USA > Pennsylvania > Encyclopedia of Pennsylvania biography : illustrated, Vol. X > Part 38
Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15 | Part 16 | Part 17 | Part 18 | Part 19 | Part 20 | Part 21 | Part 22 | Part 23 | Part 24 | Part 25 | Part 26 | Part 27 | Part 28 | Part 29 | Part 30 | Part 31 | Part 32 | Part 33 | Part 34 | Part 35 | Part 36 | Part 37 | Part 38 | Part 39 | Part 40 | Part 41
(The Russell Line).
(I) Rev. Thomas Russell, born 1759, died at Cleveland, Ohio, 1822, aged sixty- three years; the first settled Congrega- tional minister at Bethel, Vermont, 1790. He married Hannah Baldwin, born in
Mansfield, Connecticut, January 6, 1767 ; died at Bethel, Vermont, after June 24, 1824.
(II) Thomas Baldwin Russell, born in Westhampton, Long Island, February 14, 1789, died July 5, 1844. He married, No- vember II, 1810, at Royalton, Vermont, Esther Lyman, born in Middletown, Con- necticut, December 2, 1789, died at Roy- alton, February 5, 1853. Their daughter, (III) Emily Russell married William B. Bement, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (see Bement VII).
(The Baldwin Line).
(I) Henry Baldwin, said to have come from Devonshire, England, and settled in Woburn, Massachusetts, in 1640, died there February 14, 1697. He married Phebe Richardson, November 1, 1649, at Woburn, she baptized in Boston, Massa- chusetts, June 3, 1632, died at Woburn, September 14, 1716, daughter of Ezekiel and Susanna Richardson. Ezekiel Richard- son was of Charlestown, 1630, where he was deputy to the General Court of Mas- sachusetts, 1634-35 ; settled finally at Wo- burn, and there died October 21, 1647. His wife Susanna was a member of Charlestown church, August 27, 1630; she married (second) Henry Brooks, of Woburn.
(II) Benjamin Baldwin, born in Wo- burn, January 20, 1672, died in Canter- bury, Connecticut, December II, 1759. He married Hannah
(III) Daniel Baldwin, born in Canter- bury, May 26, 1705, died at Tolland, Con- necticut, estate administered upon 1771. He married, November 16, 1730, Hannah Partridge, born in Preston, Connecticut, May 10, 1711, died in Norwich, Connec- ticut, July 12, 1742.
(IV) Ebenezer Baldwin, born in Nor- wich, Connecticut, November 24, 1734; resided at Mansfield, Connecticut, where
266
Clarence S. Dement.
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
he died in August, 1832; estate adminis- John Reynolds, of Norwich, Connecticut, who died in 1702.
tered upon August, 1832. He married, November 12, 1761, at Mansfield, Ruth Swift, born in Mansfield, October 16, 1745; died there, August 26, 1826, aged eighty-one; their daughter,
(V) Hannah Baldwin, born in Mans- field, June 6, 1767, died in Bethel, Ver- mont, after June 24, 1824. She married Rev. Thomas Russell (see Russell Line).
(The Lyman Line).
(I) Henry Lyman, of High Ongar, County Essex, England, married Eliza- beth -, buried at Navistoke, County Essex, England, April 15, 1587.
(II) Richard Lyman, baptized at High Ongar, October 30, 1580, removed to Massachusetts, November, 1631 ; to Hart- ford, Connecticut, 1639; will proved in Hartford, September 6, 1640. He married Sarah Osborne, daughter of Roger Os- borne, who died at Hartford shortly after husband.
(III) Richard Lyman, baptized at High Ongar, February 24, 1617, died at Northampton, Massachusetts, June 3, 1662; came with his parents in ship "Lion;" appointed to lay out town of Hadley in 1659. He married Hepzibah Ford, who married (second) John Marsh, of Hadley, Massachusetts.
(IV) Richard Lyman, born in Wind- sor, Connecticut, 1647, died in Lebanon, Connecticut, November 4, 1708. He mar- ried Elizabeth Cowles, May 26, 1675, daughter of John Cowles (or Coles) of Hartford ; died September, 1677.
