Biographical sketches of leading citizens of Lawrence County, Pennsylvania, Part 65

Author: Biographical Publishing Company. 1n
Publication date: 1897
Publisher: Buffalo, N.Y., Biographical publishing company
Number of Pages: 682


USA > Pennsylvania > Lawrence County > Biographical sketches of leading citizens of Lawrence County, Pennsylvania > Part 65


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it; it was a fine place even then, when scarcely any improvements to speak of had been made.


Level, fertile and well-watered, Mr. Hawley saw the grand possibilities in store for the per- son who should intelligently put the resources of the farm to the proper use. He planted ap- ple seeds brought from England, and from these sprung the orchards which are so much in evi- dence on the estate to-day. The place is now owned by his son John, the father of Mrs. Paden. Matthew Hawley scarcely lived to witness the re- sults of his work, for he died, four years after settling on his new farm, at the age of fifty-six. His wife lived until her sixty-fifth year. The children were named: Matthias, who died in youth; Thomas; John; James; Joseph; William, who was taken home in childhood; George; Elizabeth; Annie, who died at the age of sixteen; and Maria. Of these, John, Mrs. Paden's father, remained with his mother after his father's de- mise, and assisted in rearing the large family. He bought out the other heirs to the property later on, and in 1871 built a new brick house, fit- ting it up throughout with hot and cold water, together with other modern fixtures. This was the first house in the township so equipped. When John Hawley first began farming for himself, he paid a great deal of attention to sheep- raising, owning some of the finest flocks ever seen in Lawrence County. Later he devoted his farm to general stock-raising and grain. He built spacious barns as they were needed. He also became the owner of another farm of 250 acres, on which he has built a house and barns. He was married to Angelina Brown, daughter of Willliam Brown, and to this couple nine chil- dren have been born: William, a farmer of Pu-


1


659


BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES, LAWRENCE COUNTY.


laski township; Lizzie A. (Paden), the subject of this article; Lottie, who married William Har- land; George, who is farming on one of the homestead farms; Brown, a merchant; Thomas, who is employed in the postoffice; Mary, who died at the age of sixteen; Reece, who is living at home; and Jane, also at home. John Haw- ley is one of the leading and most influential members of the Democratic party in Mahoning township. He has held several offices, among them those of overseer of the poor, school direc- tor and supervisor. He is very liberal in relig- ious matters, and is in every sense a broad- minded and well-informed citizen.


Mrs. Paden returned to Hillsville after the de- cease of her husband, and in the fall of 1886 was appointed postmistress at that point. With the energy and enterprise so characteristic of her family, she opened in connection with the office a store, beginning in rather a small way, but in- creasing her stock and broadening her field of operations as her efforts met the appreciation and approval of her towns-people. It soon became necessary to enlarge her quarters, so the present large store was built, equipped and stocked with the thousand and one things that go to make up the re- sources of a general store. In this building, the second floor is used for living purposes. The tenement house which adjoins the store was built by and is the property of our subject.


Mrs. Paden has fully established the fact that she is a woman of extraordinary resources. Few people, being left alone as she was with no special training for business, would have known what to do, nor could they have turned so quick- ly from domestic cares and duties to the task of .


bread-winning and the busy whirl of a mercan- tile life. The business has grown to large pro- portions, and all through the efforts of the pro- prietor to deal fairly and alike with all. Her per- severance and good business sense are admired in the community, in which her success has been steady and deserved.


BROOKS BROADBENT* has for some years past been recognized and regarded as one of the solid men of New Wilmington, Lawrence Co., Pa. Whatever success has fallen to his lot has come as the direct result of thrift and pains- taking care of all the opportunities which have presented themselves. Mr. Broadbent is of a family whose traits have ever led them in the best walks of life. The blood that flow's in his veins is of the same kind that has made the sons and grandsons of fair Britannia attain to promi- nence and utility at whatsoever point on this green earth the spirit of advancement has caused them to locate. Mr. Broadbent is a son of Henry Broadbent, and grandson of a gentleman of the same name.


Henry Broadbent, father of our subject, was born, educated and trained in England. His father, Henry Broadbent, Sr., had grown up in the dry goods business, so the young man knew quite a little of mercantile ways and methods, when, at the age of fifteen, he came to America. His first location was in Mercer Co., Pa., where after working a few years he purchased a farm of fifty acres. He conducted this place for two years, and then sold it and moved to Fayette- ville, Wilmington township, where he went into


.


