USA > Pennsylvania > Lackawanna County > Portrait and biographical record of Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania, Volume I > Part 117
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 | Part 124 | Part 125 | Part 126 | Part 127 | Part 128 | Part 129 | Part 130 | Part 131 | Part 132 | Part 133
The educational advantages of our subject were exceptionally good and were obtained prin- cipally through his own efforts. After attending the county normal school at Muncy, he taught one term, and then became a student in the state normal at Lock Haven, after which he taught for five years in Lycoming County. Meantime hav- ing graduated from Wood's Commercial College in Williamsport, in August, 1886, he came to Scranton to teach in Wood's Business College, and soon became principal of the school, which position he held for eight years. In September, 1894, he opened the Scranton Business College, of which he has already made a success. So- cially he is connected with the Scranton Bicycle Club, and in religious belief is identified with the
Elm Park Methodist Episcopal Church, being in- terested in its work and especially active in the Sunday-school. In this city he married Miss Amy Casperson, daughter of Samuel Casperson, who was connected with the Pennsylvania Rail- road Company in Wilmington, Del. Their three children are Edna, Anna and Ethel.
J OHN FRICHTEL, a worthy German-Amer- ican citizen of Scranton, is foreman of the blast furnaces of the Lackawanna Iron & Steel Company, formerly the Lackawanna Iron & Coal Company, and has been long one of their tried and true employes. Thoroughly under- standing every detail of his business, industrious and energetic, always at his post, he is a most valuable man to any business concern, and his own company realize this fact. He has been very successful, for he possesses the qualities that inevitably bring their reward.
A native of Germany, our subject was born May 9, 1833, in Untersteinach, Bavaria, and is a son of John and Louise (Rader) Frichtel. The father, who was a farmer by occupation, lived and died in Germany, and his wife, who bore him five sons, also departed this life in the Father- land. John Frichtel, in common with his broth- ers, received a good education in the excellent schools provided by the government. His par- ents instructed and trained their family in use- ful, industrious ways, thus laying the founda- tions of their character for after life. When he had arrived at suitable years he began working for himself, by hiring out to farmers. Imbued with a strong desire to come to the land of lib- erty and freedom, he at last was able to carry into effect his long-cherished dream, and August 7, 1853, he left Bremen in a sailing-vessel, which reached New York City at the end of a tedious voyage of forty-six days. He was the pioneer of his family in the New World, but later the other brothers followed his example and came to found homes here. Employment was prof- fered him with the Pennsylvania Coal Company on the canal, at Honesdale, and he was glad to accept the first opportunity of honest work, this having been one of the secrets of his success.
4I
968
PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
It was in January, 1854, that Mr. Frichtel came to Scranton, and at once began his long service for the company that we find him with today. Six weeks passed and he was transferred to this blast furnace and from time to time he was pro- moted until he was made keeper. In 1862 he was placed in charge of the blast furnaces as foreman and still occupies this position, though his duties have perceptibly increased.
In this city Mr. Frichtel and Barbara Borner were married in 1856. The lady is also a native of Germany. Eleven children were born to them, but much more than ordinary sorrow came to their hearts, as one by one their children were taken from their hearthstone by death, until but one, an enterprising young man, Jacob by name, is left to them of all the once large family circle. Jacob is a fine machinist, with the same company as is his father. Mrs. Barbara Gutheng died in 1894, and Frederick, a machinist, died when twenty-four years old. Mr. Frichtel built his comfortable residence at No. 305 Willow Street. Fraternally he belongs to Residenz Lodge, I. O. O. F. and to Scranton Odd Fellows' Encamp- ment. He is also identified with the Saengerunde and with the German Benefit Association. For many years he was a trustee of the German Pres- byterian Church, until he resigned from office. Politically he is a Republican.
B ENAJAH S. GARDNER. It is doubtless due to the industrious and persevering manner in which Mr. Gardner has adhered to the occupation of a farmer that he has risen to such a substantial position in the agricultural community of Lackawanna County. His life has been spent within the confines of Benton Town- ship, and, as a natural result, he is much interested in the progress and development of this section, which he has assisted in making the farming region it now is.
