USA > Pennsylvania > Armstrong County > Armstrong County, Pennsylvania her people past and present, embracing a history of the county and a genealogical and biographical record of representative families, Volume II > Part 75
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Robert Karns and his wife were both born near Belfast, Ireland, he in 1814 and she in 1808, and they were married in 1834. In the same year they sailed for the United States, taking passage on the ship "Eagle," in which they spent three long months before landing on the American coast. They settled first near Erie, Pa., where they purchased a farm on which they resided for eight years, and then moved to Allegheny City, this State. Robert Karns bought property there and went into business as a building contractor, continuing thus until 1851, when he exchanged his city real estate for 170 acres of land in Perry township, Armstrong county, part of which his son, Robert Jay Karns, later owned and occupied. On this farm Robert Karns resided until the close of his life, his death occurring Dec. 17, 1893, at the age of seventy-nine years ; his wife passed away April 13, 1881, when WILLIAM KEPPLE, in his day one of the most respected citizens of Parks township, aged seventy-three years. They were lifelong members of the U. P. Church. They had Armstrong county, was born there Dec. 23,
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1848, and died Sept. 10, 1895, suddenly, when Marshall o,f Beaver Falls, Pa .; and Caroline, in his very prime.
The Kepple family has been settled in this country for several generations. Nicholas Kepple, the first of this line to come to Amer- ica, was born in Germany, whence he came to the United States early in the eighteenth century. He settled in Pennsylvania.
Daniel Kepple, son of Nicholas, was born in Pennsylvania in 1767, and in 1798 came to the homestead in Parks township, Armstrong county, which has ever since been in the fam- ily name. He was one of the pioneers in this section. His death occurred in 1824. His wife, Elizabeth (Yearyan), was born in 1770 and died in 1821. They were the parents of twelve children: Susan, Margaret, George, Mary, Elizabeth, Daniel, Francis, Christina, Esther (wife of John Gumbert, of Westmore- land county), Philip, Hannah (wife of George Spicher, of Westmoreland county) and David.
George Yearyan, father of Mrs. Elizabeth (Yearyan) Kepple, was a native of Germany, and came to this country as a "redemptioner," his services being sold to David Kaufman, a farmer, to defray the expenses of his pas- sage. He worked for Mr. Kaufman three years and nine months before his time was up, at the end of that period receiving a horse, saddle, bridle and two suits of clothes. His wife, whose maiden name was Williams, was a Welshwoman who came to this country at an early day with her parents and brothers and sisters.
David Kepple, son of Daniel, was born Feb. 6, 1818, on the old homestead in Parks town- ship where he passed all his life. He built the present residence upon the place in 1861. The land lies along the Kiskiminetas river, opposite Vandergrift. Mr. Kepple served as justice of the peace and school director, and at the time of his death was an elder in the Presbyterian Church. He was a highly es- teemed citizen of his neighborhood. By hard work and well-directed energy he made his farm one of the best in Parks township, and his success was recognized by all as the result of a life of industry and integrity. His long- est absence from the farm was a period of sixteen days when he made a journey out to Iowa to visit his sister Mary. In politics he was a Democrat.
wife of D. Newton Sober, formerly of West- moreland county, now residing in Gilpin township, this county. In 1858 Mr. Kepple married (second) Elizabeth Whitesell, who was born Aug. 12, 1817, daughter of Jonathan and Susan (Vensel) Whitesell, of Kiskimine- tas township, Armstrong county. No children were born to this marriage. Mr. Kepple died Aug. 20, 1888.
William Kepple, son of David and Mag- delene (Hawk) Kepple, began his education in the common schools near home and later attended Leechburg Academy. He became familiar with farm work from boyhood, and continued to follow it all his life, remaining on the old homestead, which eventually came into his possession. His intelligent and pro- gressive methods brought the place to a high state of cultivation. In addition to general farming, he gave considerable attention to the raising of horses and cattle, and dealt in stock to some extent. He increased the area of the property to some three hundred acres, and all in all was well deserving of the high stand- ing he enjoyed among the residents of his locality, where he was regarded as a substan- tial and honorable citizen. He served his township in the offices of auditor, school di- rector and justice of the peace. He was a leading member of the Presbyterian Church at Apollo, which he had served as trustee and elder, holding the latter office at the time of his death. He was a director of the Apollo- Savings Bank. Mr. Kepple had no illness to warn him of the approaching end. He died suddenly about two o'clock on the afternoon of Sept. 10, 1895, while out on his farm, shortly after eating his dinner.
