USA > Pennsylvania > Perry County > History of Perry County, Pennsylvania, including descriptions of Indians and pioneer life from the time of earliest settlement, sketches of its noted men and women and many professional men > Part 88
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 | Part 42 | Part 43 | Part 44 | Part 45 | Part 46 | Part 47 | Part 48 | Part 49 | Part 50 | Part 51 | Part 52 | Part 53 | Part 54 | Part 55 | Part 56 | Part 57 | Part 58 | Part 59 | Part 60 | Part 61 | Part 62 | Part 63 | Part 64 | Part 65 | Part 66 | Part 67 | Part 68 | Part 69 | Part 70 | Part 71 | Part 72 | Part 73 | Part 74 | Part 75 | Part 76 | Part 77 | Part 78 | Part 79 | Part 80 | Part 81 | Part 82 | Part 83 | Part 84 | Part 85 | Part 86 | Part 87 | Part 88 | Part 89 | Part 90 | Part 91 | Part 92 | Part 93 | Part 94 | Part 95 | Part 96 | Part 97 | Part 98 | Part 99 | Part 100 | Part 101 | Part 102 | Part 103 | Part 104 | Part 105 | Part 106 | Part 107 | Part 108 | Part 109 | Part 110 | Part 111 | Part 112 | Part 113 | Part 114 | Part 115 | Part 116 | Part 117 | Part 118 | Part 119 | Part 120 | Part 121 | Part 122 | Part 123
KERR, REV. F. L. Rev. Frank I .. Kerr, son of Lewis Barnett and Elizabeth (Postlethwaite) Kerr, was born at Landisburg, September 14, 1869. He was educated in the public schools and later taught in Saville Township. He graduated at Franklin and Marshall College and in 1894 entered the ministry of the Reformed Church. He has served in the fol- lowing pastorates: Penbrook, Meadville, Newport, Pitcairn, Phoenixville, and New Kensington, where he is now located.
KINER, HENRY L. Henry L. Kiner was born February 1, 1851, the son of William and Margaret (Calhoun) Kiner. While very young, he went with his parents to Illinois, where he became proprietor of the Geneseo News, a position which he filled for thirty years. He was mayor of Geneseo, and was a gifted newspaper man. His last work was the writing of a History of Henry County, Illinois. Of his two sons, one is an attorney in Chicago, and another a civil engineer. Mr. Kiner died March II, 1920, in a hospital in Moline, Illinois, where he had made his home in later years.
KINTER, DR. JOHN H. G. Dr. John H. G. Kinter was born at Mil- lerstown, June 5, 1880, the son of John H. G. and Ann E. (Smith) Kinter. He attended the public schools and graduated from Lafayette College in 1905, and from Jefferson Medical College in 1907. He then located at Chambersburg and is now county medical director and coroner of Franklin County.
KISTLER, LLOYD K. Lloyd K. Kistler was born at Loysville, Sep- tember 16, 1847, the son of David and Susanna (Rice) Kistler. He was educated at the common schools and the New Bloomfield Academy. He taught in Perry County and in the State of Iowa and Kansas. He served in the 208th Regiment, Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, during the Sec- tional War. He homesteaded a quarter-section near Waterville, Kansas, in 1869. He has written a number of pamphlets upon economic and social lines.
KISTLER, REV. J. L. Rev. John Luther Kistler, son of David and Susanna (Rice) Kistler, was born at Ickesburg, Pa., September 25, 1849. He attended the public schools and graduated from Gettysburg College in 1872. He taught at Susquehanna University in 1874-75. He then went to Hartwick Seminary, Otsego Co., N. Y., in 1876, where he was professor of Greek and Mathematics, resigning in 1920. He received the degrees Sc.D. and D.D. from Gettysburg College.
KISTLER, MARY J. Mary J. Kistler was born at Blain, the daughter of John A. and Caroline V. (Sheibley) Kistler. She attended the public schools and the New Bloomfield Academy, graduating from the Edinboro State Normal School in 1896. She has taught in the schools of Pennsyl- vania, Massachusetts, and Connecticut, and is now a deaconess in the St. James' Methodist Episcopal Church at New York City, superintendent of
822
HISTORY OF PERRY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
the New York Deaconess Home, and superintendent of the New York Deaconess Association.
