USA > Pennsylvania > Northumberland County > Genealogical and biographical annals of Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, Vol. 2 > Part 82
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George. Brosius, son of Charles, was born at Dalmatia, and like his immediate ancestors became a farmer, living in the Mahantango Valley, where he owned the farm now belonging to Alexander Deppen. He also followed the butcher business for some years. He took some part in local affairs, serving as school director, was a Republican in polities, and was an active member of the Stone Valley Church, in which he held the office of dea- con. He died Dec. 10, 1883, aged forty-two years. eleven months. sixteen days, and is buried at the Stone Valley Church. His wife Sophia (Trego), daughter of Samuel Trego. was born Oct. 8. 1837. and died Dec. 27, 1877, and is also buried at the
Among the records at the Himmel Church we find: Nicolaus Brosius, born Dec. 23, 1754, died Stone Valley Church. They had the following
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children : John F .. Mary ( Mrs. Jerre Heckert). for many years. He is a Republican in politics, Sarah (Mrs. John E. Bastress), Charles H. and socially is identified with the Jr. O. U. A. M., Samuel (died aged ten years).
JOHN F. BROSIOUs, son of George, a merchant of Dalmatia (Georgetown), was born Aug. 6. 1863, where he still lives, and received his education in the public schools. He passed his boyhood upon the farin, assisting with the agricultural work and also helping his father in the butcher business for several years. He then became elerk in a hotel at Herndon, being thus engaged for two years. and . at the age of twenty he went out to Ogle county, On Sept. 3, 1882. Mr. Brosious married Mary G. Emeriek, daughter of Isaae and Sarah ( Spotts ) Emerick, and granddaughter of John and Anna (Charles) Emerick. They have four children : Al- bert Eugene, Harry F. (born Jan. 17, 1893), Leotta C. and Anna S. Ill., where he did farm work for about one year. After his marriage he began clerking in a hotel in his native township, continuing in that posi- tion three years, until he engaged in the livery business, in Dalmatia, in 1891, on his own ae- count. After conducting same about one and a half years he sold out and entered the bottling business, which he carried on altogether about fif- teen years, during which time, however, he was also engaged as owner and proprietor of the "Na- tional Hotel" at Dalmatia, the leading hotel of the town. He was interested in the hotel business for six and a half years, selling his property and good will in 1908 to Jacob Binga- man, the present proprietor. Sinee the spring of 1910 Mr. Brosious has had a general mercantile and drug business at Dalmatia, carrying a full stoek in both lines, and he is agent and distributer for various kinds of farm imple- and returned to Dalmatia. his early home. For ments and vehicles of every description. In this several years he followed different kinds of work, until he entered the haek business in 1900. for Dr. M. L. Emerick of Hickory Corners. Three years later he began the livery business which he has since continued, and in which he has now an extensive eustom, having an up-to-date stable, ten horses and excellent equipment. He has the repu- tation of always keeping reliable teams, and fre- quently has calls to take out parties. Mr. Brosions has built up a good business by faithful attention to the wants of his patrons, and he has been thrifty of his earnings, having bought his own residence, owns several lots in the borough, and has real es- tate in Washington, D. C. He is a thoroughly re- spected citizen, enjoying the esteem of all who know him. connection he handles the famous Mifflinbnrg (Pa.) and Michigan buggies and other vehicles, in which line he has a large trade; has the dis- triet ageney of the DeLaval cream separators, of which he has sold many in his section of the coun- ty ; is agent for a number of different harvesting machines, many makes of plows and harrows and farm supplies of various kinds, doing the largest business of the kind in the territory south of Line Mountain. Stoves, heating apparatus and bathroom supplies constitute another line in which he has built up a profitable trade. Mr. Brosions is vice-president and a director of the Mahanov & Mahantango Telephone Company, director and manager of the Aluminum Paint & Tile Company. of Dalmatia (which employs six men), is the own- In 1896 Mr. Brosious married Katie Seachrist, daughter of John Henry and Elizabeth (Zerbe) Seachrist, and they have a family of eight chil- dren : Laura M., John E .. Ella M., Charles E., Catharine M., George E., Ralph E. and William E. Mr. Brosious and his family worship with er of considerable real estate in Dalmatia, and an all-around man of affairs in his community. where he is regarded as a leading business man. and a citizen whose public spirit and progressive influence have done much for the general welfare. He has gained his substantial position through his the Lutheran congregation at Dalmatia. Political- own efforts, and the high standing he enjoys is ly he is a Republican. the result of a consistent career of honorable deal- ings and the pursuit of creditable ambitions. His financial acumen and trustworthy character were recognized by liis selection to the office of treasurer of Lower Mahanoy township, a position he filled
John B. Packer Council. No. 854, of Dalmatia (of which he was elected treasurer in 1896, two months after joining, and has filled the office ever since), and with the I. O. O. F., Lodge No. 864 at Herndon, and in religion is a Lutheran. He belongs to the Lutheran congregation at Dalmatia Union Church, of which his wife is a Reformed member, and served four years as deacon, deelin- ing another two years' term.
