USA > Pennsylvania > Pike County > Commemorative biographical record of northeastern Pennsylvania, including the counties of Susquehanna, Wayne, Pike and Monroe, Pt. 1 > Part 279
USA > Pennsylvania > Monroe County > Commemorative biographical record of northeastern Pennsylvania, including the counties of Susquehanna, Wayne, Pike and Monroe, Pt. 1 > Part 279
USA > Pennsylvania > Susquehanna County > Commemorative biographical record of northeastern Pennsylvania, including the counties of Susquehanna, Wayne, Pike and Monroe, Pt. 1 > Part 279
USA > Pennsylvania > Wayne County > Commemorative biographical record of northeastern Pennsylvania, including the counties of Susquehanna, Wayne, Pike and Monroe, Pt. 1 > Part 279
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schools.
Selling his farm near Lawsville, Mr. Allard purchased his present farm, in Liberty township, in 1885, and now has a well-improved place, under excellent cultivation. He is thoroughly familiar with every department of farm work, and has met with most excellent success in his chosen occupa-
tion. Mrs. Allard is a member of the First Bap- tist Church, and socially he has been a member of the Grand Army Post at Conklin, N. Y. His loy- alty as a citizen and his devotion to the country's interests are above question, and the community is fortunate which numbers him among its mem- bers. He is a supporter of the Democratic party, and has most efficiently filled several local offices.
LYONS. Throughout the nineteenth century the Lyons family has been a numerous one in Sus- quehanna county, many of them being the posterity of David Lyons, of Colerain, Mass. Among those of the first generation in Susquehanna county were Daniel, of Great Bend, and David (son of Daniel), of Harmony ; of the second, Nathan H., Jerre, Ben- jamin R. and Joel, all of Montrose, David, 'of Har- mony, and Seth A., David A. and Frederick D., of Susquehanna, the latter of whom still survives at the advanced age of eighty-one, residing at Susque- hanna, of which borough he has been one of the leading business men for forty years. The family is of English origin, and the first American ancestor settled, in 1635, in Roxbury, Massachusetts.
David Lyons, a farmer and hotel-keeper of Colerain, Mass., born in 1737, married Abigail Draper, who was born in 1740. Mr. Lyons was a lover of liberty, and early imbibed the spirit of hos- tility to the British, as is evidenced in his act of assisting in throwing overboard, in Boston harbor, in 1773, the British tea. He died in 1803, and his widow in 1828. Their children were: (1) Dr. Jerre, (2) Jesse, (3) Abigail, (4) Nancy (who married Clark Chandler of Gill, Mass., and had twenty chil- dren, of whom eight died in infancy, the others all reaching maturity ; B. F. Chandler, late of Mont- rose, was the youngest child), (5) David, (6) Aaron, (7) Dr. Joel ( practicing physician of Gill, Mass.), (8) Polly, (9) Daniel, and (10) Seth (who was killed at the age of twenty years, while wrestling). Of these,
Dr. Jerre Lyons, born in 1765, was a college graduate. He practiced at Colerain, Mass., and at Chesterfield, N. H., dying at the latter place in 1825. In 1790 he married Mary Richards, who was born in 1765, and died in 1808. Their children were: Rev. Luke, a Congregational minister, who died in Illinois; Betsey, who married Gilbert Minor, and lived and died at Colerain, Mass .; Mary, who mar- ried Joseph Sprague, of Gill, Mass., moved to Michi- gan, raised a family and died at an advanced age in Traverse City, that State; Jerre, who is mentioned farther on; Nathan H., born in 1796, who settled in Montrose, Penn., where he died in 1877; and Benjamin R., who is mentioned farther on. For his second wife Dr. Lyons married Polly Nye, of Colerain, and they had children as follows: Joel D. was a lifelong merchant, and died in Montrose a few years ago, at the age of about seventy ; Adaline, married Thomas Smith, of Cairo, N. Y., who is now deceased, and she is living with her niece in Traverse City, Mich., now past eighty-six years of age; Rev.