KISTLER, CLARK B. Clark B. Kistler was born May 22, 1885, at Elliottsburg, the son of Clayton J. and Ellen (Shearer) Kistler. He at- tended the public schools and the New Bloomfield Academy, graduating from Pennsylvania College in 1909. He did special work at the University of Pittsburgh since then. He taught in the schools of Perry County and in the High School at Connellsville, Pa. In 1913 he taught in the Depart- ment of History in the Pittsburgh High School, and in 1915 began teaching Mathematics in Carnegie Institute of Technology.
KISTLER, MISS SUE R. Miss Sue Rice Kistler is another of Perry County's missionaries of note. She is a daughter of David and Susan (Rice) Kistler, and was born October 25, 1863.
KLINE, IRVIN E. Irvin E. Kline was born near Blain, November 22, 1874, the son of William A. and Catherine (Mumper) Kline. He attended the public schools at Blain, graduated from the Lock Haven State Normal School in 1896, and from Dickinson College in 1901. He was a graduate student at Columbia University, New York City, during the summer ses- sions of 1904-06-07. He taught at Dickinson College Preparatory School, Blair Hall (Blairstown, N. J.), and in the Atlantic City High School, where he is located at present.
KLINE, G. ALFRED. G. Alfred Kline was born near Blain, July 27, 1880, the son of William A. and Catherine (Mumper) Kline. He attended the Blain schools, Shippensburg Normal School, Conway Hall, at Car- lisle, and graduated from Dickinson College in 1907. He did postgraduate work there in 1907-08. He did graduate work at the University of Penn- sylvania, specializing in Mathematics and Science. Before going to col- lege he taught several years in Perry County. He had charge of Mathe- matics in Conway Hall three years after graduation, the last two of which he was vice-headmaster. In the fall of 1910 he went to Philadelphia, and has been in the Mathematical Department of the South Philadelphia High School the past eight years. He has also been teaching higher mathematics in the evening schools at Drexel Institute.
KOCHENDERFER, REV. H. W. Rev. H. W. Kochenderfer was born near Saville, in Saville Township, March 19, 1875, the son of Thomas F. and Caroline (Adams) Kochenderfer. He attended the public schools and Prof. W. E. Baker's select school at Eshcol. He prepared for college at Ursinus Academy and graduated from college and the School of Theology. He also attended Ludlamb's School of Dramatic Art, and the University of Pennsylvania, where he received the M.A. degree. He had taught school in Saville Township and in Ursinus Academy. He served four years as pastor of the Royersford Reformed Church, was located at Al- toona for two years, and at Linfield for ten years, teaching during the same time at the Central High School of Philadelphia.
KRETZING, REV. JOHN. Rev. John Kretzing was born March 7, 1840, in Juniata Township, the son of John and Susan (Ernest) Kretzing. He attended the local schools and an advanced school at Chambersburg. as well as Selinsgrove Institute. He entered the ministry and served pas- torates at Littlestown, Newport, Brodhead's Mill, and other places. He died about 1894.
LANE, ALBERT M. Albert M. Lane was born at Duncannon, July 31, 1878, the son of Austin Luther and Rebecca (Moore) Lane. He attended the public schools and graduated from the Duncannon High School in 1894. He entered Lafayette College and graduated in the class of 1905. The college retained his services upon his graduation and he has been
.
823
PERRY COUNTY'S NOTED MEN
with them ever since, being now bursar and acting treasurer of the col- lege, as well as superintendent of the buildings and grounds.
