USA > Pennsylvania > Butler County > History of Butler County, Pennsylvania > Part 137
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GEORGE MCCANDLESS, second son of John McCandless. Sr., was the first of the family who settled in Butler connty. Ile came to what is now Centre township abont 1795-96, built a cabin and commenced a small clearing. lle afterwards married Mary Fish, and their first child, John. was born in the cabin home, August 24, 1798, the first white male child born in the township. They reared quite a large family and have left numerons descendants in western Penn- sylvania.
JAMES MCCANDLESS, third son of John McCandless, Sr., married Margaret Moore. and resided in this township down to his death, in 1840. His wife sur- vived him until 1847, and many of their descendants are still residents of the township.
WILLIAM MCCANDLESS, fourth son of John McCandles-, Sr., was born in Ireland, October 20. 1777, and came with his father to Allegheny county, whence he removed to what is now Centre township, Butler county, where he resided until his death, in 1850. In April, 1801, he married Nancy Fish, who was born June 11, 1783. She survived him until 1871, a period of twenty-one years. They were the parents of the following children : John F., born March 22. 1802 : Nathan F., born December 25, 1808 ; Jane C., born January 15, 1506 ; Nancy, born November 1. ISOS; Mary A., born May IS, ISIO; Robert W., born November 22, 1812: Josiah, born March 6, 1816; Anderson, born May 26, ISIS : Jemima, born January 16, 1820; Porter, born January 22, 1823, and Will- iam C., all of whom were born on the old homestead, and all dead except the youngest.
WILLIAM C. MCCANDLESS. youngest son of William and Nancy McCand- less, is the only survivor of his father's family. He was born November 7, 1825, grew up on the homestead and received a common school education. Ile has always resided upon the farm settled by his father in the last decade of the Eigh- teenth century, and has taken a deep interest in local educational and political
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HISTORY OF BUTLER COUNTY.
matters. He is a member of Muddy Creek Presbyterian church, and is an ardent supporter of the Republican party. Mr. MeCandless was married Febru- ary 2, 1865, to Amelia, a daughter of William S. Bingham, of Centreville, But- ler county. She is the mother of the following children : Mary 1 .; William B., Warren F., deceased; Origen G .: Olive J .; Florence J. : Jenning- C. : John B., and one that died in early youth.
ANDERSON MCCANDLESS, Son of William and Nancy McCandles, was born upon the MeCandless homestead, in Centre town-hip, May 26, 1818. received his education in the pioneer subscription schools, and followed farming until his death. He was married June 25, 1546, to Mary Carlin, a daughter of William Carlin, of Lawrence county, to which union were born nine children, five of whom grew to maturity, as follows : Porter A. ; Hannah J .: Carlin W .; Kinsey, deceased : Joseph T., who reside on the old homestead, and Mary E. Mr. McCandless and wife were members of Muddy Creek Presbyterian church, and took a deep interest in the growth and prosperity of that denomination. In early life he was a Whig, but subsequently united with the Democratic party. He filled several of the minor offices in his township, and was connected with the State Militia, during his young manhood.
PORTER A. MCCANDLESS, eldest in the family of Anderson and Mary Mc- Candless, was born May 28. 1547. on the old homestead in Centre township. Ile received a good common school education, and was reared upon his father's farm. In IS72, he engaged in merchandising at Unionville, but sold out and opened a store at Greece City, which he also disposed of, and then purchased his present homestead in 1876. Mr. MeCandless was married December 15. 1975, to Laura C. Eckert, a daughter of John N. Eckert, of Lawrence county. Eight children have been the fruits of this union, as follows : Mary F., who died at the age of fourteen ; Hannah E. : Estella J. ; Laura C. ; Anderson L. ; John D .; Sarah Il., and Margurette. The parents are members of Unionville Presby- terian church, in which body Mr. MeCandless holds the office of trustec. Politic- ally, he is a stanch Democrat, and is a member of the Patrons of Husbandry.
JOHN F. MCCANDLESS, eldest in the family of William and Nancy ( Fish ) McCandless, was born upon the MeCandless homestead in Centre township, Butler county, March 22, 1802. Ile lived with his parents until he was thirty years of age, and in the year 1932 was married to Nancy Hays, a daughter of William Hays. Nine children were born of this union. as follows : Mary J., wife of James Findley, of Kansas : Nancy A., wife of John J. Miller : Emeline, wife of James S. Glenn; William H. ; John M., deceased : Jennings C. ; Sarah B. ; Porter, and Minerva, both of whom died in early youth. Mr. McCandless and wife were life-long members of the Presbyterian church, in which he held the office of trustee for several terms, and was also one of the building committee of the old Muddy Creek church. In politics, he was an ardent Republican, and filled several township offices at different periods.