660


BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES, LAWRENCE COUNTY.


the grocery business as a successor to his Mr. Broadbent was united for life in the bonds brother. Here he remained, leading a busy life, of matrimony with Lizzie Weed of Mercer Co., Pa., and since their marriage three children have become inmates of the household, and shar- ers of the parental love; they are named Nellie, Henry, and James R. The family have been brought up in the Presbyterian Church, of which the parents are regular attendants.


until his early death at the age of forty-nine. He left at his decease his faithful helpmeet, who was a Miss Liddie Waterhouse, and a family of five children, by name: George W .; William J .; Charles E .; Brooks, the subject of our sketch; and Thomas H. Though Mr. Broadbent de- parted this life a comparatively young man, he was remembered well by all of his children as a true and loving father, who had set them an ex- ample of the right way of living. His sterling qualities were spoken of with many words of commendation, and his blessed memory is held in reverence by his descendants, and others who came within the inner circle of his love and in- fluence.


Brooks Broadbent received his educational training in the common schools of what was then a part of Mercer County, but is now in- cluded in Lawrence County. His boyhood days were busy ones, for he early learned the value of time and the sure and certain results of industry. At the demise of his father he partly inherited the place which he now owns, a farm compris- ing some 140 acres of choice land. When the father left this life and busy world behind him he had just begun a line of improvements which our subject has been diligent in carrying out. The house has been thoroughly remodeled and spacious barns, adapted for every conceivable need in that direction, have been erected. Every part of the estate, that would admit of a better condition, he put in that shape, so that it is now hard to find a better-kept piece of farming prop- erty, or one which shows more prominently painstaking care than does this one.


Mr. Broadbent of to-day is a hard-working citizen, one whose entire time is taken up with the routine work of life. He has in his life ac- complished enough to justify him in retiring and taking the affairs of life easier; but so keen is his interest in the busy, work-a-day world, that he feels like sticking to his post until the grim reaper shall call him home. Everyone who knows Mr. Broadbent appreciates and respects this manner of life, and his common-sense way of looking at things. Cool and conservative in judgment, his ideas and opinions have weight among his colleagues. He is a man who knows much of life and human nature. He is a good judge of men, and rarely makes a mistake in his estimate of them. As a farmer, a citizen, and a true American, he stands among those who make up the best class of people of this, the fair -. est portion of the Keystone State.


EDWARD J. MURPHY .* This gentleman, a resident of Mahoningtown, has been perform- ing the duties of engineer for the P., F. W. & C. R. R. for over a quarter of a century, and it is very probable that there is no engineer of long or short service in Lawrence County who is so well known and as favorably known as he is.


661


BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES, LAWRENCE COUNTY.


The very fact of his being continued in the ser- vice of one company for such a length of time shows that his work must have been satisfactory at all times and up to all the requirements of the road, and it also illustrates his staying qualities, for as long as no fault was found with him and he was not shabbily treated he was content to remain in the employ of the same road on which he commenced railroading thirty-two years ago. His is a splendid record, and he may well feel a little pride that he is held in such high regard by his superiors in the service. His friends are practically without number, for go where you will, you will find somebody who has a good word for him, or a yarn to tell of the days when they were together in the service of the P., F. W. & C. R. R.


Mr. Murphy was born in Allegheny City Sept. 27, 1846, and was a son of Thomas and Nellie (Daady) Murphy, both natives of Ireland, where they grew up and married. Thomas Mur- phy was a farmer in the old country; he died in Allegheny City, when his son, the subject of this sketch, was only four or five years of age.


Edward J. was reared in the Second Ward of Allegheny City, and attended the public schools until he was fourteen years of age, making his home in the meantime with his uncle, his moth- er's brother. His first work was in the estab- lishment of a tobacconist, a Mr. McGinnis. He commenced his railroading in September, 1865, for the P., F. W. & C. R. R., working in the car yards for a year. Then for five years he served as fireman; about this time, while oiling an en- gine, it was started through the carelessness of the engineer, and inflicted injuries so serious on Mr. Murphy that for two years he was unable to


perform any of his duties. When he was again able to work he was promoted to the post of en- gineer, beginning work in that capacity in June, 1870, at which time he came to New Castle, and ever since then has been in charge of an engine for the P., F. W. & C. R. R. From 1874 to 1883 he lived in Youngstown, from 1883 to 1886 in New Castle, and since that date in Mahoning- town.


