USA > West Virginia > West Virginia and its people, Volume II > Part 55
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While at Harvard Mr. Sugden was extremely popular. He was a member of the Institute of 1770: the D. K. E., the famous Greek letter fraternity established in 1770, whose requisites were good fellowship and culture : of the Hasty Pudding Club; T. N. E .; and the Varsity Club. Mr. Sugden has always been a great athlete: true to the inherited instincts of his English and Scotch ancestry, he is a great foot ball player, and while at Harvard played centre with the foot ball squad as a fresh- man, and in the fall of the years 1902 and 1903, centre also on the Var- sity team. In 1903 he became manager of the Harvard-Lacrosse team,
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and was instrumental in bringing from England the Oxford and Cam- bridge picked team, arranging the schedule for their tour of the United States in 1903. Later he coached for two years the foot ball team at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and during the last few years has officiated as referee in the important foot ball games played in this state. Mr. Sugden is loyal in other respects to the traditions of England, where many of his father's family still reside; he is a vestryman in the Episcopal church and orthodox in his religious views. Politically he is a member of the Republican party ; he was delegate from the Fourth con- gressional district of West Virginia to the Republican National Conven- tion held in Chicago, June 18, 1912, and also delegate to the National Progressive Convention, August 6, 1912. He is a thirty-second degree Mason, a Shriner, and a member of the Scottish Rite; also belongs to the following lodges : Phoenix Lodge, No. 73, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons; Sistersville Chapter, No. 27, Royal Arch Masons; Trinity Com- mandery, No. 14, Knights Templar ; Consistory of West Virginia, No. I, Wheeling; and Osiris Temple, Ancient Arabic Order of Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, Wheeling. He is also a member of the University Club, Wheeling. West Virginia, and Harvard Club of Western Pennsylvania, of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Berkeley Springs has no more progressive business
ROCKWELL man than William Albert Rockwell, one of the pio- neers of the fruit packing industry, and closely and prominently identified for a number of years with the leading interests, both financial and social, of his home town.
(I) Tolbert Rockwell, was born near Berkeley Springs, Virginia, and spent his life as a farmer in his native county. He served as a sol- dier in the war of 1812, and in politics was a Democrat, but never held public office. He married Sarah Wicks, and the following children were born to them: I. William, married Jane Adamanther; two children, John William and Sarah Betrock. 2. John, married Susan Mendenhall ; sixteen children. 3. Elias, mentioned below. 4. Edward J., married Maggie Hoover ; four children. 5. Charles, died at the age of seventeen. 6. Rhoda, married Samuel Michael; twelve or fourteen children. 7. Lotta, married John Grace; twelve children. 8. Elizabeth, married George Michael : ten children. 9. Phoebe, became the wife of Edward Rider : seven children. 10. Tillie, married John Kerns; three children. The three daughters last-named are all living in the neighborhood of Berkeley Springs. The mother of the family, who was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church, died in Berkeley Springs, and the father passed away in Morgan county, at the venerable age of ninety-two.
( Il) Elias, third child and third son of Tolbert and Sarah ( Wicks) Rockwell, was born December 2, 18-, near Berkeley Springs, Virginia. He received his education in the district schools of his native county. Like his father, he followed agricultural pursuits, and adhered to the Democratic party, but never held political office. He served as a soldier in the civil war for a term of three years, enlisting in 1861 and in 1864 receiving an honorable discharge. He married Maggie Kiefer, born near Frederick City, Maryland, daughter of George and Anna Maria (Gruby) Kiefer, the latter a native of Germany. George Kiefer was a farmer in Maryland and West Virginia and died in Morgan county, aged eighty- two or eighty-three. Mr. and Mrs. Rockwell were the parents of the following children: I. Flora, married William Widmyer, of Morgan county, West Virginia: six children: Isa, wife of Charles Webber, has three children, Helen. Edna and Virginia: Maggie, married (first) Ir-
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win Weber, by whom she had one child, ( second) John Ament, no chil- dren ; Engene, married May Zimmerman ; Carrie, married John Furnow, children, Clyde and Baby ; Estella, married Manas Weber, no children; William, single. 2. George Talbot, died young and unmarried. 3. Charles H., died in infancy. 4. Edward Lee, of California; married (first) Ella Roberts ; four children ; married (second) -. 5. William Albert, mentioned below. 6. Lila M., married David L. Harrison, of Baltimore ; three children, all unmarried: Ethel, Lesley, James. 7 Ber- tha, married Joseph P. Hovermale, of Berkeley Springs : children : Nel- lie, Maggie, Marion, Jennie, Silas, Joseph, John, Anna. 8. Charles H., married Edith Widmyer; one child, Harry. Elias Rockwell died in Morgan county, West Virginia, March 17, 1903. He was sixty-seven years old and survived his wife. Both were members of the Methodist Episcopal church, Mr. Rockwell serving as steward.