WILLIAM H. MCCANDLESS, eldest son of John F. McCandless, was born upon the homestead in Centre township, December 21. 1840, received a public school education, and worked upon the home farm until the breaking out of the Rebellion. He enlisted in Company B, One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Penn-
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
sylvania Volunteer-, for the nine months service, and participated in the battles of South Mountain, Antietam, Sharpsburg, Fredericksburg, and Chancellor -- ville. He served his full terin, and then returned to his home, where he remained until August, 1864, when he again enlisted, in Company , Sixth Pennsylvania Artillery, in which he served with the rank of first lieutenant, until the close of the war. Returning home in June, 1865, he resumed his duties upon the farm, and has since continued in agricultural pursuits. He was married March s, 1866, to HIattie Glenn, a daughter of William Glenn, of Concord township, and has five children : Carrie B. ; Milton L. : Minnie R. ; Myrta, and Everett.
NATHAN F. MCCANDLESS was born December 28. 1803, in Centre town- ship, Butler county, Pennsylvania, and was the second son of William and Nancy (Fish) MeCandless, pioneers of that township. He was reared upon the home- stead, and at the age of thirty his father gave him 100 acres of the home farm, which he subsequently cleared and improved. Ile resided upon this place for more than sixty years, dying January 31, 1891. He was a member of the Pres- byterian church, and a ruling elder in that body for many years. In 1875 he was a prime mover in the erection of the Unionville church, and gave liberally of his means toward that purpose. In early life a Whig. he joined the Republican party upon its formation, and filled the office of justice of the peace for thirty years. Mr. McCandless married Elizabeth, daughter of John Thompson. She died in 1856, the mother of the following children : Nancy J., deceased wife of William Wilson ; Martha, wife of S. R. Thompson : Lavina, deceased wife of Rev. Loyal Hays; Josiah, who served in Company E, One Hundred and Third Pennsylvania Volunteers, and died in 1863; Jefferson W., of Centre township : Isaiah J., of Butler : Mary E., deceased wife of John L. Lee, and Clarinda M., wife of J. N. Thompson, of Brady township. Mr. McCandless married for his second wife Delia Hockenberry nce Mitchell, who bore him three children : Nathan F., deceased ; Annetta M .. wife of James Ramsey. of Butler township, and Nathan W., of Mckean county. He was one of the leading farmers of Cen- tre township, was extensively engaged in settling estates, and a progressive, public-spirited man.
JOHN M. MCCANDLESS, son of James and Margaret ( Moore ) MeCandless, was born in Centre township. Butler county, in 1806, upon the farm settled and cleared by his father. He attended the subscription schools of pioneer days. and became by self-application a very well educated man, and filled most of the town- ship offices, being justice of the peace ten years, and also jury commissioner. Ile . married Nancy McCandles-, a daughter of William McCandles-, of Centre town- ship, to which union were born twelve children, as follows : Margaret J .. who married Lemon Dean, of Lawrence county ; Josiah ; James ; Nancy A. ; Abigail ; Jemima ; Elizabeth ; Abner ; Nancy, who married Calvin Robb : Mary E., who married Leonard Shannon, of Franklin township; William L., and one that died in early youth. The only survivors of this family are Abner, Nancy, Mary E., and William L. Mr. McCandless was a member of the Presbyterian church. and died in that faith, June 2, 1886. His wife died in July. 1>94. Ile was one of the most intelligent farmers of the community, and always took a decided interest in religious and educational affairs.
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HISTORY OF BUTLER COUNTY.
WILLIAM L. MCCANDLESS, youngest in the family of John M. McCandless, was born upon the homestead in Centre township. Butler county, and was reared and educated in his native township. He married Miss Mary J. Pollock, of Centre township, and is the father of seven children, as follows: Birdie A. ; Iona G. ; Ethel M. ; infant daughter. deceased ; Arthur C., deceased ; William D., and Leslie J. Mr. McCandles-, like his father, is an ardent Democrat, and is a stanch supporter of the measures and principles of his party.
THOMAS SMITH was a native of Virginia. who settled in Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, and in 1796 removed to what is now Summit township, Butler county, locating near the site of Bonny Brook. Ile remained at that point for eighteen years, was one of the first tax collectors in the county, and took an active interest in public affairs. He was married in Virginia, to a Miss Cun- ningham, a relative of the Cunninghams who donated a part of the land which now comprises the borough of Butler. His family consisted of three sons and three daughters, as follows : Adam ; John; Charles; Ruth; Cynthia, and Jane. About 1814 the family removed to Indiana, where Mr. Smith died in 1835.
