USA > Pennsylvania > Erie County > History of Erie County, Pennsylvania, Volume One > Part 46
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During the World War Mr. Schmidt enlisted from Erie on Feb. 23, 1918, and was sent to Camp Lee, Va. He sailed for overseas in June, 1918, and served throughout the war with the 340th Infantry, 85th Divi- sion. He returned to this country, April 5, 1919, and was honorably discharged.
F. Dana Payne. One of the best known and most esteemed of the younger business men of the City of Erie is F. Dana Payne, who is con- nected with the Modern Tool Works as manager. He was born in this city, June 7, 1893, and is the son of Frank H. and Grace (Barber) Payne, residents of Erie. A complete sketch of the life and business career of Frank H. Payne, manager of the American Meter Company, appears elsewhere in this history.
F. Dana Payne received his education in the public schools of Erie and Pottstown, Pa., and is a graduate of Princeton University, Prince- ton, N. J. He began his business career as an apprentice machinist and was later promoted to cost clerk in the employ of the Modern Tool Works. Mr. Payne now is manager of the plant, which is numbered among the city's leading industries.
On April 17, 1917, during the World War, Mr. Payne enlisted in the United States Navy as a seaman and served as machinist mate on a
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submarine chaser. He was promoted to ensign on the U. S. S. South Carolina and was later appointed lieutenant at the naval experimental station and hydroplane school at New London, Conn.
Mr. Payne was married Nov. 8, 1922, to Miss Mary W. Mead, a native of Erie, and the daughter of John J. and Mary (Boland) Mead, the former a native of Ireland and the latter of New York, who reside at 807 West Ninth Street, Erie. To Mr. and Mrs. Payne has been born a son, F. Dana Payne, Jr. The Payne residence is at 1347 West 10th Street.
Mr. Payne is a Republican and a member of the Presbyterian Church. His wife holds membership in the Catholic Church.
Benjamin Emerman, retired, is among Erie's honored pioneer busi- ness men. He was born at Konigsberg, Germany, July 4, 1855. He spent his boyhood in his native land and began life as a grain merchant. He came to this country in 1881, arriving at Baltimore, Md., on Saturday, July 2nd, the day on which President Garfield was shot. He engaged in the retail dry goods business with a capital of $60.00 and in 1883 established a wholesale dry goods busines at Lancaster, Pa. Five years later he removed to Cleveland, where he established a jewelry business and two years later he located in Canton, Ohio, where he engaged in the dry goods business. In 1895 he went to Akron, Ohio, where he estab- lished an iron and steel scrap business. Five years later he again located in Cleveland and organized what was at that time one of the leading concerns of its kind in the country, the C. A. & C. Iron & Metal Company, with general offices in Cleveland and branch offices at Akron and Canton. In 1904 Mr. Emerman disposed of this interest and founded the Erie Iron & Metal Company at Erie, and the outgrowth of this company is the present Emerman Company. In 1920 Mr. Emerman resigned as presi- dent of the company and retired, but was elected chairman of the board of directors. He is now actively interested in the Emerman Properties Company, whose aim is to develop business and residential properties throughout the city.
On Nov. 3, 1887, Mr. Emerman was united in marriage with Miss Leah Luntz, a native of Konigsberg, Germany, and the daughter of Rev. E. W. Luntz. Reverend Luntz resides in Pittsburgh and is 83 years of age. To Mr. and Mrs. Emerman have been born the following children: Mrs. Meyer Green, a widow, lives in Cleveland; Herman, engaged in the iron and steel scrap business, at Massillon, Ohio; Maxwell V., deceased; Har-
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vey, president of the Emerman Company, Erie; Mrs. Leo A. Weil, lives in Erie; Louis Bart, deceased; and Allen H., secretary of the Emerman Com- pany, Erie.
Mr. Emmerman is a Republican.
Allen H. Emerman is well and favorably known in Erie as a successful young business man. He was born at Akron, Ohio, Feb. 22, 1899, and is the son of Benjamin and Leah (Luntz) Emerman, a complete sketch of whom appears elsewhere in this history.