CHARLES H. BROSIOUS, who conducts a livery business at Dalmatia, was born April 22, 1870, in Lower Mahanoy township, son of George and Sophia (Trego) Brosius. He was reared upon the farm, and did farm work from the time he com- meneed regular employment, at the age of thir- teen, until he reached the age of seventeen. The next year he elerked in a hotel, and then became traveling salesman for D. F. Witmer, jobber and manufacturer of confectionery, of Herndon, fol- lowing this line of work for three years. For the ' next two years he was engaged as bar clerk at Tower City and Lykens, after which he married
Isaac E. Brosions, son of Charles and Rebecca ( Emeriek) Brosions, was born Nov. 19, 1832, in Lower Mahanoy township, where he was reared, and where he continued to live until 1890. From
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boyhood he was trained to agricultural life, which for facilitating good work, being regarded as one he has always followed, and in 1890 he moved to of the enterprising young farmers of his section. The farm is sure to improve materially under his energetic management. For nine years Mr. Bros- ious was engaged in the dairy business, conduct- ing a daily milk route to Sunbury.
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the farm near Selins Grove Junction, in the lower end of Upper- Augusta township, this county, which he has since occupied, cultivating the land on shares. There are 140 acres of cleared land in this property, and Mr. Brosious has acquired a valuable farmu stock during the twenty years he has been on this place, which he has placed in excel- lent condition by his intelligent and thrifty meth- ods. Mr. Brosious is a Republican, and is serving his second term as school director of Upper Au- gusta township, having been last elected in the spring of 1910. He and his family worship in Hollowing Run, where he is serving his second term as elder.
On Nov. 17, 1877, Mr. Brosious married Lizzie Weaver, daughter of Henry and Annie ( Bona- witz) Weaver, of Mahantango, the former a native of Lower Mahanoy township, where he died and is buried, his grave being at the Bingaman Evan- gelical Church at the county line. Mrs. Brosious's - grandfather was Henry Weaver, who also lived in Lower Mahanoy township, later moving to Juni- ata county, where he died and is buried. Fifteen children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Bros- ious, as follows: Charles H .; Jonathan A., de- ceased in infancy; Arthur F., of Upper Augusta township, who married Mary Drumm ; William I. : Forrest E., of Lower Augusta township, who mar- ried Virgie Brosius: Stella M., who married Charles Brosious, a contractor of Sunbury; Car- tie M., unmarried, who lives at home: Lizzie A., wife of William D. Wolf; a son that died in in- fancy ; Beulah D. and Anna C., both of whom are unmarried and at home: and Eben T., Flos- sie H., Leroy and E. G., all of whom are attend- ing school.