ADAM SMITH, eldest son of Thomas Smith, was a native of Rockingham county, Virginia, came with his parents to what is now Summit township, in 1796, and removed with them to Indiana. In 1830 he returned to Butler county and settled in Centre township, upon the land where his son Washington P. now resides. He cleared a farm of 200 acres, improved it with good buildings and resided there until his death, in 1869. He married Agnes Wallace, a daugh- ter of Benjamin Wallace, one of the pioneers of Centre township, who settled upon the land afterwards owned by his son-in-law, and now the property of his grandson. Their family consisted of six sons and one daughter, viz. : John ; Washington P. ; Milton, deceased ; Harvey ; Benjamin, deceased ; Thomas B., and Margaret, deceased. His wife died in 1866; he survived her three years. Ile was a member of the United Presbyterian church, and in politics, was originally a Whig, and afterwards a Republican.
WASHINGTON PERRY SMITH, eldest son of Adam and Agnes ( Wallace) Smith, was born December 10, 1521, in Harrison county, Indiana, and removed with his parents to Butler county, Pennsylvania, in 1830, where he grew to man- hood. Ile received a limited education, but was a student in boyhood, and thus became self educated. He studied surveying under David Dougal, of Butler, and also learned the carpenter's trade, which business he followed from 1843 to 1850. In the latter year he entered the employ of the Brady's Bend Iron Company, as superintendent of the building department, filled that position for sixteen years, and was then appointed superintendent of furnaces and railroads, which he occupied until the company suspended, in 1873. He then returned to the home- stead in Centre township, where he has since been engaged in farming. Mr. Smith has been an active worker in the Republican party since its organization, has held the office of school director for sixteen years, and has always manifested a laudable interest in the progress of the public schools. He was married in 1848, to Harriet, a daughter of Charles Thompson, of Massachusetts. She died in 150, leaving one child, who died in early youth. His second wife was Emeline Thompson, a sister of his first wife, to whom have been born five children, as
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
follows: Harriet N., wife of John N. Allison ; Ada, wife of Warren Albert ; Carrie, wife of Everett Ralston ; Margaret, wife of Robert Whitmire, and Mary. In early life Mr. Smith was identified with the Masonic order, but has taken no interest in that fraternity for many years. He has been one of the enterprising citizens of Centre township throughout his residence in Butler county.
JAMES ALLISON, a native of Ireland, first settled in Maryland, and came to Centre township, Butler county, Pennsylvania, in 1802. He purchased 300 acres of land, and cleared a farm, a portion of which is now in possession of his grand- son, John Allison, the old homestead being owned by O. D. Thompson. Mr. Allison married a Miss Thompson, and his family were as follows: Frank : William ; Robert ; Margaret, who married James Phillips, and Ellen, who mar- ried Ilenry Thomas, all of whom are dead. lle was a member of the United Presbyterian church, was quite prominent in church affair-, and resided upon his farm down to his death.
ROBERT ALLISON, third son of James Allison, was born in Maryland. in 1799, and came with his parents to Butler county at the age of three years. Here he grew to manhood, and spent the remainder of his life, dying upon the old homestead in Centre township, in 1883. Hle filled many of the township offices, and was a Whig, and afterwards a Republican. He was a member of the United Presbyterian church throughout his life. Mr. Allison married Jane. a daughter of Charles Cochran, of Virginia. Their family consisted of the fol- lowing children : Narcy, who married John Campbell ; Mary, who married W. D. McCandles -; Lydia E., who married J. E. Russell: Sarah E., who became the wife of Alexander Blain; Thomas C .. who enlisted in Company G, One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Pennsylvania Volunteers, and died at Belle Plain. Virginia : William, of Centre township, and John N. Mrs. Allison survived her husband two years, dying in 1885.
JOHN N. ALLisov, youngest child of Robert and Jane Allison, was born upon the homestead, in Centre township, December 26, ISIS. He was educated in the public schools and at Witherspoon Institute, and taught school for six years. Being reared a farmer, be selected that as a vocation. and has followed it up to the present. He was married in 1872, to Harriet N .. a daughter of Wash- ington P. Smith, of Centre township, and is the father of six children. as fol- lows : Perry C. ; Carrie O). : Robert P .; Ella J. : Wesley L., and Mary E. Mr. Allison is a stanch Republican, has filled the offices of school director and town- ship auditor, the latter for twelve years, and was elected county auditor in 1 93. Ile is a member of the United Presbyterian church, and is a trustee in the Holyoke congregation.