MRS. MARY A. H. LYONS
FREDERICK D. LYONS
يييي
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COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
Lorenzo, born in 1807, was graduated from Union College and Auburn Theological Seminary, and gave his life to the foreign missionary service, sailing for the Sandwich Islands in 1832, and laboring there until his death in 1886. James M. learned the cabinet maker's trade, but his health failing, never worked at same afterward, engaging in peddling, merchandising and farming; he died at the age of about seventy.
The late Jerre Lyons (son of Dr. Jerre Lyons, of Colerain), was born in 1798, at Colerain, Mass. He came to Montrose, Penn., in 1819, and engaged in the mercantile business, continuing same until 1868, at which time he retired. From 1824 until 1835 his brother, Benjamin R. Lyons, was associated with him. Later Charles F. Read was with him for a time, and still later Theodore A. Lyons, who succeeded to the business and still carries it on, be- ing associated with his son, G. L. Lyons. Jerre Lyons married Melinda Bennett, and his children were: J. Lorenzo, a missionary for some years in Syria ; Theodore A., a merchant of Montrose; and George H.
The late Benjamin R. Lyons, son of Dr. Jerre Lyons, of Colerain, Mass., was born there in 1802, and passed his boyhood at that place and at Chester- field, N. H. He was a clerk in a store at the latter place for nine years. In 1831 he settled permanent- ly at Montrose, Penn., engaging in business in partnership with his brother Jerre. He retired from active life in 1884, after having been engaged in mercantile business for nearly fifty years. He was one of the organizers of and a director in the Sus- quehanna Bank of Montrose. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church, was one of the building committee that erected the present edifice, in 1860, and gave liberally of his means to charitable, ben- evolent and Church purposes. He possessed a choice library and kept well informed on current issues. Mr. Lyons married, in 1826, Maria A. Chandler, who was born in 1801, a daughter of Clark and Nancy (Lyons) Chandler. Mrs. Lyons died in 1846, and Mr. Lyons on August 17, 1890.
Aaron Lyons was born September 10, 1780, in Roxbury, Mass., and when four years of age was taken by his parents to Colerain, same State, where he was reared. He was occupied throughout life in farming. In 1804, he married Mary Miner, a native of Connecticut, born in 1779, and both died in 1863. Mrs. Lyons was a consistent member of the Presbyterian Church. Their children were: (1) Alvin, born in 1805, died in 1833, in New Jersey. (2) Catherine Cecelia, born in 1807, married Robert Miller, now deceased. They lived in Jackson town- ship, where she died in 1848. (3) Seth A., born in 1809, died in 1880, in Lanesboro, Penn. He mar- ried Esther McKune, who was a daughter of Robert McKune, of Harmony, and a most estimable lady. They had three children, two of whom died in in- fancy. Frank A., who became a prominent busi- ness man of Lanesboro, Penn., is now also deceased.
He married Hattie McNeal, who still lives in Lanesboro, and they had a family of four children- Ray A., a physician at Muncy, Penn .; Ralph, an artist in New York City; Coloma, at home; and Harry, who died at the age of four years. (4) Gilbert M., born in 1811, died in 1836, in Colerain, Mass. (5) Mary A., born in 1814, died in 1884, in Susquehanna county, unmarried. (6) David A. and (7) Frederick D. are mentioned farther on. (8) Charles T., born in 1822, was educated for the medical profession, and practiced medicine for many years, but is now living retired. In 1849 he went to California, via Cape Horn, and remained there some four years. Later he practiced medi- cine in Colerain, Mass., several years, and also in Waverly, N. Y., finally becoming a druggist at the latter place. About the year 1854, at Waverly, he married Prudence B. Smith, and they have one son, Smith E. Lyons.
The late David A. Lyons, son of Aaron Lyons, was born in 1816, at Colerain, Mass. He came to Susquehanna county, Penn., about 1834, and entered the employ of his brother, Seth A., who had associ- ated himself at Lanesboro with Putnam Williams, and established a manufactory for sash, blinds, chairs and cabinet work. He remained with his brother until 1837, after which he was engaged in other business pursuits at Lanesboro until 1857, in that year locating at Susquehanna and engaging in mercantile business, which he continued the re- mainder of his life. He married Amelia, daughter of David Lyons, and at his death, in 1881, left a widow and one daughter, Isa E. Lyons; one son died in infancy. Mr. Lyons was a member of the Universalist Church of Susquehanna, and served on the building committee at the time of the erec- tion of the church edifice, in 1871.