LATCHFORD, DR. O. L. Dr. Orwan Luther Latchford, only son of Philip Leonard and Elizabeth E. (Orwan) Latchford, was born at Markel- ville, March 15, 1874. He attended the public schools and Prof. W. E. Baker's select school at Eshcol, from 1890 to 1893. He taught during 1893 and 1894. He then entered the drug business with John W. Cotterel, at Harrisburg, where he was located for two years. He graduated from the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy in 1898. From 1898 until 1899 he occu- pied positions as head pharmacist. He entered Medico-Chirurgical Col- lege in 1899, and graduated in 1903. He then began the practice of medi- cine at 1319 Girard Avenue, Philadelphia, with office also at Fifth and Chestnut Streets, and has been in continuous practice there since that date. He entered the Philadelphia Polyclinic and College for Graduates in Medi- cine, in the Department of Eye Diseases, in 1907, and was clinical assistant instructor in diseases of the eye, and acting chief of the clinic until 1912. In 1908 he was a special student at Jefferson Medical College, taking dis- eases of the nose and throat. During the same year he was clinical assist- ant on diseases of the nose and throat at Lebanon Hospital, Philadelphia. He was once a member of the associate staff of Northwestern General Hospital. In 1921 he helped organize the Broad Street Trust Company with a capital of $250,000, and was elected one of its directors.
LEONARD, JOHN M. John Moore Leonard, son of Edward Burchard and Julia (Rumple) Leonard, was born in Landisburg, where his father practiced law. He attended the local schools and graduated from Dick- inson College, later studying at the University of Berlin. He was professor of Greek for years at the University of Cincinnati, where he died in 1894. Prof. Leonard had the unique distinction of having been an instructor of the noted President, William McKinley.
LIGGETT, MARTIN L. Martin L. Liggett was born at Ickesburg, November 10, 1839. He was educated in the public schools and the Acad- emy at Academia, Juniata County. He graduated at Princeton and read law in Berks County and at Chillicothe, Missouri. He practiced seven years in Williamsport, but failing health caused him to return and locate at Newport, where he died a year later, on December 30, 1883.
LINDAMAN, DR. R. H. Dr. R. H. Lindaman was born at Blain, March 20, 1881, the son of Rev. F. S. and Amelia Josephine (Rice) Linda- man. He left the county as a lad. He attended the schools of Adams County, later studying medicine. He practices at Littlestown, Adams County.
LINN, JOHN ACHESON. John Acheson Linn was born in Landis- burg, January 24, 1820, a grandson of Rev. John Linn, the pioneer pastor of old Center Church for forty years. He was a son of Samuel and Mary (Diven) Linn. He attended the Landisburg schools and later engaged in mercantile business there until 1860, when he removed to Philadelphia and became a member of the noted grocery firm of Coyle, Laughlin & Co., Mr. Coyle being married to his sister, with whom he made his home. He was an active and honorable business man, an active church man, and passed away January 14, 1901, at the home of his daughter, Mrs. William Patton, whose husband is first assistant to the president of the Pennsylvania Rail- road at Philadelphia.
LONG, REV. HENRY F. Rev. Henry F. Long, son of Isaac and Eliza- beth (Smith) Long, was born in Saville Township, September 3, 1841. He . was educated in the public schools. The Sectional War attracted him to the colors. He enlisted in Company 8, Seventeenth Regiment, Pennsyl- vania Cavalry, and served until May 31, 1864, when he was shot through
827
HISTORY OF PERRY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
the shoulder at the Battle of Cold Harbor, and the next day lost his left arm through amputation as the result. Returning home, he entered the Eshcol Select School and the Markelville Academy. He taught a term and attended the academies at Greason, Cumberland County, and at New Bloomfield. He then spent six years at the Missionary Institute (now Susquehanna University) at Selinsgrove, graduating in 1873. He served charges at Arndtsville, Pine Grove Mills, Spring Hill, Illinois, and Bunker Hill, Kansas. At Bunker Hill, through the efforts of Mr. Long and his wife, with Eastern friends, Zion Lutheran Church-the first church in the town, was built. In 1883 he returned to Perry County and became pastor at Duncannon, later being located at Sharpsburg, Shippensburg, and also in Fitzgerald, Georgia, where a new church was built during his pastorate. He retired in 1901 from the regular ministry.
LOSH, SAMUEL S. Samuel Stephen Losh, pianist and baritone, was born at Lebo, Tyrone Township, October 4, 1884, the son of Charles S. and Alice ( Wagner) Losh. He attended the schools of Perry County and Hagerstown, Md., graduating from the Hagerstown High School in 1902. He also attended Leipsic Conservatory. He has been director of music at Catawba College, N. C., the Texas Christian University, and army song leader at Camp Bowie. He is director of municipal grand opera at Fort Worth, Texas, and was one of the forerunners in the development of com- munity music in the United States, having led mass singing from coast to coast. He is widely known as a pianist, singer, conductor and lecturer.
