USA > Pennsylvania > Westmoreland County > History of Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, Vol. II > Part 22
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
Mr. Kalp married, June 16, 1877, Ellen Ulery, daughter of Frederick and Rachael (Ellis) Ulerich, as the name was originally spelled. Frederick Ulerich was born December 16, 1817, in Prussia, and came to the United States when a lad of fourteen. He settled near Stahlstown, Westmoreland county, Pennsyl- vania, where he passed a part of his life as a farmer. His wife was of Scotch-, Irish extraction. Mr. and Mrs. Kalp were the parents of the following child- ren : I. J. Lloyd, mentioned hereafter. 2. William Lawrence, a graduate of Bucknell and a teacher in Mount Pleasant Institute. 3. Margaret Ellen, a stut- dent at Bucknell. 4. Maude Cecelia, wife of J. D. Springer, a real estate and insurance dealer of Uniontown, Pennsylvania. 5. Kathryn M., a stenographer. 6. Bertha P., a student at Mount Pleasant Institute. 7. Viola R. 8. Clyde F. 9. Earl A. The three last-named are attending the public schools. The death of Mr. Kalp occurred December 23, 1903, and was lamented by all who knew him as that of an upright and worthy citizen and a truly good man.
J. Lloyd Kalp, son of William Andrew and Ellen ( Ulery) Kalp, was born July 18. 1878, in Donegal township, and was educated in the public schools, Mount Pleasant Institute, graduating therefrom in class of 1899, and at Buck- nell University, graduating in the class of 1903. In that year and the preceding one he was assistant to the registrar of the University, and after graduation be- came principal of the public schools of Saltsburg, Indiana county. He came to Mount Pleasant upon the death of his father, whom he succeeded in the real estate business and also in the insurance interest. He is secretary of the Citi- zens' Building and. Loan Association, secretary and treasurer of the Cedar Ridge Mines and Tunnel Company, director of Berlin Water Company, of Berlin, Somerset county, and secretary of board of directors of Mount Pleas- ant Tool Company. He is identified with Marion Lodge, No. 562, F. and A. M., the Royal Arcanum, Moss Rose Lodge, No. 350, I. O. O. F., Encampment
142
HISTORY OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY.
No. 310 and Lodge No. 868. B. P. O. E. He married, September 14, 1905, Martha Wolfe, daughter of Charles Spiker Wolfe, deceased, of Lewisburg, Union county, Pennsylvania.
JOSEPH W. SHELAR, one of the well-known and prominent physi- cians of Westmoreland county, was born in Niles, Trumbull county, Ohio, June 2, 1859. The Shelars in America originally came from Germany, and were among the early settlers of Pennsylvania. The great-grandfather of Joseph W. Shelar was engaged in iron-manufacturing in Maryland before the war of the revolution, and his grandfather was a potter by trade, and made the first piece of earthen ware west of the Allegheny mountains, and is supposed to have lived in Westmoreland county.
J. E. Shelar, father of Joseph W. Shelar, was born in Trumbull county, Ohio, in 1833. When a boy he learned the trade of roller, at which he worked up to 1870, when he was promoted to superintendent of the mills at Niles, Ohio. He served for a time as chief of police, and is prominent in councilmanic affairs. During the time of the war of the rebellion, Mr. Shelar enlisted in the Union army in the fall of 1863, in an Ohio regiment of volunteers. He entered as a private, and April, 1864, was mustered out as a corporal. In 1854 he married Celestia McElwee, a daughter of Thomas McElwee, a native of Columbiana county, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Shelar were members of the Presbyterian church. They were the parents of ten children, five sons and five daughters.
