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Bios: Selected Bios K-Z : History of Fayette County, by Franklin Ellis, 1882: Fayette Co, PA

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       History of Fayette County, by Franklin Ellis, Philadelphia, 
                    L H Everts and Company, 1882. 

  ______________________________________________________________________

           INDEX


    KERN
    LAUGHLIN, John 
    McILVAINE, Robert Andrew 
    MILLER, Ludwig
    NUTT, Adam Clarke 
    PEIRSOL/PEIRSEL 
    PLAYFORD, Robert W 
    PHILLIPS, Theophilus 
    REIST, Christian 
    RESLER, Daniel 
    ROGERS
    RUSH, Sebastian 
    SHANK, John
    SHEARER, Jacob  
    SHREVE PARTY
    SMITH, Robert
    STONEROAD, Joel
    STRICKLER, Stewart   
    SWEARINGEN, John and Van
    TRADER, William H 
    WELLS, Tunis 
    WILLSON

  ______________________________________________________________________


 p753

    The KERN family emigrated from Holland to Eastern Pennsylvania about
1700.  From thence some of the family moved to Westmoreland county,
settling in the neighborhood of Jones Mill.  There one of the family was
killed by Indians while returning home from a visit with a neighbor;
several of those who had accompanied him escaping.  
    Among some of the above family were Micheal Kern, William Kern, George
Kern and Peter Kern.  The latter died in Westmoreland County; George Kern
becoming a resident of Washington County.  William Kern served in the
Revolution and after the war married Catherine Hoover.  He moved to
Springfield, buying out the claim of a man who held a tomahawk right to a
tract of land in the present Murray district.  On this land he died about
1837 at the age of ninety one years.  He reared sons named: Solomon Kern,
Abraham Kern, William Kern, Jacob Kern, Jonathan Kern, Joshua Kern, and
daughters who married Joseph Eicher and George Nicholson.
    Solomon Kern was born in the township and died in 1862, at the age of
eighty one years, his father being probably one of the very first
settlers and he one of the first born in Springfield.  Solomon Kern was a
carpenter by trade and made many of the early carding machines.  He also
had in operation wood carding (shouldn't this be wool carding??)
machinery in different parts of the State.  For a time he was engaged in
the Baldwin machine shops at Connellsville, but finally settled on a farm
west of Springfield village, which is at present the home of his son,
Judge John Kern.  Other sons were: Josiah Kern, Solomon Kern, and Simon
Kern.  His daughters married Samuel Davis, Henry Gebhart, Henry Griffin
and Aaron Hart.  
    Abraham Kern, the second son of William Kern, removed to Ohio; William
Kern, the third son, married Nancy White and lived and died on the Kooser
place.  Jacob Kern lived a little south of Springfield village where he
died about twenty eight years ago.  He was the father of George Kern and
William Kern, both of the township.  His sons, Abraham Kern and David
Kern, died in the Rebellion.  Jonathan Kern, the fifth son of William
Kern, became a resident of Greene county, and Joshua Kern, the youngest
son and only survivor, lives on Indian Creek, more than eighty years old.
He has sons named William M Kern and George Kern yet living in the
township; and John Kern and James Kern died in the war for the Union.  The
Kerns have become one of the largest and best known families in
Springfield.  


 page 726

    JOHN LAUGHLIN, a conspicuous character in Redstone's early history,
tomahawked a four hundred acre claim that included the present Benjamin
Phillips and Colvin places.  Laughlin was a bachelor, a farmer of some
enterprise, and employed slave labor almost exclusively.  He must have
occupied his land as early as 1780, if not before.  He was esteemed a man
of considerable wealth, and was noted for keeping a large amount of it,
in the form of gold and silver, tied up in a pair of buckskin breeches.  
Once, when he lay quite ill, he sent for his neighbors, William Colvin,
Thomas Wells and Samuel Grable, whom he requested to count in his and
each other's presence the gold and silver that was within the buckskin
breeches.  That task they performed and left him satisfied, and his mind
relieved.  Contrary to his expectations, however, he did not die that
time, but he did die about six months later; and then, strange to relate,
not a vestige of either his buckskin breeches or the wealth they
contained could be found.  
    There were many conjectures as to what became of the money, and many
faithful searches in every place of supposable concealment, but every
search was fruitless, and the disappearance remained as much a mystery as
ever in the end.  People whose cupidity outran their judgement dug upon
the present Benjamin Phillips farm in various places and under cover of
night, hoping to unearth the treasure which then was and today is
confidently believed by some persons to be hidden in the earth, placed
there they say by the hands of old John Laughlin himself; but as the case
stands at present, they are not likely to learn whether their theories
are or are not correct.  
    Mr Laughlin's death occurred shortly after the year 1800, and although
his silver and gold were not found, he left behind him a bountiful supply
of this world's goods for those who came after him.  He had been an
excellent master to his slaves, and in his will left to each one a
substantial reminder of his thoughtful care.  Laughlin was not only a
kindly-disposed and gentle master to his servants, he was an earnest and
faithful worshipper at the Dunlap's Creek Church, despite the fact that
he was not a member thereof.  For a long time it was the generally
accepted belief that he was a member, and indeed, the church members
themselves were so convinced that he was one of them that they chose him
a ruling elder.  When they learned from his own lips that he had never
been in membership, they were both surprised and disappointed.  That one
so devout and regular in attendance upon church meetings could be without
the circle did not once occur to them.
    John Laughlin was as precise in his dress as in his manners, and as
famous almost for his knee breeches, slippers, silver buckles and
perique, as he was for his simple and correct methods of speech and
honorable dealings with his fellow men.  He followed the business of
distilling to a considerable extent, and kept his neighbors as well as
his own farmhands well supplied with the juice of the grain.  An old
manuscript in the possession of Mr Benjamin Phillips purports to be an
order from some person (signature missing) upon John Laughlin for
delivery to John Miller of two gallons of whisky "the day he begins to
reap and not before."
    John Fulton, who located upon the present Samuel Colvin farm about 1800,
died there in 1818.  One of the daughters of his son, John L Fulton, is
Mrs Benjamin Phillips.  


