USA > Pennsylvania > Indiana County > Indiana County, Pennsylvania, her people, past and present, Volume I > Part 136
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eral blacksmith work, until his enlistment in 1864, for service in the Civil war, becoming a member of Company A, 58th Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, which was attached to the 24th Army Corps. It is supposed he was injured in battle by a bursting shell, causing concussion of the brain, and never recovered, dying Aug. 3, 1868, at his home at Baker's cross road; he was buried at Carlton. In poli- ties he was a Democrat. Mr. Baker was mar- ried at St. Lawrence, Cambria Co., Pa., to Catherine Waltz, who was a native of Ger- many, born on the river Rhine, daughter of George Waltz, and came to this country with her parents in 1833, the family locating near St. Lawrence, at which place she resided un- til her marriage. Two of her brothers are still living; George Waltz, of Patton, Pa., and Jacob Waltz, of California. Mrs. Baker died Sept. 21. 1912, aged eighty-four years, at the home of her son Joseph, in Blairsville, and the remains were taken to Patton and thence to the home of her son George, the funeral taking place in St. Benedict's Catholic Church. She was buried in the church ceme- tery, she having been a member of the Catho-
She was survived by their eight children as well as thirty-seven grandchildren and thirty great-grandchildren. We have the following record of their family: Andrew Philip is mentioned below; Mary married John Bran- iff and lives at Oklahoma City : John E. lives in Illinois: Ella, wife of Samuel Kelly, re- sides in Kansas City, Mo .; Annie, wife of Jack Ward. resides in Los Angeles, Cal .; George resides on the old homestead at Bak- er's cross road: Catherine married a Mr. Murrin and lives in Chicago, Ill .: Joseph mar- ried Myrtle Spires and lives at Blairsville.
Andrew Philip Baker had only fair op- portunities for acquiring an education, and as he was but sixteen when his father died he, being the eldest of the family, had to be their main support. He early learned the trade of blacksmith, which he has continned to follow more or less all his life. In 1871, when twenty years of age, he came to Indiana county, locating at Campbell's Mills, in Bur- rell township, where he found employment at his trade with Lytle & McKeeg. who were then operating the old General Campbell mills. established by General Campbell. In 1872 he went to Blackliek station, this county,
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HISTORY OF INDIANA COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
where he became engaged in horseshoeing and Catherine is the wife of Joseph Limegrover, general blacksmith work, following that line a member of the fire department at No. 29 engine house, East End, Pittsburg. The fam- ily are Catholics, belonging to the parish of SS. Simon and Jude in Blairsville. there with steady success for a period of fif- teen years. In 1887 he purchased the Camp- bell Mills and adjacent farm of 134 acres, which he has continued to operate ever since. He has acquired other lands, and has carried on general farming rather extensively, though that has by no means become his principal interest. These mills have now been in oper- ship and for four years supervisor. In politi-
In spite of the multitude of private affairs which Mr. Baker attends to he has found time for public service, having been a member of the township election board, clerk of the town- cal association he is a member of the Demo- cratie party.
ROBERT ALEXANDER THOMPSON, wholesale lumber dealer, of Indiana, Pa., was born June 29, 1849, on a farm in East Mahon- ing township, Indiana county. The Thomp- son family is one of the best known and most highly respected in the county.
ation for about one hundred years, and Mr. Baker has installed the most up-to-date ma- chinery, in that branch of his business-as in every other-following the most approved modern methods. He has erected a fine dwell- ing house, barn and other buildings on the farm, all lighted by electricity, supplied from the plant at the mill. Everything about the property is in the most desirable order and shows Mr. Baker's progressive disposition. Here also he engages in stock raising, giving his attention principally to horses, of which he is a great lover, this branch of his business affording him as much pleasure as profit. All of his horses have taken the blue ribbon at county and State fairs. He has owned some of the finest stallions in Indiana county, among them Plowboy, Dick Turpin, Duke of Hamilton (an imported Clydesdale), Fritz (a French imported horse), Eclipse (full blooded), Corbeau (a Belgian horse), Cyrus (a French horse), Reveur (also imported), Decerday (which he raised himself). Mr. Baker has also had a blacksmith shop on his place, besides his other industries mentioned. For the last nineteen years he has done busi- ness as a lumber manufacturer, owning one or two sawmills throughout that period, hand- ling principally hardwood, ship and railroad timber. He was likewise engaged in contract- ing for some time. His indefatigable indus- try and genius for management have enabled him to look after all these concerns without neglecting any of them, and the prosperous condition of his affairs bespeaks a degree of thrift and enterprise highly creditable to his ability.