Joseph W. Shelar, son of J. E. and Celestia ( McElwee) Shelar, was edu- cated in the public schools of his native place. His first regular employment was errand boy in a general store at Niles. On leaving this employment he at- tended the high school of Niles for two terms, and from 1874 to 1877 served an apprenticeship in a printer's shop. At the expiration of this term he removed to Warren, Ohio, remaining but a short time, when he returned and found em- ployment in a nail factory. In 1881 he removed to Mount Pleasant, Westmore- land county, Pennsylvania, and entered the drug store of E. J. McElwee as clerk. He remained there for a year, and then engaged in the management of a branch store of Mr. McElwee's, where he continued until 1884. Mr. Shelar entered into the study of medicine in 1882, studying first under the preceptor- ship of Dr. J. E. Rigg, now of Wilkinsburg, Pennsylvania. In 1883 he en- tered the Long Island College Hospital at Brooklyn, New York, attended three courses of lectures, and was graduated in 1886. He began the practice of medicine that year at Stoner, Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, continuing there until 1896, when he removed to Mount Pleasant, where he has since been engaged in an extensive and lucrative practice. Dr. Shelar makes a specialty of diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat, and his practice covers a wide range of territory. Dr. Shelar is a member of the surgical force of the Mount Pleas- ant Hospital, member of the Westmoreland, County Medical Society, the Mod- ern Woodmen of America, the Independent Order of Odd Fllows, Moss Rose Lodge : the Woodmen of the World, also the Grand Fraternity. He is medical examiner for the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company, the Travelers' Insur- ance Company, and two of the fraternal societies. His political sympathies lie with the Republican party, in which he takes an active interest. He is a man of broad and liberal views, and is well thought of throughout the community.
In 1888 Dr. Shelar was united in marriage to Betta, a daughter of Solomon Stoner, of East Huntingdon township. In 1895 Mrs. Shelar died, leaving the following children: Camille V., Ethel Blanche, and Sollie B. In 1897 Dr. Shelar married for his second wife Anna M. Boyd, daughter of J. F. and Han- nah Boyd, of Scottdale.
143
HISTORY OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY.
CHARLES F. COLDSMITH, one of the leading druggists of West- moreland county, was born in Mount Pleasant, March 2, 1870, a son of John and Sarah (Brehan) Coldsmith. John Coldsmith was a native of eastern Pennsylvania, and when a young man removed to Westmoreland county. He followed the occupation of a hatter, and was also engaged in the grocery bus- iness. He served as councilman of Mount Pleasant for some time and dis- charged the duties of that office with credit.
Charles F. Coldsmith was reared in the borough of Mount Pleasant, and received a good general education in the public schools of that place. After leav- ing the school-room he entered in his first regular employment in the drug store of Mr. M. S. Kuhn, remaining there for eleven years. In 1897 Mr. Coldsmith and Mr. Kuhn bought out the drug establishment of Mr. E. J. McElwee, and conducted the business under the firm name of Coldsmith & Kuhn. Previous to this Mr. Coldsmith had taken a course of instruction in the Chicago School of Pharmacy, and became a thorough master of the profession. He is also a reg- istered pharmacist of Pennsylvania. His partnership with Mr. Kuhn existed until 1901, when Mr. Coldsmith succeeded to the ownership and management of the entire establishment, and it is now known as the Chrystal Pharmacy. The store is well stocked with a full line of drugs, medicine, etc., and he makes a specialty of filling prescriptions. The business is entirely successful and is considered one of the best drug establishments in the county. Politically Mr. Coldsmith is a strong Republican, takes a deep interest in the welfare of that organization and is an earnest party worker. He is a member of the Royal Arcanum, Independent Order Odd Fellows, and Knights of Malta. No. 350, Moss Rose Lodge, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, No. 868. He is also a member of the National Association of Retail Druggists, and the West- moreland Druggists' Association. Mr. Coldsmith erected a handsome residence on Eagle street, Mount Pleasant, where he has since resided.
Charles F. Coldsmith was united in marriage to Daisy May Lozier, daugh- ter of Henry Lozier, of Mount Pleasant. The following named children were born to them: Daisy Marie, deceased ; Eugene Mckinley and Gertrude Gene- vieve. They are members of the Church of God and German Reformed church, respectively.