Allen H. Emerman was reared in Cleveland and was a student at Central High School. He was graduated from Central High School, Erie, and after spending one year at the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo., he attended the University of Michigan for two years, but left to enter service during the World War. In 1919 he became secretary of the Emer- man Company, which position he has since filled, and in 1923 he was ap- pointed general manager of the Emerman Properties Company. He is also managing another Emerman interest known as the Times Square Garage.
Mr. Emerman is a member of the West Eighth Street Temple. He has acquired some repute as an amateur entertainer in singing and dramatic work.
Joseph L. Stadler, vice president and superintendent of the Superior Bronze Corporation, is a prominent citizen and successful business man of Erie. He was born in this city, July 26, 1880, and is the son of Joseph and Adelaide Stadler.
Joseph Stadler was born in the United States and his wife is a native of Germany. For 35 years he has been engaged in railroad service and resides at East Eighth Street, Erie. Mr. and Mrs. Stadler have six chil- dren: Edith, married B. W. Neimaier, lives in Erie; Katherine, married F. I. Pease, lives at Columbus, Ohio; Alois Stadler, lives in Philadelphia ; Frank, lives at Youngstown, Ohio; Charles, lives at Pittsburgh, Pa .; and Joseph L., the subject of this sketch.
Joseph L. Stadler was educated in St. Mary's Academy, Erie, and began life as a moulder. For several years he has been connected with the Superior Bronze Corporation which he founded and is now vice president.
On Jan. 24, 1903, Mr. Stadler was married to Miss Ella Harned, the daughter of Randolph Harned. Mr. Harned resides at Crossingville, Pa.
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His wife is deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Stadler have two children: Lawrence, a student at Notre Dame University, and Margarite, a student at Villa Maris Academy.
Mr. Stadler and his family are affiliated with the Catholic Church and he is a member of the Elks Lodge.
William A. Parker, manufacturer, is recognized as one of the repre- sentative business men of Erie. He was born at Adams, N. Y., Feb. 28, 1866, and is the son of James A. and Amanda (Whitehead) Parker.
James A. Parker was born at Henderson, N. Y., in 1832, and died in 1908. In early life he was a locomotive engineer, and later practiced law. He also engaged in the manufacturing business. His wife died in 1915, and they are buried at Adams Center, N. Y. William A., the subject of this sketch, is their only child.
William A. Parker was educated in the public schools of Rome, N. Y., and began life as a draftsman and machinist. He developed a method of making castings in permanent molds and started operations in 1906. The present factory building was erected in 1912 and enlarged in 1919 and in 1924, and employs 75 men. The Parker White Metal & Machine Company has a valuation of $150,000, the business being founded by Mr. Parker without any capital.
On Nov. 26, 1895, Mr. Parker was married at Toledo, Ohio, to Miss Jessie Whittingham, a native of that place, and the daughter of Charles and Mary (Fellows) Whittingham, natives of England. Mr. Whittingham died Nov. 23, 1909, and his wife died March 14, 1909. Mr. and Mrs. Parker have three children: Norman A., production manager of his father's business; Edythia L., a Normal student; and Robert W. Parker.
Mr. Parker's ancestors settled in Massachusetts in 1685, having come here from Manchester, England. Several of his direct lineage held com- missions in the French and Indian wars, American Revolution, War of 1812, and the Civil War. A revolutionary uniform is still in possession of the Parker family.
Mr. Parker has a fox ranch near Fairview Village, Pa., where he is raising silver foxes for the market. He now has 12 pairs of these foxes, one pair of which are very fine silver foxes that is worth on the market $5,000. Another interesting feature of his fox ranch is that it is located on a mound about 600 feet in circumference, which bears every evidence of prehistoric existence. In grading on this spot, Mr. Parker unearthed
WILLIAM A, PARKER
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considerable pottery, etc., which would indicate that this was an ancient mound.