On Jan. 27, 1874, he was married in New Cas- tle to Fannie Robinson, daughter of Andrew G. and Frances. (Edwards) Robinson. Andrew G. Robinson was born in the region of Hollidays- burg, Pa., about 1812, one of a family of sixteen boys and one girl, and followed charcoal burn- ing until bituminous coal took the place of char- coal in the iron furnaces, when he learned the trade of an iron-worker, and was employed in the iron mills the remaining years of his life. He died in New Castle at the age of seventy-three years. His wife was born in Wales in 1813, and with her two brothers, they being left orphans at an early age, came to the United States and set- . tled in Hollidaysburg. Of the family of eleven children born to her, seven boys and four girls, in the aggregate, seven survive. Following is the record: Sarah Jane, who married Howard Huttenbaugh, an operative in the rolling mills of New Castle; David, who was killed in the late war; Thomas, deceased; Zechariah, a mill oper- ative of New Castle; Joseph, the chief of police of New Castle; Andrew, a puddler in the iron works of New Castle; Edward, deceased; Lizzie, deceased; Margaret, the wife of Charles Owery, a mill operative of New Castle; James W., whose sketch appears elsewhere in this volume; and Fannie, the wife of our subject. Two children


662


BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES, LAWRENCE COUNTY.


have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Murphy; An- drew Gerry and Nellie Frances. The family are attendants of the M. E. Church. Mr. Murphy is a Republican in his politics. He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, and has taken seventeen degrees of the ritual, and belongs to the follow- ing organizations: Western Star Lodge No. 21; Mahoning Chapter No. 93; Mahoning Council of Youngstown, Ohio, No. 45; Lawrence Com- mandery of New Castle, No. 62; and Zem Zem Temple of Erie, Pa.


PROF. JAMES A. WATSON,* a respected and honored school-teacher of Lawrence County, who is most highly esteemed for his exceptional success in matters educational, and who for six years was superintendent of schools of the coun- ty, is living on his farm in Wilmington township, near Fayetteville, but has not given up alto- gether his vocation as an educator for the calling of a farmer. He comes from a good, respectable family of agriculturists, who have given material assistance in the developing of Lawrence County.


The great-grandfather of our subject, John Watson, was born east of the mountains and re- moved to Fayetteville in 1811, where he engaged in agricultural pursuits, and made his home on the Whereham farm of 150 acres. This prop- erty, when he took possession of it, could hardly be called a farm, for it was as yet almost unim- proved and a dense forest covered the greater part of it; under the supervision of our subject's worthy ancestor, the trees were felled and the


soil gradually and slowly made ready for the growth of crops. He then bought the land, which is now owned and farmed by Prof. Wat- son. It was here that death came to him sud- denly and without warning in 1826, when he was aged sixty-five years; he happened to be driving a yoke of oxen attached to a wagon, and in some manner was thrown from the vehicle upon a rock in the roadway, and his neck broken. His wife, who was a Miss Wilson of Juniata Co., Pa., bore him three children -- Dr. William of Bedford Springs, Hugh, a school- teacher, and James, the grandfather of our sub- ject.


The grandfather, James Watson, spent most of his life near Fayetteville, and his occupation for a number of years was the operation of a distillery, which he constructed himself. Upon his father's decease, he bought the interests of the other heirs to the homestead and made the old place his home until death, supporting him- self and providing for the wants of his family by cultivating the farm that his father had tilled before him. In 1835 he was elected to the posi- tion of sheriff of Lawrence County, in which po- sition he acquitted himself with credit, making himself generally feared by the evil-doers. Late in life he married Catherine Douglass, and the members of their family were: John, deceased; William J., the father of our subject; Robert; James; and Catherine.