WILLIAM McNAUGHTON. Among the energetic and enterpris- ing business men of Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, perhaps no one has attained to a higher degree of success than William McNaughton. He was born in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, December 14, 1855, a son of James and Mary (Griven) McNaughton. His father was born and reared in Philadelphia, and was by trade a shoemaker. He traveled extensively, but spent the most of his life in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. He served some eighteen months in the Civil war in Knapp Battery. He married Mary Griven, a native of the north of Ireland, and the following named children were born to them : James, William, mentioned hereafter : Rebecca, Harry, Charley. Jennie, Kate, William, two chil- dren who died in childhood, and George. The father of this family died in 1899. well advanced in years.
William McNaughton was reared in Pittsburg, and educated in the com- mon schools of that city. At the age of nine years he left the school-room, en- tering into his first regular employment with the McKce Brothers Glass Manu- facturing establishment. His earnest and diligent work won rapid promotion for him, and he subsequently became a practical glass maker. He removed to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, remaining there some fourteen years. After this
1.44
HISTORY OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY.
he removed to Findlay, Ohio, and there became interested in the manufacture of glass. He became a member of a glass firm there and assisted in the estab- lishment of two glass plants. After some seven years spent in the state of Ohio Mr. McNaughton returned to Pennsylvania, associating himself with the Bryce Brothers as manager of their establishment, and in 1898 was admitted to the firm, and is now a member of the board of directors. Mr. McNaughton is pre- eminently a self-made man. Thrown upon his own resources at the tender age of nine years, with a very limited education, and no capital except determina- tion to succeed and willingness to work, Mr. McNaughton has by dint of those success-getting qualities-patient perseverance, unfailing energy and indomit- able will-advanced himself to an enviable place in the ranks of successful and prosperous business men. In politics Mr. McNaughton accords with the doc- trines of the Republican party, and loses no opportunity to advance the inter- ests of that organization. He is a member of the Benevolent Protective Order of Elks, No. 868, Mount Pleasant ; the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, Jefferson Lodge, No. 12, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ; Knights of Pythias, Hylis Lodge. In 1898 Mr. McNaughton erected his handsome residence on Wash- ington street, Mount Pleasant. As a citizen he has the respect and esteem of his fellow townsmen and is well thought of throughout the community.
In 1873 Mr. McNaughton was united in marriage to Mary A. Holmes, daughter of William Holmes, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and the following named children were born to them : William, in the employ of the Bryce Broth- ers. Laura, the wife of Aaron B. Shaw, of Mount Pleasant; they have one child, Elsie. Mary, residing at home. Howard, living at home. Mr. Mc- Naughton and his family are members of the church of United Presbyterians.
MYERS WORMAN HORNER, M. D., physician and surgeon, whose office is located at the corner of Main and Diamond streets, Mount Pleas- ant, is a native of that borough, born December 27, 1870, son of Isaac and Sarah (Myers) Horner, of Mount Pleasant township, Westmoreland county, Penn- sylvania.
Dr. Horner was reared to farm life, educated in the public schools, Mount Pleasant Institute, and Central State Normal school, Lock Haven, Pennsyl- vania, from which he was graduated in 1890. The following three years he, was engaged in the vocation of teaching, the first year in the district school of Mount Pleasant township, and the two succeeding years as vice-principal of Mount Pleasant schools. He then began the study of medicine in the Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, and graduated therefrom in 1896. The first three months after his graduation he practiced his profession in the city of Phil- adelphia, attending to the practice of Dr. Johnston. He then returned to his native place, Mount Pleasant, where he has since established for himself an enviable reputation and gained a large and remunerative practice. The suc- cess he has gained in his profession is due to his quickness of perception, promptness in action, capability, and tender and sympathetic disposition. He is a member of the United States pension examining board located at Scottdale, Westmoreland county, and is a member of the surgical staff of Mount Pleasant Hospital. Dr. Horner is a member of the Westmoreland County Medical So- ciety, of which he was president ; Pennsylvania State Medical Society, American Medical Association, the Association of the United States Pension Examining Surgeons. He is president of the board of health of Mount Pleasant. He is affiliated with Marion Lodge, No. 562 Free and Accepted Masons, Scottdale ; Moss Rose Lodge, No. 350, Independent Order of Odd Fellows; Mount Pleas-
I45
HISTORY OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY.