 p538   Dunbar Township, Fayette County, Penna

    ROBERT ANDREW McILVAINE
    The Scotch Irish McIlvaines of America point to Ayrshire, Scotland, as
the home of their ancestors and revert to a period as far back as 1315
when Edward, brother of Robert Bruce, led a large force into Ireland with
the purpose of expelling the English troops from the soil of Erin, great
numbers of his soldiers and retainers remaining in Ireland and founding
what is known as the Scotch Irish race, many of whom migrated to America
in colonial times, and among whom were the ancestors of Robert Andrew
McIlvaine of New Haven, Fayette County, Penna, whose father, John
McIlvaine, was a native of Delaware, where in 1796 he married Sarah White
by whom he had ten children, six born in Delaware.
    In 1813 he with his family left his native State in the latter part of
June for Washington County, Penna, arriving there after a tedious
journey, a great undertaking in those days, in the early part of August
and locating on Pike Run.  In the same county two of his uncles, George
McIlvaine and Grier McIlvaine, were then living and also two of his
brothers-in-law, Fisher White and James White.
    On the 25th of August, 1814, his son Robert Andrew McIlvaine was born,
and in October of the same year, John McIlvaine moved to Connellsville
where he lived until March, 1815, when he moved across the river into New
Haven, a town at that time comprising about twenty dwellings and a few
shops.   Here in 1815 Mrs McIlvaine taught a small school and counted
among her pupils Margaret Connell and Eliza Connell, daughters of
Zachariah Connell, the founder of Connellsville.  This school was one of
the pioneer educational enterprises of the village.  While living there
three children were born to Mr McIlvaine: Sarah McIlvaine, Isaac
McIlvaine, and Eliza McIlvaine.  The parents instructed their children in
the precepts and practices of Christianity and endeavored to impress them
with a sense of the importance of habits of industry and frugality.
    John McIlvaine died in 1850 in his seventy ninth year, Sarah his wife
having gone before him in 1835 in her fifty second year.  Of their ten
children only four survive: Mary Tarr, the oldest survivor, a resident of
Bethany, Westmoreland County, Penna, in her seventy sixth year: James
McIlvaine, aged seventy three, now of Washington County, Penna, a
gentleman distinguished for his benevolence as well as great business
ability; Isaac McIlvaine, the youngest survivor, residing near
Pittsburgh, Penna; and Robert A McIlvaine, the subject of this sketch,
who is sixty seven years of age and lives in New Haven where he has spent
the greater part of his life, actively identified with the business and
growth of the place,
    In the early part of 1853 Mr McIlvaine, after having been engaged with
the ordinary share of success in various avocations of life, entered upon
the business of a druggist, earning an exceptional reputation therein for
scientific accuracy in the compounding of medicines, and securing the
confidence of a large circle of customers thereby, as well as augmenting
his own financial resources.  From this business he withdrew in 1876, and
though keeping a watchful eye over his affairs, now lives in comparative
retirement, unpretentious in his habits, and greatly preferring to fields
of public duty the quiet enjoyments of home.
    In May, 1841, Mr McIlvaine married Miss Susan King, an estimable young
lady and former resident of Westmoreland County, Penna.  Of this union
four children were born, the first not surviving its birth.  The others,
Josephine McIlvaine, Gertrude McIlvaine, and Ada McIlvaine, grew up to
maturity and were in proper time given the best educational advantages at
command.  Josephine McIlvaine graduated at Beaver Female Seminary and
Institute; Gertrude McIlvaine at the Washington Female Seminary; and Ada
was educated at the Moravian Seminary at Bethlehem, Penna.
    In 1868 Gertrude McIlvaine was married to Thomas R Torrence of New
Haven.  In 1871 Mr McIlvaine lost his daughter Josephine who died only
four months before her mother, Mrs Susan K McIlvaine, who expired in the
fifty second year of her age.  In 1872 Ada McIlvaine married Dr Ellis
Phillips of New Haven.  Mr McIlvaine and all his children are members of
the Episcopal Church, the office of senior warden having been filled by
him since 1854.  He has five living grandchildren: Josephine Torrence;
Catharine Torrance; and Robert McIlvaine Torrence; and Ada Phillips and
James McIlvaine Phillips, two having died in infancy: Thomas Torrence and
Gertrude Ellisa Phillips.  


p743

    LUDWIG MILLER was born in Somerset county but in 1800 moved to the
present Christner farm in the southern part of Salt Lick township where
he died in 1845.  His son, Jacob H Miller, was just a year old when his
parents settled in the township.  He yet resides in the eastern part of
Salt Lick, one of the oldest and most hale men in the county.  For twenty
five years he was a justice of the peace and in that period of time
joined two hundred and forty couples in matrimony, a very large number
considering the sparsely settled condition of the country.  
    The other sons of Ludwig Miller were Ludwig H Miller, who moved to Ohio;
George H Miller, who died near Sparks Mill; Henry H Miller, whose death
was caused by falling from a horse; Abraham H Miller, who died in
Springfield; Frederick H Miller, who fell from a cherry tree and was
killed; John H Miller, removed to Ohio; and Isaac H Miller, the youngest,
died in the township.  The daughters married Christian Bungard; Ludwig
Hart; Jacob Bungard; George Sleasman; and Henry Cassell.  There were
thirteen children in all, and when Mrs Ludwig Miller died at the age of
eighty six, she had one hundred and fifty grandchildren and two hundred
great grandchildren, some of her children being parents to eighteen and
twenty children.
    Nearly all the Millers in Salt Lick originated from this family and have
displayed remarkable unanimity in their political predilections.  At the
late Presidential election, the family cast twenty votes for General
Hancock.  John Harbaugh, who resided for many years on the headwaters of
Poplar Run, was a grandson of the Millers.  He received from General
Jackson a hickory cane which passed from him to the Millers and is
cherished by them as a memorial of the stern old hero of New Orleans.  


 p489  Bullskin Township, Fayette County, Penna

    At Pennsville and north of the village, a large tract of land was
settled early by PETER NEWMEYER.  He died in 1836, aged seventy five years
and was interred in the cemetery at the Baptist church.  His sons who
attained manhood were named: Jacob Newmeyer, David Newmeyer; Samuel
Newmeyer and Jonathan Newmeyer; and his daughters married: Betsey
Newmeyer, Henry Strickler of Tyrone township; Mary Newmeyer, Christian
Newcomer of Tyrone township; Ann Newmeyer, David Shallenbarger who lived
on the Sherrick place; Rachel Newmeyer, Abraham Shallenbarger who lived
on the adjoining farm; Susan Newmeyer, Henry Arnold of Connellsville;
Hattie Newmeyer married Edward Riggs; Jacob Newmeyer married Ann
Shallenbarger and died in Tyrone; David Newmeyer moved to Ohio; Samuel
Newmeyer married Elizabeth Stauffer and removed to the West; Jonathan
Newmeyer married Mary Strickler and lived on the home place till his
death, May 15, 1879 at the age of eighty years.  None of the family remain
in the (Bullskin) township.
    Abraham SHALLENBARGER and David Shallenbarger lived on the fine farms
west of Pennsville until their deaths.  The former had sons named Jacob
Shallenbarger; John Shallenbarger; Abraham Shallenbarger; and David
Shallenbarger, all deceased.  The sons of David Shallenbarger were John
Shallenbarger, Henry Shallenbarger, Abraham Shallenbarger and David
Shallenbarger.  The Shallenbarger farm is now well known as the home of A
H Sherrick, whose family were pioneers in Westmoreland County.  