Prof. James Watson, in whom the interest of this sketch centers, is a graduate of Westminster College, and also of the Edinboro State Normal School and Grove City College, where he pur- sued his studies until he had completed his edu- cation and fitted himself for his chosen profes-


663


BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES, LAWRENCE COUNTY.


sion of teaching. In 1890 his work was given the prominence that was the fruit of untiring toil and endeavor to fulfill his duties as an edu- cator, and he was elected superintendent of the county schools, holding this position for six years. He exhibited marked qualifications for the office, and added during his term of office much to the efficiency of the schools throughout the county. He is popular not only among his fellow-educators and teachers but also among the general public, which is ever ready to appre- ciate honest endeavor and superior work.


In 1896 Prof. Watson bought one hundred acres of land near Fayetteville, where he has es- tablished his home, but does not anticipate en- tering largely into agricultural pursuits. His wife Elizabeth, daughter of John Graham, left him at her death three daughters, named: Anna, the wife of G. E. Daniels; Nellie, who married M. D. McCarthy; and Margaret, the wife of C. W. Wilson Some time had elapsed after Mrs.


Watson's demise when the Professor chose an estimable lady, Mary Bingham, daughter of James Bingham, to preside over his household and share his fortunes. Prof. Watson is a sturdy Republican, politically, and is enabled by his po- sition to work intelligently for the party. He is a man of great force of character, decided in his opinions, and when he is convinced that he is right, he expresses his views fearlessly. He has been a great reader and deep thinker, and his large experience, both in the field of the educa- tor and in general business relations, have tended to great self-reliance and stamina, which are the most admirable qualities in a man's possession. He and his family are faithful members of the church of their choice, the Presbyterian. Hav- ing made for himself a place in the difficult life -. work he has undertaken, Prof. Watson com- mands the respect of the entire community and is regarded as an authority on matters educa- tional.


z


INDEX.


BIOGRAPHICAL.


Aiken, Hon. David W. A PAGE


3


Broadbent, Brooks. 659


Courtney, Philip T. 631


Aiken, Robert C. 240


Aiken, Prof. William N. 472


Brown, James P. 366


Cover, Samuel. 374


Alborn, Charles F


630


Brown, John B. 37


Cox, Thomas. 505


Alborn, Henry C .. 81


Brown, John D. 652


Cox, William H. 55


Alexander, Rev. Moses C. 451


Brown, William. 587


Browne, Robert Audley, D. D. 17


Cunningham, David L. 186


Allen, Jacob S. 298


Buchanan, Charles F 176


Cunningham, Dr. Dewees 348


Anderson, Alexander. 349


Buchanan, Milton I. 365


Cunningham, H. Ira. 170


Curry, William


338


B


C


Bailey, Rev. John A. 483


Banks, Lewis. 554


Cain, John W 656


Barnes, David F. 188


Cain, Dr. Leander F. 641


Barnes, Samuel A. 78


Campbell, James. III


Dean, Isaac P. 234


Dice, Rev. John S. 265


Dicks, Robert . 479


Bay, William 528


Chambers, William C. I2I


Chambers, William H. 226


Christie, David W 544


Clark, Charles S. 570


Bitner, Daniel.


122


Clark, General William A 510


Douglas, David Elliott. 333


Douglas, John Harvey. 209


Douthitt, William 618


Blair, Dr. John A.


447


Cochran, Lewis C. 39


Cochran, Mrs. Nancy. 183


Cole, Andrew C. 395


Colnot, Jacob. 74


Blim, Mrs. Mary M.


392


Connor, James. 130


Cook, James J 423


Cooper, David P. 201


Cooper, Dr. Edwin S. 565


Eger, Rev. Francis Joseph 541


Elder, John 32


Elliott, William D. 593


Boyd, Joseph H .. 307


Cornelius, Jesse S 467


Braby, William H. 546 Cosgrove, William 141


D


Dach, Ludwig. 650


Daly, Martin R. 345


Davidson, James Ramsey 267


Davis, William 142


Barnes, William. 576


Campbell, Joseph J. V. 302


Barnett, David.


535


Caswell, Elisha Elbridge. 403


Dixon, Joseph C


134


Bear, Mrs. Elizabeth J.


553


Bell, John .. 538


Douds, William F.


270


Blackstone, Frank A. 447


Blackwood, Dr. Thomas J.


625


Blanchard, William 627


Blatt, Henry S. 255


Blevins, John. 407


Boak, Dr. Robert G. 562


Boggs, Jacob R. 247


Book, George. 291


Booksing, Henry. 169


Cooper, Dr. Jesse R. 624


Boyd, George Johnson, M. D. 191


Cooper, Dr. Joseph L. 27


Emery, Samuel P.