The father of our subject was Horace Gard- ner, who was born in Rhode Island in 1800, and the following year was brought to this country by his parents, George and Abigail (Dean) Gardner, also natives of Rhode Island, and deceased in Abington Township. Grandfather Gardner was
a farmer and tinner, a veteran of the War of 1812 and died when over eighty years of age. The father of George Gardner and the great-grand- father of our subject, was a captain in the Rev- olutionary War and came with his son, grand- son, and other members of the family to Abing- ton Township, being among the very first to set- tle in this section of the country. The trip was made over the mountains with ox teams, and on arriving at their destination they cleared the land and began the life of agriculturists at the commencement of the present century. The family was founded in America by three brothers, who came to this country from Scotland. The grandmother of our subject attained the age of one hundred and five years.
The marriage of Horace Gardner united him with Narcissa Bowen, who died on the home farm at the age of eighty-nine; he passed away in the spring of 1872 at the age of seventy-three. They were the parents of eight children, of whom only two are living. One son, J. C., who parti- cipated in the late war, died in 1896; the second son, Cyrus C., is a resident of Factoryville. Our subject was born in Benton Township, May 3, 1827, and was reared on the home farm, but at the age of twenty-five went to Scranton and was employed in the meat business. After his mar- riage he continued to live there for four years, then came to this place in the spring of 1856 and began agricultural work. About 1875 he built a saw mill, and three years later erected a grist mill, the dam of which was built in 1874. He has since operated these mills, with the as- sistance of his son, Miles, who at the present time owns a half interest in the mill.
September 7, 1853, Mr. Gardner married Miss Catharine A. Reynolds, daughter of Crispen and. A. Melinda (Seamans) Reynolds. Her father was born in Rhode Island, and about 1798 settled, with his family, at Factoryville, and twenty-five years later purchased the farm where our sub- ject now lives. He enlisted as a soldier in the war in 1814 as a substitute for his father. He re- turned to Benton Township, residing here for many years afterward, and until his death in 1855 at the age of sixty-one; his wife died when sixty- six. They had a family of eight children, but
969
PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
only two are now living. The paternal grand- parents of Mrs. Gardner were Solomon and Frances (Northrup) Reynolds, natives of Rhode Island, who died in Factoryville, Pa. The Rey- nolds family cleared the first land in Benton Township and were among the earliest perman- ent settlers here.
The only son of our subject, Miles P., was given educational advantages in youth and has been of the greatest assistance to his father in the management of their business interests. He married Luzina Gardner, who though bearing the same name was not related to this family; they are the parents of three children: Mary H., Jack B., and Howard P. The only daughter of our subject is Lucetta, who received an excellent ed- ucation, has gained breadth of culture and re- finement by extensive travel throughout the United States, and is regarded as one of the most intelligent ladies of this locality. The family attend the Baptist Church and have assisted in the erection of houses of worship, besides aid- ing in other religious undertakings and charitable projects. Both father and son are Republicans in political belief and support the principles of that party. They willingly aid in local improve- ments and public enterprises, and have lent a helping hand in various township matters.
C HRISTOPHER A. SHERMAN. This county had its quota of men who enlisted in the Union army during the Civil War and endured all the hardships of forced inarches, exposure to weather and on the tented field, be- sides the greater peril of open engagements with the Confederate forces. In this class of patriotic citizens belongs the name of Mr. Sherman, of Glenburn, who enlisted August 14, 1862, for three years, or until the close of the war. Company B, of which he was a member, was incorporated in the One Hundred and Forty-third Regiment of Pennsylvania Infantry. At the close of the Re- bellion he was honorably discharged, June 12, 1865, by reason of General Order No. 77, A. G. O., from headquarters. He took part in the various engagements in which his regiment participated and at Gettysburg was made a prisoner, but was
paroled while on the field. For three months he was on detached service, and was afterward mustered out in New York harbor. He is justly proud of the history of his regiment and the hon- orable part it bore in quelling the Rebellion. The nineteen engagements of the regiment were as follows: Pollock's Mills, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, South Mountain, Funkstown, Cen- treville, Thoroughfare Gap, Wilderness, Laurel Hill, Spottsylvania, Bull's Church, North Anna, Pamunkey River, Cold Harbor, siege of Peters- burg, Weldon Railroad, Petersburg, Weldon raid and Hatchie's Run. He was with the regiment in all these battles except the last, when, after start- ing out with his comrades, he was sent back by the adjutant, Charley Campbell, because of sick- ness.