(III) William Albert, fifth child and fourth son of Elias and Mag- gie (Kiefer) Rockwell, was born May 13, 1865, near Berkeley Springs, West Virginia. He attended the public schools of the neighborhood. He began his active life by assisting his father on the farm, afterward going to Baltimore where he was employed in the shops of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Later he had charge of steam heating and filled the position of gateman at the Union Station. After returning from Balti- more to his native place Mr. Rockwell turned his attention to fruit pack- ing, discerning in that industry a field hitherto uncultivated in that part of the country, and in 1899, with characteristic enterprise and foresight. he engaged in that line of business. The undertaking prospered. his trade increased and he now ships his product to the middle and western states. He is a director of the Berkeley Springs Mutual Telephone Company and the Bank of Morgan County, being also a stockholder in both corporations. In politics he is a Democrat, but the only office which he has ever accepted is that of town councilman, which he held for two years. He is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fel- lows, in which he has passed all chairs. He and his wife attend the Methodist Episcopal church. Mr. Rockwell is a fine type of the ener- getic, enterprising business man, a man useful wherever found, furnish- ing an example of the spirit of progress combined with unquestioned integrity, and greatly needed in every community.
Mr. Rockwell married. September 15, 1887, Elizabeth Widmyer, and the following children have been born to them: 1. Lillie May, a student at Goucher College. Baltimore. 2. Harry Penington, died in infancy. 3. Charles Berman, attended the City College, Baltimore, graduated in 1913 ; 4. and 5. Albert Leroy and William Roscoe, twins. 6. Elias Smith. Alford Berman Widmyer, father of Mrs. Elizabeth (Widmyer) Rockwell, was born near Berkeley Springs, where he is still living, engaged in agricul- tural pursuits. He married Sarah Ann Michael, who was also born in the neighborhood of Berkeley Springs, and they became the parents of the following children : I. Elizabeth, wife of William A. Rockwell. 2. George Samuel, died in infancy. 3. Ella, married William Keyes: chil- dren :. Odra, married Frank Johns and has one child: Lola: Mamie ; Elmer R. : Dorothy ; Norman. 4. Carrie. died in infancy. 5. John, died in infancy. 6. Edith, married Charles H. Rockwell : one child, Harry. 7. Pearl, died in infancy.
The family of which Lewis Largent, mayor of Paw LARGENT Paw, is a worthy representative, was founded in this country in 1600, in which year his ancestor emigrated from France with a colony which made settlement in North Carolina.
John Largent, a descendant of the ancestor above named, came to
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Hampshire county, Virginia, in 1700, and settled on Cacapon river in the extreme end of said county. His first wife was of Welsh extraction, and this marriage was followed by three others, having born to him of these four marriages eighteen sons and six daughters, who by natural drift scattered over a wide scope of territory, married and not infrequently, though far removed, returned and remarried, until the name of Largent became a familiar one in that portion of Virginia. Not a few of these ancestors were men of valor and native talent, and participated in the early wars for independence and previously in the pioneer conflict with the redman. The line to Mayor Largent is traced through James, son of John; Lewis, son of James; Joseph, son of Lewis.