CHARLES H. BROSTOUS, son of Isaac E., was born March 4, 1880, in Lower Mahanoy township, and there attended the connnon schools. He was reared to farming, which he followed as assistant to his father in his youth, continuing to live with his parents until 1904. That year he moved to Sun- bury, where he continued to reside for a year and a half, following which he was located at Lime- stone, in Upper Augusta township, for four years, in the spring of 1910 settling at his present home in the central part of Rockefeller township, at the Center ( Shipman) schoolhouse. It was at one tinte the Daniel Conrad homestead, later owned by William Horning, and consists of seventy-one acres of fertile land, with good buildings and vari- ous modern improvements. Everything about the property is in excellent condition, and Mr. Bros- ious has up-to-date machinery and the necessary equipment for carrying on his work profitably and expeditiously. He has a silo, and is wide-awake in adopting any approved apparatus or methods
On July 9, 1904, Mr. Brosious married Katie May Foy, daughter of Daniel B. and Sallie M. (Rebuck) Foy, of Rockefeller township, and they have one daughter, Ellen May. Mr. Brosious and his family worship at the Hollowing Run Luth- eran Church. Socially he holds membership in Lodge No. 203, I. O. O. F., of Sunbury.
WILLIAM I. BROSIOUS, son of Isaac E .. the old Lutheran Church, St. Elias Church in was born June 2, 1883, in Lower Mahanoy town-
ship, Northumberland county, and there began his education in the public schools. When he was in his, seventhi year his parents moved to their present home in Upper Augusta township, and he continued to work for them on the farm until he reached his majority, at which time he took up the carpenter's trade. He followed that . business about four years altogether. In the spring of 1893 he had begun farming on shares, being thus engaged for two years, one in Lower Augusta township and one in Rockefeller township. After that he was employed at his trade until the spring of 1910, when he purchased and settled upon the farm of seventy-two acres in Lower Augusta town- ship, near Mount Zion U. B. Church, which he now occupies. This farm was owned in the earlier days by John Bartholomew, and later by F. B. Delbough. Mr. Brosious raises general crops and attends the Sunbury markets. He is prospering by strict attention to his work, and is one of the industrious and respected citizens of his locality.
On July 4, 1902, Mr. Brosious married Bertha Daisy Delbough, daughter of F. P. and Carrie Delbough, of Lower Augusta township, and they have three children, namely : Eugene A .: B. Violet and W. Leroy. Mr. Brosious and his family are Lutherans in religious faith. He is a Republican on political questions.
Peter Brosius, horn July 23, 1782, was one of the early residents in the lower end of the county, and followed farming, owning a large acreage. now divided into two farms. The one went to his son Peter and is now owned and occupied by Wesley Snyder ; the other went to his son Andrew. and is now owned by the Milton Drumheller estate. Peter Brosius died Nov. 19, 1849, and he and his two wives are buried at the Himmel Church. All his children were born to his first marriage, with Anna Margaretha Hepler. who was born July 19, 1286, and died April 27, 1838. His second wife, Anna Maria ( Hepler), was a sister to the first, and was herself first married to Jacob Reitz : she was born April 4, 1784, and died Sept. 23, 1857. Two sons and three daughters
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were born to Peter and Anna Margaretha Brosius: den) ; Emanuel G. is mentioned below ; James died when about eleven years old.
Maricha, who married Godfried Rebuck ; Godfried; Peter ; Eve, who married a son of Rev. Mr. Hemp- ing ; and Anna, who married Benneville Holshue (storekeeper, hotelkeeper and postmaster at Greenbrier, in Upper Mahanoy township) and (second) a German named Lawrence, with whom she moved West.