Tracing the genealogy of the Sherman family, we find that Philip Sherman was born in July, 1610, and married Sarah Potter. Their son, Sam- uel Sherman, was born in February, 1648, and married Martha Tripp, whose birth occurred Au- gust 31, 1663. Their descendant, John, born May 25, 1725, had a son, Job Sherman, who was born May 20, 1752, and married Lydia Cundale, born July 7, 1751. Next in line of descent was John Sherman, born May 25, 1786, died September 21, 1870; his wife was Mary Norton of Tiverton, R. I. Their son, John C., was born January 10, 1814, in Rhode Island, and at the age of two years was brought to Pennsylvania, where he married Ruth Phillips, born in this state July 28, 1815. Their children, ten in number, were born as follows: Mary, May 13, 1834, died May 18, 1834; William Norton, born May 13, 1835; Ezra, born December 16, 1837, died May 20, 1840; Jencks, born September 2, 1839, and died June 24, 1840; Christopher Alon- zo, born May 17, 1841; Celestia, born May 19, 1843, died July II,
1879; George, born May 17, 1845; Ruth Ellen, born November 29, 1848, died March 18, 1851; Zachary T., born April 9, 1849, died March 15, 1851; and John C., Jr., born October 5, 1854, died January 10, 1856. The father was a man of energetic and in- dustrious character and great kindness of heart, a consistent believer in the principles of Christi- anity and the doctrines of the Baptist Church,
970
PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
which he proclaimed from the pulpit. His was a busy and useful life and his death was deeply mourned. He passed away November 27, 1873, at which time he was pastor of Pequa Church in Lancaster County, Pa.
In South Abington Township, this county, Mr. Sherman was born May 17, 1841, a son of J. C. and Ruth (Phillips) Sherman. During his ab- sence in the war, he was cheered by letters from his sweetheart at home, and the year after his return they were married. She was Miss Amanda Brooks, a native of New Jersey, but from four years of age a resident of Carbondale, where she was reared by an aunt. Their marriage, January 8, 1866, was blessed by five children, namely: Charles, who is married and has one child; Al- bert, who lives in Scranton; Hurley; Arthur and Amy, twins.
From 1865 until 1868 Mr. Sherman worked for his father, after which he spent two years in Newton Township, then returned to South Ab- ington Township (now Glenburn borough), and afterward went to Tunkhannock, where he was engaged at cabinet work for five years, also gave some attention to wagon-making. From that place he came back to the family homestead, where he has since resided. He has served as burgess, justice of the peace and held the most of the offices in the borough. While in the army he voted for Abraham Lincoln, on the occasion of his second election to the presidency, and since then he has always supported the ticket of the Republican party. His family are connected with the Baptist Church, in which he has held various official positions. He is a pensioner of the war and an active member of the Grand Army Post in Waverly, of which he was the second com- mander.
C J. WILBUR, M. D. The calling of a physician is one of the most important to which a man can devote his life. It is one that calls for physical strength and power of endurance, and for keenness of intellect and mental acuteness. Fortified with these qualities a physician will attain success in the profession, without them his hopes will never be realized.
When Dr. Wilbur started out in the practice many years ago, he was a young man of robust constitution, strength of character and discrimi- nation of mind. More than this, he had the great- est faith in the possibilities of his profession, and the strongest determination to succeed in it. The passing years brought him prominence as a phy- sician and financial success; it being a notable fact that of the eleven hundred cases of obstetrics he attended he lost but one and this speaks much for his skill and ability as a physician.
Dr. Wilbur was born March 23, 1836, at Car- bondale, to the union of Eseck Tabor and Mary S. (Kennedy) Wilbur, being the fourth of ten children. He is the descendant of one of three brothers, who settled in Massachusetts in early colonial times, being Quakers by faith, and endur- ing all the hardships of early settlers. His grand- father, Christopher E. Wilbur, was born in New York State and removed from there to Carbon- dale in the year 1810, where he purchased a large tract of land, becoming one of the first settlers of that place.
The father of our subject was born in Genesee County, N. Y., January 20, 1806, and accom- panied his parents to Carbondale at the age of four years. There he grew to manhood and was employed as contractor and lumberman. About 1842 he removed to what is now North Scranton (then called Razorville and afterwards Provi- dence), and became the owner of one of the finest flour mills in the Lackawanna Valley, also a val- uable tract of land upon which he opened a coal mine called Leggett's Gap. In 1844 he removed to Susquehanna County, and purchased one of the finest farms in that section of the country, upon which he remained until his death August 7, 1865. He was a successful business man, having started. without means and leaving at his death an estate valued at $60,000. His wife was born in Rhode Island July 4, 1809, and died at Moscow at the home of her son, Dr. Wilbur, March 16, 1891, at the age of eighty-two.