Lewis Largent was born at Forks of Cacapon, Hampshire county, Virginia, now West Virginia, October 13, 1838. He was reared at the Forks, near the junction of Cacapon and North rivers, and near this point in the early settlement of the country was a fort where refuge was had from hostile Indians, also from this location can be seen Caudy's Castle, looming up from its base on the bank of Cacapon river, seven hun- dred and fifty feet, affording some very romantic scenery. Tradition says, one Caudy took shelter in the crevices of this gigantic rock when pursued by the Indians, and when they approached on a narrow ledge, Caudy pushed them off to certain death hundreds of feet below. When the civil war broke out Joseph Largent, father of Lewis Largent, was in favor of the Union, and his sons imbibed that sentiment; Lewis evaded the sharp watch of the Confederates, and in 1861 crossed the Potomac river and went to Illinois, where many of his relatives had previously set- tled, and during his stay there saw many regiments of Illinois troops leave for the front in defense of the Union. Among them was the Eleventh Illinois Cavalry, under command of the noted Colonel Robert G. Inger- soll, the skeptic, who was captured at the battle of Pittsburg Landing or Shiloh ; when he was exchanged he resigned and left the service.
When Lewis Largent returned to his native state he located in Paw Paw, Morgan county, where he was engaged with a mercantile firm for some time. Later he went to Montana Territory, going by rail to Corinne, Utah, thence by stage up the Malad Valley, forty miles west of Salt Lake, passing across Idaho into Montana, seven hundred miles by stage, and locating at Sun river with his cousin, John Largent. At this time buffaloes by thousands roamed over that vast unoccupied region, and antelopes were seen in herds like great flocks of sheep. Lo! the poor Indian was also there, still maintaining many of his natural characteristics. Subse- quently Mr. Largent returned to his native state and entered the postal service, running on postal cars between Washington, D. C., and Grafton, West Virginia.
In 1878 Mr. Largent represented Morgan county in the West Vir- ginia legislature and secured some very beneficial legislation in the inter- ests of public education. In 1879 he organized the mercantile firm of Largent & Williamson, conducting an extensive and lucrative business at Paw Paw. In 1888 he again represented Morgan county in the West Virginia legislature and aided in the submission of a constitutional Pro- hibition amendment, which was defeated at the polls. He was sheriff of Morgan county from 1892 to 1896; later he served as president of the board of education of his district, where twenty public schools were cared for and comfortable buildings provided ; was appointed a deputy United States marshal for the District of Columbia ; did service in the supreme courts of the district in 1908 and 1909 during the pendency of the Gomp- ers, Mitchell and Morris, and other important cases. He was a delegate to the International Grand Lodge of the World of the Independent Order of Good Templars at its session held in DesMoines, Iowa, in 1893, where
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sixteen languages were represented, and which assembly was presided over by Dr. Oronhyatekha, a full-blooded Mohawk Indian, a man of remarkable ability, tact and gentility. In 1911 he was re-elected mayor of Paw Paw, in which capacity he is serving at the present time, active and earnest in all that tends to the interests of his adopted town. At the present time he is retired from active business pursuits. He is a Repub- lican in politics.
Charles Edward Wentling's descent is German on one WENTLING side,-the father's, and on the other, good old Penn- sylvania-American stock.
(I) Jacob Wentling came from the old country, where he had been a hatter. He was a young man when he came, was a Whig in politics, but so far as known held no office. He died near Centerville, Bedford county, Pennsylvania, at the age of seventy-two years. He married (first) a Miss Brandt, (second) a Miss James, but the particulars are indefinite. By these two unions he had nine children : I. Elizabeth, mar- ried William Laney. 2. Nancy, married Henry Bruner. 3. Cinderella, married Lenox Ash. 4. Sarah, married Joseph Growden. 5. Cornelia, married a Mr. Hoffman. 6. William Henry, of whom further. 7. John, married (first) a Miss Davis, ( second ) Emily Mackelfish. 8. George, died unmarried. 9. Samuel, married Maggie Bruner. Of these only Samuel, the youngest, survives. He lives on the old home place in Bed- ford county. Pennsylvania.