Andrew G. Brosius was born in Upper Mahanoy township, Sept. 23, 1832, and died April 16, 1900, aged sixty-seven years. He owned and operated the Brosius mill and farm, his land consisting of 120 acres, now owned by his son-in-law, Wesley Snyder, and the mill is now owned and operated Godfried Brosius, son of Peter, was a farmer all his life. He settled in Washington township, where Milton Drumheller now lives, and was a Intheran member of the Himmel Church there, gristmill. A man of initiative and energy, he where he is buried. He was born Jan. 27, 1808, by his son William S. During his ownership of the mill Andrew G. Brosius remodeled it, and he had a linseed oil mill and sawmill, as well as a long held his place as the leading business man and died November 29, 1851: his wife Catharine of the district, where he did considerable building Klock, born Nov. 24, 1805, died Dec. 1, 1876, and and lent his influence and aid to many projects which benefited the whole community. He was an active member of the Lutheran congregation at the Himmel - Church, where he held various offices, and was also a public officeholder, serving as school director and supervisor of his township. In politics he was a stanch Democrat. Mr. Bro- sius was twice married. His first wife, Mary A. Schankweiler, daughter of Solomon Schankweiler, of Upper Mahanoy township, was born Sept. 9, 1834, and died March 12, 1867. They were the parents of five chldren: Sarah married John Keim; Samuel lives at Shamokin, Pa. : Cassie married Wesley Snyder: William S. is mentioned below : Mary married Lewis Rothermel. By his second marriage, to Luzetta Adam. daughter of Jeremiah Adam, there were three children : Galen, of Rough and Ready, Pa. ; Frances, who married William Snyder; and Andrew Jackson. is also buried at the Himmel Church. We have the following record of their children : (1) Judith married David Ferster, and they lived near Urban, Pa. (?) Samuel obtained the homestead of his father when he was sold out, and later moved north of the mountain into one of the Augusta townships. He married Kate Rebuck. and they had children. Wilhelmina, Emma. James, Washington, Zetic and Sivilla. (3) Lydia mar- ried Joseph Rebuck and they lived near the Him- mel Church in Washington township. (4) Sarah, born in 1837, died in 1854, unmarried. (5) Peter married a Miss Christ and they lived in Ashland. Pa. They had a family. (6) Joseph had a small tract of land in the neighborhood of the Himmel Church, and besides cultivating it followed his trade of carpenter. He married Henrietta Clark and they had Jane ( Mrs. Morris Rothermel) and Lanra (Mrs. Richard Hilbush).
WILLIAM S. BROSIUS, son of Andrew G .. operates the old gristmill and sawmill run by his father and grandfather before him, at Green-
Peter Brosins, the other son of Peter and Anna Margaretha ( Hepler) Brosius, passed all his life in the Swabian creek district, near Greenbrier, brier, in Washington township, where he was born in what is now Washington township, Washington March 10, 1865. He was reared to work on the farm and in the mill, assisting his father until he reached his majority, after which he was em- ployed in the coal mines at Locust Dale for a period of eight years. For the following ten years he was engaged in railroading, on the Phil- adelphia & Reading road. On April 2, 1900, he came to his present home and has since devoted himself to the operation of the mill; it is located on a two-acre piece of land. Mr. Brosius has a thriving business, which has continued to grow under his management, and he is a reliable miller and honorable in all his transactions, having the respect of all who have had dealings with him. and Upper Mahanoy townships forming the Swabian Creek Valley. He owned over two Imun- dred acres of land (the farm now owned by Wes- ley Snyder ), and was an enterprising and snc- cessful man, in addition to farming being engaged in milling, in which he prospered as in his other work. He operated an oil mill, sawmill and grist- mill. He was succeeded by his son Andrew. Peter Brosius died Feb. 2, 1854, aged forty-three years, five months, nineteen days, and was buried at the Himmel Church, of which he was a Luth- eran member. His wife, Catharine Gonsor, daughter of Daniel Gonsor, of Washington town- ship, died Oet. 6, 1895, aged eighty-five years, In 1888 Mr. Brosius married Elizabeth Umlauf. daughter of Henry and Dinah ( Racebeck) Umlauf, of Ashland. Pa., the former of German (lescent, the latter of English ancestry. Mr. and Mrs. Brosius have had a large family, namely : Francis, Myrtle, Guy, Gertrude, Adda. William. Ethel, a son that died in infancy, Clarence. eleven months, twenty-nine days. They had a . large family, viz .: Andrew G. is mentioned below : Eve married John Hetrich; Maria (deceased) married a Mr. Boissel : Catharine (deceased ) mar- ried William Hetrich: Daniel (deceased) lived on part of the homestead, where Charles Brosius now lives ; Mary married John Houten (or Hou- Emery, Henry, and Roy (who died when five
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months old). Mr. Brosius and his family are helmina Brosius, daughter of Samuel and Cath- Lutheran members of the Himmel Church. He is a Demoerat in politieal sentiment.