(V) Samuel Lyman, born in North- ampton, Massachusetts, April, 1676, died in Lebanon, Connecticut ; will proved in June, 1751. He married, May 9, 1697, Elizabeth (Reynolds) Fowler, born in Norwich, Connecticut, 1666, died in Leb- anon, February 24, 1742; daughter of
(VI) Jabez Lyman, born October 10, 1702, died in Lebanon, Connecticut, Oc- tober 22, 1787; will proved December 4, 1787. He married, January 29, 1730, Martha Bliss, born March 30, 1709, died before March 24, 1784, date of husband's will.
(VII) Ezekiel Lyman, born in Leb- anon, Connecticut, October 23, 1733, died at Royalton, Vermont, after June 27, 1802 ; soldier in French-Indian War in cam- paign of 1755 under Captain John T. Terry, First Connecticut Regiment ; re- moved to Royalton, 1782. He married, February 10, 1757, Elizabeth Bliss, born in Lebanon, October 3, 1730, daughter of John and Hannah (Ticknor) Bliss.
(VIII) Asa Lyman, baptized at Leb- anon, Connecticut, November 6, 1757, died at West Turin, New York; was a Revolutionary soldier from Connecticut ; removed to Royalton, Vermont, before September 28, 1788. He married, Sep- tember 14, 1763, at Middletown, Submit Mitchell, born in Middletown, Connecti- cut, January 31, 1768, died after March 4, 1801, daughter of Abner and Esther (Johnson) Mitchell.
(IX) Esther Lyman, born in Middle- town, Connecticut, December 2, 1789, died in Royalton, Vermont, February 5, 1853. She married, November 11, 1810, Thomas Baldwin Russell (see Russell Line).
BEMENT, Clarence S.,
Manufacturer.
Clarence Sweet Bement, son of the late William Barnes and Emily (Russell) Be- ment, was born in Mishawaka, Indiana, April 11, 1843. He received his education in the schools of Lowell and Philadelphia, and then entered the employ of his father, who was head of the machine tool manu-
267
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
facturing firm of Bement & Dougherty, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In 1870 he became a partner in this concern, upon the retirement of Mr. Dougherty. He held this office until the business was sold, in 1899, when he retired to private life, al- though remaining a director of the suc- ceeding corporation, the Niles-Bement- Pond Company. Politically Mr. Bement is affiliated with the Republicans. He is a member of the American Philosophical Society, Historical Society of Pennsyl- vania, Neumismatic and Antiquarian So- ciety, Union League of Philadelphia, and other institutions. He has been from boy- hood interested in minerals, ancient coins, books, etc., and has made several notable collections on these subjects.
On December 29, 1871, Mr. Bement married Martha Shreve, daughter of the late Jacob E. and Sarah (Shreve) Ridg- way, of New Jersey, and they were the parents of the following children : 1. Em- ily Ridgway, died in infancy. 2. Bertha, wife of J. Clark Moore, Jr., of Philadel- phia; they have a daughter: Marion Elizabeth. 3. Joseph Leidy, died in early infancy. 4. Anna, wife of Albert Ludlow Kramer, of Long Island, New York ; they have two children: Albert Ludlow, Jr., born in 1907; and Martha Leighton, born in 1911. The death of Mrs. Bement oc- curred March 22, 1907.
BEMENT, William P., Manufacturer.
William Parker Bement, son of the late William Barnes and Emily (Russell) Bement, was born in Philadelphia, Penn- sylvania, February 12, 1854. He was ed- ucated in the schools of Philadelphia, and early entered the firm of William B. Bement & Sons, of which his father was head. Mr. Bement was admitted to part- nership in 1879, and held this position
until the sale of the company in 1899, whereupon he retired. He has been offi- cially connected with various financial and industrial concerns in the past; is a Republican in politics, and a member of the Union League of Philadelphia. His time is spent in looking after his private interests.
Mr. Bement married, November 24, 1880, Caroline, daughter of Henry and Margaretta (Perry) Van Beil, of Phila- delphia, and they are the parents of the following children: Marguerite, unmar- ried ; Russell, born February 12, 1884, un- married ; Eleanore, wife of Samuel George Stem, of Philadelphia.