ant Lodge, No. 868, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks; the Protected Home Circle, American Order of United Workmen, of Mount Pleasant, and. the Pike Run Country Club. He is a member of the board of education, and. a member of Mount Pleasant fire department.
Dr. Horner married, October 31, 1901, Pearl Elvira Smith, who was born in Mount Pleasant, February 22, 1872, daughter of William H. Smith, of Mount Pleasant. They are the parents of a child, Sarah Smith Horner, born Deceni- ber 15, 1904. Dr. Horner is a member of the German Baptist Brethren church, and Mrs. Horner is a member of the Presbyterian church.
JULIU'S REICHMAN. One of the most useful of Mount Pleasant s foreign-born citizens is Julius Reichman. He is a son of Joseph Reichman. He is a son of Joseph Reichman, who was a native of Austria Hungary and by trade a miller. His wife, Julia Reichman, bore him two sons : Joseph, and Ju- lius, mentioned hereafter. Mr. Reichman is now deceased and is survived by his widow.
Julius Reichman, son of Joseph and Julia Reichman, was born in Austria Hungary, and was well educated in the colleges of Kaschau and Podolin. In 1896, at the age of eighteen, he came to the United States and after being for a time variously employed obtained a position in an exchange bank in New York city. After remaining there nearly three years, he became manager of a branch office in the same line at Catasauqua, Pennsylvania, retaining that posi- tion until 1901. In that year he and his brother Joseph established their present business at Mount Pleasant, under the firm name of Reichman Brothers. They are steamship agents and deal exclusively in foreign exchange, carrying on also a legal business in the execution of deeds and the sale of property in all parts of Europe. Their connection with European attorneys is very extensive, and they translate into all languages both legal and private documents. The rules and regulations for the anthracite regions of Pennsylvania were translated by Mr. Julius Reichman, under whose personal supervision the business in Mount Pleasant is conducted. April 11, 1905, Julius Reichman bought his brother's- interest in the business and is now sole proprietor. He is a member of the Eagles.
Joseph Reichman, mentioned above as the brother of Julius Reichman, was born in Austria Hungary, and came to this country in 1891, being then eighteen years of age. He had been well educated in his native country and readily found a position in a banking house. He was a member of the firm of Reichman Brothers, but did not give his personal attention to the business. He is a resident of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, where he is engaged under the firm name of John Nemeth & Company in a business similar to that conducted by his brother in Mount Pleasant.
HENRY JOHNSTON JORDAN. Among the popular citizens of Mount Pleasant must be numbered Henry Johnston Jordan, son of Johnston Barndollar and Lovina Christina (Shupe) Jordan, and was born April 25, 1859.
He was educated in the public schools, and while still in his teens was em- ployed at the Standard coal and coke works. He then assisted his father for two years in the hotel of which the latter was the proprietor, and in 1888 went to Connellsville, Pennsylvania, where for five years he was employed as a clerk. In 1893 he took charge of the National Hotel, of which his father had been the previous proprietor, and has since conducted the same. On becoming the 2-10
146
HISTORY OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY.