FREDERICK D. LYONS, son of Aaron Lyons, was born March 14, 1819, at Colerain, Franklin Co., Mass., where he was reared and educated. At the age of twenty-four he commenced teaching school, and followed that profession successfully four wint- ers, his future wife being one of his pupils for one term. Several of his brothers having previously located at Lanesboro, Susquehanna Co., Penn., Fred- erick D. Lyons, in 1848, followed them to that point. He became associated with his brother David A., in the mercantile business, which they carried on to- gether until, in 1856, the partnership was dissolved, and Frederick D. Lyons then conducted the busi- ness there alone for two years. Removing to Sus- quehanna, he there, in 1859, embarked in the same line, and for forty years has been one of the leading business men and citizens of that borough. He is a man of good judgment, and, through his ability, industrious habits and good management, has made a success of his undertakings, and has a competence. He is one of the substantial men of Susquehanna county, where he has enjoyed the confidence and esteem of the people through a long business career. He is a member of the Universalist Church, and on the organization of that Society at Susquehanna,
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in 1866, he was chosen clerk. Politically he is identified with the Republican party.
In Whitingham, Vt., in August, 1851, Mr. Lyons was married to Miss Mary A. Hull, a most estimable lady, and to their union was born one daughter, Carrie, now deceased, who was the wife of Howard Shaeff of Susquehanna. Mrs. Lyons was born in Whitingham, Vt., in 1831, a daughter of Emory and Lydia (Chase) Hull, also natives of that place, where the father died in 1841, at the age of thirty-eight years. He was a cooper by trade. In 1865 the mother came to Susquehanna, Penn., where she passed away in 1871, at the age of sixty- three years. She was an earnest and faithful mem- ber of the Methodist Episcopal Church. They had five children: George, who died in Vermont; Mary A., wife of our subject ; Fanny, who married Harvey Holdridge, and died in Susquehanna ; Ann, who died unmarried, in Vermont ; and Melissa, wife of New- ell B. Hall, of Turner's Falls, Mass. Mrs. Lyons' paternal grandparents, Jesse and Fanny Hull, were lifelong residents of Whitingham, Vt., where the former was engaged in the marble business. He was a soldier in the war of 1812.
Mrs. Lyons is widely known all over the State of Pennsylvania, being prominent in religious, charitable, temperance and other work, in which she wields a potent influence for good. For the past fourteen years she has been an active member of Moody Woman's Relief Corps No. 12, Susquehanna ( which is auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Re- public ), has been vice-president of the corps two years, president three years, and chaplain three years, and her duties in connection with the Order have taken her all over the State. In 1897 she was National aid to the National president of the W. R. C., serving as such one year, was department chap- lain of the department of Pennsylvania one year, assistant inspector in the State, four years; and served on the executive board two years. It is the custom of the W. R. C., at their annual conventions, to hold memorial services for deceased members, and on two occasions the services were conducted by Mrs. Lyons, she delivering the customary ad- dress. For the past four years she has been presi- dent of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union at Susquehanna, and by virtue of her office was mainly instrumental in the placing of a public foun- tain in that city. Until within the past few years, when failing health commenced to interfere with her efforts, she was a great Church worker, a leader, a "Mother in Israel," and what she has already achieved, in that and other lines, remain enduring monuments to her unselfish, patient labors in the noble work of doing good.
Daniel Lyons, born in 1778 at Colerain, Mass., learned the trade of a cabinet maker. In 1812, he came to Great Bend, Susquehanna county, and there carried on that business. He was one of the subscribers of the Great Bend Bridge Co., in 1812, and in 1814 was chosen one of its managers. He married Rebecca Barker, who died in 1819, and he
subsequently wedded Anna Smith. His children who lived to mature age were: David (mentioned farther on), John, Jesse, Betsey, Barker, Susan M., Sabra A., Daniel, Joshua, Horace, Silas and George. The father was a deacon in the Baptist Church, and his first wife was the daughter of a Baptist clergyman of Massachusetts. Daniel Lyons, it is said, alone built the Baptist Church at Great Bend in 1825.