Mr. Parker is a Republican, a member of the Episcopal church, and belongs to the Erie Consistory and Zem Zem Temple. Mr. Parker is a self made man and is well and favorably known in Erie County. Mrs. Parker is identified with the Women's Club of Erie.
James D. Hay ranks among the representative and successful busi- ness men of Erie. He is general manager of the Cascade Foundry Com- pany. Mr. Hay was born at Fairview, Erie County, Aug. 31, 1848, and is the son of William and Juliette (Demsey) Hay.
The Hay family is one of the oldest and most prominent in this section of the state. It was in 1802 that James Hay, grandfather of the subject of this sketch, came from his native state of Maryland and made the family homestead in Erie County. John Hay, son of James, served as a captain in the War of 1812, and John Hay, the famous author and distinguished statesman, was also a member of this family. William Hay was born in Maryland in 1802 and was reared and educated in Erie County. He married Juliette Demsey, a native of Erie and the daughter of John Demsey, a pioneer millwright and carpenter who built many of the early mills of the county. Her father also served in the War of 1812. Mrs. Hay died in 1879, the mother of four sons and six daughters. Henry, deceased William C., served in the Civil War as captain of Company H, 111th Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry; John, enlisted in Com- pany A, 145th Regiment Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry and was killed at the battle of Fredericksburg, Dec. 13, 1862, at the age of 17 years; James D., the subject of this sketch; Carolina, married S. R. Miller, both deceased; Lucinda, married William Cole, both deceased; Mary, married Joseph Wilcox, and they lived on a farm near Amboy, Ohio; and they are both deceased; Eliza J., married Charles Loverin, and they are both deceased; Adelaide, the widow of Charles P. Cummings, lives at Marshall- town, Iowa; and Nellie, married D. E. Waters, lives at Marshalltown, Iowa. Mr. Hay died in 1883 and his wife died in 1879. He was a Republican, active and interested in local politics, a public spirited man, and a mem- ber of the Methodist church.
James D. Hay received his early education in the schools of Fair- view Township, and then entered the University of Michigan. He served as superintendent of Shadeland Stock Farms in Crawford County, Pa.,
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from 1882 until 1890, when he moved to Erie and took a position in the Department of Internal Revenue. In 1895 he became deputy sheriff under George Evans and the following year was elected Register and Recorder of Deeds and Wills in Erie County. He was re-elected in 1899 and served six years. In 1902 he became general manager of the Cascade Foundry Company, which position he now holds. From 1916 until 1922 Mr. Hay served as water commissioner on the Erie Water Board.
On Dec. 23, 1879, Mr. Hay was united in marriage with Miss Lillian L. Davie, a native of Erie, born Feb. 19, 1854, and the daughter of O. J. and Esther (Gallowhur) Davie, natives of Pennsylvania and both now deceased. To this union were born four children: Donald D., born Oct. 9, 1881, a major in the United States Army, resides at Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, N. Y .; Florence Ester Hay, Born March 6, 1883, lives in Erie; Carlyle Hay, born July 21, 1887, died Nov. 29, 1892; and John Harold Hay, born Dec. 13, 1888, a physician in Pittsburgh at the time of his death, Dec. 2, 1915. Mr. Hay's wife died Dec. 16, 1892, and he was married on Dec. 24, 1907, to Miss Anna Lipton, a daughter of E. B. and Martha (Pruden) Lipton, of Erie.
Mr. Hay is one of the leading Republicans of the county, is a member of the Presbyterian church, and belongs to the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Elks and Masonic lodges, the Consistory, Shrine and is a Knight Templar. He is well and favorably known throughout the com- munity in which he has spent his entire life.
Joseph E. Nason, one of the capable and excellent citizens of Erie, engaged in the manufacturing business, is a native of Erie County. He was born in Fairview Township, Nov. 7, 1881, and is the son of D. W. and Polly (Washburn) Nason.
