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BIO: Benjamin HARTSHORN, Clearfield County, PA
 
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_____________________________________________________________

From Twentieth Century History of Clearfield County, Pennsylvania,
and Representative Citizens, by Roland D. Swoope, Jr.,
Chicago: Richmond-Arnold Publishing Company, 1911, pages 818 - 820.
_____________________________________________________________ 

  BENJAMIN HARTSHORN, one of Pike township's representative and substantial 
citizens, residing two miles north of Curwensville, Clearfield county, Pa., 
where he owns 600 acres of valuable land, was born on this farm, November 28, 
1833.  He is a son of Jonathan and a grandson of Benjamin Hartshorn.
  Grandfather Benjamin Hartshorn was born in Cecil county, Md.  He came to 
Clearfield county, with his family when all this section included in Pike 
township, then Huntingdon county, was almost a wilderness.  He was a squatter 
settler, laying claim to 500 acres of new land, the present farm being a part of 
that claim.  He built his log cabin on what is now the McNaul farm, choosing his 
home near one of the finest springs in the county.  It is related that bears 
were frequent visitors to the neighborhood and after they had stolen the milk 
crocks that had been placed on poles near the spring, as was the early custom, 
Mr. Hartshorn built a bear trap and subsequently had the satisfaction of filling 
up the larder with bear meat, the animal weighing 600 pounds.  He was a very 
enterprising and resourceful man and although he died at the age of fifty-eight 
years he had accomplished more than many whose life extended much farther.  He 
girdled the trees over about forty acres, killing them in this way, and later, 
with his ox-team, cleared up this land and put it under cultivation.  He also 
started a tannery, the first one east of Bellefonte, and after his death his 
son, William Hartshorn, continued to carry it on.  Benjamin Hartshorn was also a 
man of public importance and was one of the organizers of Clearfield county.  He 
had six children, namely:  Margaret, who married Andrew Caldwell; Anna, who 
married Robert Ross; Jonathan; William, who married a Swan; Benjamin, who 
married; and Mary Ann, who married Manning Stephenson.  With his wife this old 
pioneer of Pike township rests in the McClure cemetery.  They attended the 
Presbyterian church.
  Jonathan Hartshorn, father of Benjamin Hartshorn, of Pike township, had few 
school advantages and by the time a school was established in the neighborhood 
of his father's farm, he and his older sisters were beyond school age.  All were 
inured to pioneer hardships and as they never knew any of the luxuries of life 
in their youth, did not miss them.  Jonathan and his brother William assisted 
their father and sometimes it was necessary to travel a long distance even 
beyond Center county in order to obtain salt, a commodity necessary to the 
raising of their cattle as well as for domestic uses.  What now costs but a few 
cents then was one of the extravagant purchases they were obliged to make.  It 
is very probable that the youths on these trips carried with them an old flint-
lock musket, still in the possession of the family as a relic, and, although it 
often missed fire, it sometimes killed a bear and on these occasions one-quarter 
of the carcass would be kept for home consumption and the rest sold at 
Curwensville.  Jonathan Hartshorn was as industrious and successful as his 
father had been.  He worked on his land during the summer seasons and during the 
winters was largely engaged in lumbering and was considered a very expert 
raftsman, frequently taking huge rafts down the river.  With his brother William 
he bought a saw-mill and they also conducted the tannery established by their 
father and continued until the death of Jonathan, after which the saw-mill was 
sold and the timber on this tract was also disposed of for $47,000.  All the 
timber has been delivered and removed.  Coal also was found on the land and it 
took a large amount of work before the stripping of the layer of coal was 
completed.  At the time of his death, Jonathan Hartshorn owned 500 acres of 
land.
  Jonathan Hartshorn married Miss Rachel Leonard, who was born in Bradford 
township, Clearfield county, Pa., in 1807, and died in 1894.  She was a sister 
of Judge Leonard, who at one time was an associate judge of Clearfield county.  
Her parents were Abraham and Elizabeth Leonard.  To Jonathan and Rachel 
Hartshorn ten children were born, as follows:  Jane, who married Robert R. 
Neeper, of Pike township; Benjamin; Margaret, who is the widow of Robert 
Wrigley, of Clearfield; Abraham, who died in infancy; Z. L., who is now 
deceased; Mary Ann, who died unmarried, April 10, 1908, and was buried in the 
Oak Hill cemetery, at Curwensville; Hannah, who is deceased, was the wife of 
Martin Braughler, who lives in California; Joshua, who was living on the old 
homestead at the time of his death, married Nora Lawhead; Jonathan T., who 
married Josephine Holland, a native of Little Rock, Ark., has one son, Troy K., 
and they live at Pasadena, Calif.; and Lavinia, who died aged thirteen years.  
Both parents of the above family lived to the unusual age of ninety-three years 
and both were buried at Oak Hill cemetery.  The father passed away first, his 
death occurring on February 15, 1882.  They were members of the Presbyterian 
church.
  In his early years of manhood, Jonathan Hartshorn was a Whig but later became 
a Republican.  He never accepted any public office although he was always 
interested in current events and public affairs.  He was, however, persuaded to 
become the mail carrier away back in 1817, between Bellefonte and Kittanning, 
Pa.  At that time it took six days to make the round trip, these journeys being 
two weeks apart.  He often told his children about the dangers he encountered on 
these trips and also of the rapid increase in population as evidenced by his 
having to increase his carrying capacity by 1818 and still more later on.  The 
old Indian trail went through this farm and many Indians journeyed over it east 
and west.  Mr. Hartshorn treated them well and he never had anything to complain 
of in the way they met him and his family, friendly relations always existing.  
He maintained an open, hospitable home and his cheerful fireside often had 
guests beside it whose names were known far and wide.  One of these was of his 
own kindred, General Ross Hartshorn, a son of his brother William, the former of 
whom was the only brigadier-general appointed in Clearfield county among the 
officers who served in the Civil war.
  Benjamin Hartshorn obtained his education in the district schools and has 
always lived on the land that came to him from his father and grandfather, and 
all of it practically belongs to him.  About 100 acres have been cleared and are 
under cultivation, while the remainder is in woodland, the timber being valuable 
and it is largely used as pasture ground.  Mr. Hartshorn has no coal bank now 
open but there is an underlay of from four to five feet of fire clay that has 
never been developed.  It would seem that the grandfather of Mr. Hartshorn had 
more than ordinary foresight and good judgment when he made his selection of 
virgin land.  Mr. Hartshorn has lived a quiet, uneventful but busy life and is 
well known all over Clearfield county.  He has never taken any active part in 
political matters.  He is a stockholder in the Rural Telephone Company of Pike 
township.  Mr. Hartshorn has never married.