On March 13, 1873, Mr. Kepple married Susan L. Keppel, who was born in 1848,. daughter of Jacob Keppel, of Westmoreland county, and continues to reside upon the farm. Seven children were born to them : David James, born April 6, 1874, married Florence Stitt, and died April 3. 1899, at the age of twenty-five years; Jacob Albert, born Aug. 18, 1876, is now engaged in farming the home- stead ; Philip Frank, born Oct. 16, 1878, is employed at the Vandergrift Sheet Mill; Charles Hawk, born Aug. 23. 1881, died Nov. 30. 1885; William McBryar, born Jan. 25, 1885. is at home: Paul Whitesell, born June 4, 1887, is now a student at State College ; Magdalene Virginia, born Nov. 18, 1889, is at home.
Mr. Kepple was married (first) in January, 1844, to Magdelene Hawk, who was born Nov. 14, 1816, in Westmoreland county, Pa .. daughter of Daniel and Mary Hawk, and died May 17, 1855, the mother of five children : Jacob Keppel, father of Mrs. William Kep- Daniel ; William ; Philip; Mary, wife of S. S. ple, lived and died in Westmoreland county,
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HISTORY OF ARMSTRONG COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
Pa. He married Elizabeth Klingensmith, and they became the parents of fourteen children : Margaret, wife of Andrew Sober; John; Jo- seph; Susan L., widow of William Keppel ; Albert; Samuel; Jonas; a daughter that died in infancy ; Jane, wife of George Kline ; Flora, wife of William F. Hill; Barbara, wife of
George Bortz; Elizabeth, wife of Augusta A. ried to Margaret Ann Swauger, of Indiana Weilman ; Minerva, wife of Dr. U. H. Deben- darfer; and Theodore.
WILLIAM UMBURN, of Bethel town- ship, Armstrong county, superintendent of the plant of the Philadelphia Gas Company, Sta- tion No. 3, at Banks Farm, is a native of Somerset county, Pa., where the Umburns settled many years ago. His grandfather, Henry L. Umburn, was a farmer in that coun- ty. He was of German descent, and his wife, Rebecca (Burkey), was born in Scotland, of Scotch ancestry; she came to the United States with her parents when a child, and attained the age of ninety-three years.
Lewis Umburn, son of Henry L. and Re- becca (Burkey) Umburn, was a native of Somerset county, but eventually settled in In- diana county, Pa., where he followed farm- ing. He married Susan Ripple, who was also born in Somerset county, and both lived to old age, Mr. Umburn dying when about sev- enty-eight years old, and his wife when about seventy-three. They were members of the Lutheran Church at Indiana, Pa. Their fam- ily consisted of nine children, six sons and three daughters, namely: Henry L. was killed while serving in the Civil war as a soldier from Pennsylvania; Josiah married Susan Crum, of Long Island, N. Y .; Hiram R. was twice married, first to Della Gibson, subsequently to Anna Earhart; Elizabeth married William Crayton; Lovina is unmar- ried ; William is mentioned below ; Urias died in childhood ; Elmer McClelland died in child- hood ; Emma J. married Charles McGee.
worked at Zollarsville, Washington Co., Pa., building a station there. In April, 1905, he was promoted to his present position, being superintendent of Station No. 3, at Banks Farm (post office Kelly Station), in Bethel township, in Armstrong county, Pennsylvania.