D. W. Nason was born in Fairview Township and began life as a farmer. In 1885 he established a retail house furnishing business in Erie, which he successfully conducted for 17 years. He served as county treasurer for one term and as secretary of the Poor Board for several years. He died Oct. 20, 1911, and his wife, who was born in Mckean Township, died March 15, 1915. Mr. and Mrs. Nason had four children: Myrtle M., lives at 927 Weschler Avenue, Erie; Mrs. Martha A. Eld- redge, lives at 48 Fountain Street, Dayton, Ohio; W. S., lives in Erie; and Joseph E., the subject of this sketch.
Joseph E. Nason attended the public schools of Erie and began life
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as a newsboy. He was later engaged in his father's store and in 1898 began as a road salesman for the Thomas B. Hebbelwhite Company of Buffalo, and the following year represented the Odin Stove Manufactur- ing Company of Erie. On April 1, 1904, Mr. Nason organized the Eriez Stove & Manufacturing Company of which he has served continuously as secretary-treasurer and general manager. In 1919 he founded the Eriez Stove & Manufacturing Company, of Canada, Ltd., located at Montreal, Quebec, of which he is director and sales manager. In 1924 he estab- lished the Eriez Stove & Manufacturing Company of California, which is located at Los Angeles, and Mr. Nason is president and director of this company. The Eriez Stove & Manufacturing Company manufactures high grade gas ranges, heaters and gas appliances, and is among the leading industries of Erie.
On June 28, 1906, Mr. Nason was married to Miss Ruth Burton of Erie and a daughter of Charles and Anne (Marks) Burton and grand daughter of A. P. Burton, residents of Erie. There are four children in the Nason family: Jack Burton, Joseph Richard, Ann, and Ruth Nason.
In politics Mr. Nason is identified with the Republican party. He is an attendant of the Park Presbyterian Church, a member of all Masonic bodies including the 33d degree. He stands high in the community and has many friends and acquaintances.
W. S. Nason, who is successfully engaged in the real estate business in Erie, is a native of Pennsylvania. He was born at Fairview, Erie County, Nov. 24, 1874, and is the son of Daniel Webster and Polly (Wash- burn) Nason.
D. W. Nason was born in Fairview Township and in early life engaged in farming. In 1885 he established a retail house furnishing business in Erie, which he conducted for 17 years. He served as county treasurer for one term and as secretary of the Poor Board for several years. He died Oct. 20, 1911, and his wife, who was born in Mckean Township, Erie County, died March 15, 1915. To Mr. and Mrs. Nason four children were born: Myrtle M., lives at 927 Weschler Avenue, Erie; Mrs. Martha A. Eldredge, lives at 48 Fountain Street, Dayton; W. S., the subject of this sketch; and Joseph E., secretary and general manager of the Eriez Stove & Manufacturing Company, Erie.
W. S. Nason was educated in the public schools of Erie and when a young man was connected with the local newspapers as a reporter. Mr.
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Nason is also connected with several manufacturing industries in the city.
On Aug. 22, 1900, Mr. Nason was married to Miss Clara Louise Kess- ler, a native of Erie and the daughter of C. and Helen (Bloeser) Kessler, natives of Germany and Pennsylvania, respectively. Mr. and Mrs. Nason have two children, Helen K. and Polly Nason.
Mr. Nason is a Republican and has served as census supervisor and journal clerk to the Senate of Pennsylvania. He is a member of the Presbyterian Church and is identified with the Masonic Lodge, Inde- pendent Order of Odd Fellows, the Kahkwa Club and the Shriners. He served as a member of the Pennsylvania National Guard for six years.
Reed Anshutz is the popular and successful manager of the Lawrence Hotel, Erie. He was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., Dec. 20, 1883, and is the son of Frank and Linnie T. (Gatchell) Anshutz.
Frank Anshutz, deceased, was one of the founders and senior mem- ber of the stove manufacturing firm of Anshutz, Bradbury & Company, Pittsburgh. His grandfather built the first blast furnace west of the Allegheny Mountains. Melting iron ore was the business of the Anshutz family for three or four generations. To Mr. and Mrs. Frank Anshutz were born four children: Frank A., associated with the Carnegie Steel Company, Pittsburgh; Ruth; Betty; and Reed, the subject of this sketch.
