BIO: William Appleton McCONNEL, Beaver County, PA
  
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  _________________________________________________________________ 
  
  BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES.  This Volume Contains Biographical Sketches 
  of Leading Citizens of Beaver County, Pennsylvania.  Buffalo, N.Y., 
  Chicago, Ill.: Biographical Publishing Company, 1899, pp. 408-410.
  _________________________________________________________________ 
  
  408  BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES
  
  WILLIAM APPLETON McCONNEL, of the law firm of Buchanan & McConnel, is one of
  the members of the Beaver county bar, of some prominence although still a
  young man.
  
  He was born in the borough of Bridgewater, Beaver county, Pennsylvania,
  October 23, 1866, and is a son of William Phillips and Lydia Ann (Stewart)
  McConnel, grandson of James and Elvira (Phillips) McConnel, and
  great-grandson of James and Rebecca (Wisbie) McConnel. This latter James
  McConnel was of Scotch-Irish descent, and was born in the northern part of
  Ireland, from which he emigrated to America, locating near Green Garden,
  Raccoon township, Beaver county, Pa. He was described as being an exceedingly
  tall man, very active and exceedingly witty, and was familiarly known as
  "Uncle Jimmy." He was joined in wedlock with Rebecca Wisbie, who died while
  still a young woman, and was survived by her husband until he attained the
  age of about eighty years. They were the parents of the following children:
  Henry; James; John; Jane (Orr); and Polly (Ensley).
  
  James McConnel, Jr., the grandfather of our subject, was born in Washington
  county (now Allegheny county), Pa., and was a steamboat carpenter and
  builder. He settled in Freedom, Pa., where his death occurred in 1862, at the
  age of sixty years. He was united in marriage on Sunday, February 28, 1830, by
  the Rev. George Holmes, to Elvira Phillips, who was a daughter of Stephen and
  Rhoda (Parsons) Phillips. Stephen Phillips, was one of the prominent men of
  Beaver county in the early days, very largely interested in the development
  of the country, especially in the line of steamboat building. He and Jonathan
  Betz bought a large tract of land, on the northern side of the Ohio River,
  from William Vicary, in 1832, and laid out the town of Freedom as it is at
  present; afterwards, associated with John Graham, he bought a tract of land
  on the south side of the river from Frederick Rapp, which afterwards became
  the borough of Phillipsburg (named after him), and is now the borough of
  Monaca. In both places, boat-yards were established and the one in Freedom
  has been in operation until within very recent years. The panic of 1837,
  however, almost bankrupted him, and on the 17th of November, 1855, he was
  drowned off the steamboat Jacob Poe, at the port of Wheeling, West Virginia,
  on his passage home from Portsmouth, Ohio, and his body was never recovered.
  His age was seventy-five years, eleven months and twenty-one days. His wife,
  Rhoda (Parsons) Phillips, survived him until March 1, 1861, when she died at
  the age of seventy-eight years.
  
  Elvira (Phillips) McConnel was a native of Vermont, having been born March
  28, 1811, on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain, whence she came West with
  her father about 1820. She died January 6, 1897, in the eighty-sixth year of
  her age, leaving to survive her the following children: William Phillips;
  James, of Bridgewater, Pa.; Alonzo Henry, located in Pittsburg; Alcinus Clark,
  
  BEAVER COUNTY  409
  
  of Allegheny, Pa., Hiram Smith, a leading physician of New Brighton, Pa.;
  Emma Annette, widow of Ben. J. Stephenson, of Seattle, Washington; and Omar
  Montague, of Atchison, Kansas.
  
  William Phillips McConnel, above-named, was born at Phillipsburg (now
  Monaca), and with his father became a steamboat carpenter and builder,
  engaging in this occupation for about ten years, during which time he
  assisted in building boats on the Ohio, Mississippi and Tennessee rivers.
  
  After that he engaged in the business of keeping a general store, for several
  years at Olean, Ohio, and later at Freedom, Pa. But river life suited him
  better, so he accepted a position as clerk on a steamer, and was soon
  promoted to secretary and treasurer of Gray's Iron Line of the city of
  Pittsburg, which position he held for twenty-five years. Having resigned his
  position with Gray's Iron Line, he became, in 1895, secretary of the Beaver
  Valley Traction Company, which position he still occupies.
  
  Mr. McConnel was twice married, his first wife being Elizabeth Stewart, a
  daughter of David and Catharine (Baker) Stewart of Bridgewater, Pa. She
  passed to the life beyond at the early age of thirty-one years, leaving three
  children: Ada Annette, who died April 1, 1896; Laura Stewart; and David
  Stewart. Mr. McConnel was married afterwards to Lydia Anne Stewart, a
  daughter of Charles M. Stewart of New Brighton, Pa., and a cousin of his
  first wife. She bore her husband the following children: William A., subject
  of our sketch; Lillian Augusta, who, after graduating from Mount Holyoke
  Seminary, South Hadley, Mass., in 1891, and teaching in the high school at
  New Brighton, Pa., died on October 28, 1898; Jessie, who is a teacher in the
  Allegheny Kindergarten Association; Richard Gray, who served during the War
  with Spain, in 1898, as an ensign in the U. S. Navy, and is now a lieutenant
  in the U. S. Marine Corps; Paul George, who graduated in medicine at the
  Western University of Pennsylvania, in 1899, and is now on the staff of the
  West Penn Hospital, Pittsburg; and Charles Hiram, a student at Pennsylvania
  State College.
  
  William A. McConnel attended the public school at Bridgewater until 1882,
  when he entered the high school at Beaver, Pa. From there, in 1884, he went
  to Phillips Exeter Academy, at Exeter, New Hampshire. In June, 1886, he took
  his examinations at Shadyside Academy, near Pittsburg, for admission to Yale
  University, which he entered that fall. He graduated, with a High Oration
  standing, from Yale, in 1890.
  
  He then studied law under the preceptorship of John M. Buchanan, Esq., of
  Beaver, and was admitted to the bar January 23, 1895. He was immediately
  taken into partnership by his preceptor, under the firm name of Buchanan,
  Reed & McConnel, which afterwards became Buchanan & McConnel, Lewis W. Reed
  retiring from the firm. Since then he has risen rapidly in his chosen
  profession, and today the firm of which he is a member is considered one of
  the best in Beaver county.
  
  410  BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES
  
  Our subject was united in marriage with Sarah Stokes Bruce on July 10, 1895,
  in the First Presbyterian church, Beaver, Pa., by the Rev. P. J. Cummings.
  Sarah (Bruce) McConnel is a daughter of William H. Bruce, a highly respected
  citizen of Beaver, Pa. This union has been blessed with two children: William
  Bruce, born May 5, 1896; and Stewart Phillips, born March 10, 1898. Mr.
  McConnel is a member and trustee of the Methodist Episcopal church of Beaver,
  Pa., a member of the Epworth League, and teacher in the Sabbath School of that
  church, taking great interest in all church work.