The late David Lyons, son of Daniel Lyons, was born in 1804 at Colerain, Mass., and was brought with the family on their removal to Great Bend in 1812. He had but meager school privileges, and early learned cabinet making and the use of tools under his father. He was variously employed through a long and busy life, kept hotel for a time, worked at carpentering and building, and making wagons, and was largely occupied in lumbering and milling. At one time, in connection with Mr. Aus- tin, he purchased 500 acres of timberland, and at another, associated with Jonathan Taylor, 1,400 acres and the mills-the Lane property. He marketed much lumber by raft to Philadelphia. In 1829 he settled in a home at Lanesboro, and ever afterward lived at that point. In 1839 he erected a gristmill at Lanesboro, for Jesse Lane. Mr. Lyons was a man of good judgment and business ability, and of marked individuality. He was self- reliant, always industrious, a good manager, and made a competence. In 1827 he married Amanda Smith, who died in 1872, aged sixty-eight years. He died in 1894. Their children were: Amelia, who married David A. Lyons, of Susquehanna; Sarah H .; Julia A., who died when nineteen years of age; Nancy, who married C. B. Smith, of Stamford, Conn .; and Charles J., who married Laura F. Roberts, and lives at Windsor, N. Y., engaged in farming.
WILLIAM PRATT. Few if any men have for half a century been better or more favorably known in Lenox township, Susquehanna county, than William Pratt, who is a successful and pros- perous farmer, as well as a trained and talented musician, who has throughout his long and useful life made large contributions to the entertainment and enjoyment of many people.
He was born in Lathrop township, Susque- hanna county, May 18, 1822, the son of Noah Pratt, a native of England, who migrated to Amer- ica and first settled in Connecticut. He there mar- ried Nancy Mack, and in 181I became one of the earliest settlers of what is now Lathrop township (then York). He purchased 125 acres of wild land, where Lorenzo Sweet now lives, and cleared a considerable portion of it. He died in Nichol- son aged ninety-two years, and his wife also lived to an advanced age. They reared a large family of children, as follows: Nancy, who married Asa Tewksbury and died in Lathrop township; Noah, deceased; Alfred, of Binghamton, Penn .; Albert, deceased; George, deceased; Betsy, who married
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W. Hecock, of San Francisco, Cal .; Julia, who married Eli Bacon, of Wyoming county, and is now deceased; Elmira, who married Nelson Ben- jamin, and is now deceased; Maria, of St. Joseph county, Mich., widow of J. Millard; William, sub- ject of this sketch; Lafayette, deceased; Phœbe, widow of William Babcock, of Scranton, Penn .; Amanda, widow of Marvin Newcome, of Woon- socket, Ia .; Sallie and Eli, who both died in Lathrop.
William Pratt attended in his youth the com- mon schools, and possessing both taste and talent for music he early became proficient in that pro- fession, making a thorough study of music in his youth. At the age of twenty-one years he learned the trade of carpenter and joiner and also studied architecture. He followed his trade through most of his life, also devoting a considerable portion of his time to music. He has worked in all parts of Susquehanna county, and in Scranton.
On April 3, 1847, Mr. Pratt was married to Miss Harriet Almeda McNamara, who was born in Nicholson, Penn., April 16, 1827, daughter of Lewis and Polly ( Halstead) McNamara, of En- glish and French descent respectively. To Mr. and Mrs. Pratt were born four children: Rexford M., born December 22, 1847, who married Harriet L. Wilson, settled in Lenox township and died Octo- ber 21, 1894; Frank C., born November 26, 1849, married Louisa Green, and is a farmer and musi- cian of Brooklyn township; Willis W., born Janu- ary 30, 1852, died September 27, 1873; Amanda L., born September 13, 1855, married Dr. William Nelson Green, a practicing physician of Hopbot- tom, who died in 1886, and she has since lived with her father. She, too, is a finished and talented musician, having studied the profession with her father. The wife and mother died November 29, 1898.