head of this establishment in which he has served an apprenticeship to the hotel business, Mr. Jordan refitted it throughout, making of it the largest and best-equipped hostelry in the borough. Mr. Jordan gives his whole attention to the duties of his position, which he is admirably fitted to discharge. He has always been actively identified with every movement having for its object the welfare of the borough, and although not an office seeker has been frequently urged to accept positions of trust which he has steadily refused to do. He is a member of the County and State Hotel Men's Associations, a charter mem- ber of the Loyal Association of the Royal Arcanum, No. 97, and also belongs to the Royal Arcanum, No. 592, the Benevolent Protective Order of Elks, No. 868, a charter member of Mount Pleasant Lodge, a member of the Pike Run Country Club, of which he was one of the charter members, also a member of The Homeless No. 26. In political affairs he is a staunch Republican, and is ever ready to give of his time and efforts for the welfare of the organization. He is a member of the county committee. Mr. Jordan married, January 2, 1892, Eliza A., daughter of William and Mary Rush, of Connellsville, the former being now deceased. Four children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Jordon : Gertrude E., Henry, died March 16, 1903, in his seventh year ; Chris- tina Marie, and Josephine Elizabeth. Mrs. Jordan was born in Brownsville, Pennsylvania.
WILLIAM H. SMITH. In the ranks of Mount Pleasant's honored citizens William H. Smith holds a foremost place. The father of Mr. Smith, Joseph Smith, settled in Derry township on a tract of one hundred and thirty- six acres of land, which he cleared and on which he erected good buildings. He was a useful citizen and a worthy man, taking an active part in politics and also in church affairs. Joseph Smith married Christina Speilman, who like himself was of German descent, and they were the parents of thirteen children : Ephraim, born October 8, 1817, now resides near Pleasant Unity, being the sole survivor of the family with the exception of his brother William H. John, who was a shoemaker in Derry township; Catharine, who died in infancy ; Jacob, who was a carpenter in Derry towship ; Mary, who became the wife of Henry Bussard; Susan, married George Rupert; Elizabeth, who was the wife of a Mr. Brinnell; Joseph, who was a tinner, and emigrated to Ohio where he died ; Katic, married Henry Auckeman ; Christiana, who was the wife of Seth Baugh- man, and after his death married again and moved to Indiana; Jones, who was a miller at Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania ; Andrew, who was a laborer and fence- builder of Unity township: William H., mentioned hereafter. Mr. Smith, the father of this numerous family, died on his farm in 1829, at the age of sixty- four.
William H. Smith, son of Joseph and Christina (Speilman) Smith, was born October 28, 1825, in Derry township, just above Latrobe, where he passed his boyhood. At the age of sixteen he went to Liscipes, Unity township, to learn the blacksmith's trade, remaining there about eighteen months. In the spring of 1844 he went to Mount Pleasant with his employer, Matthew McMil- Jan, for whom he worked eight months after finishing his apprenticeship. He and his nephew, Joseph Smith, then bought out the business which they con- ducted together for about a year. Joseph Smith then decided to go to the Mexican war and in consequence the business was sold out, Mr. Smith for cigli- teen months thereafter working as a journeyman for William H. Smith. At the end of that time Mr. Smith purchased the business and continued to conduct it in that place until 1885, doing the work of a general blacksmith. In 1876
THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
9,4 % 40, 16 50 Tuden! Foundations,
*
Go & Deaur
1.47
HISTORY OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY.