SIMPSON, Frank F., M. D., Specialist, Hospital Official.
The medical profession of Pittsburgh numbers in its ranks representatives of various nationalities and many who are natives of distant parts of our own land; the city's body of physicians and sur- geons have been recruited from beyond the seas and also from every State in the Union. Among those who have come to us from the South is Dr. Frank Farrow Simpson, who has practised for more than twenty years in the metropolis, and has long been recognized as a leader in his profession.
William Simpson, the first ancestor of record, who was born in 1729, in Belfast, Ireland, and about 1770 emigrated to South Carolina, settled near the place afterwards called Belfast, in the south- eastern part of Laurens county. He mar- ried, in Ireland, Mary Simpson, of an- other Simpson family, and their five chil- dren, all born in Ireland, came to South Carolina with their parents, with the exception of John, mentioned below. William Simpson died in 1806, and his wife, who was born in 1730, passed away.
268
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
(II) John, son of William and Mary Simpson, was born November 17, 1751, in Belfast, Ireland, and remained behind when the family emigrated. At the age of twenty-one he went to London, Eng- land, and there engaged in the mercantile business until 1786, when he also emi- grated to South Carolina, taking up his abode in Laurens county and establishing a store at Belfast. He conducted this business during the remainder of his life, amassing a large fortune, which he dis- pensed with great liberality. At his death he was the owner of a large part of the town of Laurens. He married, Sep- tember 21, 1786, just before leaving Eng- land, Mary, born August 29, 1754, daugh- ter of Richard and Jane (Asmond) Wells, of Burford, Oxfordshire, and they be- came the parents of seven children, among whom was John Wells, mentioned below. Mrs. Simpson died in 1810, and two years later "Colonel" Simpson, as he was always called, married the widow of Judge John Hunter. The death of Col- onel Simpson occurred September 15, 1815.
(III) John Wells, son of John and Mary (Wells) Simpson, was born Sep- tember 2, 1796, and at the time of his father's death was a student at the South Carolina College. He immediately re- turned home and took charge of the estate. About the age of twenty-one he received from the Medical College of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the degree of Doctor of Medicine, and for some years practised at Belfast, then removing to Laurens Court House, where he resided during the remainder of his life. In early manhood he was elected to the Legisla- ture, and served several terms. His posi- tion as a citizen was a distinguished one. Among the memorials of his benevolence and liberality of sentiment was the build- ing and endowment of the Laurensville
Female College. As a business man he was successful, attaining a condition of affluence. He was a lifelong and devoted member of the Presbyterian church. Dr. Simpson married (first), March 2, 1820, Elizabeth, born May 3, 1803, daughter of John Satterwhite, a merchant and planter of Newberry, South Carolina, and two children were born to them: John Wis- tar, mentioned below; and William Dun- lap. Mrs. Simpson died September 2, 1824, and Dr. Simpson married (second), Martha D., daughter of Frederick and Nancy (Finch) Foster, by whom he had three children, all of whom died in infancy. Their mother passed away February 17, 1829, and Dr. Simpson married (third) Eliza, daughter of Dr. Freeborn and Judith (Finch) Adams, the former a native of Maine and the latter of Virgina. Mrs. Simpson died June 26, 1854, leaving eight children, and Dr. Simpson married (fourth) Jane Caroline (Beatty) Clow- ney, widow of the Honorable W. K. Clow- ney. The fifth wife of Dr. Simpson was Anna (Barnet) Williams, widow of Col- onel John D. Williams. Dr. Simpson died April II, 1881.
(IV) John Wistar, a son of John Wells and Elizabeth (Satterwhite) Simpson, was born June II, 1821, and in 1843 graduated with honors at the South Caro- lina College. Soon after he commenced the study of law at Cambridge, Massa- chusetts, under Judge Story, remaining eighteen months. After his return home he settled at Laurens Court House, and for many years was a successful lawyer, in partnership with his brother, W. D. Simpson, the firm being one of the ablest in the State, employed in nearly every important case in the surrounding coun- ties. When 'his brother and partner was elected Governor of South Carolina, Mr. Simpson retired from the practice of his profession, and he and his children pur-
269
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
chased the estate of Glenn Springs, in Spartanburg county, South Carolina, where he resided during the remainder of his life. For years he was a member of the Presbyterian church. Mr. Simpson married, March 23, 1847, Anna Patillo Farrow, whose ancestral record is ap- pended to this biography, and their chil- dren were: John Patillo, William Wells, Wistar Satterwhite, Stobo James, Har- vey Strother, Elizabeth Satterwhite, Paul Simpson, Wistar Gasper, Arthur Osmond, and Frank Farrow, mentioned below. Mrs. Simpson died in 1872, and the death of Mr. Simpson occurred May 17, 1893. He was a man of high princi- ple and genial disposition, loved and ven- erated by all.