 p358 Connellsville Borough and Twp, Fayette Co, Penna

    ADAM CLARKE NUTT, present cashier of the National Bank of Fayette
County, is the son of Joseph Nutt, a farmer, and Anna Randolph, his wife,
who was born on the 8th of January, 1839. Although the 8th was "New
Orleans Day" and the elder Nutt a strong Democrat, he was also an ardent
Methodist and his Methodism then getting the better of him, the boy was
named for the great commentator instead of Andrew Jackson. Both the
families Nutt and Randolph migrated into western Pennsylvania from New
Jersey and were of Quaker stock.
        Joseph Nutt, the father, died in California in 1851, when Adam Clarke
Nut was twelve years old. The boy was sent to the common schools and for
one term attended the graded school taught by L F Parker in Bridgeport in
the fall of 1855, walking to and from school daily a distance of three
miles each way. There he studied geometry and Latin. After private
studies conducted at home, he entered the preparatory department of
Allegheny College in Meadville in 1856, and supporting himself by
teaching during the winter months, graduated from the college in 1861
with the highest honors of his class as valedictorian. While connected
with the college he paid much attention to general literature and
received the Woodruff prize for the best essay in the Philo-Franklin
Literary Society on the subject propounded for competition, "The Western
Continent as a field of laudable ambition."
    In the war of the Rebellion he was connected with a three month company 
in 1861. From October, 1862, to July 29, 1863, he served as a private
soldier in the One Hundred and Twelfth Pennsylvania Volunteers and from
the last mentioned date to October 31, 1863, he was captain of the Third
United States Colored Troops under Captain B C Tilghman. He participated
in the siege of Fort Wagner and in operations on Morris Island until
February 8, 1864. He went into Florida under Gen Truman Seymour in the
Olustee campaign, being for a time in the brigade commaned by Gen Joseph
R Hawley.
    After the disaster at Olustee, he was engaged in fortifications around
Jacksonville, Florida, until April, 1863, and subsequently commanded the
post at Lake City, Florida, until October of that year. And here may be
mentioned a matter of national history with which he was connected while
at Lake City and which may otherwise escape record in connection with
Payne, who attempted to kill Secretary Seward at the time of the
assassination of President Lincoln. The government wishing to fix the
identity of Payne, Gen Foster sent Captain Nutt on the delicate mission
of visiting the alleged family of Payne and securing the evidence; the
result of his mission being the determining of the fact that Payne's
correct name was Lewis Thornton Powell, and that he was the son of a
Baptist minister living about twelve miles from Lake City.
    Captain Nutt returned home in December, 1863, and in April, 1866,
removed to Uniontown where he has since resided. He read law with Hon
Daniel Kaine, and was admitted to the bar in December, 1868, practiced a
while and came connected in 1871 as a teller with the National Bank of
Fayette County where he has meanwhile served having been cashier since
August 20, 1878. He was Republican candidate for prothonotary of Fayette
County in 1881, and was beaten by only one hundred and eighty seven votes
by Col Thomas B Searight, the Democratic candidate, in a proverbially
Democratic County, many leading Democrats openly voting for Captain Nutt
in honor of his talents and moral worth.
    Captain Nutt holds a high place among his neighbors as a man of
integrity, but above all he is esteemed as a gentleman of large
information and accurate scholarship. He has contributed considerably to
the best literature of the day, and while enjoying enviable repute as an
incisive and effective off-hand and political stump speaker, has
occasionally delivered upon history, education, and kindred subjects
public lectures of a character, both as to their embodied thoughts and
rhetorical methods, which places him in the front rank of thinkers and
writers.
    PS. Since the above went to press, Captain Nutt has resigned his post as
cashier of the Fayette County Bank and has been appointed cashier of the
State treasury under Gen Baily, the State treasurer. Harrisburg will open
to him a wider and more important field than Uniontown, a field which he
cannot but ably fill.


 p721

PEIRSOL
    Among the old families of Perry township we find the name of PEIRSOL.
The first of the family to settle in Fayette County was William
Peirsol/Peirsel, who bought of Thomas Estel in 1784 the farm now owned by
James Peirsol and Lewis Peirsol.  He was married to Miss Grace Cope, and
was born according to the Cope genealogical history, about the year 1748.
For a time Mr Peirsol lived in a rudely built cabin which in time gave
way to a log house, which at that time was considered a model of elegance
and comfort, and which still stands on the farm of James Peirsol  In this
he resided till his death at a ripe old age.
    His children were: John Peirsol, born 1782; Sarah Peirsol, born 1785;
Jeremiah Peirsol, born 1787; Samuel Peirsol, born 1789; Mary Peirsol,
born 1792; Elizabeth Peirsol, born 1794; William Peirsol, born 1797; and
James Peirsol, the subject of this sketch, born May 29, 1799  All of the
children grew to man's and woman's estate.  
    On the 29th day of June, 1823, James Peirsol was married to Elizabeth
Gue who was born October 2, 1806.  To them have been born: John Peirsol,
June 10, 1825; Mary Jane Peirsol, December 2, 1827; James A Peirsol,
February 5, 1830; Sarah Peirsol, February 6, 1832; Joseph Peirsol, July
4, 1834; Emeline Peirsol, February 2, 1837; Edith Peirsol, March 17,
1739; Nancy V Peirsol, May 6, 1842; and Jacob L Peirsol, November 28,
1851.  
    After his marriage he went to Ohio and settled on a tract of wild land
owned by his father  Here he remained four years clearing away the
forests and improving the farm when not engaged in his favorite pursuit
of hunting, of which he was passionately fond, and at which he became an
expert  Not liking his new home he returned at the expiration of the four
years, his place being filled by an older brother.  On the death of his
father the old homestead fell to him, on which he still resides and to
which he has added until it now comprises 300 acres of valuable land  For
more than thirty years, Mr Peirsol has been a consistent member of the
Baptist Church and through a long life has been an honored and respected
citizen.  


 p667

    JEREMIAH PEIRSEL was born in what is now Perry township, March 4, 1787,
and died in Menallen township, November 20, 1880.  He was of Welsh descent
and educated in the common schools  He was married to Mary Beal of
Menallen township in 1810.  They had twelve children, seven sons and five
daughters  He was always a farmer and located upon the farm where his son
Samuel Peirsel now resides in 1824, and remained there until his death.
He was an exemplary member of the old Redstone Baptist church for more
than sixty years.  He never held a political office; never had a lawsuit;
never had any difficulties with his neighbors  His long life was due in a
measure, not doubt, to his amiable disposition.  He had all the good
qualities that usually attend a lovable disposition  He belonged to a
long-lived family.  The average age of himself, brothers and sisters is
eighty years.
    His father, William Peirsel/Peirsol, came to Fayette County from Chester
County, Penna, early in life.  He married Grace Cope.  They had eight
children.  Jeremiah Peirsel was the third.  William Peirsel died in 1848,
supposed to be over one hundred years old.  Grace died in 1854, aged
ninety four.
    Seven of the children of Mr Peirsel are living: Elizabeth Peirsel
married to James McLaughlin; Samuel Peirsel married to Maria Radcliffe;
Jeremiah Peirsel Jr married Melvina N Frasher and has one living son,
Isaac F Peirsel, who has received a liberal education, is a farmer and is
married to Mary Hormel and has one child, Arthur L Peirsel, the only
grandchild of Jeremiah Peirsel Jr.  The other four children are: Sarah
Peirsel married to Henry Frasher; Anne Peirsel married to Jacob Grant;
William Peirsel married to Catharine McKay; and Uriah Peirsel married to
Dettie Swayne.  One of his sons, Levi Peirsel, was killed in the late war
at the battle of Petersburg.
    For a great part of her life the wife of Mr Peirsel was seriously
afflicted by mental maladies and he took the utmost tender care of her,
never being heard to complain of his unhappy lot.
    Jeremiah Peirsel Jr well maintains the goodly name he bears, is
industrious and thrifty, and is the enjoyment of a comfortable home and a
competency, which he has acquired through his own energy and business
sagacity.  He, like his father, has the confidence of his neighbors and if
not so gentle and retiring as his father, it is because the latter was
extremely so.  