On June 21, 1878, Mr. Umburn was mar-
county, daughter of William and Ann (Lan- dis) Swauger, and four children have been born to them: William Lewis, born June 14, 1879, is an electrician, and is now located at Clarksburg, W. Va .; Frank, born April 16, 1881, is a carpenter, at Los Angeles, Cal .; Fred Alfred, born April 10, 1886, died June 12, 1908, at the age of twenty-two years; Margaret Hazel was married Sept. 15, 1909, to H. W. Hancock, a steel mill worker at Brackenridge, Pa., and has one child, Edwin Martin, born Oct. 18, 1910. Mrs. Umburn and her daughter are members of the Pres- byterian Church, Mr. Umburn is a Lutheran in religious connection. He joined the I. O. O. F. at Amos, W. Va., becoming a member of Lodge No. II0, and was made a member of the Knights of Pythias lodge at Gilmore, Mckean Co., Pa. In politics he is a Repub- lican.
JAMES HARVEY CRAIG, at present en- gaged as a real estate and lumber dealer at New Bethlehem, Pa., has been located there since 1875 and associated with the business interests of the borough throughout the period of his residence there. He was born at Sligo, Clarion Co., Pa., Oct. 20, 1841, son of Wash- ington and Nancy (Thompson) Craig and grandson of William Craig.
William Craig was born in County Antrim, Ireland, and coming to this country shortly after the close of the Revolutionary war set- tled first in Erie county, Pa., and later at Sligo, Clarion county. He died there, and is buried in the cemetery at Rimersburg. He married a Miss Thompson, and their children were: James, Alexander, David, Rufus and Washington.
William Umburn was born May 30, 1856, near Davidsville, Somerset county, where he attended a German school until eight years old. His parents then moving to Indiana Washington Craig, son of William, was born in Erie county, Pa., and lived at Sligo for many years, owning what is known as the "Big Lick farm." He cleared and improved part of that property, upon which the Sligo Furnaces were located. By trade he was a millwright, and after selling, his farm at Sligo, in the latter forties, he moved to Greenville, Clarion county, where he purchased a tract of county he obtained the rest of his schooling there. When a boy of fourteen he com- menced to learn the carpenter's trade, and by the time he had reached the age of seventeen was a journeyman. In 1875 he went into the oil country, and found employment running an engine, being thus engaged until 1904 in Butler, Washington and Mckean counties. He has since been in the employ of the Phila- timber and a saw and grist mill. He tore delphia Gas Company, for whom he first down the mill and rebuilt it, and operated it
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HISTORY OF ARMSTRONG COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
for many years; it is still carried on by his eldest son, William T. Craig. Mr. Craig died at the age of eighty-one years. He married Nancy Thompson, a native of Indiana county, Pa., and they reared a family of eleven children : William T .; John F .; Calvin A., colonel of the 105th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, who was fatally injured at Deep Bottom, Va., dying Aug. 16, 1864; Washing- ton, Jr .; Mary M., who married James Todd; James Harvey ; Albert C .; Reed M .; Nancy J .; Robert R., and Quincy A.
James Harvey Craig was reared in his na- tive county and obtained his education in the common schools. He learned flourmilling at Greenville, and was employed at that business until he enlisted for service in the Civil war, in August, 1861, as drummer. He was mus- tered in Oct. 24th, as a member of Company C, 105th P. V. I., which was attached to the Army of the Potomac, and participated in all the engagements of his regiment. He veteran- ized Dec. 20, 1863, in the same company and regiment, was promoted to principal musician Aug. 28, 1864, and was honorably discharged at "Camp on Field" in the rear of the breast- works, near Petersburg, Va., Sept. 24, 1864. Upon his return home again he engaged in the milling business, at Callensburg, Clarion county, owning a half interest with his father in the Callensburg Flouring Mills. Later he became sole proprietor of those mills which he operated until his removal to this section in 1875. He has since lived at New Bethle- hem. The year of his arrival there he and others of his family purchased land at South Bethlehem and erected a new gristmill, operat- ing the same until 1893. Mr. Craig then sold a half interest to C. C. Gumbert, and a few years later disposed of the remainder of his interest in the mill; it was he who built the race at South Bethlehem to run this establish- ment. Meantime Mr. Craig had also become interested in the lumber business, conducting Dr. Banes is a member of the Odd Fellows and the Knights of the Golden Eagle. He be- longs to the Armstrong County Medical So- ciety, and is interested in everything pertain- ing to his profession. the yard which he still owns, and for several years he was proprietor of a successful general store at New Bethlehem. In addition to his lumber trade he now has extensive real estate interests, owning valuable building sites in South Bethlehem. He has been recognized HERMAN A. KING, senior member of the firm of H. A. King & Son, which has establishments at Brick Church and at Coch- ran Mills, Armstrong county, is one of the leading country merchants of this section of Pennsylvania. He has been in business at Brick Church for the last forty years and throughout that time has maintained high as a wide-awake business man from the time he settled at New Bethlehem, and has always been foremost in promoting interests that promised to benefit the town and advance its standing and prosperity. He has been associ- ated with the Republican party but not active in politics, is a member of New Bethlehem standing among the most progressive business 58
Lodge No. 522, F. & A. M., and in religious connection is a Presbyterian.