Mr. Pratt came to Lenox township in 1852. He bought first twenty-five acres of land to which he later added seven acres. Still later he made an- other purchase, adding fifty acres to the property. For nearly half a century Mr. Pratt has been an industrious and successful farmer in connection with his trade and profession. He is a stanch Democrat in politics, but he has never sought nor accepted public office.
JAMES MUSGRAVE. Among the well-to- do and successful farmers of Wayne county, who have accumulated a competency through their own exertions and economy and are now enabled to lay aside all business cares, is the subject of this bio- graphical notice. For many years he was one of the most active, enterprising and energetic agri- culturists of Sterling township, but now leaves the operation of his farm to others, though he still resides there.
Mr. Musgrave was born in Philadelphia, Penn., September 29, 1822, a son of Andrew and Isabella (Gilchrist ) Musgrave, natives of County Tyrone,
Ireland, who became acquainted and were married in Philadelphia, where they continued to reside until coming to Sterling township, Wayne county, in 1828. At the end of two years, however, they re- turned to the Quaker City, leaving our subject and two sisters to care for themselves. The father, who was a farmer and trader by occupation, was the first man to die of cholera in that city, passing away at the age of thirty-five years, and his remains were buried there. Subsequently, in 1839, his widow returned to Sterling township, Wayne coun- ty, where she purchased a farm and made her home until her death, in 1871, when she was eighty-five years of age. For her second husband she mar- ried Robert McLane, who died in May, 1845. There were no children by this union, but by her first mar- riage she had four, namely: James, the subject of this sketch; Margaret, who married Thomas McLane, both being now deceased ; Mary widow of Thomas Bennett, and a resident of Har- risburg, Penn .; and Elizabeth, wife of John Hines, a hotel-keeper of Perth Amboy, N. J. Our sub- ject's paternal grandfather, Robert Musgrave, spent his entire life in Ireland, and after his second marriage his three sons, Andrew, Thomas and John, came to America.
At the tender age of six years James Musgrave was thrown upon the world to earn his own liveli- hood, and for the success that he has achieved in life he deserves great credit. For a time he and his sister Mary resided with their step-grandpar- ents, Robert Catterson and wife, and at the age of seventeen our subject joined his mother in Phila- delphia, both returning a few months later to Ster- ling township, Wayne county, where, as previously stated, the mother purchased a farm. When she married again, three years later, our subject left home, and for the first two months had only $4. After his marriage he engaged in farming and chopping wood, for which he received $20, invest- ing the same in a cow. For three years he resided upon the farm of his brother-in-law, Isaac Smith, paying his rent by clearing and improving six acres of land. He then purchased fifty acres of his pres- ent farm, for $3 per acre, and after his return home from the war bought thirty acres more, for $750. The land was still in its primitive condition when he located thereon, but by industry, persever- ance and good management he now has a fine farm of 100 acres, under a high state of cultivation and well improved. His first team consisted of a yoke of oxen, which he purchased from his mother for $18.
In Sterling township, in August, 1842, Mr. Musgrave was united in marriage with Miss Jane Rawlston, who was born in Scotland, August 25, 1822, and was brought to America in 1826 by her parents, John and Mary (Rawlston) Rawlston (they were not related prior to their marriage). Until 1841 they made their home in Philadelphia, where her father engaged in draying, but after coming to Sterling township, Wayne county, in
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COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
that year, he lived retired upon a farm. He died in February, 1852, aged seventy-five years, and was buried in Sterling township, his widow returning to Philadelphia, where she passed away ten years later. They were Episcopalians in religious be- lief. They were the parents of eight children : Ann, wife of Michael McGlocklin; Margaret, wife of John Speer; Martha, wife of Noble Speer ; Mary, wife of Charles Rawlston; William; Thomas, who married Ann Lamb; Rebecca, wife of Robert Rawlston; and Jane, Mrs. Musgrave, the only sur- vivor of the family. Her paternal grandparents, William and Ann (Scott) Rawlston, natives of Scotland, came to America at an early day. Her maternal grandfather, Joseph Rawlston, spent his entire life in Scotland.