Robert Thompson, the founder of the family in this country, was an early settler in the northern part of Indiana county. He was born in 1737 in County Derry, Ireland, and came to America in 1789 with his wife Mary (Cannon) and their six children, Hugh, Mar- tha, James, John, Margaretta and Elizabeth, the family leaving Ireland May 29th. They first settled in Franklin county, Pa., thence moving to near Old Salem Church, in Derry township, Westmoreland Co., Pa., where they lived for a few years, in 1795 removing to what is now Rayne township, Indiana county, and settling ou Thompson's run, nearly two miles above where Kelleysburg now is. The son Hugh and his young wife Martha, with their infant daughter, had attempted to settle there alone in 1793, but Indian hostilities compelled them to return to their former home south of the Conemaugh river. Their permanent settlement in 1795 was made com- paratively safe by General Wayne's defeat of the Indians in August, 1794. Robert Thompson was known as a man of noble char- acter and sterling worth, and his wife as a most estimable woman. We find from the his- tory of the Presbytery of Kittanning that they, and their son Hugh and son-in-law Hugh Cannon, were among the founders of Gilgal Presbyterian congregation, about four miles from their home. "Gilgal, a mother of churches, traces her origin to an improvement in 1797 by Robert Thompson, Hugh Thomp- son and Hugh Cannon, from Westmoreland county, who were soon followed by other
In 1874 Mr. Baker was married in Blairs- ville to Emma Donahey, daughter of James and Maria (Bills) Donahey, and they have had four children, namely: Guy W. has been employed at the steel mills at Vandergrift, Pa., for the last fourteen years; he married Annie Mowery. James Roy was a soldier in the Spanish-American war, and is a black- Presbyterians." To Mrs. Thompson belonged smith by occupation ; he married Maud Lime- the honor of giving to the organization its grover. Joseph Scott, who is now operating name Gilgal. The Thompsons belonged to his father's mill, married Malinda Glass. that sturdy race whose wholesome physical
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HISTORY OF INDIANA COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
and mental traits made them so desirable Oct. 5, 1815, to John Fenton, and died Dec. founders of the Commonwealth. They were 24, 1829. (2) Jane C., born July 26, 1794, died May 1, 1837. She married John B. Hen- derson, who was born in 1793 and died Nov. 5, 1844. (3) Joseph, born Jan. 12, 1797, mar- ried in May, 1822, Euphemia Moorhead, who was born in 1800 and died Sept. 27, 1873. He was at one time associate judge of Indiana county, and died Oct. 27, 1882. (4) James, born July 24, 1799, died May 9, 1837, in Phila- delphia, while buying a stock of merchandise. On March 16, 1825, he married Ann E. Ayers, who was born Oct. 2, 1803, and died Aug. 28, 1889. (5) Robert, born Dee. 13, 1801, died Jan. 10, 1879. On June 9, 1825, he married Mary Leasure, who was born Feb. 29, 1804, and died Jan. 23, 1870. (6) John, born June 1, 1803, was a well-known and prominent citi- zen of Ebensburg. Pa., where he died Dec. 5, 1879. He married Ellen J. Patton, who was born Feb. 19, 1806, and died March 6, 1872. (7) William C., born April 12, 1807, married Harriet Ferguson, who was born April 10, 1819. They were married near Mansfield,
intelligent and farsighted, industrious and capable. Their religious faith was strong and abiding. It is related that on the evening of the day the family arrived in what is now Rayne township, though they had no cabin for shelter, Robert Thompson conducted fam- ily worship, seated with the older members of the family upon fallen timber in the woods, holding the younger children in their arms. Ilis farm was selected from the northern por- tion of the tract, and after he and his wife died their son James and daughter Mar- garetta, neither of whom ever married, occu- pied it. Mr. Thompson died Oct. 13, 1809, and Mrs. Thompson on Jan. 25, 1815. They and all of their children but Hugh lived be- vond the allotted threescore and ten, and they are buried in the cemetery near Gilgal Church, where they all worshiped. Of the six chil- dren, Hugh is mentioned fully below. Martha, born in 1775, resided with her husband, Hugh Cannon, upon a farm which was the southern portion of the original tract settled in 1795, Ohio, and afterward removed to Steuben and died Sept. 5, 1848, in Rayne township, county, Ind., where he died May 31, 1890. (8) Hugh A., born April 1, 1810, was for two terms prothonotary of Clarion county, Pa., afterward clerk in the State department under Governor Curtin, and still later cashier of the First National Bank of Indiana, Pa. He died April 23, 1886. On Feb. 21, 1834, he mar- ried Elizabeth Mulholland, who was born Oct. 29. 1816, and died Feb. 8. 1890. (9) Samuel Henry was born March 5, 1814. the mother of seven sons and one daughter, William, Robert, John, Fergus, James, Joseph, Hugh M. and Mary T. James, born in 1778, died Feb. 13. 1849. John, born in 1781, mar- ried Mary McCluskey April 26, 1810, and set- tled upon a farm west of his father where he lived until his death, March 27, 1859 ; his chil- dren were Mary Jane, Matilda, Eliza A., Roh- ert and Margaretta. Margaretta, born in 1785, was burned to death Feb. 23, 1864. Elizabeth, born in 1788, married Henry Van Horn in 1815, and resided in East Mahoning township, where she died Feb. 13, 1858, her husband dying in 1877; their children were Mary C. Dorcas L., James T .. Tabitha L., Robert T .. Isaiah V. and Harry A.