Mr. Craig was married to Elizabeth Patton Parsons, daughter of David and Maria (Wil- kins) Parsons, of Limestone township; Clar- ion Co., Pa., and they have four children: Maggie T., wife of J. C. Miller ; Parepa, wife of Dr. R. L. Spencer; Lula Maud, wife of Robert A. Hoysett (they have one son, Rob- ert F.) ; and Amy M.
C. C. A. BANES, M. D., physician, of Ford City, Armstrong county, was born May 2, 1884, in Philadelphia, Pa., son of George H. and Laura (Aplin) Banes.
Dr. John T. Aplin, the maternal grandfather of Dr. Banes, was one of the noted physicians of Guernsey county, Ohio, where he was in active practice for more than forty years.
Dr. Banes received his early education in the public and high schools of Philadelphia, and the Normal Training School, subsequently entering Jefferson Medical College, Philadel- phia, from which institution he was graduated in 1909. He was then engaged as assistant on the medical staffs of the Roosevelt and Gen- eral hospitals for about a year and a half. On May 9, 1911, Dr. Banes settled at Ford City, where he has already built up a good practice. He served two terms of three years each in the Pennsylvania National Guard, being first sergeant at the time he received his honorable discharge.
On Aug. 28, 1910, Dr. Banes was married to Jane Ketchum, daughter of George Ketch- um, of Orange county, N. Y. Mrs. Banes is highly educated, well qualified to share her husband's practice, as she was graduated in the class of 1909 from the Woman's Medical College, Philadelphia, and had an eighteen months' experience in a hospital at Philadel- phia.
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HISTORY OF ARMSTRONG COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
men of his county ; he has been postmaster at finger; George; Gideon, who married Mary that point for twenty-three years.
Wolf; John; Selim; Esther; Susanna, who Mr. King was born April 7, 1852, in Bur- married Michael Schall and Ephraim Rupert ; rell township, this county, where his whole Lydia; Eve; Helen, who married George life has been spent. He belongs to a family Slease; and Flora, who married John Stivin- son. of German descent founded in this country by Mathias King, who was the first of the family to come to America. He crossed the Atlantic in the ship "Janet," arriving in 1751, and settled in Northampton county, Pa., at what is now Nazareth. He obtained a land patent from the Penns, for land in Northamp- ton county. He served during the Revolution as corporal in the American army. He mar- ried a Miss Hartzell or Hertzell, and had among other children George Adam King. They all came to Westmoreland county and settled near Greensburg, in what was called Harrold's German settlement in Hemphill township.
George Adam King, son of Mathias, born Feb. II, 1765, at Nazareth (or Hecktown), in Northampton county, was the great-grand- father of Herman A. King. About 1791 he came west of the Alleghenies, locating first in Westmoreland county, and thence prior to 1800 coming to 'Armstrong county, where he was a pioneer. His first marriage was to Maria Catherine George, who was born Oct. 25, 1768 (certificate of baptism shows John Nicholas and his wife, Maria Catherina, as sponsors), daughter of Conrad and Susanna George, and they had children as follows : Abraham; Isaac; Thomas; John Jacob; John, born March 27, 1790; Christiana, born in 1792, who died Aug. 21, 1794; Henry; Solomon, born in 1798, and Susanna.
