Bios: ANKENY, Edmund K., Indiana Co, PA

SUBJECT: ANKENY, Edmund K.
SUBMITTER: E.K. Warner
EMAIL: wgene@twd.net
DATE: Sep 17, 2000
PASSWORD>
SURNAMES: ANKENY, FAIRMAN, KELSO, KIMMEL, KING, KLINGENSMITH, LICHTY,
MOORHEAD, SAYLOR, WATTERSON, WHIPPY
as recorded by Prof. J. T. Stewart in
Indiana County, Pennsylvania - Her People, Past and Present
Published by J. H. Beers & Co., 1913 Reformatted by E.K. Warner, September
2000

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EDMUND K. ANKENY, farmer of White township, Indiana county, living
one mile from the borough of Indiana, has resided at that place since
the fall of 1900. He is a native of Westmoreland county, Pa., born
near Derry Sept. 23, 1858, son of Jacob and Elizabeth (Lichty) Ankeny.
The parents were both natives of Somerset county, Pa. They had a family
of six children. The father served as a Union soldier during the Civil
war. He died when his son Edmund was very young, and the mother subsequently
married his brother, J. D. Ankeny.

When Edmund K. Ankeny was but an infant his parents removed to Somerset
County, this State. He was only seven years old when he lost his father.
For a few years during his boyhood~he lived in Plumcreek township,
Armstrong county, where he attended school, and he was employed at
farm work from an early age. At the age of twenty-three years he went
out to Waterloo, Iowa, where he worked on a farm for his uncle, Jacob
Lichty, and in the fall went to Thayer county, Nebr., being one of
a company of eighteen formed at Waterloo to go to that county. He
worked at carpentry with a cousin, Frank Kelso, picked and cribbed
the corn from a hundred acres, and then went with another cousin,
Jacob Whippy. He next went to Atchison, Kans., for eight weeks, at
the end of that time going to Brown county, Kans., and from there
to Richardson county, Nebr. He then farmed for U. M. Saylor, in Brown
county, after which he came back to Pennsylvania and commenced farming
on his own account, living near Elderton, Armstrong county, on a tract
of 120 acres, for nearly two years. His next change was to the William
Watterson farm in White township, Indiana county, where he remained
one year, moving from that place to the Kimmel farm in White township,
where he followed general agricultural pursuits and ran a dairy for
nearly eleven years. In the fall of 1900 he came to his present farm,
in White township, then known as the Jacob Moorhead tract. At that
time the principal buildings on the place consisted of a one and a
half story house and a log barn, both of which have been supplanted
by substantial modern structures, Mr. Ankeny having built his barn
in 1901 and his house in 1903. He has made numerous other improvements,
has a fine peach and apple orchard, and has the property in creditable
condition in every respect. Mr. Ankeny deserves great credit for his
present comfortable circumstances for they are the result entirely
of his own efforts, and he is one of the most respected men in his
locality. He is a member of the Presbyterian Church of Indiana, and
politically is a Republican in sentiment, but votes independently.

On July 12, 1887, Mr. Ankeny married Mary King, of South Bend township,
Armstrong county, daughter of Daniel and Catherine Ann (Klingensmith)
King, and they have had the following children : Arthur, who is now
attending the normal school at Indiana; Lottie, wife of Earl Fairman,
of Apollo, Armstrong Co., Pa.; Olive, who died in infancy; Roy (a
student at the normal school) and Ross, at home; and Jessie, a student
at the normal school.



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