(V) Dr. Frank Farrow Simpson, son of John Wistar and Anna Patillo (Far- row) Simpson, was born April 21, 1868, at Laurens, South Carolina, and received his preparatory education in private schools, passing to the University of South Carolina and graduating in 1889 with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. He then entered the Medical Department of the University of Pennsylvania, and in 1893 received from that institution the degree of Doctor of Medicine. For one year thereafter Dr. Simpson served as interne at the Mercy Hospital, Pitts- burgh, and then for nine years held the position of assistant gynæcologist at the same institution. Since 1904 he has been gynæcologist to the Allegheny General Hospital, and for a time was consulting gynæcologist to the Columbia Hospital. His private practice is large and he pos- sesses the implicit confidence of the med- ical fraternity and the general public.
Dr. Simpson was a member of the Fourteenth International Congress of Physicians and Surgeons that met in London, and holds the office of secretary general of the Seventh International Con-
gress for Obstetrics and Gynecology, also serving as a member of its executive committee. He is treasurer and a mem- ber of the executive committee of Ameri- can Physicians for the Aid of the Belgian Profession, also serving on the executive committee of the American Society for the Control of Cancer. He is president of the American Gynæcological Society, and is a member of the Southern Surgi- cal and Gynæcological Association, the American Association of Obstetricians and Gynæcologists, the Pittsburgh Academy of Medicine, the Pittsburgh College of Physicians and Surgeons, of which he was at one time president, the American Medical Association, the Pennsylvania State Medical Association and the Alle- gheny County Medical Society. He has been secretary of the Committee of Amer- ican Physicians for Medical Preparedness since its organization early in 1915, and when the Council of National Defense was established by the National Govern- ment in December, 1916, he was asked to become chief of its medical section, which position he now holds.
In politics Dr. Simpson is an Inde- pendent, giving to the consideration of public affairs as much time and attention as his professional duties will permit. He affiliates with Fellowship Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, and belongs to the University, Duquesne, Oakmont, Pitts- burgh Golf and Stanton Heights Golf clubs, and the Kappa Alpha fraternity. He attends the Presbyterian church.
Both in and out of his profession, Mr. Simpson has many warm friends. His personality, appearance and manner are those of a polished physician and a man of birth and breeding. His success is the result of natural aptitude enforced by exceptionally fine equipment and guided and controlled by a high sense of duty and honor.
270
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
(The Farrow Line).
(I) John Farrow, gentleman, as the county records give his name, was born in Prince William county, Virginia, and re- moved to the Ninety-sixth district, of which the present town of Spartanburg, South Carolina, formed a part. He mar- ried, in Virginia, Rosanna Waters (see Waters) and their children were: Sarah ; Thomas, mentioned below; John; Lon- don ; Samuel; Mary ; Jane; and William. (II) Thomas, son of John and Rosanna (Waters) Farrow, was born in 1755, in Prince William county, Virginia, and was a child when taken by his parents to South Carolina. During the Revolution- ary War he was captain of a company belonging to a regiment commanded by his uncle, Colonel Philemon Waters, and participated in many of the battles fought in the Carolinas. He married (first) Rebecca Wood (second) Patience Roch- ella and (third) Anna (Patillo) Harrison, daughter of the Reverend Henry Patilla, and widow of Colonel Harrison (his sec- ond wife), who figured prominently dur- ing the Revolution in Virginia and the Carolinas. Captain Farrow and his third wife were the parents of two children: Patillo, mentioned below; and Nancy.