arine (Rebuck) Brosius, who lived at the place now occupied by Milton Drumheller, Samuel Bro- ANDREW JACKSON BROSIUS, son of Andrew G. and Luzetta (Adamı) Brosins, was born June 20, 1880, in Washington township, and received his education in the local schools. He was reared to farm life, but also gained a familiar knowl- sius later moving to Plum Creek, in Rockefeller township. Eight children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel G. Brosius: Sarah J. married David Rebuck; Catharine married Frank Het- rich ; Emma married Charles Wanke; Charles is edge of the milling business, operating the Brosius a resident of Sunbury ; Irwin is nnmarried and mill at Greenbrier for four years. from the time he lives at home; Virgie married F. Brosious; Nora was seventeen years old. For five years he also married Calvin Klock; Annie married John Strasser.
followed the earpenter's trade, one year as journey- man and four years as boss carpenter, during which time he built a number of houses and barns in the locality, employing at times as many as seven men. In 1904 he began farming at his present home in Upper Mahanoy township, where he owns a traet of one hundred acres, which for a number of years belonged to Amos Mattern. Mr. Brosius has found huckstering profitable, and he makes weekly trips to Shamokin, where he dis- poses of his various products. He is a thrifty young farmer, and is making good progress in his work.
On Nov. 23, 1901. Mr. Brosius married Sarah Elizabeth Mattern, daughter of Amos Mattern, and they have a family of four children: Harry R., Norma I., Blanch C. and Amelia L. Mr. Brosius was originally identified with the Inth- eran congregation at the Himmel Church. but sinee living in Upper Mahanoy township he and his family attend St. John's Church, where he is at present serving as a deacon.
EMANUEL G. BROSIES. son of Peter and a Democrat, taking interest in the success of his Catharine (Gonsor) Brosius, was born Sept. 17, party and in the local welfare : he served as super- 1845, in the Swabian creek district, and was visor and overseer of the poor. Mr. Broseious's reared on the farm of his parents. for whom he first wife, Rebecca (Hepner), daughter of George continued to work until he was of age. He then and Eve (Weiser) Hepner, died in 1859, aged began farming on his own account, at the place forty-two years, the mother of three children : David, Henry and Elizabeth ( who married Jaeoh Eister and lives in Sunbury). His second mar- riage was to Mary Ann Hartline, daughter of George Hartline, and she survives him. Two chil- dren were born to this union: Sevilla, who mar- ried John Richie : and Rebecca, who died young. where Israel Lahr now lives, being located there for eight years. About 1878 he came to his present home in Lower Angusta township, where he has lived continuously since. The first seven years he was a tenant of Henry Reitz, and then bought the place. which contains 150 aeres of good land, which under his care has been brought to a highly improved state. He built his house in 1898 and his barn in 1901. The place has been intelligently and systematically cared for ever since it came into his possession, and is now a valu- able piece of property. Mr. Brosius formerly held the office of overseer of the poor, and is now serv- ing as supervisor of his township, which office he has held siner 1908. He votes independently. He and his family are Lutheran members of St. Elias Chureh, which he has served as deacon, elder, treasurer and trustee, holding the two offices last named at present.