The children born to Mr. and Mrs. Musgrave are as follows: Mary, born May 18, 1843, is the wife of James McGuire, a railroad engineer of Amboy, Penn .; Andrew, born February 26, 1844, died at the age of five years; Margaret M., born February 26, 1846, is the wife of Reuben Malson, a farmer of Sterling township; Isabella, born May 25, 1848, died when young; Elizabeth, born Octo- ber 26, 1852, is the widow of Joe Thompson, and a resident of Amboy ; William J., a railroad man of Dunmore, born February 2, 1854, wedded Marion Lewis, who died May 8, 1898, leaving three chil- dren, Grace, Pearl and Percy; Henry, born No- vember 26, 1856, married Maggie Paul, and is a railroad engineer of Jersey City, N. J .; Emily, born May 24, 1858, is the deceased wife of Otto Snyder, a carpenter of Amboy, Penn .; Thomas R., born March 19, 1860, wedded Mary E. Reid, on De- cember 25, 1895, and has one child, Maud, he and his family residing with our subject; Walter, born August 19, 1862, married Elizabeth Spangenberg, and is engaged in farming in Sterling township; and Lillie, born May 14, 1867, is the wife of C. C. Hawk, a farmer of the same township.
In the fall of 1861 Mr. Musgrave was drafted for service in the Civil war, and became a member of Company A, 179th P. V. I., under Capt. Hubble. At the end of eleven months he was honorably dis- charged and returned home. He was then engaged in teaming for the Lehigh Lumber Co. from fall until March 24, 1864, when he enlisted in the 3rd Pennsylvania Heavy Artillery, under Capt. King, but a few months later was transferred to the 188th P. V. I. After the captain of his company was killed he was under the command of Lieut. Hawk, and later under Capt. Gray. Fortunately he was never wounded nor taken prisoner, and when the war was over he was honorably discharged, at Fortress Monroe, Va. While in the army the lightning struck his home, killing his daughter Martha, and burning the building to some extent. In political sentiment he is a Republican. He has always made the most of his opportunities in life, and has not only secured a handsome competence, but has also gained the respect and confidence of all with whom he has come in contact.
JOHN D. WEST, a worthy and highly-es- teemed citizen of Rush township, Susquehanna county, was born November 15, 1835, in Herrick, Bradford Co., Penn., and is a son of Hezekiah N. and Emily ( Barnes) West, the former a native of Connecticut, the latter of Bradford county, Penn. The mother, who was a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, died in Herrick in 1841, aged thirty-two years, and was laid to rest in the Orwell cemetery, in Bradford county. The father remarried and long survived her, dying in Madison county, Ohio, in 1868, at the age of sixty- five, and was buried in that State. He was a farmer, and followed that occupation at various places. Religiously he also held membership in the Methodist Episcopal Church. By his first mar- riage he had six children: Mary E., born May 29, 1825, deceased wife of John M. Pickering; Ruth E., born November 10, 1826, deceased; Erastus B., born April 23, 1829, a blacksmith of Geneva, Ohio; Eunice E., born January 16, 1831, deceased ; John D., our subject; and Orrill H., born April 27, 1839, wife of Harvey Esthus, a farmer of Rush township, Susquehanna county. For his second wife, the father married Nancy H. Vargason, and the children born to them were as follows: Chan- cey J., deceased; Sarah, wife of Henry Nye, a farmer of Mountville, Ohio; David H., a farmer of Lake county, Ohio; Elizabeth, wife of William Hutchinson, a farmer of Ashtabula county, Ohio; and Annetta, wife of Frank Nichols, an agriculturist of Lake county, Ohio. Our subject's paternal grandfather, Rev. Hezekiah West, a Baptist min- ister, was born in Connecticut, and died in 1844, while on a visit to Iowa, at an advanced age. His children were Hezekiah, father of our subject; Eunice, wife of George Hardy ; and Orrill, wife of Robinson Barnes.
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