WILLIAM CHRISTIE was one of the early settlers of Butler county. He was born in Ireland in 1765, came with his parents to Westmoreland county. Penn- sylvania, in early boyhood, and there grew to maturity. About the year 1775, while he and an elder brother were hunting for his father's cattle in the woods. they were surprised by Indians. His brother fled, pursued by the latter, who upon their return told William they did not capture his brother. They took their prisoner to their camp, and there produced a scalp, which he recognized as that of his brother, whom the savages had killed and scalped. William was held 68
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HISTORY OF BUTLER COUNTY.
a captive for eighteen months, when the Indians exchanged him for a few gal- lons of whiskey, which in this case proved of some substantial benefit. William Christie was one of a family of three brothers and one sister. His brother Andrew settled in Butler county. upon the site of Greece City. About 1800 William came to Butler county and entered 200 acres of land in what is now Concord township, upon the head water- of Connoquenessing creek, built a cabin and lived upon this tract for several years. He then returned to Westmoreland county, leaving his son John in charge of the farm. He came back again in 1^24, and resided with his son in Concord township until his death. Ile was one of the early school teachers of Westmoreland and Butler counties, and made education one of his particular hobbies. He was an elder of the Presbyterian church, and died in that faith. He married Sarah Irwin, who became the mother of three sons and one daughter. as follows: John : Robert, who was drowned in early manhood : William, who located in Venango county, and there died, and Betsey, who married John McClain, of Westmoreland county. Mr. Christie died at the home of his son John, in Concord township, in 1848; his wife died in 1823.
JOHN CHRISTIE, eldest son of William and Sarah Christie, was born in West- moreland county, in 1796. In ISIS he took charge of his father's farm in Con- cord township, upon which the latter had settled in 1800, and devoted the balance of his life to clearing and improving it. He possessed a good education, and was one of the pioneer school teachers of Butler county. Politically, he was one of the leading Democrats of his time, and filled many of the minor township offices. In religious faith, he was a Presbyterian. Mr. Christie married Margaret, a daughter of Capt. John Guthrie, a veteran of the Revolution. She was a native of Westmoreland county. and became the mother of nine children. viz. : Sarah. who married Johnson Timblin : Mary : William A. ; John G .. of Concord town- ship: Eliza, wife of John Anderson ; Nancy, deceased; Martha. wife of James Pryor : Ellen. and Oliver, of Kansas. Mr. Christie died in 1861: his widow survived him ten years, dying in 1871.
WILLIAM A. CHRISTIE, eldest son of John and Margaret Christie. was born in Butler county, January 13. 1528. and received a public school education. He remained with his parents until he was twenty-six years of age, and then com- menced farming upon a part of the homestead place. In 1857 he purchased a farm in Centre township. resided upon it for thirty years, and then retired from active life, locating at Unionville, where he expects to spend his remaining years. Mr. Christie has been an active member of the Republican party since early manhood, filled the office of justice of the peace for ten years, and that of county commissioner for three years. Ile has been an elder of the Presbyterian church for thirty years, and has always given liberally of his means towards every worthy object. In 1849 he married Sarah J., a daughter of James Me Junkin, to which union were born six children, four of whom are living, viz. : James L., a physician of Petersville ; Mary L., wife of Dr. Albert Holman, of Unionville ; William M., and Henry C., both residents of Baldwin City, Kansas, Mrs. Christie died July 17, 1887, at the home of her son William M .. in Kansas, where her remains were interred. He was again
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BIOGRAPHICAL. SKETCHES.
married in 1889, to Mrs. Kesiah J. MeCandless, a daughter of John S. MeCand- less, whose father was the first sheriff of Butler county. Mr. Christie is one of the leading citizens of his township, and is a man of progressive ideas and com- mendable public spirit.