The early years of Dr. Wilbur . were passed upon a farm. He obtained a primary education in the district schools. At the age of nineteen he began to read medicine with Dr. A. C. Blakes- lee of Springville, and in 1857 he attended a
97I
PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
course of lectures at the medical department of Yale College. In the spring of 1858 he entered the office of Dr. David James of Laceyville, where he assisted the doctor in his large practice, re- turning in the fall of 1858 to attend his second course at Yale College. In 1860 he opened an office at Moscow, where he continued in active practice until 1887, with the exception of a short time spent in the army during the Rebellion. In September, 1864, he was appointed surgeon at Hampton Hospital, Fortress Monroe, where he remained for three months, being transferred to Point of Rocks Hospital on Appomattox River, near City Point. He remained here but a short time; receiving orders to report at Norfolk, he was appointed to take charge of the Delemator Post Hospital, where he remained until the close of the war. His services were volunteered, leav- ing a lucrative practice to endure the perils and hardships of an army life, believing that thereby he could be of service to his fellowmen and coun- try.
May 1, 1873, Dr. Wilbur married Miss Sarah J. Dixon, an estimable lady, who died April 9, 1892, leaving two daughters, Mary Valeda and Romie Marion.
In early manhood Dr. Wilbur was an active Republican, but for the past twenty years he has taken no part in politics. Fraternally he is a member of the Masonic fraternity and the Order of Odd Fellows. He has always been a man of temperate habits and firm character with strong likes and dislikes, expressing his opinions with a fearlessness that is one of his pronounced traits and condemning under all circumstances the de- ceit and hypocrisy that too often mar the char- acter of men and women.
H ON. WILLIAM HUNTTING JESSUP, senior member of the well known law firm of Jessup & Jessup, of Scranton, is a distinguished descendant of a celebrated fam- ily. John Jessup, the first of the family of whom there is any authentic record, is said to have set- tled in Massachusetts as early as 1620, the year of the landing of the Pilgrims. In 1637 there are records of the family living in Hartford, Conn.,
but before 1640 they had removed to Wethers- field, in the same state, and in the latter year had again removed, this time to Stamford, one of the oldest Connecticut towns, of which they were among the first settlers. In 1649 the father re- moved his family to Southampton, Long Island, where descendants have continued to live.
John Jessup, the member of this family from whom Judge Jessup is descended, was married June 16, 1669, and had a son Henry, born March 12, 1681. Thomas Jessup, a son of Henry, was born February 28, 1721, and in later life held the office of deacon of his denomination. One of his sons, Zebulon, was born September 15, 1755, and was consequently in early man- hood when occurred the great struggle between the mother country and the American colonies, in which contest, it may be presumed from his title of major, he took an active part. December 6, 1780, he married Zerviah, daughter of Samuel Huntting, a merchant of Southampton, whose family came from England in August, 1638, the family of the present generation being therefore able to trace its descent, through two branches, to over three hundred years of unbroken Ameri- can ancestry.
William Jessup, son of Zebulon and Zerviah Jessup, and father of the subject of this sketch, was born at Southampton, Long Island, June 21, 1797, and removed to Montrose, Pa., in 1818, entering the law office of A. H. Read, and also teaching for five terms in the town academy. February 2, 1820, he was admitted to the bar of Susquehanna County, and at once entered upon the practice of his profession. Being a man of ability and force of character, he took the lead in many matters of public import in his adopted town, and especially in military matters as col- onel of his regiment, gained a reputation for the high degree of skill his troops attained under his well-directed discipline. From 1824 until 1833 he served as register of wills and recorder of deeds for his county, but declined re-appoint- ment to the position in the latter year. April 7, 1838, he was commissioned judge of the Eleventh Judicial District of Pennsylvania, serving by re- appointment until November, 1851. His career as a judge was marked by great wisdom and im-
972
PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
partiality. In the temperance movement he was one of the earliest leaders, at a time when public sentiment needed a great deal of arousing as to the sinfulness of the traffic in liquors. He joined the Presbyterian Church of Montrose Septem- ber 3, 1826, and August 2, 1829, was made a ruling elder. Two sons were foreign mission- aries of the Presbyterian denomination in Syria. In politics he was first a Democrat, then a stanch Whig, and later took a prominent part in the or- ganization of the Republican party. At the Chi- cago convention of 1860, when Lincoln was nominated for the presidency, he was chairman of the committee of resolutions, and when in his speech before the convention he said, "Freedom is the normal condition of the territories," he was greeted with thunderous applause and cries of "Read that again" from the different parts of the house.