LUPFER, ALEXANDER MCCLURE. Alexander McClure Lupfer was born at Blain, September 17, 1855, the son of Samuel and Matilda (McClure) Lupfer. His early education was gotten principally in the schools of Newville, where his parents moved shortly after his birth. He attended Millersville State Normal School, where he prepared for college. He graduated in the civil engineering department of Lafayette College in 1880. The following year he went West and became one of the famous engineers who blazed the trails of the great transcontinental railways. He is recognized as one of the great locating and construction engineers of the great Northwest. He constructed lines in Pennsylvania, Minnesota, North Dakota, Montana, Washington, Idaho, Oregon, and British Columbia. For practically thirty years he was one of James J. Hill's chief engineers on the Great Northern Railway. He died February 3, 1920.
LUPFER, DR. GEORGE W. George W. Lupfer, M.D., was a son of Jesse K. and Sarah (Ricedorf) Lupfer, born at Markelville, November 15, 1856. He was the eldest of a family of twelve children. He attended local schools until fifteen, then the New Bloomfield Academy, and three terms at Millersville. He taught two terms in Perry and two in Northumberland County. He worked with his father at carpentering to secure funds for his education. He read medicine with Dr. J. D. Shull, of Williamsport, and graduated from College of Physicians and Surgeons at Baltimore in 1881. His preceptor had in the meantime removed to Markelville, and with him he practiced for a year and a half. He then located at Neff's Mills, being postmaster there during a term starting in 1893. After assist- ing a physician perform an operation at Petersburg, Huntingdon County, November 2, 1905, he started home in his carriage. About a mile and a half east of that town he was observed in a reclining position, with his hat off and the horse driverless. Kind hands conveyed him into the neighbor- ing farmhouse, and in a few minutes he expired.
LUPFER, EDWARD P. Edward P. Lupfer was born at Toboyne Tannery, Perry County, October 22, 1868, the son of Samuel and Matilda (McClure) Lupfer. He attended school at Beavertown, Pa., where his family resided later, and at Newton, Kansas, where he graduated from the
825
PERRY COUNTY'S NOTED MEN
High School in 1889. From 1892 to 1894 he was at the University of Kan- sas at Lawrence. Since that time he has been assistant engineer in charge of heavy mountain construction on the Rio Grande Western, assistant en- gineer of construction on the western extension of the Great Northern Railway in Montana, Idaho and Washington; assistant engineer of con- struction on the Rio Grande Western in Utah; transit man on location of a route of the Great Northern Railway; assistant engineer of the Middle Division of the Great Northern Railway; division engineer of the Eastern Minnesota Railway; locating engineer on mountain work on the Great Northern Railway in Northern Washington; locating engineer on the West Branch Valley Railroad in Pennsylvania; resident engineer of the Pennsylvania Division of the New York Central; locating engineer of the Buffalo & Susquehanna Railway in New York, and later division engineer and assistant chief engineer of the same line. In May 1907, he entered private construction work and contracting at Buffalo, New York, under the firm name of Lupfer & Remick, in which he still continues. This firm makes a specialty of heavy bridge building and filtration plant work.
LUTZ, ALBERT J. Albert J. Lutz, the son of Isaac and Sarah (Inch) Lutz, was born in Liverpool, May 9, 1863. He attended the Liverpool schools and graduated at the Lock Haven State Normal School. He then followed teaching for a number of years, having been principal at various places, and ranking high in the profession. He was a writer of no mean ability and contributed to the press both prose and verse. Upon the found- ing of the Mont Alto camp for tubercular patients in the South Mountains he founded and edited a little magazine called Spunk, which gave him a nation-wide reputation as an optimist. Later returning to Liverpool he entered the furniture business with his father, but March II, 1912, died in the prime of his manhood.
