Montgomery County PA Archives Biographies.....Blair, Eugene June 7, 1858 - 
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File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by:
Joe Patterson jpatter@epix.net February 17, 2026, 3:42 pm

Source: Biographical Annals of Montgomery County Pennsylvania, T. S. Benham & Company and the Lewis Publishing Company, 1904
Author: Ellwood Roberts, Editor

EUGENE BLAIR, a well known citizen and business man near 
Hatboro, Montgomery county, Pennsylvania, belongs to an old 
family of Scotch ancestry. He was born in Moreland township 
adjacent to Hatboro, June 7, 1858, he was reared as a 
farmer, and also learned the milling trade.He was educated 
in the public schools of the vicinity.He is the son of David 
T. and Mary C. (Krusen) Blair, of Bucks countyPennsylvania.

David T. Blair (father) was a son of William R. Blair of 
Cambridge, Maryland, who was born in 1788 and came to 
Pennsylvania with the family in 1795. They located in Bucks 
county, where William R. grew to manhood.

William R. Blair (grandfather) was a son of John Blair, of 
Scotch-Irish nativity. He came to America during colonial 
days and assisted in throwing off the yoke of Great Britain 
during the war for Independence, serving in the army in the 
Revolutionary conflict.He held the rank of 
brigadier-general, and was a paymaster in the army. He was 
faithful to the cause of the struggling colonies, being 
endowed with a large share of the patriotism which was so 
conspicuous a trait in the Scotch-Irish character. After the 
Revolutionary war he located in Maryland, at Cambridge, 
where he engaged in merchandising, and died previous to 
1795.He held lands which were allotted to him by the 
government, the title of which he entrusted to other parties 
for location and identification and which was ultimately 
lost sight of. His wife, Jean Ramsey, was a native of Bucks 
county, whose family bought land directly from William Penn, 
and were among the early settlers of that county.

 They had three children, William, of Warwick township, 
Bucks county; Jane, who married Robert Ramsey; and Nancy, 
who did not marry. Robert Ramsey was reared in Bucks county 
and became very prominent. He was quite a politician, and 
represented the county in the state legislature several 
terms. Later He served two or three terms in the United 
States congress. When President Andrew Jackson vetoed the 
bill for rechartering the United States Bank, Ramsey left 
the Democratic party and became a Whig, that party 
afterwards electing him to congress, so that he served 
through the choice of both political parties.

William R. Blair married Mary, daughter of James Thomas, a 
prominent hotel keeper at Chalfont, Bucks county, 
Pennsylvania, during the Revolutionary war and later.William 
R. Blair was a carpenter and later in life a farmer, and a 
respected member of the community. He affiliated with the 
Presbyterian church. Ills children: Jane, died unmarried; 
David T., father of Eugene Blair; John, who resides at 
Topeka, Kansas, at the age of eighty-four years; James T. 
deceased, a blacksmith; Mary, died unmarried; Rachel, Mrs. 
J. Alter.William Ramsey a brother of Jean served through the 
Revolutionary war.He was a courier. and crossed the Delaware 
river with messages, crossing over the, ice when it was so 
thin that he was obliged to carry a rail, so that ill case 
he broke through it would keep him from sinking.

David T. Blair, father of Eugene Blair, married September 3, 
1857. He remained in Bucks county until 1858 and settled in 
Montgomery county. In 1853 he returned to Bucks County. In 
1876 he returned to Montgomery County and purchased the farm 
and mill property on which he remained during the rest of 
his life. The mill was built in the year 1827, and was 
originally run by water power, although steam was ultimately 
used. The mill is yet in good condition. Politically he was 
a Democrat.During his residence in Bucks county he often 
served as a delegate to conventions. He was over six feet in 
height, and stout in proportion. He affiliated with the 
Presbyterian church. He died at the homestead, May 19, 1891. 
His wife survived him and died October l0, 1896. She was the 
daughter of James Krusen, of Northampton township, Bucks 
county, the family being descended from Hollanders. The 
father of James Krusen was Derrick Krusen. The family as a 
rule were farmers, and members of the Reformed church. James 
Krusen died in Bucks county. His children: Mary C., mother 
of Eugene Blair; Anna (Mrs. H. Addis); Francis, a farmer in 
Bucks county.
 
The children of David T. Blair: Eugene, subject of this 
sketch; H. Craig, born January 25, 1862, died July 5, 1892, 
unmarried; Lynn, born February 15, 1865, died January 10, 
1867. The mother was a Presbyterian in religious faith.

Eugene Blair, being the only surviving heir of his parents, 
remained at the farm and mill. Politically he is a Democrat, 
but does not aspire to public office.

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