Hugh Thompson, eldest son of Robert, was born in 1767 in County Derry, Ireland, and died June 13, 1829. He continued his resi- dence on the middle portion of the tract where he settled in 1795 to the end of his days. In September, 1791, in Westmoreland county, he married Martha Thomson, who was of Scotch descent but a native of County Derry, Ireland, born in 1770. She was the fifth child of James and Mary Thomson, who moved Clair and William Laird afterward owned and from Westmoreland county, Pa., to Nicholas county, Ky. Mrs. Thompson died Sept. 10, St. Clair died March 31, 1912.
1848. Seven sons and two daughters were born to her and her husband, all natives of Rayne township but the eldest (or eldest two) : (1) Mary, born Oct. 10, 1792, was married
Maj. Samuel Henry Thompson, youngest of the family of Hugh Thompson, passed his youth in Rayne township in much the same manner as other farmers' sons of the day. He received his education in the subscription schools. Soon after commencing life for him- self he engaged in merchandising, but gave it up to return to farming because of the great financial crisis. The farm on which he lo- cated in East Mahoning township, and where he lived for nearly twenty-four years, was bought by Johnston Lighteap in 1861, and in 1862 he moved back to Rayne township. set- tling upon a larger farm above Kelleysburg, on Thompson's run, which he had purchased from Daniel Stanard, Esq. His sons T. St. occupied the southern part of this farm; T.
Major Thompson was one of the leading citizens of this section in his day. He gained his title in his connection with the State militia. He became very prominent as an ar-
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HISTORY OF INDIANA COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
dent Abolitionist, and his place was a station he received some instructive reproof and an on the "underground railroad," he and Dr. explanatory admonition that enlightened him Mitchell being closely associated in their efforts considerably."
to assist fugitive slaves. We quote from an article published some years ago: "Major Thompson was a man of clear conception, strong moral courage, sound judgment and generous disposition. Socially he was agree- able, humorous and witty; firm in his opin- ions, yet tolerant and liberal; always found on the moral and progressive side of public issues, as well as fearless and consistent in the expression and practice of his convictions. These characteristics, with his mental ability and readiness, enabled him to be equal to any occasion in the discussion of all public ques- tions, in which he was always well and thor- oughly informed. In determining upon pub- lic men and measures he 'hewed close to the line,' and when quite a young man became an intense hater of the institution of human chat- tel slavery, despised the position of the North
that agitation, eut loose from the political associations of family and friends and took a forward part in the anti-slavery movement of that period, when the principal arguments used against such men by the dominant politi- cal parties were social ostracism, epithets, slan- der, rotten eggs, mob law, the destruction of their printing presses and the occasional kill- ing of an editor to make proceedings more effective. He was secretary of about the first Indiana county anti-slavery organization ; afterward its nominee for prothonotary when their strength was less than one hundred votes in the county, and was also connected with the underground railway system. To use one of his own expressions on the subject, he 'denied the right of any man to own, hold in bondage or dispose of human beings as chattels unless a bill of sale was first produced from Almighty God, properly executed and signed.' His son, Hugh S., remembers that when quite a small lad a squad of escaping slaves, two of them mothers with babes in their arms, called at his father's one morning for food and direc- tions about the roads; some days later two grim looking strangers on horseback, with large whips in their hands, passed where he was at play on the roadside and inquired 'if any black people had gone along there lately.' Not understanding the matter, and not know- ing that the men were slave hunters, he very innocently told them all about it. right along. But it was the only and last 'pointer' he ever gave men and women stealers, for upon tell- ing his father of the affair at dinner that day
Major Thompson was quite prominent in the administration of local affairs, being par- ticularly interested and active in educational matters. He served as director when the school system had its early trials, and was one of the original board of managers of the Marion select school, long a successful institu- tion. At the time of his death, which occurred on his farm in Rayne township Aug. 15, 1865, he was serving as auditor of the county, to which office he had been elected on the Repub- lican ticket. He was one of the founders of the Smyrna United Presbyterian Church, near Georgeville, served as ruling elder of that congregation for over twenty years, and was long one of its main supporters. His wife also belonged to that church. They are buried in Oakland cemetery at Indiana.