John King, son of George Adam and Maria Catherine (George) King, was born March 27, 1790, at Nazareth, Northampton Co., Pa. (cer- tificate of his birth is in the possession of his grandson, Judge J. W. King, of Kittanning), being a young child when the family came to western Pennsylvania. He was a highly in- telligent man, and had more than the average education for his times; some of his books are now owned by his grandson, James W. King, of Kittanning. He learned the cooper's trade, and followed farming. He married Susanna Heilman, who was born Aug. 8, 1788, daughter of Peter and Elizabeth (Harter) Heilman, and baptized July 20, 1789, sponsors Theodore Wagner and his wife Christiana (certified by Rev. Michael J. Steck, Lutheran minister at Harrold's Church, near Greens- burg). Mr. King died in 1848. Eleven chil- dren were born to him and his wife Susanna, namely: Mary, who married John Heffel-
John King, son of John King, was born May 5, 1816, in Kittanning township, Armstrong county, and passed all his life in that county. He engaged in farming and stock raising, raising quite a number of horses. In religion he was a Lutheran, being a member and deacon of St. Michael's Evangelical Lutheran Church (at Brick Church). In politics he was a Re- publican. He married Christina Wolf, who was born in Bethel township, Armstrong county, June 28, 1820, daughter of George and Susanna (Williams) Wolf, farming people, and they had a family of eleven children, four of whom are living: Herman A. is mentioned below; Samuel A., a farmer, married Louisa Woodward, daughter of Samuel, and has children, Eugene and Olive; Jesse H., M. D., born Nov. 30, 1861, at Cochran Mills, is mar- ried to Olive Crawshaw, and lives at Worth- ington, Armstrong county; Christina, widow of O. J. Woodward, had two children, Harry B., who died aged eighteen years, and Anna C., now Mrs. Brooks, of Pittsburgh. The mother died April 21, 1893. She was also a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church at Brick Church. The father died Sept. 5, 1896.
Herman A. King grew to manhood in Bur- rell township, and attended the common schools and the Freeport (Pa.) Academy. He began his mercantile career when a young man of twenty, starting in business on his own ac- count at Brick Church in 1872. He has car- ried on his general store there without inter- ruption since, and has also established another general store at Cochran Mills, in the same township, where he has, besides, a fine flour- ing mill. His son, Owen J., is now in partner- ship with him, under the firm name of H. A. King & Son, and they do an extensive busi- ness, their patrons at both places coming from a wide radius. There are few general mer- chants in the county who have an equally large custom, and Mr. King has built up this busi- ness by the most honorable methods and up- right treatment of his customers, who appre- ciate the advantages his well stocked store of- fers and the excellent service accorded to all. His obliging disposition and sincere efforts to please have met with substantial reward. On Aug. 4, 1890, he was appointed postmaster at Brick Church, and has continued to fill that office down to the present time.
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HISTORY OF ARMSTRONG COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
Anna C. Woodward, who was born July 5, 1856, in Burrell township, Armstrong county, daughter of Samuel and Leah (Shall) Wood- ward, and granddaughter of Benjamin and Anna Woodward, of Cumberland county, Pa. They have had three children: Owen J., now in partnership with his father, and located at Cochran Mills, married Louisa Cook and has had three children, one son and two daughters, James A., Herma A., and Marian Louise, the last named dying April 23, 1914; Pearl is the wife of Dr. Charles H. Wilson, of Pittsburgh, and has two children, Donald A. and Loyal K .; Edna Mabel, born Dec. 1, 1891, was graduated from the music department of Westminster College, New Wilmington, Pa., in June, 1912, and completed post-graduate work in the same college in June, 1913, and is now in Pittsburgh, where she sings con- tralto in the Crafton M. E. Church.