 p438

    Dr ROBERT W PLAYFORD was born in London, England, on the 12th day of
March 1799 and educated at Eton College, the celebrated English public
school founded by King Henry VI in 1440.  In this school he was what is
known as a "king's scholar." His position in his classes on leaving the
college entitled him to a scholarship at Oxford, but he preferred to
enter at once upon the study of medicine in the office of his father, a
reputable London physician.  With his father he came to this country
locating in Brownsville in 1820.  
    Dr Playford Sr remained here almost two years, in that short time
establishing in connection with his son, a large and lucrative business.
He returned to London where he died in 1826.  
    Dr Robert W Playford remained in Brownsville continuing in active
practice until 1861 when he was stricken with hemiplegia which unfitted
him for further active practice.  He enjoyed the reputation of having the
largest business of any physician in the county.  In all his practice he
was singularly successful; his acute perception, his clear judgment, and
rapid decision fitting him particularly for emergencies and seemed to
render his knowledge of his duties almost intuitive.  
    During the whole period of his business life he was once away from town
five days at one time, being the only instance of absence from his
professional cares for more than one during the forty one years of his
life that were devoted to active professional pursuits.  He frequently
wrote for the local press on sanitary affairs and matters of home
interest.  He died at his home in Brownsville, March 24, 1867.  His
surviving children are: Mrs Sophia Parkinson of Monongahela City, Penna;
Miss Harriet Playford of Brownsville; Dr Robert Playford of Petroleum
Centre, Penna; Hon William H Playford of Uniontown, Penna; and Mrs Amanda
Kennedy of Philadelphia, Penna.  


 p763  Springhill township

    Prominent among the early settlers of Springhill township was Colonel
THEOPHILUS PHILLIPS.  In May, 1767, he in company with his brother-in-law,
the Rev James Dunlap, emigrated to Fayette county (Penna) from New Jersey
and settled, or rather squatted, on a stream which has been called
Dunlap's Creek for more than a century.  
    After clearing a piece of land and farming it jointly for a time, they
dissolved partnership and cast lots for the land which fell to Dunlap.
Phillips then purchased a large tract of land in Springhill township
called "Phillips' Choice," containing 453 3/4 acres and allowances.  The
patent is dated December 12, 1786.  
    Mr Phillips enjoyed the respect and confidence of all who knew him and
was often called to fill public positions.  It was near his residence that
the courts of Monongalia County, Virginia, were held in the last half of
the eighteenth century.  The buildings have long been demolished and
nothing but the foundations of them remain to mark the site.  
To the left of the New Geneva and Springhill furnace roads, via Morris
Cross Roads and about two hundred yards from the same, on a long knoll
with direction northeast, stood the Phillips residence with many
outbuildings, including shop, negro quarters, still house and stables.
Among his grandchildren are Theophilus P Kramer, Theophilus Williams and
Adolph Eberhart, whose ages are eighty one, seventy eight and sixty four
years respectively.  They recollect hearing their parents say that the
Monongalia court was held in the shop which stood near the old Phillips
dwelling house.
    Colonel Phillips was ordained an elder of the Mount Moriah Church in
Springhill township in 1774.  He was among the first to ship four and
whiskey to New Orleans from Wilson Port, as the mouth of Georges Creek
was then called.  In 1789 he was elected to the State legislature which at
that time met in the city of Philadelphia.  His boats were ready laden for
New Orleans and he resolved to go with them and instead of crossing the
mountains, sail around by the Gulf and the Atlantic to Philadelphia.  
Before starting he willed his estate, giving each of his children their
portion in case he should never return.  This proved to have been the act
of a sensible man for not long after leaving the port of New Orleans en
route for Philadelphia, he fell a victim to ship fever and was buried at
sea.  He left a numerous family.  Captain John Phillips of the War of 1812
was his son.  He died of cholera near Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1832.  Of the
Williams family, many of whom have been elected justices are: John P
Williams; Thomas Williams; Joseph G Williams; and Thomas Williams Jr;
grandsons and great grandson of Colonel Theophilus Phillips.   Dr William
Wilson of Indiana, brother of Mrs Eliezer Robinson of Uniontown, married
a granddaughter, Miss Elizabeth Kramer.  Theophilus Phillips married a
Miss Joanna Prater (Prather).  It is said on several occasions Washington
visited the Monongalia court house near Colonel Phillips place.  It is,
however, doubtful whether he was ever in that vicinity more than once-in
the year 1784.  


 p488   Bullskin Township, Fayette County, Penna

    CHRISTIAN REIST, a native of Lancaster County, settled in the Boyd
neighborhood about 1800 and died in 1827.  He had three daughters, two of
whom married Thomas Boyd and Simon Roughcorn, and the third remained
single, all of them long since deceased.
    Presley Carr Lane was also a Virginian who settled on the Henry D
Overholt place.  He was a man of culture and great gentleness of manner
and for those times quite wealthy.  He served in the Legislature with
creditable distinction.  The family removed to Kentucky before 1830, and
the original homestead has been much divided.
    Henry Freed, a native of Bucks County, Penna, after living a short time
in Virginia settled on Mounts' Creek about 1785.  He died about 1863, aged
eighty four years, having reared four sons and three daughters.  Jacob
Freed, the oldest, married Susan Garver, a daughter of Martin Garver, a
pioneer of Bullskin, and settled on that part of the homestead now owned
by his son Joseph Freed where he died in August, 1875.  
    Other sons were Henry Freed, Samuel Freed, and Jonathan Freed, the
former two living on Green Lick Run.  Peter Freed, the second son of Henry
Freed, lived and died in Tyrone township; John Freed, the third, moved to
McLean County, Illinois; Henry Freed, the youngest, lived on the
homestead west of the creek until his death, caused by an accident, about
ten years ago.  The land is now the property of the Cleveland Rolling
Mills.  
    One of the daughters married Joseph Beidler, who lived on a farm
adjoining the homestead; another daughter married Jacob Overholt; and the
third daughter married Joseph Johnston of Union township.  


 p753

    DANIEL RESLER, a native of Berks County, Penna, settled on the stream of
water which bears his name about 1787 and died in that locality before
1817.  He had three sons and three daughters, the latter becoming the
wives of Solomon Kern, Christian Senff, and John Murphy.  
    Daniel Resler and David Resler, two of the sons, moved to Ohio many
years ago.  John Resler, the other son, married a daughter of Peter Bruner
and lived on Resler's Run until his death in 1856.  His widow yet lives in
the township at the age of eighty four years.  She was born in Stewart,
but since she has been three years of age has been a resident of
Springfield.  The children of John Resler were: Daniel Resler, deceased;
David Resler and Jacob Resler, removed to the West; Mary Resler, the wife
of David Barned; Elizabeth Resler, the wife of John Brooks; and Susan
Resler, the wife of Samuel Scott.
    Peter Bruner settled in what is now Stewart township some time during
the Revolution, but in 1798 settled on the Rogers farm on Indian Creek.
His son, Daniel Resler, moved from the township.  At that time Indians yet
roved along the stream, but did not disturb the family.  


p753  SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP

  ROGERS
    In the early history of the county, three brothers, Thomas Rogers, John
Rogers and James Rogers, came from Frederick, Maryland, and settled at
New Haven, Fayette County, Penna.  Their sister was married to Colonel
James Paull, at that time one of the leading men of Fayette.  Thomas
Rogers and John Rogers remained citizens of Dunbar, but Major James
Rogers, after living some time at the Findley Furance, settled on Indian
Creek in Springfield about 1828 and resided there until his death about
1842.  He superintended the building of the Fayette Furnace for the mining
company which also controlled about three thousand acres of land, which
Major Rogers sold to the settlers.  
    He had nine sons: John Rogers; William Rogers; Phineas Rogers; Joseph
Rogers; James Rogers; Thomas Rogers; George Rogers; Daniel Rogers and
Erwin Rogers.  Of these William Rogers served in the War of 1812 and died
of disease contracted in the service; George Rogers is yet living in
Ironton, Ohio; and Dr Joseph Rogers, after living in Springfield more
than twenty score years, actively engaged as a practitioner and
manufacturer, died March 20, 1876, at the age of seventy nine years.  In
1831 he was married to Elizabeth Johnston of Connellsville, who yet
resides in that city.  They reared sons: Dr James K Rogers, who died after
the late war; Dr Alexander Rogers, residing at Scottdale; John Rogers, at
the same place; and William D Rogers, yet residing on the homestead.  