On April 12, 1838, Major Thompson mar- as errand-boy and lick-spittle for the South in ried Flora A. Stewart, who was born June 1, 1818, daughter of John K. and Elizabeth (Armstrong) Stewart, the former an old-time merchant. She died May 11, 1869. We have the following record of the nine children, eight sons and one daughter, born to this marriage : (1) Hugh S., born Sept. 9, 1839, married June 10, 1863, Harriet N. Work, who died Aug. 21, 1896, in the Philadelphia German hospital, while undergoing an operation. On Aug. 18, 1901, he married (second ) Mary M. Me Anulty, who was born in 1846 and died April 29, 1911. (2) John Stewart, born in October, 1841, served in the Civil war. On May 6, 1866, he married Maggie T. Moorhead, who was born Oct. 5, 1843, and died June 3, 1867. His second marriage was to Frances A. Smith, who was born May 2, 1846, and died Sept. 8, 1885. (3) Archibald S., born Jan. 23, 1843, was a member of the United States Signal Corps during the Civil war, serving with the Army of the James. He and his brother Wilson were discharged in August. 1865, arriving home just a few hours before the death of their father. He married May 22, 1866, Mary C. Owens, who was born Feb. 28, 1846, and died in July, 1904. He died July 25, 1909. (4) James Wilson, born March 30, 1845, is mentioned elsewhere in this work. (5)
Thomas St. Clair, born Sept. 13. 1846, was a member of the 206th P. V. I. during the Civil war, serving as a musician. On Oct. 13, 1869, he married Marietta Brady, who was born Feb. 19, 1850. He died March 31, 1912. (6) Edwin Reynolds, born March 5, 1848, died March 27, 1877, and is buried in Oakland
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HISTORY OF INDIANA COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
cemetery. He was unmarried. (7) Robert Alexander is mentioned below. (8) Elizabeth Hindman, born Aug. 10, 1851, was married Jan. 25, 1876, to George W. Simpson (wlio was born Jan. 26, 1847), and they live in Santa Barbara, Cal. (9) William Laird, born July 14. 1855, was married May 29, 1884, to Louisa Barber, who was born April 12, 1858, and Graff. they live on the home farm.
Robert Alexander Thompson grew to man- hood in East Mahoning and Rayne townships. He began his education in the common school in East Mahoning township, attending there until he was ten years old, and then attended in Rayne township. His first teacher was Araminta Richardson, now Mrs. Joseph Hud- son. Up to the age of eighteen he worked on the home farm, after which he engaged in a mercantile business in Indiana borough, con- tinuing same for six years. He then entered the wholesale lumber business, which he has carried on very successfully ever since, rep- resenting many of the big mills in the north and northwest in his transactions. Mr. Thompson has been deeply interested in poli- ties and prominently associated with political movements. He was at one time a Green- backer and owned the Indiana News, a Green- back paper. He was also active in the People's party, and served as chairman of the Pennsyl- vania State organization for seven years, doing effective work in that capacity. He is a man of progressive ideas and an ardent champion of what he considers right, and he holds the unlimited respect of those with whom he has been associated in any of the relations of life.
active life a prosperous agriculturist of that vicinity, and widely known for his devotion to religious work, which was one of his main interests to the close of his long life. Mr. Graff was a native of Westmoreland county, Pa., born Sept. 9, 1826, near Pleasant Unity, eldest son of John and Lucy Sophia (Hacke)
John Graff, the founder of this branch of the family in America, was born April 15, 1763, in Neuwied, Germany, and was the eld- est of the family of nine children born to Henry and Mary (Friedt) Graff. His grand- father resided at Grafnauer. John Graff left the Fatherland and crossed the Atlantic in 1783 in company with his uncle William Friedt. They landed at Philadelphia, thence proceeding to Lancaster county, Pa., where they spent several years. Coming farther west they settled in Westmoreland county, Mr. Friedt locating at Greensburg, while Mr. Graff settled about six miles from the county seat, becoming the owner of a tract of 200 acres upon which he made his home during the remainder of his life. He died Dec. 31, 1818, while still in his prime. He was a man well read for his day, industrions, devoted to his family and of high Christian principles. He was a member of the Lutheran Church, at- tending near Pleasant Unity. In 1793 Mr. Graff married Barbara Baum, who was born in 1775. at Path Valley, in Huntingdon county, Pa., danghter of Frederick Baum. At the age of eight years, while out in the woods, she was captured by Indians, and would un- doubtedly have been scalped but for the inter- vention of an old Indian who had received aid from the Baum family when threatened with
On Feb. 12, 1879, Mr. Thompson was mar- ried at Marion Center, Indiana county, to starvation one cold winter. He secured her Josephine Brady, who was born at Marion Center and there received her education, spending her life there up to the time of her marriage. She is the daughter of Joseph and Mary (Park) Brady. Mr. and Mrs. Thomp- son have passed all their married life in In- diana, now residing at their beautiful home at No. 903 Oakland avenue, which street was named by their daughter Mabel. They had two children: Mildred, born Jan. 23, 1881, who was married April 11, 1905, to C. V. Me- Creight and continues to reside at home; and Mabel, born July 16, 1882, who died July 14. 1885; Joseph, born Oct. 13, 1804, died in 1904, at St. Joseph's hospital, Philadelphia. Mr. and Mrs. Thompson are members of the Presbyterian Church.