he purchased a stock of hardware and established a business under the firm name of Smith & Company, the business being looked after by Mr. Rumbaugh, the partner, while Mr. Smith gave his attention to his trade. In 1885, as before stated, he disposed by sale of the smithy and engaged personally in the hard- ware business. In 1889 Mr. Rumbaugh died, his interest was purchased by Mr. Smith's son, William F. Smith, and the name of the firm was changed to its present form of W. H. Smith & Son. They carry a complete line of hardware, also buggies, wagons, farm implements, harnesses, robes, blankets, and in fact everything that bears a relationship to the business .. The main storeroom has a depth of one hundred and fifty feet, with basement, and one of the two ware- houses is forty by forty feet and consists of three stories, while the other, which has one story, is twenty by forty feet. This is the largest hardware establish- ment in Mount Pleasant, and the business has grown until it has assumed a magnitude equal to any of the kind to be found outside the limits of a large city. Mr. Smith's career as a business man contains a wholesome lesson for the youth of the present day, being an example of one who is a self-made man in the best sense of the term. Beginning with a salary of four dollars per month, he stands to-day as one of the solid business men of that part of West- moreland county, his success being entirely due to close application to business and strict adherence to the principles of honorable and upright dealing. Mr. Smith is a public-spirited citizen, and about 1870 laid out a small addition to the town, known as Smith's addition, through which Smithfield street runs, and which consists of eight building lots with a plot of about one acre additional. He served two terms as burgess of Mount Pleasant, and for nine years was a member of the council. He has been for many years a devoted member of the Presbyterian church in Mount Pleasant. Mr. Smith married, August 10, 1848, Sarah, born in Bradford, Pennsylvania, daughter of Joseph Gibbs, and their children were: George W., a blacksmith in Mount Pleasant ; Annie E., Nor- man, Catharine, wife of S. C. Stevenson, of Mount Pleasant ; Charles K., died at the age of twenty-five years ; William F., mentioned hereafter ; Oma and Pearl (twins), the former is deceased and the latter is the wife of Dr. M. W. Horner, of Mount Pleasant. In 1898 Mr. Smith and his children were deeply afflicted by the death of the wife and mother, who passed away at the age of seventy-two. Mr. Smith has seven grandchildren as follows: S. Jean, Sarah E., William, Herbert N., William Stevenson, Viola Stevenson, and Sarah Horner.
William F. Smith, mentioned above, is the junior member of the hardware firm of W . H. Smith & Son. He is past master of Scottdale Lodge, No. 562, F. and A. M. and trustee of Mount Pleasant Lodge, No. 868, B. P. O. E. He also belongs to Moss Rose Lodge, No 350, I. O. O. F., Encampment, and Pike Run Country Club. He married Mary A. Shaeffer, of Johnstown, Pennsyl- vania, and they have two children : S. Jean and Sarah E.
GEORGE J. SEANOR, sheriff of Westmoreland county, Pennsyl- vania, well and favorably known in that section of Pennsylvania, is a represen- tative in the present generation of a family whose earlier members were among the first settlers of the state. The Seanors came originally from Germany.
Adam Seanor, grandfather of George J. Seanor, was born near Seanors church, Westmoreland county, toward the latter part of the eighteenth century, and died in 1864, aged about sixty-nine years. In politics he was a member of the Whig party, and in religious faith was a Presbyterian. He married Eliza- beth Harrold, born three miles south of Greensburg, Pennsylvania, and their
148
HISTORY OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY.
children were: Mary, married Jonathan Null, died in 1885; John, died 1885; Lewis, died in Washington state in 1904; George, died of fever at the age of twenty-six; Adam, of whom later ; William, died in 1903 ; Henry, a resident of Kansas.
Adamı Seanor, fourth son and fifth child of Adam and Elizabeth ( Har- rold) Seanor, was born in Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, in 1831. He had the advantage of a good common school education, and upon attaining a proper age turned his attention to farming and stock raising. This calling he followed all the active years of his life. He is prominently identified with the Presbyterian church, and affiliates with the Republican party. He married Salina Tweedy, daughter of William Tweedy, and they had ten children, the names of eight of whom are here given : Elizabeth, born 1854, died at the age of sixty-seven years; Louisa, 1856, married David Kepple; Emma, 1858, mar- ried Wilson Kepple; Harry F., July 29, 1860, married, September, 1881, at Latrobe, Pennsylvania, Larus P. McKelvy, (See sketch of Harry F. Seanor) ; William, 1864, married Mary Kepple ; Elmer, married Mattie Laughlin ; Mag- gie, 1866, died May 25, 1905, married Samuel Kepple, and was the mother of ten children, nine of whom survive her : George J., of whom later; Charles, 1874, married Laura Hoffman.
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.