 p840,    Wharton Township, Fayette County, Penna

SEBASTIAN RUSH
    The late Sebastian Rush, known far and wide as "Boss" Rush and also
popularly designated as the "King of the Mountain," filled a large place
in his locality, Farmington, Wharton township, as farmer, businessman,
and friendly advisor of a wide circle of acquaintances who sought his
counsel and particularly as the genial host of "Boss Rush's hotel" on the
line of the National Pike and over which he presided from 1840 when he
bought the hotel until he died February 9, 1878.
This hotel was a favorite stopping place of many of the great men of
other days.  Henry Clay, Tom Ewing, President Polk, etc, when journeying
over the National Road, and Jenny Lind in her famous tour through the
country with the great showman, Barnum, tarried over night at "Boss's
hotel," and Mrs Rush while living, as does Mrs Rush who now conducts the
house, made his more distinguished guests "twice happy" by honoring them
with lodgings in Jenny Lind's room, a species of sagacity as well as
gallantry worthy of imitation by publicans in general.
    Mr Rush was an ardent politician, early in life an old line Whig
afterwards a Republican, and wielded a great influence in his region,
putting into local office whom he would when his party was in power and
was a Presbyterian in religion, which fact doubtless added to his success
as a politician.  He amassed a large property, owning at the time of his
death about twelve hundred acres of good land adjacent to his house, as
well as several outlying farms of considerable size besides the country
store opposite the hotel, and which he for a long time conducted in
connection with his other business and other property.  He was also an
extensive stock raiser.  Though noted for his unusually good sense and
"clear head" in mature life, Mr Rush enjoyed but meager advantages of
study in his childhood but in after life was notable as a reader.
    He was a man of great physical strength and during the latter portion of
his life of ponderous size, weighing sometimes two hundred and fifty
pounds.  When he arrived at about twenty two years of age he was made a
constable and for years filled his office with more than the usual
ability, but for the first year or so he was obliged to execute his
duties on foot, lacking a horse to ride through pecuniary inability to
buy one.  From such a beginning his great energy and sound sense built up
for him the fortune he afterwards enjoyed.
    He was the son of Levi Rush, born 1783, who came to Fayette County from
Somerset County late in the eighteenth century.  His mother was Mary Kemp,
a native of New Jersey but living in Henry Clay township when she married.
"Boss" Rush was born in the same township, November 20, 1808, and in
November, 1829, married Margaret Baird, a girl of fifteen years of age,
born 1814, a daughter of James Baird, a native of County Derry, Ireland.
This was a "runaway match" and though it proved a happy one, Mrs Rush, a
vigorous and intelligent lady now conducting the hotel, as she and her
husband so long and successfully carried on the business, is emphatic in
pronouncing against "runaway matches" among her children especially.  Mr
Rush died leaving seven children, four sons and three daughters, three
other children having died before him, two in childhood.


 p489  Bullskin Township, Fayette County, Penna

    JOHN SHANK, a German, after his emigration to America settled at
Hagerstown, removing thence to Bullskin township, Fayette County, Penna.
He located on Mounts Creek, building mills about the beginning of the new
century which occupied the site of Detweiler's mills.  He was a Mennonite
and at his death was buried in the Mennonite graveyard on the township
line between Tyrone.  He had sons named John Shank and Jacob Shank, and
the daughters married John Stauffer; Martin Myers who lived near the
Shank place; and Christian Seigfried of Westmoreland.  
    Jacob Shank married Nancy Stauffer and settled a mile north from
Pennsville where he died in 1845.  He was the father of John Shank of
Ohio; Henry Shank of the same State; and Christian Shank and Jacob Shank,
yet living in the township.  The latter was for many years a journeyman
hatter, having learned that trade of Herman Gebhart of Connellsville.  The
second son, John Shank, remained single and died in the eastern part of
the township.  The Shanks have always been sober, steady citizens.
    John Stauffer removed to Bullskin from Hagerstown, Maryland, settling on
a farm in the neighborhood of the Baptist Church, on which he died.  His
only son, John Stauffer, lived at Mount Plesant.  A grandson, John C
Stauffer, resides at Pennsville.  Other families in the township bearing
this name had a different origin and made a settlement at a later date.  


 p563,     Franklin Township, Fayette County, Penna

    JACOB SHEARER of Franklin township is the son of Frederick Shearer, who
was born March 24, 1770, in Eastern Pennsylvania.  He was married March
23, 1793, to Rebecca Markle of Berks County, Penna.  They had eleven
children of whom Jacob Shearer is the eighth.  He was born in Franklin
County, Penna, January 30, 1809, and removed with his father in 1815 to
Jefferson township, Fayette County, Penna.  Mr Shearer is of German stock.
He received his early education in the common schools and was married
March 27, 1838, to Emily Shotwell, daughter of John Shotwell, long a
prominent man of Franklin township.  They had seven children, two of
whom, Emanuel Shearer and Sarah Catherine Shearer Flemming, are still
living.  
    Emmanuel Shearer married Elizabeth Cook and has five children: Esther E
Shearer; Fred Orvill Shearer; Harry J Shearer; Jessie Shearer and an
infant boy as yet unnamed.  Sarah Catherine Shearer married Rufus Flemming
of Franklin township and has three children: John Frederick Flemming; Guy
Shearer Flemming; and Esther Emma Flemming.  
    Mr Jacob Shearer has never held office, never aspiring to public place
and has led a modest and industrious life and bears an excellent
reputation for integrity.  He and his family are all members of the
Christian Church.  The church which they habitually attend stands near the
spot, where in the open air Alexander Campbell, the founder of the sect
called Disciples, first promulgated his distinctive doctrines after the
severance of his relations with the Baptist Church.
    Mr Shearer has resided in his present home since 1843 and is the
possessor of valuable properties, consisting of coal lands, etc.  For the
last few years he has been a considerable sufferer under physical ills,
which he has patiently borne.  


 p710

    SHREVE PARTY, Perry township

    General Washington, however, did not succeed in selling or otherwise
disposing of his lands until after the fall of 1789 when they were leased
for a term of five years to Col ISRAEL SHREVE, who afterwards became
their purchaser.  Col Shreve emigrated to Western Pennsylvania in 1788
from New Jersey, leaving his old home in Hunterdon county in that State
on the 7th of July.  
    With him came others, forming a party of thirty persons in all: Israel
Shreve and Mary, his wife, with their children-Keziah Shreve; Hester
Shreve; Israel Shreve, George Shreve; Greene Shreve; Rebecca Shreve and
Henry Shreve; with John Fox and James Starkey; William Shreve and Rhoda,
his wife, with their children-Anna Shreve and Richard Shreve, the
preceding named traveling in three two horse wagons and driving three
cows; Joseph Beck and Sarah, his wife, with their children: Benjamin
Beck; Rebecca Beck; Elizabeth Beck; Henry Beck; Joseph Beck; and Ann Beck
in one three-horse wagon; Daniel Hervey, his wife Sarah, their son Job, a
mulatto boy, Thomas Wheatley, Joseph Wheatley and Ann Wheatley; and John
Shellow, the last named seven traveling with one three-horse wagon, one
two horse wagon and one cow.  
    They came over the mountains to Westmoreland county, Penna.  Without
pausing to follow the fortunes of other members of the party, it is
sufficient to say that Col Shreve stopped with his family in Rostraver
township, occupying the house of Joseph Lenman for something more than a
year until he rented the Washington lands before mentioned.  
    Soon after concluding the bargain, he wrote to his brother Caleb Shreve
of Mansfield, New Jersey, which shows what was the condition of the
Washington lands at that time as also the fact that the mill built by
Gilbert Simpson was then in disuse and too much out of repair to be again
started without considerable expense.  