In August, 1870, Mr. Brosins married Wil-
Jacob Broscious, great-grandfather of Charles H. Broscious, of Sunbury, farmed in Lower Mahanoy township, this eounty, and lived in the vicinity of Uniontown, where he died about 1848, at an ad- vaneed age. He is buried in the lower end of the county. In religion he was a Lutheran. To him and his wife Catharine Beisel were born the fol- lowing children: Daniel, John, Jacob, Elias, Samuel, Lydia, Catharine, Maricha and Sally.
Samuel Broscious, son of Jacob, was a native of the Swabian creek valley, born in 1821, and farmed in Shamokin township the greater part of his life, also engaging in the hotel business near Paxinos, on the Tulpehocken road. He dealt rather extensively in horses and cattle, and in the pursuit of his various interests became a widely known man. He died at his home in Stonington, in Shamokin township, in 1904, at the advanced age of eighty-three years, and is buried at Snyder- town. In religious matters he was connected with the Lutheran church, and in politics he was
David Broscious, son of Samuel, was born in 1842 in the Mahantango Valley, and died in Lower Mahanoy township, Sept. 4, 1902. He is buried at Lantz's Church. For five years Mr. Broscious farmed in Lower Augusta township, and then for nineteen years followed that vocation in the Irish Valley, returning to Lower Augusta township and thence moving to Lower Mahanoy, .where he was residing at the time of his death. He was an active member of the Democratic party, and held local offices. In religion he adhered to the Re- formed faith. Mr. Broscious married Louisa Fegley, daughter of Jaeob and Harriet (Zartman) Fegley, and six children were born to them : Web-
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ster, now of Baltimore, Md .; Charles H .: Mary, George Brosius, and followed farming throughout ·
who married William Shipe; Katie, who married his active years. His children were: Daniel, D. H. Snyder; and two that died in infaney. Elias, John, Jacob, Samuel, Maricha (married Fer- dinand Masser), Elizabeth (married Jonas Boh- her), Mrs. Solomon Delp and Mrs. Peter Thomas.
CHARLES H. . BROSCIOUS, contractor and builder, of Sunbury. senior member of the firm of C. H. Broscious & Co., was born July 4, 1869, at Augustaville, son of David Broseious. He grew up in the Irish Valley, where he received his edu- cation in the publie schools, until he was twenty-
Daniel Brosius, son of Jacob, was born in Jordan township Nov. 14, 1808, and there engaged in farming on an old homestead of the Brosius family, owning a tract of 130 acres now the property of one years old living and working on the farm. He George Emerich. He died Dec. 17, 1885, survived then learned the earpenter's trade, which he fol- by his wife, Sarah (Wenrich), whose people eame lowed in Shamokin for eleven years in one employ, from the Heidelberg valley in Berks county. She for the West End Lumber Company. His next work
was born Jan. 16, 1815, and died Sept. was as carpenter at Sunbury in the employ of the 14, 1895, and they are buried at St. Paul's Church, at Urban. Mr. Brosius was first a member of the Hebe Church, later uniting with St. Paul's, and he was active in church work, holding various offices. Four children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Brosius: Michael, George, Annie (1847-1863) and Polly (married Andrew Adams). Of these, George, who was & lifelong farnier, lived and died on his father's homestead ; he married Polly Wolfgang, and their children were. Catliarine, Emma, Jane, Ella, Daniel, Nora, Cora. Elwood and Lizzie.
Michael Brosius, son of Daniel, now a resident of Lower Mahanoy township, was born across the line in Jordan township July 4, 1842. He was reared in Jordan township. where he worked for his father and for a year or two as hired man on farnis, in about 1864 beginning farming for him- self. IIe continued to engage in agricultural pur- suits in Jordan township until about 1904, when he practically retired, moving to his present home in Lower Mahanoy, where he has a small tract besides his- dwelling. which was built by one Daniel Schlegel. Mr. Brosius has led a quiet life. and has taken no part in public affairs exeept to serve as school director. He has been active. however, in the work of St. Paul's Church at Urban, to which he and his family belong. and In polities lie is a Democrat. Mr. Brosius has
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