(III) Patillo, son of Thomas and Anna (Patillo-Harrison) Farrow, was born September 2, 1796, on the homestead of his paternal grandparents, in Spartan- burg district, South Carolina, and gradu- ated in 1815 at the South Carolina College. He studied law, and in 1818 was admitted to the bar at Columbia, South Carolina. In 1837 he retired. Mr. Farrow was asso- ciated with Chief Justice John Belton O'Neal in organizing the original temper- ance movement in South Carolina, and was an elder in the Presbyterian church. On January 2, 1826, Mr. Farrow married Jane Strother James (see James) and their children were: James; Anna Pa-
tillo, mentioned below; Susan Washing- ton, Thomas Stobo, Henry Patillo, Ros- anna Waters, and Julia Woodruff. The death of Mr. Farrow occurred October 18, 1849.
(IV) Anna Patillo, daughter of Patillo and Jane Strother (James) Farrow, was born June 26, 1828, and became the wife of John (3) Wistar Simpson, as stated above.
(The Waters Line).
The arms of the Waters family, origi- nally of Yorkshire, England, and later of New England, Virginia and Maryland, are as follows:
Arms-Sable on a fess wavy argent between three swans of the second two bars wavy azure. Crest-A demi-talbot argent, holding in the mouth an arrow gules.
Motto-Toujours fidele.
(I) Edward Waters, gentleman, founder of the Virginia-Carolina branch of the family, was born in England, and in 1608 emigrated to Virginia. He was known as "lieutenant." Lieutenant Waters mar- ried Grace O'Neill, who was born in 1603, in England, and their children were: William, mentioned below; and Mar- garet. Lieutenant Waters died in Eng- land, in 1630.
(II) William, son of Edward and Grace (O'Neill) Waters, was born in 1623, in Virginia, and in 1652 married Margaret (Robins) Clark, widow · of George Clark. They were the parents of the following children: Richard, John, Edward, Thomas, Obedience, and Wil- liam, mentioned below.
(III) William (2), son of William (1) and Margaret (Robinson Clark) Waters, married Mary Boynton, and their chil- dren were: Thomas, mentioned below; William, and Edward.
(IV) Thomas, son of William (2) and Mary (Boynton) Waters, married Mary
271
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
-, and the following children were born to them: Philemon, mentioned below; Edward, and Thomas.
(V) Philemon, son of Thomas and Mary Waters, was born October 8, 1711, in Stafford county, Virginia, and married Sarah Bordroyne, who was born March 20, 1720. Their children were: Phile- mon; Rosanna (twin to Philemon), men- tioned below; Thomas, and William. Philemon Waters, the father, died Janu- ary 20, 1779, and the mother of the fam- ily passed away July 4, 1792.
(VI) Rosanna, daughter of Philemon and Sarah (Bordroyne) Waters, was born in Prince county, Virginia, became the wife of John Farrow (see Farrow), and died in South Carolina.
(The James Line).
(I) John James, the first ancestor of record, was of Stafford county, Virginia, and married Washington (see Washington), and their son John is men- tioned below.
(II) John (2), son of John (1), mar- ried Anna Strother, and their son Ben- jamin is mentioned below.
(III) Benjamin, son of John (2) and Anna (Strother) James, married Jane Stobo (see Stobo), and their daughter, Jean Strother, is mentioned below. Ben- jamin James was a distinguished lawyer.
(IV) Jane Strother, daughter of Ben- jamin and Jane (Stobo) James, became the wife of Patillo Farrow (see Farrow).
(The Washington Line).
(I) Lawrence Washington, gentleman, of Northamptonshire, England, received, in 1538, during the reign of Henry the Eighth, the grant of the Manor of Sul- grave, the grant covering all the lands in Sulgrave and Woodford and part of Statesburg, Cotton, Ashley and Cotesby. Lawrence Washington died February 19,
1584, and his son Robert is mentioned below.
(II) Robert, eldest son of Lawrence Washington, was born about 1543, and inherited the Manor of Sulgrave. In 1610, with the consent of his eldest son, Lawrence, mentioned below, he sold the estate to a nephew.
(III) Lawrence (2), son of Robert Washington, was the father or three sons: William, who was knighted, and married a sister of George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham; John, mentioned below; and Lawrence.