The letter referred to is here given as follows:

Forks of Yough, December 26, 1789
Dear Brother,
    Having an opportunity to Philadelphia, I embrace it and mention my
situation or intended one.  Since I have been here, have worked to get
Washington Bottom and have at last obtained the whole tract on rent for
five years.
    I write to the General by his Agent in this county, Col Canon, who a few
weeks ago returned from New York; the General was pleased to order Col
Canon to let me have the whole of the Bottom so called at my offer.  The 
old farm contains about eighty acres of improved upland and about 40 of 
the best kind of meadows, a bearing orchard of 120 applie and 100 peach 
trees, the buildings as good as most in this county, pretty well situated, 
and five other improved farms that at this time rent for £ 43 10s.  
I am accountable for the whole rent which altogether is £ 60, so
that I shall have the old place for (pound sign) 16 10s, to be paid
either in money or wheat at 3 s per bushel.
I considered that the land at the Miami settlement was rising fast and
that I had better pay this low rent for a well improved farm than barter
away my land at a low rate for land here.  Land does not rise much in this
place owing to the great emigration down the river.  It seems as if people
were crazy to get afloat on the Ohio.  Many leave very good livings, set
out for they know not where, but too often find their mistake.  I believe
this as good as any of the settlements down the river for the present.
This Mississippi trade is open at this time, and all the wheat, whiskey,
bacon, etc, buying up by those concerned in it.  The highest price for
wheat is four shillings in trade, or three shillings ninepence cash,
whiskey three shillings cash, and bacon ninepence per pound cash.  On the
farm where I am going is as good a chance of a ghrist mill as any in the
whole forks, and a mill that can be set going as it will produce more
grain than all the six farms on the tract.  I am to have possession the
first of April next, and flatter myself I have as good a chance as any
person in my circumstances could expect.  I shall have nothing to attend
to but my own private concerns.  I think this way of life far preferable
to any other.  Richard Shreve is to have one of the small farms.  They
contain of improved land as follows: One forty acre upland and five good
meadows; the other two twenty five acres upland and five or six good
meadows; the whole in fences they being the year before last rented for
repairs.  Peggy Shreve has a daughter.  She and her husband have been very
sickly this last fall, but have recovered.  I am grandfather to another
son.  John and his wife are pretty well, as is our family at present, but
except the measles as it is in the school where our boys go.  I hope you
are well also.
I am, with great respect and love,
Your Brother, Israel Shreve
This letter, as also the account of the party with which Col Shreve
emigrated from New Jersey to Western Pennsylvania, was published in the
AMERICAN MAGAZINE OF HISTORY in 1842.

Footnote: Israel Shreve was born December 24, 1739, at the Shreve
homestead, Mount Pleasant, Mansfield, Burlington county, New Jersey, but
at a later period removed to Hunterdon county in the same State where he
was living at the outbreak of the Revolution.  When the first two
battalions were raised in New Jersey for the Continental army, he was
appointed by the Congress (Oct 28, 1775) lieutenant colonel of the
Western Battalion.  William Maxwell being appointed colonel and David Ray
major.  These officers were commissioned November 8, 1775, and the
Battalion was mustered into the regular Continental service in the
following December and marched to the vicinity of the City of New York
which was then occupied by the British.
    On the reorganization of the New Jersey line, he was made colonel of the
Second Regiment and remained in that command to the close of the war,
serving in Maxwell's brigade, and taking part in many of Washington's
most important battles, including that of Monmouth.  His brother was
colonel of the First New Jersey Regiment, and another brother, Samuel
Shreve, lieutenant colonel of the First Battalion of New Jersey in the
Continental line.  

    Nearly two years after General Washington's death, his executors,
George Steptoe Washington and Samuel Lewis, constituted James Ross of
Pittsburgh, their lawful attorney, to convey the five tracts in pursuance
of the agreement of July, 1795; and accordingly on the 17th of June,
1802, Ross did so convey the property to the heirs of Israel Shreve.
    Colonel Shreve had four sons, Henry Shreve, John Shreve, Samuel Shreve,
Israel Shreve Jr.  Henry Shreve was a civil engineer and was employed by
the government to clear the channel of the Red River in Louisiana.  He
finally settled on that river at the present town of Shreveport which was
named in his honor.  John Shreve lived in what is now the township of
Perry and represented the district in the Assembly with John St Clair and
Colonel Henry Heaton.  Samuel Shreve settled in Perry and was one of the
original proprietors of Perryopolis, Israel Shreve Jr also lived and died
in Perry.
    The heirs of Colonel Shreve sold the greater part of the property
purchased from General Washington to Isaac Meason.  In the division of the
property after his death, the Shreve homestead, containing one hundred
and sixty one acres, was set off to Mrs Williams of Greensburg, by whom
it was sold to Caleb Antrim, a Quaker.  He left it by will to his daughter
Mary, Mrs William Campbell, whose heirs sold it to the present owner,
John Rice.
    A tract of two hundred and thirty six acres of the Washington lands 
was set off in the partition of the Meason estate to Alfred Meason.  He sold
to Benjamin Martin who is turn sold in 1838 to Pierson Cope, who still
occupies it.  His father was one of the early settlers in Jefferson
township, and he is himself one of the oldest living settlers of Perry.


 p550    Franklin Township, Fayette County, Penna

    ROBERT SMITH came from Westmoreland County before 1790 and settled on
the farm now occupied by his son, Robert Smith.  Mr Smith had served as a
private in the Revolutionary war, and of his record in that struggle has
left the following:
    "An account of the military services rendered by me during the
Revolutionary war in the Pennsylvania militia of Berks County.  I was
drafted and served two months in 1776, during September, October, and
November in Colonel Burns' regiment, stationed at Bergen and Paulus Hook
in New Jersey.  In 1777 I served two months as volunteer in the Berks
County militia during September, October and November.  Our officers'
names I do not recollect.  Our general's name was Irven of Philadelphia.
Our encampment was along with General Washington's main army at sundry
places.  When we were discharged the army was encamped at White Marsh
about fourteen or fifteen miles from Philadelphia.  When I returned home I
was drafted and served two months in the same fall and winter with Col
Heister's regiment of Berks County militia.  We were stationed at Plymouth
Meetinghouse near Barren Hill Church.  From thence we went to the banks of
the Shammine near the Crooked Billet tavern.
Robert Smith"
    Mr Smith set up a blacksmith's shop on the Lazy Hollow Road in front of
his dwelling and for years plied his trade in the service of the people
who came from near and far.  He died in 1837 at the age of eighty.  Of his
ten children, only one is left, Robert Smith aged eighty two and living
still on the Smith homestead where he was born.  Long before Robert Smith
the elder came to Franklin township, the farm he bought there had been
occupied by David Allen, of whose sons Josiah Allen and George M Allen,
Smith purchased it.
    The farm now occupied by Jesse Piersol was owned at a very early date by
Hugh Shotwell who settled thereon about the year 1780.  His four sons,
John Shotwell, Joseph Shotwell, William Shotwell and Arison Shotwell,
settled in Franklin but the last three ultimately moved to Ohio.  John
Shotwell died in Franklin in 1869 aged eighty five.  One of his daughters
is now the wife of Robert Smith, above mentioned.  