( 11) William Henry, son of Jacob Wentling. was born near Center- ville, Bedford county, Pennsylvania. He was educated there in the dis- trict schools. He followed the business of farming and huckstering for a livelihood. He was a Democrat politically, but not an office seeker. He was of military proclivities, however, belonged to the citizen soldiery, and was buried with military honors just before the civil war. He died in Bedford county, Pennsylvania, March 11, 1860, at the age of twenty- nine years. He married Elizabeth Ann Huffman, born near Cumber- land, Allegany county, Maryland, December 19, 1833, died August 17, 1871, at the age of thirty-eight, daughter of Edward, a farmer, and Sophia ( Rizer ) Huffman. Mr. and Mrs. Wentling had three children : 1. William Franklin, married Jennie Davis ; lives in Cumberland, Mary- land, with a family of ten children. 2. Francis Marion, died at the age of twenty years. 3. Charles Edward, of whom further.
(11]) Charles Edward, son of William Henry Wentling, was born near Centerville. Bedford county, Pennsylvania, January 28, 1858. He remained there, living with Sophia Huffman, his grandmother, farming and going to school until his sixteenth year. He then attended school's in Allegany county, Maryland, and in Hampshire county, West Vir- ginia, until in his young manhood he came to Paw Paw to live. Here at first he followed the tannery line ; then he clerked for Wilson & Fisher ; then he engaged in business under the name of Wentling & Hinkle, in the merchandising line. This firm continued with success for five years when C. E. Wentling became its successor. Mr. Wentling is a Republican and takes an active interest in politics. He has been mayor of Paw Paw two years, and is now a member of the district school board. He is an Odd Fellow, who has honored all the chair. He is of the Methodist faith.
He married. August 14. 1878. Miranda Cothern Dickens, whose father, Thomas Dickens, was a farmer of Centerville, Bedford county, Pennsylvania, and the father of seven children. Mr. Wentling and wife are the parents also of that number, namely: 1. Ethel, wife of Lambert Henderson, of Elko, Nevada. 2. Mamie Elizabeth, married Gilbert H.
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Friend, of Cumberland, Maryland; two children. 3. Oliver, married Clara Shadd, and lives in Paw Paw. 4. Mary Eliza, of Elko, Nevada. 5. Grace. 6. Atlee P. 7. Ruth. The last three still remain at home.
Nathaniel Lewis was a native of Wales, from whence he
LEWIS came to this country, settling in Massachusetts. He mar- ried and had a son Asa, of whom further.
(II) Asa, son of Nathaniel Lewis, was a native of Massachusetts. He came to Baltimore after his school days: went from thence to Frederick county, Maryland, and then to Hancock, Maryland, where he was in business for a number of years. He put in the locks on the Chesapeake & Ohio canal. He was a Whig in politics, but never held office, and he died at Willet's Run, West Virginia, at the age of seventy- two. He married ( first) in Massachusetts, -: (second ) in Mary- land, Hannah Barnes, a native of Towsontown, a suburb of Baltimore. Her father was Bruce Barnes, a farmer of Baltimore county. She had four brothers of whom Joshua, the second, was sheriff of Baltimore county for eleven years. The children of Asa Lewis and his wife Han- nah numbered ten, and were named as follows: 1. Sally, died in infancy. 2. Mary, died in infancy. 3. Samuel Alter, married twice and had one child by the first union, and four by the second. 4. Rose Ann, died un- married. 5. Asa, married (first ) -: six children : married (second ) Ann (Lickity) Lewis ; six children : still lives with her children in Paw Paw. 6. Joshua D., of whom further. 7. John W., married Mary Syp- hole; thirteen children. 8. Nannie J., wife of M. Frank Kissler. 9. James T. 10. -. now deceased. Of these sons and daughters, all but Asa and Joshua D. have passed away. The mother died in Paw Paw, at the age of seventy-two years.