MACCLUER, REV. DONALD W. M. Rev. Donald W. M. MacCluer was born May 28, 1885, at Springfield, Ohio, but spent all of his early life in Perry County. He was the son of William M. and Mary C. (Rice) MacCluer. He attended the Centre Township schools and graduated from the New Bloomfield Academy in 1902. He graduated from Mercersburg Academy in 1904, Washington and Lee University, Virginia, in 1907, and from Att- burn Theological Seminary in 1910. From September, 1910, to September, 19II, he was a missionary in charge of the educational work of the Pres- byterian Church in Chieng Rai Province, Siam. He was invalided home with jungle fever. He was pastor of the Third Presbyterian Church at Niagara Falls, 1911-13; pastor of the First Presbyterian Church at Cold Water, Michigan, 1913-19; assistant pastor of the Central Presbyterian Church, at St. Louis, Missouri, 1919-20, and pastor of the Rose City Park Presbyterian Church, at Portland, Oregon, since July 1, 1920, the mem- bership of which is 663. During the war he was camp pastor for the Na- tional Service Commission, being stationed at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas.
McGUIRE, REV. F. W. Rev. Frank W. McGuire was born October II, 1863, in Wheatfield Township, the son of Robert and Harriet Henri- etta (Greenbaum) McGuire. He attended the local schools, the Duncan- non High School, the Bloomfield Academy, and entered Washington and Jefferson College as a freshman, quitting owing to his health. In October, 1887, he was ordained a minister of the gospel by the Church of God. He has since served at Smithville, Matamoras, Elizabethtown, Churchtown, Newville, Shiremanstown, Landisville, Saxton, Lisburn, and Roherstown, where he is now located. For twenty-five years he has been president of the Board of Extension of the East Pennsylvania Eldership, and for al- most that long a member of the Board of Missions. At present he is ex- executive controller and a member of the standing committee. He has
826
HISTORY OF PERRY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
been a member of the General Eldership since 1902, a member of the Ex- ecutive Board of that body since 1905, and president of that body since 1913. For nine years he was associate editor of the Sunday School Gem.
McCASKEY, JOHN L. John L. McCaskey was born at Shermansdale, August 14, 1857, the son of Joseph A. and Jane (Smiley) McCaskey. He was educated in the local schools and the Cumberland Valley State Nor- mal School at Shippensburg. He also attended the Philadel- phia High School. He con- ducted a Summer School of the teachers' preparatory grade at Shermansdale, 1878-80. Of a mechanical turn of mind, in connection with Wilson Smiley, he designed and constructed the large tower clock placed upon the Smiley foundry, with quarter-hour strikes, which served Carroll Township with standard time for many years. From 1882 to 1888 he was edi- tor and publisher of the Dun- cannon (Pa.) Record, serving part of the time as principal of schools there also. From there he went to Waynesboro as su- perintendent of schools, and while there installed an electric signal (program) system, the JOHN L. McCASKEY. first one in the country. In a legal contest over this matter with Thomas A. Edison, in 1892, Mr. McCaskey won. His inventions are covered by seventeen patents and three foreign patents, the more important being the electric signal (program) time clocks, sold around the world, geographical time charts, and his World's War torpedo reflector, the latter being one of three ordered built from almost two thousand inventions of the same class. As a member of the War Board Mr. Edison urged its preferential building. For some years Mr. McCaskey has been connected with the Westinghouse Company of Pittsburgh, as a consulting engineer of the purchasing department. He is a gifted speaker and is called upon in the field of economics and community betterment, etc. He is president of the Beautifying Commission of the Homewood-Brushton district of Pitts- burgh. He is teacher of the men's organized Bible Class of the Fourth Methodist Church. He has been recognized by the Allegheny County courts as an expert mechanical engineer, and was for a time connected with the Department of Commerce and Labor as an expert accountant. In December, 1921, he was appointed a deputy revenue collector for the Pittsburgh District.