release from her captors and returned her to her home. This happened in 1783. Mrs. Graff died March 12, 1841, at the age of sixty- six years, the mother of twelve children, namely: Henry, born May 27, 1794, died Sept. 9, 1855; Mary, born Sept. 4, 1795, mar- ried Jacob Lose, and died Dec. 4, 1833; Sarah, born May 3, 1797, married Daniel Barnes, and died Sept. 16, 1850; William, born Oct. 1, 1798, died in November, 1882; Jolin is men- tioned below; Margaret, born May 3, 1802, married John Collcasure, and died March 24, 1806; Elizabeth, born Jan. 7. 1806, married John Armstrong, and died May 19, 1888: Peter, born May 27, 1808, died April 9, 1890; Jacob, born Sept. 5, 1810, died Dec. 9. 1886 : Matthew, born Ang. 12, 1812, resided near
HENRY GRAFF, late of Blacklick, In- diana Co., Pa., was during many years of his Kensington, Ohio; Paul, born May 31, 1815,
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HISTORY OF INDIANA COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
was for years a well-known and successful business man of Philadelphia (he compiled and published a genealogy of the Graff family ).
John Graff, son of John and Barbara (Baum) Graff, was born Aug. 3, 1800, near Pleasant Unity, Westmoreland county, and obtained his education principally in the sub- scription schools of that township, attending the Greensburg Academy for two terms. He grew to manhood on the home farm, and after his father's death, which occurred when he was a youth of eighteen, he remained there with his widowed mother until 1833, when he became a merchant at Pleasant Unity, con- ducting a store at that place for three years. In 1837 he moved to Blairsville, Indiana county, at which point he bought a half in- terest in the warehouse built by his brothers Henry and Peter. Two other houses were subsequently built, and he became owner of all three in 1847, together with the mercantile business carried on in connection. Taking several of his sons into partnership, under the firm name of John Graff & Sons, he continued his connection with this business to the end of his days. When he died in Blairsville, Jan. 31, 1885, he was the oldest merchant then do- ing business in the county. Mr. Graff made an enviable position for himself as a success- ful business man, but he had an equally high reputation for honesty and uprightness in all his dealings, in all the relations of life living up to the Christian standards he professed. He was a member first of the Reformed Church and later of the M. E. Church, join- ing at Blairsville, and was quite active in church work and a faithful attendant at meetings. As an ardent anti-slavery man he was early associated with the Liberty party, and was its candidate for the State Legisla- ture and for Congress. He was a zealons sup- porter of the free school law of 1834, and served under it as school director. As times changed he was in turn a Whig, Free-soiler and Republican in politics.
In 1824 Mr. Graff married Lney Sophia more, Md., and she preceded him in death, passing away March 4, 1876, at the age of seventy-one. Eleven children were born to this union, as follows: Susanna, June 23, 1825 (died July 10, 1825) ; Henry, Sept. 9, 1826; Caroline, Dec. 10, 1828 (married Alex- ander Shields, and died May 16, 1882) ; Alex- ander, July 2, 1831; Jacob, Sept. 23, 1834 (married Sallie Davis) ; Nicholas, October, 1836 (died in 1899) ; Paul, July 4, 1838 (for
years president of the First National Bank of Blairsville ) ; James, January, 1841 (died May 11, 1860) ; Edward, Feb. 18, 1843 (died in March, 1845) ; Charles H., Feb. 6, 1846 (mar- ried Margaret Loughry) ; Mary, Jan. 10, 1850 (died March 16, 1850).
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