In religious matters Mr. King and his fam- ily are identified with the Lutheran denomina- tion, belonging to St. Michael's, at Brick Church, in which he has been very active, hav- ing filled all the church offices. Politically he is a Republican, and he was overseer of the poor one term. He belongs to the Royal Ar- canum lodge at Worthington.
Through his grandmother, Susanna (Heil- man) King, Mr. King is descended from an old family of German origin, the name dating from 1305, when a German Palatine, "Veit the Heilman," was knighted by the Emperor Al- bright and given a nobility diploma, his de- cendants calling themselves Heilman. The name is found in the German Genealogical Register from that time down to the sixteenth century. The name is variously spelled, Heil- man, Heylman, Hileman and Hyleman in old records.
Christian Heilman came to this country in 1752 and settled in Northampton county, Pa. His wife died during the voyage across the At- lantic. He married again in Northampton county ; his son Peter had a brother or half- brother named Michael, who remained in Northampton county when Peter moved to Armstrong county.
Peter Heilman, son of Christian, the emi- grant, is said to have been born in 1750 in Alsace-Lorraine, and to have been about two years old when he came to America with his father. He was given only three weeks' schooling. He was married (in Northampton county supposedly) to Elizabeth Harter, and in 1795-96 they came to what is now Kittan- ning township, Armstrong county, and settled
On Aug. 27, 1874, Mr. King was married to on Garrett's run. Here he became a promi- nent citizen. He was a zealous Lutheran, and his wife also belonged to that church. She died before him, passing away (according to the Kittanning Gazette) "Jan. 21, 1831. in the seventy-ninth year of her age." His death occurred Jan. 27, 1833, at the age of eighty-two years. They are buried in the old Heilman cemetery in Kittanning township.
Twelve children were born to Peter and Elizabeth (Harter) Heilman: (1) Gertrude married Jacob Piser or Poiser ( name also writ- ten Pieser, Beaser and Peaser). They had sons Adam (married) and Jacob (who mar- ried a Miss Meals). Jacob Piser's grandson, Jacob, Jr., lived near Slippery Rock, Pa. (2) Christina married Joseph Piser, brother of Jacob. Their daughter married John Ried or Reed and had William and Margaret (Mrs. Hershey). (3) Mary married Frederick Tarr (ancestor of Dr. Tarr, of Kittanning) and had children, Catherine (Mrs. William Orr), Re- becca (Mrs. William Gibson), William (mar- ried a Richison or Richardson), Sarah (mar- ried James Larkin and George Rimby), Eliza- beth (Mrs. Michael Davis), Susy (Mrs. George Rummel), Caspar, Joseph (married Mary Croyl), Lobin (married a Miss Mainer) and George. The father, Mr. Tarr, died Aug. 17, 1825. (4) Susanna married John King (grandfather of the present Judge James W. King), and had eleven children. (5) John married Elizabeth Yount, and their children were John (married Eliza Briny), David (married Jane Elliot), William (married Miss Rufner), Sarah (married by Rev. G. A. Reich- ert May 7, 1829, to Israel Schall), Rebecca (married by Rev. Mr. Reichert June 20, 1832, to Daniel Schall), Lydia (married George .Cook). Hannah (married John Blose) and Mary Ann (married John Long). (6) Daniel married Lydia Yount (sister of John's wife) and had Solomon (married Elizabeth Schreck- engost ), Daniel (married Susanna Hankey), George (married), Harry (married Margaret Orr), Isaac (married Hannah Briny), Samuel (married Martha Rupert), Simon (married Susan Smith). Eve (married George Scheaf- fer) and Lydia (Mrs. Iman). There were also two who died young, Susie and Eliz- abeth. (7) Solomon married Hannah Yount (Youndt, or Yunt), and their children were Jacob (married Catherine Iseman), Joseph (married Mary Iseman), William (married Margaret Iseman), Alexander (married Elizabeth Iseman). Adam (mar- ried a Miss Goldstrom), Rachel (married by Rev. G. A. Reichert Jan. 27, 1831, to
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