Reed Anshutz attended the public schools of Pittsburgh, Park Insti- tute and is also a graduate of Western University, now the University of Pittsburgh. Although now manager of the Lawrence Hotel, Mr. An- shutz is by no means a novice in the hotel business. Like a lot of mana- gers of the biggest and most successful hotels in the country, he started in at the bottom. He was only 18 years old when he began in the hotel business. His first position was in the Forbes Hotel, Pittsburgh. He kept moving up step by step and gained most of his experience in other Pittsburgh hotels. He was later connected with the Fort Pitt, the Chatham and the William Penn. Since 1920 Mr. Anshutz has been associated with the Lawrence Hotel as assistant manager and manager, being appointed to the latter responsible position in June, 1924.
The Lawrence Hotel, which is Erie's finest hotel, and in fact one of the leading hotels in the state, was built in 1911 at a cost of $2,500,000. It is owned and operated by the United Hotels Company, who own and operate the following well known hotels: Bancroft, Worcester, Mass .;
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Durant, Flint, Mich .; Olympic, Seattle, Wash .; Onondaga, Syracuse, N. Y .; Penn-Harris, Harrisburg, Pa .; Portage, Akron, Ohio; Robert Treat, New- ark, N. J .; Rochester, Rochester, N. Y .; Roosevelt, New York City; Seneca, Rochester, N. Y .; Stacy-Trent, Trenton, N. J .; Ten Eyck, Albany, N. Y .; Clifton, Niagara Falls, Can .; King Edward, Toronto, Can .; Prince Edward, Windsor, Can .; Mount Royal, Montreal, Can .; and the Royal Connaught, Hamilton, Can. One of the newest hotels owned by this company is the Benjamin Franklin, Philadelphia.
LAWRENCE
LAWRENCE HOTEL, ERIE, PA.
The Lawrence Hotel has 267 rooms, an attractive main dining room, grill, several small banquet rooms, and a beautiful ball room. It is widely known for its attractive wall decorations and prominent among the panel paintings are : three panels representing Charlemagne and his army cross- ing the Alps; two panels representing Roland in the Fairy Gardens of Falerina, where he went in search of Hector's armies; and a painting repre- senting "A Roland for an Oliver."
Mr. Anshutz is identified with the Pennsylvania State Hotel Associa- tion, the Greeters of America, the Erie Club, the Erie Motor Club, the Masonic lodge, the Elks, the Rotary and Kahkwa clubs, and the Y. M. C. A. He ranks among the representative citizens of Erie and is widely and favorably known.
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Robert Francis Hoffstetter, vice president and treasurer of the Odin Stove Manufacturing Company, is a leading citizen of Erie. He was born at Kalamazoo, Mich., Jan. 24, 1888, and is the son of John Calhoun and Auguste (Heine) Hoffstetter.
John Calhoun Hoffstetter was a native of Ann Arbor, Mich., and an early settler of Erie, Pa., where he was engaged as railway ticket agent for 15 years. He later became interested in the stove business and is now deceased. His wife, who was born at Galesburg, Mich., resides in Erie. There were two chillren in the Hoffstetter family: C. H., lives at 637 West Sixth Street, and Robert Francis, the subject of this sketch.
After receiving his education in the public schools of Erie, Robert Francis Hoffstetter became interested in the stove business and was engaged in business with his father and brother for 16 years. He is now vice president and treasurer of the Odin Stove Manufacturing Company.
On Feb. 27, 1913, Mr. Hoffstetter was united in marriage with Miss Christine Raitt, a native of Erie and a daughter of Burton C. Raitt, who was a native of New York, and is now deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Hoff- stetter have two sons: John R., and Robert Francis, Jr.
Mr. Hoffstetter is a Republican, a member of St. Paul's Episcopal Church, a 32nd degree Mason and Shriner and belongs to the Elks Lodge, the Kahkwa Club and the Erie Club. During the World War he served three years as a member of the Pennsylvania Reserve Militia. Mr. Hoff- stetter is a representative business man of his community and is favor- ably known.