Evans, William A. 38


411


Binning, William S. 299


Clifton, Warren R. 324


Cline, Conrad .. 28.4


Drescher, Major Henry 639


Duffy, Charles. 629


Dugan, Thomas 1 80


E


Edwards, Hon. Henry. 160


PAGE


PAGE


Brown, Henry V 220


Cover, Mrs. Elzedda. 612


Crawford, Walter S. 408


Allen, Thomas. 203


Arrow, George W. 537


Buchanan, William H. 646


Cage, Robert E. 405


Doran, Mrs. Jane


Dougherty, James R. 105


666


INDEX.


PAGE


Johnson, George W. 503


Jones, George J. 102


Jordan, Alexander. 640


Jordan, John


509


Jordan, Kinsey


653


K


Keith, Benjamin. 208


Kelley, John J. 215


Kelly, Frank L.


428


Kemp, John P.


604


Kennedy, Samuel M.


616


Kenny, Wildress A. 326


King, Seth R.


120


Kissick, Joseph .


.56


Knobloch, Michael


619


Knox, James William


387


Knox, John W.


632


Kyle, Henry


373


L


Lawrence, James M. 104


Leslie, Howard D. 605


Leslie, William H.


167


Lindsey, Thomas S.


545


Linville, Dr. Montgomery


77


Locke, William H.


228


Long, James M.


223


Long, Joseph Dick 2.43


Long, Scott D. 87


Lostetter, Prof. James A. 519


Lowry, William S.


378


Lutton, Dr. Joseph R.


377


M


Maitland, Perry


305


Major, Frank P. 432


Marquis, Milton S.


I25


Marshall, David C.


273


Marshall, John 413


Marshall, William Hillis 439


Martin, Judge J. Norman.


225


Martin, James R.


420


Martin, Thomas 332


Martin, William C. 453


Matheny, Elijah Gad


285


Matthews, Charles


416


Mayne, James M. 22


McAnlis, John Y .. 362


McCleary, Joseph W. 207


McCleary, Thomas J. 196


McClure, Robert C. .


611


McClusky, William D.


583


Jefferies, Benjamin Y.


522


McComb, Rev. John


339


PAGE


McComb, Col. Robert B. 557


McConaghy, Alexander 571


McConnell, Malcolm 217


McCracken, Hon. George W. 521


McCready, Hugh J.


46 1


McCreary, Ernest M.


606


McCreary, Samuel 572


McCreary, Samuel Clark 549


McCune, William


527


McFarland, Mrs. Elizabeth 2II


McGinnis, John M.


152.


McGraw, John 595


McKinley, George H.


313


McKinley, Willis J. 391


McKnight, Robert:


575


McMillin, Herman E., M. D. 28I


McMillin, James A.


591


Mealy, Dr. George N.


536


Means, Hugh L.


480


Mehard, George H., M. D. 446


Menice, James J.


200


Merriman, Hiram V. 379


Micheltree, Esq. William W. I27


Miller, Frederick Carpenter


136


Miller, Horace G. 381


Miller, James R. 389


Miller, John C.


77


Miller, John J. 372


Miller, Dr. Walter E.


294


Moncreif, William


239


Moore, Edwin D. 649


Moore, Harry M. 486


Moorhead, Samuel


175


Morehead, Thomas F.


29


Morris, David S.


235


Mumbaugh, Jacob 504


Murphy, Edward J.


660


Myland, J. Leslie.


644


N


Neal, Benjamin


350


Newell, Alexander. 310


Newell, Archibald D. 71


Newell, John D. F.


71


News, The New Castle.


260


Nickum, John W.


244


Norris, David S. 65


Norris, James C. 88


Nye, Dan.


293


Nye, George B.


321


Nye, Nathaniel


158


O


Offutt, John C.


. .....


440


Falls, Wallace H. 90


Ferver, Joseph C. 517


Fisher, J. Johnston. 308


Foltz, Samuel.


274


French, Mrs. Rebecca 514


Fulkerson, David P. I3


Fulkerson, John C. 23


Fulkerson, Hon. Robert J. 53


Fulmer, Thomas J.


645


G


Gageby, George W. 427


Gallagher, Rev. Joseph Francis. 579


Gardner, James A. 79


Gearing, William


518


Gilmore, William T.