McKEE, REV. GEO. B., PH.D. With the single exception of his birth, which occurred at Port Royal, Pennsylvania, April 4, 1862, Rev. George Brady McKee was a Perry Countian, as he was less than a year old when his parents removed to Ickesburg. His father was John M. McKee, who had been "a Southerner," a teacher, and musician, and his mother was Susan J. Crist, of Markelville, Perry County. At the age of six years his father died. To the schools of Buckwheat Valley and Eshcol he first went, after which he attended the New Bloomfield Academy. At seven-
827
PERRY COUNTY'S NOTED MEN
teen he taught, and at nineteen he secured a position in a large printing house in Philadelphia. He was converted at the age of sixteen, and from then on his object was to enter the ministry. He took a theological course in Philadelphia, and at the age of twenty-one was ordained to preach. He was reared a Presbyterian, but changing his views about baptism in his twenty-seventh year, he transferred his allegiance to the Baptist denomi- nation. He visited the Holy Land in 1900 and spent four months in study of Biblical locations. He served pastorates in Pennsylvania at Port Provi- dence, Tyrone, Altoona, New Brighton and Sharon; in Indiana at Kokomo, Lebanon and Indianapolis, and in Illinois, at Vermont and Canton. He also served once at Fredonia, Kansas. Rev. McKee was married to Miss Luella Wickey, a daughter of Rev. L. A. Wickey, of Eshcol, Perry County, who survives him. Three daughters and a son composed the family. He was a director of the Graham Hospital of Canton, Illinois, where he died of apoplexy, August 13, 1921, being then the beloved pastor of the First Baptist Church of Canton. He is spoken of as a man of broad vision, positive convictions, and of a kindly and loving disposition.
McKEE, REV. J. KERN. Rev. J. Kern McKee, son of Samuel and Margaret (Kern) McKee, was born at Andersonburg, August 22, 1872. He attended the local schools and preparatory school at Blain. He gradu- ated from Ursinus College in 1898, and from the Ursinus School of The- ology in 1901. He has been pastor of the following Reformed churches : Red Lion, 1901-06; Christ's, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1906-07; Zion, York, Pa., 1907 to date. During his pastorate two fine churches have been built, Zion Church, at York, having cost $120,000. This church has over nine hundred members.
McKEE, JOHN M. John M. McKee was born at New Bloomfield, March 1, 1851, the son of Wilson and Martha (Milligan) McKee. He was educated in the public schools and the New Bloomfield Academy. He learned the machinist trade in Harrisburg, later working in Sunbury and Renovo. In 1880 he went to Colorado, where he prospected in the moun- tains, finally settling in Pueblo, where he was made master mechanic in the railroad shops. He served four years as deputy revenue collector iu that district. At the outbreak of the Spanish-American War he enlisted in Co. E, First Regiment, Colorado Volunteers, and served in the Philip- pines two years. On his return while lying sick in San Francisco lie was elected treasurer of Pueblo County, in which office he served two terms. Subsequently he was selected sheriff of his county, and died during his second term in that office, April 19, 1918.
McKEE, THOMAS L. Thomas L. McKee was born at New Bloom- field, October 17, 1854, the son of Wilson and Martha (Milligan) McKee. He was educated in the public schools and the New Bloomfield Academy, learning the printing trade in Harrisburg. In 1880 he published The Voice, a weekly, in Martinsburg, Blair County, Pennsylvania. Later he went to Colorado, where he became editor and manager of the North Park Miner. From there he went to Laramie, Wyoming, and bought a half interest in Bill Nye's Daily Boomerang, afterward the Laramie Republican. While in Laramie he served two terms as county treasurer, and was also internal revenue collector for the State of Wyoming. In 1905 he went to Aberdeen, South Dakota, and was one of the founders of the Aberdeen American. He died in St. Luke's Hospital, in Aberdeen, February 6, 1920.
McKEEHAN, REV. H. D. Rev. Hobart D. McKeehan, son of L. Scott and Ella ( Mahaffey ) McKeehan, was born at Mannsville, April 26, 1897. He was educated in the public schools, the New Bloomfield Academy, Franklin and Marshall Academy, and the Universities of Chicago and Valparaiso. He graduated from the Theological Seminary of the Reformed Church at
828
HISTORY OF PERRY COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
Lancaster with the B.D. degree, and the Lincoln and Jefferson University at Chicago conferred upon him the degree of B.D., and S.T.M. For two years he was president of the Historical Research Association at Valpa- raiso University, and is the author of a treatise on "The Influence of Cal- vinism Upon John Knox and the Scottish Reformation." In 1918 he was acting minister to Bethel Church at High Point, N. C. The following year he became pastor of St. Paul's Reformed Church at Dallastown, Pennsylvania, where he is still located.
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.