(IV) John, son of Lawrence (2) Wash- ington, emigrated to Virginia in 1657, Oliver Cromwell being the Lord Protec- tor of the Commonwealth of England. John Washington was accompanied by his brother Lawrence. Not long after his arrival in Virginia, John Washington was in a military command against the In- dians in Maryland and Virginia, and rose to the rank of colonel, being the first of the Washingtons to hold office, either civil or military, in America. The parish in which he resided, at Bridge's Creek, in Westmoreland county, was named in his honor. It was there he married Anne Pope, and their two sons, Lawrence and John are mentioned below.
(V) Lawrence (3), son of John and Anne (Pope) Washington, married Mil- dred Warner, and their son Augustine is mentioned below.
(V) John (2), son of John (I) and Anne (Pope) Washington, had a daugh- ter -, mentioned below.
(VI) Augustine, son of Lawrence (3) and Mildred (Warner) Washington, was born about 1694, and married Mary Ball, second nuptials. Their son George is mentioned below. Augustine Washing- ton died in 1743, and his widow passed away about 1789.
(VI) -, daughter of John (2)
272
Laws Historical Fus Co
Данов. Е. Пасу
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BIOGRAPHY
Washington, became the wife of John James (see James Line).
(VIII) George, son of Augustine and Mary (Ball) Washington, was born Feb- ruary 22, 1732, and became commander- in-chief of the American army, and first President of the United States. His death occurred December 14, 1799.
(The Stobo Line).
(I) The Reverend Archibald Stobo, founder of the American branch of the family, was a noted Presbyterian minister who in 1699 left Stobo Castle, Stobo Parish, Peebleshire, Scotland, and in Jan- uary, 1700, settled in Charleston, South Carolina. His son, Richard Park, is men- tioned below.
(II) Richard Park, son of Archibald Stobo, had a daughter Jane, who is men- tioned below.
(III) Jane, daughter of Richard Park Stobo, became the wife of Benjamin James (see James).
The Reverend Archibald Stobo has in South Carolina and Georgia many worthy descendants, among them Theodore Roosevelt, ex-President of the United States.
TRACY, David Edward,
Manufacturer.
Pennsylvania numbers among her cit- izens many representatives of that valu- able class of solidly aggressive business men who, wherever they are found, con- stitute the bone and sinew of their com- munities. Prominent among this class in Harrisburg is David E. Tracy, president and director of the Harrisburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Company, one of the large manufacturing concerns of Pennsylvania.
David Edward Tracy was born in Con- shohocken, Montgomery county, Pennsyl- vania, March 1I, 1867, son of the late
James and Margaret (O'Brien) Tracy. James Tracy descended from the old fam- ily of Tracy, was one of the pioneers of Conshohocken, his father before him be- ing a large grain, coal and ore dealer. David E. Tracy received his early educa- tion in St. Matthew's Parochial School, from which he graduated in 1881, then entered the University of Pennsylvania, from which he received the degree of Bachelor of Science in 1886 and the degree of Mechanical Engineer in 1887. He then came to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where he was employed by the Harrisburg Ice Machine Company for three years. In 1889 he formed with two others the Har- risburg Pipe Bending Company, Limited, of which he was one of its largest stock- holders. He held the office of general superintendent until 1894, when the Har- risburg Pipe and Pipe Bending Company was organized, of which he became gen- eral superintendent and director, and in 1912 president. This concern was formed for the bending of iron pipe for refriger- ating plants, and later entered the field of pipe manufacturing and steel stamping plates, in which they have built up a large business. They have their own steel mills, with hundreds of employees (1918) manufacturing munitions for the Allies and United States Government, and high pressure seamless cylinders. Their prod- ucts are known internationally for their excellence.
The business qualifications of Mr. Tracy have always been in demand on boards of directors of different organiza- tions, and he has accepted many such trusts. He is a director of the Central Trust Company, of Harrisburg, and of the Merchants National Bank ; director of the Valley Railways, Central Construction Corporation, and chairman of the District Exemption Board, No. 2, of the Middle Judicial District of Pennsylvania; direc-
Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.