DR. ALBERT HOLMAN ' was born in Allegheny county, Pennsylvania. August 19, 1858, upon the site of the first house erected in Franklin township. son of Joseph and Nancy ( Neely ) Holman. His grandfather, Joseph Holman. Sr., was one of the early settlers of Franklin township, Allegheny county. Our subject received his primary education in the public schools and afterwards attended Sharpsburg AAcademy. He then learned the carpenter's trade, which business he followed for six years. In 1878 he commenced the study of medicine with his brother. Dr. J. A. Holman, and located in practice at Unionville, But- ler county, in 1880, as assistant to his brother. He graduated from Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, in 1881, and formed a partnership with hi- brother, which continued until the removal of the latter to Allegheny City, one year afterwards. In 1890 Dr. Holman opened a drug store at Unionville, and in 1893 he purchased the general store of M. II. McCandless, which he carries on in connection with his profession. He was appointed postmaster at Unionville in 1893, and is still filling that position. He is one of the leading Democrats of his locality, and takes a prominent part in local campaigns. He is a member of the Presbyterian church, and is connected with the Jr. O. U. A. M. In Isst he married Mary L., a daughter of W. A. Christie, and has three children, viz. : Nanny B., Florence R., and Ralph MeJ. Dr. Holman is a member of the But- ler County Medical Society, enjoys a lucrative practice. stands well among his professional brethren, and is one of the leading citizens of his township.
HENRY Hoox was born in Dauphin county. Pennsylvania, five miles north of Harrisburg, and was of German extraction. In ISIS he settled in Oakland township, Butler county, purchasing 400 acres of land, upon which he made his home down to his death. He was twice married, his first wife being Kate Thomas, a native of New Jersey, but at the time of her marriage a resident of Dauphin county. She was the mother of two children : John, and Elizabeth. who married James Turk. His second wife bore him the following children : James : Henry ; Samuel ; William, and Anthony, all of whom are dead except Anthony, who lives upon the old homestead in Oakland township. The parents were members of the United Presbyterian church, and resided in this county until their death.
JOHN HoON, eldest son of Henry and Kate (Thomas) Hoon, was born in Dauphin county, Pennsylvania, in 1798, and there learned the tanner's trade. Ile came with his parents to Butler county in Ists, and at the age of twenty-five engaged as a teamster between Pittsburg and Erie. In 1832 he settled upon the farm in Centre township, where his son Thomas R. now lives, and spent the remaining years of his life in farming. Ile was one of the leading Democrats of his township, held nearly all the township offices at different periods, and was lieutenant in the old State Militia. He was one of the early members of the United Presbyterian church of Butler, and an elder in that body for many years. Hle married Nancy B. Rainey, a daughter of Thomas M. and Sidney (MeKit-
HISTORY OF BUTLER COUNTY.
trick ) Rainey, who bore hin the following children : Margaret J .. who married Michael Thompson : Catherine, deceased wife of Dickson Beighley : Mary E .. wife of Philip Seibert : Agnes. deceased ; Maria, who married Robert Gerrard ; Harriet, who became the wife of Isaac Conant: Thomas R .: George H., deceased ; John C .; Nelson, and Isaiah M. Mr. Hoon died July 31. 1864, and his widow. August 1, 1865.
THOMAS R. Hoov, son of John floon, was born December 3. 1835, in Centre township, Butter county. and was reared and educated in his native township. He was employed as a teamster until 1860, then went to Oil Creek, Venango county, and engaged in the oil business. In 1862 he enlisted in Company G, One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Pennsylvania Volunteers, and served his full terin : he then re enlisted in Company I, Sixty-seventh Pennsylvania Volunteers, and served until the close of the war. participating in the following engagements : South Mountain. Antietam, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, the Wilderness. and the closing scenes around Richmond, ending with the surrender of Lee at Appomattox. After being mustered out he returned to the old homestead, where he has since been engaged in farming. He married Sarah J., a daughter of David Jones, of Franklin township, to whom have been born seven children, as follows: George 11 .. deceased : Mary ; William C., deceased ; John R. ; Nancy B. : Henrietta, and Lina. Mr. Hoon is a member of John Randolph Post, G. A. R., also of the Patrons of Husbandry, and both he and wife are connected with the United Presbyterian church. He is a Republican. in politics, and has filled most of the township offices. He is the owner of 300 acres of well improved land, and is one of the progressive, enterprising farmers of his township.
JAMES THOMPSON was born in Ireland in 1778, there married Sarah Gil- liland, and immigrated to Pittsburg. Pennsylvania. and thence to Butler county. early in the present century. lle purchased a farm in 'what is now Franklin township. subsequently removed to Beaver county, and then returned to Butler county, and bought a tract of 600 acres of land in Cherry township. Here he cleared a farm. made substantial improvements, and resided upon it down to his death, in 1961. He was a member of the Protestant Episcopal church. To James and Sarah Thompson were born twelve children. as follows :. Mary .1 .; Jane, and Sarah, all of whom are dead: Elizabeth: Moses: Arabella : James. deceased : Minerva: Matilda, and John, the last two of whom are deceased ; Emeline, and AAndrew, deceased.
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