 p539   Dunbar Township, Fayette County, Penna

Rev JOEL STONEROAD
    Venerable not only for his ripe old age but for his well spent life, as
also by reason of his almost classic, chastened face and fine presence
and port as a gentleman, and for those acute instincts and sensitivities
which belong only to the scholarly man of thought, is the Rev Joel
Stoneroad, who has been identified for over half a century with Fayette
County, doing excellent work in moulding its moral character and
disciplining its intellectual forces.
    This gentleman is of German descent, the name Stoneroad being the
English translation of the German "Steinway," and was born near
Lewistown, Mifflin County, January 2, 1806, the son of Lewis Stoneroad
and Sarah Gardner Stoneroad, both natives of Lancaster County, the name
of the former's father, Mr Stoneroad's grandfather, having also been
Lewis Stoneroad.
    Mr Stoneroad was educated at a common country school and at Lewistown
Academy under Rev Dr James S Woods, a son-in-law of the famous Rev Dr
Witherspoon, the president of Princeton College, New Jersey, at which
academy he remained for a year and a half, there applying himself to
study with such remarkable assiduity and cleverness in acquirement as in
that brief period of time to fit himself to enter the junior class of
Jefferson College, Washington, Penna, as he did in the fall of 1825,
graduating from that institution in 1827; whereafter he entered the
Theological Department or Seminary of Princeton College, New Jersey,
where he remained three years, taking what was then not the custom to do,
the full course and receiving a diploma.  
    Leaving the seminary he was licensed to preach and returned home to
Mifflin County whence with saddle, bridle and horse, provided him by his
father, he set out upon missionary work under the commission of the Board
of Home Missions and betook himself at first to Hancock County, Maryland,
where he preached his first sermon and from thence to Morgantown, and
Kingwood, Preston County, West Virginia, at which place he continued in
his missionary labors for about a year when he accepted the call of the
Presbyterian Church of Uniontown, Fayette County, in 1831, of which
church he was pastor for about eleven years.
    An important incident in his history while residing at Uniontown was the
active part he took in 1836 in the trial of the celebrated Rev Albert
Barnes for doctrinal heresy by the General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church of which he was a member and then in session in Pittsburgh.  The
controversy was at its height when Mr Stoneroad made a most telling
speech, which was extensively published through the Pittsburgh and
Philadelphia papers, and has frequently been quoted from since.
    Leaving Uniontown he received a call from the church of Florence,
Washington County, Penna, where he remained eight years.  His next call
was the joint or united one of Laurel Hill, Franklin township and Tyrone,
Fayette County.  After holding this double charge for about twelve years,
he relinquished that of Tyrone and devoted himself to Laurel Hill with
Bethel added, for about sixteen years, when after having been in the
active ministry nearly fifty years, he resigned this charge, his health
having failed him, through too great a devotion to his pastoral duties
and consequent exposure to the severities of an inclement climate, which
broke down in good part a constitution which was apparently and otherwise
might have continued to be one of the most robust.  Since that time Mr
Stoneroad has taken no active part as a clergyman.  He now resides with
his family in their quiet, romantically located farmhouse, in Woodvale.
He is an old time Calvinist in doctrine but not of that very bigoted
school whose cruel austerities are sometimes pictured by ill tempered or
despairing mothers, and so made use of to frighten refractory children,
for he is both genial and benevolent.
    Mr Stoneroad was twice married, the first time in Greene County, Penna,
September 11, 1832, Miss Rebecca Veech, daughter of David Veech Esq, and
sister of the late Hon James Veech, the celebrated historian of Western
Pennsylvania, by whom he has two daughters, the elder being the wife of
the Rev T P Speer of Wooster, Ohio; the younger, Miss Sarah Louisa
Stoneroad, who resides with her sister.  
    Mr Stoneroad's second marriage on June 27, 1854, was with Miss Hannah
Paull, daughter of Col James Paull and Mary Cannon Paull of Fayette
County, and who is still living.  Of this union there are four children:
James Paull Stoneroad, now residing in New Mexico; Thomas L Stoneroad, a
graduate of Lafayette College, Easton, Penna, in business near
Philadelphia; Mary Belle Stoneroad, who having taken full course of
studies at Hollidaysburg Female Seminary, is spending her time at the
present making advanced studies at home; and Joel T M Stoneroad, now
attending Wooster University, Ohio.  


