre, where he has followed his chosen profession for thirty-two years (1929). His place in the ophthalmic world is established, as well: besides his membership in the Luzerne County Medical Society, and the State Medical So- ciety and American Medical Association, he is a member of the American Academy of Ophthalmology and Otolaryngology, and he was for a considerable period the ophthal- mologist for Mercy Hospital at Wilkes-Barre. He is a member of the medical staff of the Wilkes-Barre General Hospital, and one of the ophthalmic surgeons for Lehigh Valley Railroad Company. In his political views, Dr. Carr is a Republican; his clubs are Westmore- land and Wyoming Valley Country and he is a communicant of St. Stephen's Protestant Episcopal Church.
Dr. George W. Carr married, August 8, 1902, Louise Clarkson Murphy, of Wilkes- Barre, daughter of Dr. Joseph A. and Frances (Parrish) Murphy. Dr. Murphy, an old- school doctor, was for many years one of the leading physicians of Wilkes-Barre.
ALBERT WASHIINGTON BROBST, one of the most active members of the Luzerne County bar, with offices at Nos. 31-33 Bennett Building, Wilkes-Barre, was born at Nurem- berg, Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, Sep- tember 20, 1888, son of Henry and Lucy (Singley) Brobst. Henry Brobst, for many years a merchant of Nuremberg, was the son of Joseph and Matilda (Croll) Brobst, mem- bers of old Pennsylvania families. Henry Brobst is a member of the Democratic party organization and of the German Lutheran Church, and he and his wife have become the parents of two children: 1. Albert Washing- ton, of whom further. 2. Mabel Pearl, wife of William Smith, of Schuylkill County.
Albert Washington Brobst attended the public schools, where he received his early education; and then entered the Keystone State Normal School at Kutztown, Pennsyl- vania, from which institution he graduated in the class of 1906. He then determined to follow the law for a livelihood, and accord- ingly matriculated in the Law Department of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, Michigan, and graduated in the class of 1913 with the degree of Bachelor of Laws. He was thereupon admitted to practice the profession in the State of Michigan, but seeing a better opportunity to the southeast, he went to Cleveland, and was admitted to the Ohio Bar. He practiced six months at Cleveland, then heard the call of his native State, and re- turned to Wilkes-Barre in 1914, was ad- mitted to the bar in Pennsylvania, and has been successfully practicing law there ever since. He combines a thorough knowledge of the law with a keen business judgment, and has shown such an active interest in civic affairs that he has won an enviable
place for himself among his neighbors and associates.
Mr. Brobst is a leading and valued member of the Luzerne County Bar Association. In politics he adheres to the faith of the Re- publican party. His religious affiliation is with the Lutheran Church, following in the footsteps of his honored parents. He is a memher of Wilkes-Barre Lodge, No. 655, of the Free and Accepted Masons; Caldwell Consistory at Bloomsburg; Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite Masons of the thirty-second degree; and lrem Temple of the Ancient Arabic Order Nobles of the Mystic Shrine of Wilkes-Barre; Prospect Lodge, No. 292, of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and the Order of Encampment of the Odd Fellows. He has built up a nice practice through his own efforts and is one of the most successful of the self-made men of the city.
Mr. Brobst married Clara May Werley, of Virginville, Berks County, Pennsylvania, and their union has been blessed with three chil- dren, Henry Thomas, Betty P., and Marjorie A.
BARNETT HERMAN COOPER, M. D .- A native of Russia, but a resident of this coun- try since his early childhood, Dr. Cooper has been established in the general practice of medicine at Nanticoke since 1912 and is con- sidered one of the most able and successful physicians and surgeons of that section of Pennsylvania. Ever since coming to Nanti- coke he has taken a deep interest in that town's development and welfare, while his patriotism found expression in service with the Medical Corps of the United States Army during the World War.
His father, Max Cooper, was at one time a resident of Odessa, Russia, from where he came with his family to this country in 1895, settling in New York City. He was a furrier by trade and was active in this line until his death in New York City in 1924, at the age of sixty-two years, since when his widow has continued to make her home in New York City. Mr. Cooper was greatly devoted to his family and succeeded in giving his four sons an excellent education. He was the father of four children: 1. Barnett Herman, of whom further. 2. Joseph F., a physician of Boston, Massachusetts. 3. Arthur S., manager for the F. & W. Grand Corporation at Reading, Pennsylvania, and a graduate chiropractor. 4. Lewis M. Cooper, an attorney-at-law in New York City.
Barnett Herman Cooper was born in Odessa, Southern Russia, May 18, 1888, oldest of the tour sons of Max and Tillie (Forman) Cooper. He came to this country with his parents in 1895 and for the next sixteen years lived in New York City. He was educated in the public schools of that city and at the College of the City of New York, from which he grad- uated in 1907. He took up the study of medicine at the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Baltimore, Maryland, graduating there with the degree of Doctor of Medicine in 1911. During his last year at this institu- tion he acted as assistant to Professor Fried- enwald, a prominent specialist in gastro- enterology. During 1910 he also spent six months as an interne at Bellevue Hospital and two months in the same capacity at the Lying-In Hospital, both of New York City. In 1911, after his graduation from medical school, he came to Nanticoke as an interne at the New Nanticoke Hospital, which he assisted in opening. At the end of one year he established himself as a general practi- tioner at Glenlyon, near Nanticoke, where he still continues to practice, though he also maintains an office at No. 36 East Broad
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