July 4, 1820, Judge Jessup married Miss Amanda Harris, of Southampton, Long Island, and to this union were born ten children: Jane R., a daughter, married Col. J. B. Salisbury, of New York, but is now deceased; Mary S. became the wife of F. B. Chandler of Montrose, and is deceased; Harriet A. married Isaac L. Post, of Scranton, and is likewise deceased. Of the sons, William H. is the subject of this notice; Rev. Henry H. Jessup, D. D., has, with his brother, Rev. Samuel Jessup, D. D., been a missionary to Syria, stationed at Beirut, for many years, the former since 1856 and the latter since 1862. Of the remaining children of the family, Phoebe A. married Alfred Hand, of Scranton, and is now de- ceased; Fannie M. is unmarried; George A. is a resident of Scranton, and Huntting C. is the law partner of his brother, William H. The father died in Montrose September II, 1868, his death resulting from a stroke of paralysis. The mother died in August, 1883.
William Huntting Jessup was born in Mont- rose, Pa., January 29, 1830, and was educated at Cortland Academy, in the town of Homer, N. Y. In 1846, at the age of sixteen, he entered the sophomore class at Yale College, and on his graduation in 1849, chose the practice of law as a profession. After two years of hard study he was admitted to the bar at the last term held
by his father, who, finally severing his connection with the bench just then, re-entered the profes- sion of law as a partner with his son. Under the father's experienced management the fame of the firm spread, and their practice extended throughout the state, and included practice be- fore the state and the United States courts. After the death of the father, the son continued in the business, a worthy successor, being accu- rate, thorough, conscientious, and of unimpeach- able honor and integrity. His judicial ability was recognized when, in 1877, he was appointed presiding judge of the Thirty-fourth Judicial Dis- trict, a position he held until 1879. As a judge, he was remarkable for clearness of comprehen- sion of all intricate and difficult points of law and for his promptness of decision. Upon his retire- ment from the bench, he resumed the practice of law. In 1881 he opened an office in Scranton, having as partner the late Isaac J. Post. Their practice became one of the largest in the place. After the death of Mr. Post, in 1886, Judge Jes- sup's son, William H. Jr., became a partner in the practice of law. The latter was born in Montrose in 1859, and graduated from Yale Col- lege in 1884 with the degree of A. B. In 1886 he was admitted to the bar and since that time has practiced continuously with his father. He possesses the same qualities of mind which made his father and his grandfather famous in their profession, and is well qualified to be the partner of his brilliant father.
In October, 1853, Judge Jessup married Miss Sarah W. Jay, of Belvidere, N. J., by whom he had two sons and four daughters.
At the early age of thirteen years, following the strong religious bent of many of his ances- tors, Judge Jessup joined the Presbyterian Church, and has ever since lent that denomin- ation his active support. For thirty-six years he served as superintendent of the Sunday-school, and since 1868 he has been one of the ruling elders. In all the forward movements of the day he has taken an active part, and especially in the cause of temperance, like his father before him, he has worked untiringly. In politics his influence has been one of the upward factors of the community. In early manhood he assisted
973
PORTRAIT AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.
in forming the Republican party, and since that early day has been unwavering in his support of its principles. He has been chosen many times to represent his district in political conventions, and has done so with an energy and enthusiasm which have helped carry the day for his party. During the war of the Rebellion, he saw active service as major of the Twenty-eighth Regiment, Pennsylvania Militia, campaigning through 1862 and 1863. In the latter year he was appointed by President Lincoln assessor of internal revenue for the Twelfth Collection District of Pennsyl- vania, and held the position for three years. In 1871 he was commissioned by Gov. John W. Geary as major-general of the Tenth Division of the Pennsylvania National Guard. For many years he served as president of the Susquehanna Agricultural Society, one of the oldest organiza- tions of the kind in the state. That his ability does not lie along one or two lines, is shown by the fact that he has been one of the foremost men in his county to introduce valuable farm stock, and has stood sponsor to many of the most advanced methods of farming that have been adopted in the state. Lately, however, his legal business, which includes the charge of the legal affairs of many large corporations, has en- grossed most of his time, leaving him little leis- ure for anything outside of that arduous profes- sion.
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.