97


Gott, Ralph. 526


Green, Alexander M 634


Greer, Rev. Thomas.


525


Griffith, Israel N. 337


Grove, Capt. Abraham C.


414


H


Hammond, Harvey C. . 258


Hardaker, Joseph Burnley. II7


Hartman, George W. 578


Hartsell, McClure ..


34 1


Hartsuff, Hiram K.


502


Haun, Dr. James Reynolds. 493


Hazen, Henry W. 567


Hazen, John B. 455


Henry, T. Logan 277


Hess, Freeman R.


477


Hess, William C 632


Hill, Frank S.


89


Hinkson, John. 543


Iloffmaster, Solomon 581


Hoover, James R. 48


Hough, Alexander


233


Houk, Isaac R


463


Howard, Harry.


I49


Hunt, George ..


192


1


Ingham, Gershum B. 50I


Irvin, John B.


435


J


Jackson, Colonel. 9


Jackson, W. Edwin, D. D. S. IOI


Jameson, David 436


F PAGE


Fallis, James N. 40


667


INDEX.


P PAGE


Paden, Mrs. Lizzie Ann ... 657


Parker, John .. 406


Parshall, William.


444


Parsons, Prof. William.


369


Pattison, Robert D.


485


Pattison, William S.


318


Patterson, John D.


150


Patton, James Y.


569


Peters, Rev. Frank Randolph. 66


Phillip, Mrs. Florence L 560


Phillip, Elder John T


43


Phillips, James R.


I72


Pitts, John F 648


Pitzer, Bazzelleel. 289


Pitzer, Cress


151


Titzer, Joseph D.


657


Pleas, Charles.


342


Pollock, James K., M. D. 61


Poister, Frederick E.


498


Porter, Dr. Cassius M


145


Potter, John R.


248


Preston, John H.


636


Pryor, George G.


475


R


Raney, James A. 157


Raney, James C. 227


Redmond, Dr. Robert E 615


Reed, Archie


282


Reed, Dr. Charles A.


621


Reed, Luther M. 2.49


Reed, William E. 62


Reno, Gilbert Lafayette. 144


Reno, Henry B.


448


Repman, Levi


361


Reynolds, Charles L. 582


Reynolds, Peter S.


199


Reynolds, William H. 421


Rhodes, Abraham I33


Rhodes, Irwin.


236


Rhodes, J. Wesley.


589


Rhodes, Peter S.


45


Rigby, Seth


610


Riley, John. 330


Todd, Hon. Robert A 654 Robinson, James W 46


Robinson, Robert Paisley. 404


Robison, John C.


95


Rodenbaugh, William B.


301


Truesdale, Frank N


82


Turner, Samuel P.


178


Turner, Winfield S.


297


V PAGE


Van Gorder, Alvah S


487


Van Gorder, Israel.


12


W


Waddington, J. Seth. 276


Waddington, John W. 558


Waddington, William W. 43I


Wallace, John.


325


Wallace, Robert I12


Wallace, Judge William D. 35


Walter, Joseph T II8


Ward, James 533


Watson, Hiram I22


Watson, Prof. James A. 662


Watson, Philip J. 468


Weinschenk, George G. 106


Weinschenk, William Ilenry 315


Weir, Andrew F. 257


Weitz, Frank. 154


Welch, James L. 371


Welsh, John L.


Westminster College. 534


Wheildon. Albert B. 252


White, Chester L. 162


White, Joseph S. 241


White, Dr. Maria. 93


Whippo, James. 353


Wick, Revillian T. 28


Wick, Samuel L. 454


Wilder, Shubael T 601


Wilkin, John H. 331


Wilson, George Harvey. 398


Wilson, Robert F. 323


Winter, Rev. Thomas W. 550


Winter, William F 603


Winters, John. 103


Wood, James S. 363


Wood, Wick W. 231


Woods, William C.


476


Wright, Joseph


620


Y


Young, Phillip A.


322


Young, Sylvester M.


399


Z


Rogers, Charles C.


380


Rogers, John N.


462


Ruby, John N.


566


Russell, Robert. 525


S


Sample, Luther H., Esq. 128


Samuel. David. 612


Sankey, Charles H. 232


Sankey, Clinton E. 194


Sankey, Ezekiel R.