(III) Joshua Decatur, son of Asa Lewis, was born in Hancock, Wash- ington county, Maryland, November 25, 1841, so that he is now in his seventy-third year. His earlier years were spent in Morgan county, West Virginia. He went to pay school as a boy at Great Cacapon, West Vir- ginia, and on finishing there commenced his career in the railroad line with the Baltimore & Ohio. He was with that company forty-two years, and is now retired with a pension for faithful service, a fact of which he is justly proud. He conducts at present a store in Paw Paw. Mr. Lewis is a Republican in politics, and a member of the Masonic order. He is a member also of the Evangelical Association, and subscribes to that form of religious faith.
Mr. Lewis married, November 7, 18-2, Ann Eliza Luttrell, born March I, 1851, in Canady, Morgan county, West Virginia, daughter of Leon- ard Luttrell, a cooper, formerly of Timber Ridge, Frederick county, Vir- ginia, who was killed by a train at Paw Paw at the age of eighty-four years. His wife was Elizabeth ( Youngblood ) Luttrell, born near Berke- ley Springs. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis are the parents of eight children: I. Rose Ann, married John Thomas ; lives at Davis, West Virginia : no chil- dren. 2. James Harrison, deceased. 3. Martha Elizabeth. deceased ; married Robert Kidwell, who lives in Paw Paw; eight children. 4. Joshua Bayson, deceased. 5. John Oliver, deceased. 6. Floyd Sylvester, after various experiences in the railroad and manufacturing lines, is now a barber in New York. 7. Lizzie Orrena, resides at home. 8. Maude Malinda, resides at home.
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The observant traveler from Grafton to Parkersburg, LAMBERT over the Baltimore aud Ohio line, forming part of their route from New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington to Cincinnati, Louisville, and St. Louis, while noting the hills and tunnels, will have his attention arrested by a sign inviting him to make his abode at Lamberton and grow up with the place. The found- er of Lamberton is a descendant of old Virginia, though, as so often oc- curs, the same name is found in the New England states also. The name is an old one in Great Britain. In this instance, however, the interest is chiefly in the very newest and latest, the intensely modern, whatever the background of antiquity on which the family history rests may be.
(I) Isaac C. Lambert, the first member of this family about whom we have definite information, was born in Virginia, in that part which is still Virginia, and died at Ellenboro, Ritchie county, West Virginia. Com- ing in 1844 from Harrison county into Ritchie county he settled at Ellen- boro. He married Katharine Crable. Children : I. Joseph, born July 31, 1821, died in 1906; married. September 1, 1846, Margaret Lynch. 2. David, of whom further. 3. Madison. 4. M. M. 5. Anna, married Maxwell. 6. Virginia, deceased ; married - Byrd. 7. Katharine, married - Lynch. 8. Elizabeth, deceased : unmarried.
(II) David, son of Isaac C. and Katharine (Crable) Lambert, was born in the valley of Virginia. He married Katharine Sunner. Child, Isaac Henry, of whom further.
(III) Isaac Henry, son of David and Katharine (Sunner) Lambert, was born in Virginia, in 1848, died in 1907. In his young manhood he bought a farm and here he raised stock: he was also interested in the oil development. He had the reputation of being the hardest working man in Ritchie county. He married, in 1876, Mary A., daughter of David and Jane ( Marsh) McGinnis, of Mole Hill, Ritchie county, West Virginia. Children : 1. Harry L., of whom further. 2. Emma, born in 1883. 3. Thomas, born in 1885; teacher in the high school at Pennsboro. 4. Levi, born in 1889. 5. Oscar P., born in 1890.