J. Reed Craig, an attorney of Erie, is recognized as one of the repre- sentative members of the bar of Erie County. He was born at Lime- stone, Clarion County, Pa., Sept. 7, 1869, and is the son of John F. and Mary J. (Ogden) Craig.
John F. Craig, deceased, was a prominent attorney of his time. He was born at Sligo, Pa., and after graduating from Washington and Jeffer- son College in 1856, was admitted to the bar in 1858. Two years later he engaged in the woolen manufacturing business, in which he was interested until 1891. From 1895 until 1910 he served as president of the New Bethlehem Trust Company. He died Sept. 26, 1924, and his wife died Nov. 21, 1923. They are buried at New Bethlehem, Pa. To Mr. and Mrs. Craig were born five children as follows: Myrtle C. Jones, lives at Erie;
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Edward E., lives at New Bethlehem, Pa .; J. Frank, lives at Erie; H. Rush, lives at New Bethlehem, Pa .; and J. Reed, the subject of this sketch.
J. Reed Craig spent his boyhood at New Bethlehem, Pa., and after receiving his preliminary education he was graduated from Oberlin Col- lege and Grove City College. He engaged in the active practice of his profession after being admitted to the Erie County bar in 1894, and has met with unusual success. Mr. Craig was interested in the Union Oil Works of Erie and served as secretary and treasurer of that corporation from 1900 until 1920, when his increasing practice made it necessary to relinquish any active participation in outside work.
On Dec. 15, 1898, Mr. Craig was united in marriage with Miss Kath- erine Whittelsey, a native of Erie, and a daughter of Hon. Edward L. and Charlotte (Hunt) Whittelsey, the former a well known judge in the Erie courts. Judge Whittelsey died in 1920 and his wife died in 1899. Mr. and Mrs. Craig have three children: Louise, a designer in New York City ; John W., a student at Washington, D. C .; and Katherine, a student at National Park Seminary, Washington, D. C.
Mr. Craig is identified with the Republican party and served as a mem- ber of the state legislature in 1921. At the annual meeting of the Erie County Bar Association in September, 1924, Mr. Craig was elected presi- dent and is now serving in that capacity. During the. World War he served as attorney for the Food Administrator and also for Draft Board No. 1 of Erie County. Mr. Craig is a member of the Central Presbyterian Church is a 32nd degree Mason and belongs to the Elks. He is an excellent citizen and an asset to his community.
Ford Winfield Rochelle, Jr., Canon of St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral Erie, is a well known and highly estemed member of his community. He was born at Chester, N. J., Oct. 3, 1897, and is the son of F. W. and Margaret B. (Titus) Rochelle.
F. W. Rochelle was born at Sparta, N. J., and his wife was a native of Princeton, N. J. He was graduated from Newton Academy in 1881 and from Princeton University in 1885. He resides at Chester, N. J., where he is engaged in the wholesale nursery business. There are five children in the Rochelle family: Mrs. C. Harold Levy, lives at 929 Bellevue Avenue, Trenton, N. J .; P. F., lives at Morristown, N. J .; Miss Helen P. Rochelle, lives at 18 Newfield Street, East Orange, N. J .; Philip T., lives at Chester, N. J .; and Ford Winfield, Jr., the subject of this sketch.
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Ford Winfield Rochelle, Jr., was reared and educated in his native city and after his graduation from Roxbury High School he entered Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va. After studying at the General Theological Seminary, New York City, he was appointed Canon of St. Paul's Cathedral.
On Sept. 30, 1920, Reverend Rochelle was married in New York City to Miss Marion C. Baker, a native of Dover, N. J., and the daughter of Andrew T. and Carrie L. (Dodge) Baker, the former a native of New Jersey and the latter of New York. Mr. Baker died May 3, 1918, and his wife died Aug. 17, 1897. Reverend and Mrs. Rochelle have a daugh- ter, Marion Ellene, born March 16, 1922.
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