85


Scanlon, Patrick J.


109


Schweikert, Joseph.


608


Scott, A. Talcott. 73


Shannon, William A., M. D. 185


Sheaffer, Hon. John. 637


Shearer, John C. 530


Shira, Hiram C.


647


Simison, Parker


495


Slemmons, Samuel D 357


Smith, Edward L.


437


Smith, Forgus F.


58


Smith, John A., M. D.


623 -


Smith, John D


138


Smith, Mrs. R. Emeline.


443


Smith, Samuel H. 215


Smith, Samuel W.


57


Snider, John H. 596


Sproull, Dr. John P. 609


Stevenson, Elisha M. 346


Stevenson, Silas, M. D


I70


Stewart, James F.


651


Stewart, Rev. Robert Curtis. 552


Stewart, Thomas M. 356


Streib, William H.


317


Stright, Charles B.


224


Swisher, Hosea H.


259


T


Taggart, John Smith 283


Taylor, John W. 269


Taylor, Rev. William M., D. D .. . 459


Thomas, John.


496


Thompson, John I. 96


Tidball, David, Esq. 419


Toner, Dr. Mark F. 628


Travers, John V.


626


Treser, Adam 329


Ziegler, R. E. W.


........


429


PAGE


69


668


INDEX.


PORTRAITS.


PAGE


Alexander, Rev. Moses C. 450


Haun, Mrs. James R.


491


Parsons, Prof. William 368


Bailey, Rev. John A. 482


Howard, Harry. 148


Phillip, Elder John T. 42


Pitzer, Bazzelleel. 288


Blatt, Henry S. 254


Irvin, John B.


434


Pollock, James K., M. D. 58


Boggs, Jacob R. 2.16


Jackson, Colonel. 8


Pryor, George G .. 474


Brown, William. 586


Jackson, W. Edwin, D. D. S. 100


Raney, James A. 156


Jordan, John 508


Redmond, Dr. Robert E 614


Browne, Robert Audley, D. D. I6


Caswell, Elisha Elbridge. 402


Cochran, Mrs. Nancy, and hus-


band James. 182


Cole, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew C. 394


Cooper, Dr. Edwin S. 564


Cooper, Dr. Joseph L. 26


Linville, Dr. Montgomery. 76


Smith, William H ..


68


Smith, William John Stevely .. 442


Taylor, Rev. William M., D. D ..


458


Daly, Mr. and Mrs. Martin R 344


Dice, Rev. John S. 262


Dice, Mrs. John S.


263


Marshall, David C. 272


Treser, Adam. 328


Eger, Rev. Francis Joseph. 540


McCleary, Joseph W. 206


Turner, Winfield S. 296


Ferver, Joseph C .. 516


McComb, Col. Robert B 556


Wallace, Judge William D. 34


Ward, James 532


Whippo, Dr. Charles Tillotson. 352


92


Greer, Rev. Thomas 524


McMillin, Herbert E., M. D 280


Wilder, Shubael T. 598


Griffith, Isaac N. 336


Moncreif, William. 238


Wilder, Mrs. Shubael T. 599


Hardaker, Joseph Burnley 116


Moorhead, Samuel 174


Wood, Wick W., and daughter


Haun, Dr. James Reynolds 490 Nye, George B. 320


Edna T 230


3779


Sankey, Ezekiel R. 84


Scanlon, Patrick J .. 108


Cornelius, Jesse S.


466


Long, Mr. and Mrs. James M. 222


Cosgrove, William. 140


Lutton, Dr. Joseph R. 376


Maitland, Perry. 304


Thomson, Alexander. 410


Tidball, David, Esq. 418


Fulkerson, Hon. Robert J 50


Fulkerson, Mrs. Robert J. 51


McKinley, George H 312


McKnight. Robert.


574


White, Dr. Maria .


Gageby, George W 426


Marquis, Milton S ..: 124


384


Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs. Peter S. . I98


Knox, Mrs. James W. 385


Rhodes, Abraham. 132


Leslie, William H. 164


Leslie, Mrs. William H 165


Repman, Levi. 360


Kelley, John J. 214


Knox, James William.


PAGE


PAGE


Boyd, George Johnson, M. D. I90


Ingham, Gershum B. 500


McCreary, Samuel Clark. 548


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