 p805,  Tyrone, Upper and Lower Townships, Fayette County, Penna

    STEWART STRICKLER, the only son of Jacob Strickler, a farmer of Fayette
County, was born at New Salem near Uniontown, February 17, 1812, and
received a common school education.  When he was sixteen years old, his
mother died and his father breaking up housekeeping, Stewart Strickler
and his eight sisters, all younger than himself, were scattered among
relatives.  In the spring of 1830 Stewart hired out to John Smiley, a
farmer, at six dollars per month and stayed with him till Christmas after
which he began peddling chickens and eggs which he carried down along the
Youghiogheny River in a very simply constructed boat made by himself of
boards, giving away the boat when he sold his merchandise and walking
back, making such a trip every few weeks during the year 1831.  Early in
1832 he began working about for different persons at making rails and
washing sand, which was taken to the Pittsburgh glass makers.
    In the latter part of 1832 Mr Jacob Strickler got his children together
again, Stewart with the rest joining him on the old place known as the
Jimtown farm where Stewart remained till 1835 when he married Mary
Newcomer of Tyrone township and bought a piece of land from his father at
Jimtown, and built thereon a house and barn and commenced farming.  In
1837 the great financial panic came and found Stewart badly in debt for
his farm, he says times were then so hard that he had to pay fifty cents
in "shinplasters" to see a quarter in silver.  He struggled on till about
1840 when times began to improve, but farming being poor business, he
found it necessary to exercise his brain power and began to conjure up
ways to enable him to pull through and get out of debt.
    Here let us remark that in an early day there had been an iron furnace
at the mouth of Jacob's Creek, known as Turnbull Furnace, but then long
abandoned and in ruin.  Near it was a huge pile of cinders containing a
great among of iron unextracted from the ore.  Mr Strickler conceived the
notion of taking the cinder to ironworks in Pittsburgh, bought it for
fifty cents a ton, built a large flat boat on which he carried the
cinders to the city, and there sold it for four dollars and a half a ton
and afterwards sold his boat, making something on it.  The enterprise
stimulated him to plot and plan still further and early in 1842 he bought
ten acres of coal land on the Youghiogheny River at the point now called
Sterling Coal Works, built six ovens, and began making coke which he
shipped out by flatboats to Cincinnati, Ohio.  He carried on this business
successfully for several years.
    About the same time there were others engaged in the business, but they
were not successful and became discouraged and gave it up.  About 1855 Mr
Strickler bought eighty acres of coal land, known as the John Taylor farm
and began improving it with the intent to carry on the coal business as
before, but on a larger scale.  In 1857 the Pittsburgh and Connellsville
Railroad was completed and Mr Strickler put into operation his place
eighty coal ovens.  At this time he built a side track from his works to
the main line of the railroad for the purpose of shipping coal and coke
to Graff, Bennett & Co of Pittsburgh, keeping their furnaces going from
1860 to 1864 with two thousand bushels to day.  He then sold a third
interest in his business to the above named firm for $35,000, a few
months afterward selling the balance to Shoenberger & Co for $45,000.
    Somewhere between 1835 and 1840, Mr Strickler bought all of his father's
old farm, paying $30 per acre.  In the spring of 1864 he sold it to J K
Ewing for $200 per acre, the latter afterwards selling it for over $400
per acre.
    In 1867 Mr Strickler removed with a portion of his family to Middle
Tennessee near the Cumberland Mountains.  He is the father of eight
children, two sons and six daughters, the eldest of whom, Mrs Caroline
Hill died in March, 1879.  His wife and the rest of his family are living.
Three of the daughters reside in Tennessee.  Two sons and two daughters
live on the farm formerly owned by John Smiley, for whom and where Mr
Strickler worked in 1830 as above related.
    The children living in Fayette County are: Mrs Maria Strickler Boyd;
Lyman Strickler; Dempsey Strickler; and Mrs Martha Strickler Herbert.
Those in Tennessee are: Mrs Harriet Strickler Ramsey; Mrs Kate Strickler
Thompson, whose husband is a physician; and Miss Deccie F Strickler, the
latter residing with her parents.
    Mr Strickler is now over seventy years of age and notwithstanding his
serious labors in life and many dangers encountered from some of which he
barely escaped with his life, he is in good health and in full possession
of intellectual vigor.  He is respected by his wide circle of
acquaintances as a man of strict integrity and nobility of heart.  Not
only cane he look back upon a life well spent, triumphant over early and
great difficulties, but he is also entitled to enjoy the reflection that
through his excellent judgment, advice and influence not a few persons in
the region where he spent his most active days are also successful,
enjoying many of them, the blessings of wealth.


 p764

    JOHN SWEARINGEN and VAN SWEARINGEN, father and son, were among the
earliest settlers in Springhill township, Fayette County, Penna, being
here as early as 1770 and possibly in 1769, Van Swearingen being in the
latter year twenty six years old.
    Thomas Swearingen Sr and his son Thomas Swearingen came to Western
Pennsylvania about the same time and settled west of the Monongahela.  
    The ancestors of all the Swearingens in this region were Garrett Van
Swearingen and Barbara De Barrette, his wife, who came from Holland to
America, settled in Maryland and were with their children Garrett and
Barbara naturalized in that province in April, 1669, as is shown by the
records in Baltimore.  Two other children of theirs, Elizabeth and
Zachariah, were born in the Delaware counties and so needed no
naturalization.  The prefix Van was afterwards dropped from the surname of
the family, but was used as we see, as the Christian name of the son of
John Swearingen.       
    Of this John Swearingen who settled in Springhill township very little
is known beyond the fact of his settlement here and that he was a
resident of the township in 1785.  His son, Van Swearingen, did not remain
long in Springhill but removed to a new location on the east side of the
Monongahela near the mouth of Redstone, but retaining ownership of his
lands in Springhill at least until 1785.  Before that time, however, he
had left his second location near Redstone and removed to Washington
County, of which he was elected sheriff upon its organization in 1781.
After a few years spent by him in Washington County, he removed to land
which he had located in early 1772 in Ohio County, Virginia, and died
there December 2, 1793.  During all the period of his residence west of
the Alleghenies, he was a prominent man both in civil and military life.  


 p588

    WILLIAM H TRADER of Georges township, is a man of mark, distinctively of
that honorable class called "self made," having fought the battle of life
to financial success by this own energy and skill.  He was born in
Maryland near the line of Virginia, January 15, 1818.  When he was two
years of age, his father left Virginia and settled in Georges township.
Mr Trader never enjoyed opportunities of schooling.  What he learned he
picked up as he could.  His summers were employed cultivating the home
farm, his winters in threshing with a flail until he became eighteen
years of age; when he left his father or "turned out" without money or
education, to make his own way in life, first working for a farmer of his
neighborhood.
    In 1841 he married Charlotte Franks of Nicholson township.  By her he has
ten children, all living, three sons and seven daughters, all of whom but
one are married.  
    Mr Trader has held the office of school director and other important
township offices.  Both himself and his wife are members of the Baptist
church.  He is a modest, unassuming man and enjoys an excellent business
and general reputation.  He has lived upon his present farm thirty five
years and has steadily worked on to fortune, accomplishing the purpose of
his early life and is now regarded wealthy, his estate being estimated by
his neighbors at from sixth thousand dollars to seventy five thousand
dollars.  About two hundred and fifty seven acres of Mr Trader's homestead
farm are underlaid with the five feet vein and the nine feet vein, also,
of Connellsville coking coal.  


 p618  Jefferson Township, Fayette County, Penna

TUNIS WELLS
     On September 5, 1784, a tract of land including four hundred and twenty
 three acres and called "Tunis" was surveyed to Tunis Wells and in 1790
 patented to him for three pounds, ten shillings and sixpence. Mr Wells
 made his settlement about 1780 and losing his wife by death soon after
 coming, married for his second wife, Margaret Williams.
    By his first wife he had six children of whom none are now living. By
 his second the children were: Mary Wells, Joseph Wells, Rachel Wells,
 Elizabeth Wells, Margaret Wells, James Wells, Jacob Wells and Charlotte
 Wells. The only one living is Charlotte whose home is in Iowa. James
 Wells died in Jefferson; Jacob Wells in Ohio; and Joseph Wells on the
 old homestead in 1877; there his widow still lives.
    Tunis Wells himself died on his Jefferson farm in 1811 and was buried in
 the Dunlap Creek churchyard. His widow died in 1845. Joseph Wells' widow,
 now residing on the Tunis Wells place, came with her father, Issachar
 Shaw, to Jefferson in 1816.


 p810

    WILLSON
    In 1771 John Willson landed in Virginia from Ireland and from Virginia
in 1788 he removed to Washington township, Fayette County, Penna, to
occupy a two hundred acre tract bought for him by his sons Hugh Willson
and John Willson, living respectively in Allegheny County and Perry
township, where they had then been residing for some time.
    The two hundred acres lying on the line between Westmoreland and Fayette
counties were bought for Willson from one Jones and into the house Jones
had put up Willson moved with his family.  In 1804 Mr Willson replaced the
Jones cabin with the log house now standing on the place (1882).  Three
sons came with him in 1788.  They were James Willson, Robert Willson and
David Willson.  James died in Washington in 1827; Robert moved to Ohio and
David Willson, inheriting the homestead, died there in 1863 at the age of
ninety years after a residence of seventy five years on the farm.
    John Willson, the father, died in 1807, aged eighty two years.  It is
worthy of mention that three of his sons, Hugh Willson, John Willson and
Robert Willson, saw service in the Revolution.  Of the children of David
Willson, the living ones are John R Willson, Mary J Willson and James M
Willson.