BIO: Thomas A. APPLEBY, Huntingdon County, PA

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Commemorative Biographical Encyclopedia of the Juniata Valley: 
Comprising the Counties of Huntingdon, Mifflin, Juniata and Perry, 
Pennsylvania, Containing Sketches of Prominent and Representative 
Citizens and Many of the Early Settlers.  Chambersburg, Pa.: J. M. 
Runk & Co., 1897, pages 353-355.
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  THOMAS A. APPLEBY, Mount Union, Huntingdon county, Pa., was born May 
2, 1843, son of the late John and Priscilla (Montague) Appleby. His 
great-grandfather, John Appleby (1), was of English ancestry, came to 
Pennsylvania before the Revolutionary war and settled in the Tuscarora 
valley two miles east of Shade Gap, Dublin township, Huntingdon county. 
His occupation was that of a farmer, and he experienced all the dangers 
and privations of frontier life. He was one of the original 
contributors to the fund raised in October, 1808, to support the 
Presbyterian church at Shade Gap, of which he was one of the original 
members. John Appleby (2) grandfather of Thomas A. Appleby, was born 
about 1782, two miles east of Shade Gap. He was reared on the home 
place and made farming the occupation of his life. His wife, Mary 
Moreland, was a native of Ireland. Their children were: William, who 
married Elizabeth Speer; Thomas, who died aged twenty-two years; John; 
Alexander, who resides near Shade Gap; Mary (Mrs. Henry Likely); Ann 
Eliza (Mrs. John Taylor); Margaret Ellen, resides near Shade Gap; and 
Rosanna, who died young. The only ones now living are Alexander and 
Margaret Ellen. Mr. Appleby was a Presbyterian, and like his father, 
was subscriber to the fund raised in 1808 to support the church at 
Shade Gap, of which he was an elder. He died about 1852, aged seventy 
years. His wife died in 1870, aged eighty-nine years and six months. 
John Appleby (3), father of Thomas A., was born in 1813, on the old 
family homestead near Shade Gap. He was brought up on the farm and 
received a common school education. In his young manhood he learned 
carpentry, at which he worked for a number of years, and then purchased 
a farm in the neighborhood of his boyhood home, to the cultivation and 
improvement of which he devoted the remaining years of his life. He 
died July 14, 1856, from the effects of a kick of a horse. He was a 
Whig, but joined the Republican party at its organization. He held 
various township offices, among them being those of supervisor and of 
school director. He was a member, and for a number of years previous to 
his death, a deacon of the Presbyterian church. Mr. Appleby married 
Priscilla, daughter of Daniel and Jane (Cluggage) Montague. Daniel 
Montague was born near Orbisonia, Pa., and was of Scotch descent. His 
wife, Jane Cluggage, was a daughter to Thomas Cluggage. Her father, 
Thomas Cluggage, and uncle, Robert Cluggage, were officers in the 
Revolutionary army. The deceased children of Daniel and Jane (Cluggage) 
Montague were: Priscilla; Alexander; Isabella; Daniel; Nancy; Margaret; 
James; and Jonathan. Those living are as follows: George, who resides 
in Illinois; Thomas, who resides near Shade Gap; and Rebecca (Mrs. John 
B. Peterson), who lives near Burnt Cabins, Pa. John and Priscilla 
(Montague) Appleby were the parents of the following named children: 
Daniel C., who served as a lieutenant of Company I, One Hundred and 
Forty-ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers, and was wounded at the battle of 
North Anna; Thomas A.; John S., now steward of the Huntingdon county 
poor-house, at Shirleysburg, Pa.; James M., of Mount Union; and George 
S., postmaster of Decorum, Huntingdon county, Pa. Mrs. Appleby died 
June 20, 1892, aged seventy-seven years. Like her husband, she was a 
consistent member of the Presbyterian church and led the life of a 
sincere Christian. 
  Thomas A. Appleby attended the common schools of his native township 
in his youth, and also took a course in Milnwood Academy, which he 
completed when he was twenty years old. On September 1, 1864, he 
enlisted in Company K, Two Hundred and Second Pennsylvania Volunteers, 
served under the Stars and Stripes for nearly a year and was honorable 
discharged August 3, 1865. During the winter that followed he served 
his country no less effectually, though less conspicuously, in the 
school room as a teacher. In 1866 he became a clerk for the firm of 
Blair & Appleby, general merchants at Shade Gap. In 1867 he came to 
Mount Union and embarked in business as a partner in the firm of B. X. 
Blair & Co. After two years the firm was changed to Blair & Appleby, by 
the retirement of D. C. Appleby, a brother of Thomas A. Appleby, the 
latter continuing as a partner of the firm until 1876. In 1869 he was 
appointed postmaster of Mount Union, and held the office until 1885. In 
1883 he embarked in business for himself, and during the years since 
intervening, has built up a large trade. He carries on a general store, 
and is one of the oldest merchants in Mount Union. Mr. Appleby is a 
progressive and public-spirited citizen, and every enterprise 
calculated to promote the welfare of the community finds in him a 
willing and earnest supporter. He was prominently identified with the 
organization of the De Frehn Chair Company, the leading manufacturing 
enterprise of Mount Union, of which he is the secretary. He is a 
staunch Republican, and has taken an active interest in promoting the 
party's success in Huntingdon county, having served on the Republican 
county committee. He has also served as a member of the Mount Union 
borough council, and of the school board.
  Thomas A. Appleby has been twice married. His first marriage, to 
Martha S., a daughter of James and Mary (Glenn) McNeal, took place 
October 27, 1870. To this union there were born two children: John C.; 
and Katherine, now a teacher in the Tyrone public schools. Mrs. 
Appleby, who was a faithful and active member of the Presbyterian 
church, died October 28, 1876, aged thirty-four years. In 1878 Mr. 
Appleby married as his second wife Miss Kate McNeal, a sister of his 
first wife. They are the parents of the following named children: James 
D.; Martha P.; Charles R.; Janet L.; and Nellie R. Mr. Appleby was 
ordained an elder in the Presbyterian church in 1873; has been 
superintendent of the Sunday-school at Mount Union since April of the 
same year, and for many years has been a member of the committee on 
Sabbath-schools of the Presbytery of Huntingdon county to the general 
assembly at Saratoga, N.Y.
  James McNeal, paternal grandfather, and Hugh Glenn, maternal 
grandfather of Mrs. Appleby, were members and supporters of the Shade 
Gap Presbyterian church from its organization.
  The Appleby family are justly proud of their patriotic record. As 
already stated, the father and uncle of Mr. Appleby's mother were 
officers in the Revolutionary army. He and his brother Daniel C. served 
in the late war, as did also David C. and Thomas, sons of his uncle 
William Appleby, and John McGinley, a son of his uncle, Alexander 
Appleby. The two former served in Company I, One Hundred and Forty-
ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers, "Bucktail Regiment," and the latter in 
the Two Hundred and Ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers. Two of his mother's 
brothers were also in the Union army, viz: George Montague, who served 
in the Forty-sixth Illinois, and William, who served in the Two Hundred 
and Ninth Pennsylvania Volunteers. Hugh Glenn, his wife's grandfather, 
was a soldier during the Revolutionary war and did a patriot's duty in 
achieving American independence. Robert McNeal, a brother of Mrs. 
Appleby, was a member of the One Hundred and Forty-third Pennsylvania 
Volunteers, and was shot through the arm at the battle of the 
Wilderness. He is now an elder in the Shade Gap Presbyterian church.