(IV) Harry L., son of Isaac Henry and Mary A. (McGinnis) Lam- bert, was born at Pennsboro, Ritchie county, West Virginia, July 14, 1882. For sixteen years he lived on a farm, and he received a common school education. At the age of sixteen he started in business for him- self, at Middlebourne, Tyler county, West Virginia, working in a drug store for one dollar a week and his board. In that position he remained for six months. Then he came to Cairo, Ritchie county, West Virginia, in the employment of the Buffalo Oil Company. Later he organized a company, holding the controlling interest in the stock and drilled a num- ber of dry holes. Leases which he held enabled him to come out even from this venture. Abandoning the oil business, he went into the manu- facture of suspenders, with a capital of sixty-five dollars. In one year he cleared eight hundred dollars. The next year he opened a millinery store, and in three years he had lost in this business all that he had gained in the suspender business. On June 1. 1903, he went to Philippi, Barbour county, West Virginia, and within twenty-four hours he sold ten thousand dollars' worth of stock in the suspender business, having organized a company, to forty-eight people. For six years he lived at Philippi. During the first year of his residence there he invested twenty- five dollars in a pool room and bowling alley, and in five years he cleared eleven thousand dollars. During this period he opened a number of amusement places of similar nature and all were profitable. He also purchased a large number of bankrupt stores, and made money in every instance. The first of these he purchased on credit and by careful busi- ness management was enabled to meet the obligation before the same
Lambert.
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came due, besides making a clear profit of over one thousand dollars in one week's time. For a while he owned more stores in West Virginia than any other man.
Disposing of his interests in these stores, Mr. Lambert moved to Pennsboro and opened one large store. Later, in 1909, he organized the Lambert Oil & Gas Company. The first well drilled was a dry hole, and he had hard work to persuade the others in the company to drill another well. However, a second drill was made, and resulted in a good gas well: the company was able soon to pay monthly dividends. Mr. Lam- bert organized another oil company in the same year, known as the No Name Oil Company, which drilled a good gas well on property owned by himself ; he is now president and manager of this company.
At Pennsboro he made several efforts to boom the town, and organ- ized a board of trade. But not finding the people sufficiently responsive to his efforts, he determined to build a town of his own, as he already had his own gas company and fuel. For a site he bought the farm of his uncle, G. W. Lambert, known as the old Lambert homestead. Then he began the quest for factories. In 1910 he met a man with a patent known as the Undercurrent System of Electric Traction. This is for use on transportation lines, and does away with the overhead wires and poles and all danger in the street car business; the current is conveyed under the cars, and connections are made by the aid of electric magnets and broken gravitation. The inventor of this patent was without funds at that time : Mr. Lambert contracted with the Undercurrent Company to give them a free site for a factory and to furnish their fuel and finance the company. In 1911 he began to raise the money. In that year, on the fourth of July, a celebration was held on the site of Lamberton with a sale of lots. Many thousands of people were present, and the sale was a success. In spite of the fact that the financing had been difficult, the pres- ident of the company and the inventor undertook to possess the com- pany ; but Mr. Lambert contested the matter in the courts and in a few months the company was in better condition than before. Its president is H. J. Scott; Mr. Lambert is first vice-president ; Fred Gardener, sec- ond vice-president : C. R. Cunningham, treasurer ; J. G. Young, secre- tary; A. W. Barnhart, master mechanic. The authorized stock is now one inillion dollars. The company's proposition has shown remarkable development. A large concrete block power plant has been erected and equipped with up-to-date machinery used in generating electric power to operate a standard street car demonstration of the Undercurrent system and the proposed manufacturing plant. The company has several hundred feet of standard track upon which a regular street car is oper- ated, being fully equipped with the Undercurrent system. This clearly demonstrates the merits of the invention and is most convincing. The public interest is increasing daily and crowds coming to inspect the car in operation say the proposition to the invester is one of unlimited possi- bilities. Lamberton is the first town in the county of Ritchie to have paved streets, electric light plant, street cars, underground telephone ser- vice and full sewerage system, and is second in having its water plant in. It is Mr. Lambert's intention to make it a complete and model city in every respect.
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