BIO: John H. PARK, Beaver County, PA
  
  Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja & Joe Patterson
  
  Copyright 2005.  All rights reserved.
  http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm
  http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/beaver.html
  
  http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/beaver/bios/bbios.htm
  Index for this bio book.
  _________________________________________________________________ 
  
  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. 349-353.
  _________________________________________________________________ 
  
  JOHN H. PARK, one of the reliable business men of Rochester, Beaver county,
  Pa., is superintendent of the Park Fire Clay Company, a prominent firm whose
  products are shipped to all parts of this country and Canada. He is a son of
  James I. and Emiline (McDonald) Park, and was born in New Sewickley township,
  Beaver county, Pa., in 1856.
  
  William Park, the great-grandfather of John H. was born in Cookstown, County
  Tyrone, Ireland, whence, after attending school, he moved to Philadelphia,
  Pa., where he learned the trade of a stone mason. Papers in their original
  state, now in the possession of W. A. Park, show that he was admitted as a
  member of lodge No. 479, F. & A. M., at Tullaghoge, County Tyrone, December
  3, 1873. When he came to America, April 26, 1791, he was given a demit from
  that order, and also one by the Knights Templar, together with high
  recommendations as to his character. He landed in Philadelphia, in May, 1791,
  but located in Wilkinsburg, Allegheny county, Pa., in 1796, where he
  instituted the first, and for many years the only, Masonic lodge in that
  region. He followed his trade the rest of his life, and there are many houses
  standing in that county today which are the result of his work. He died at the
  age of eighty-eight years and was laid to rest in the Beulah burying grounds.
  His wife was Mary McGahey, who died at the age of ninety-four years, and they
  had the following offspring: John, who married Margaret Duff; James, who
  married Betsey Duff; David, whose
  
  350  BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES
  
  wife was Ann Hamilton; Jane; William, who married Nancy Johnson; Robert, who
  married Elizabeth Loney; and Thomas, who married Helen Duff.
  
  David Park, the grandfather of the gentleman whose name heads these lines,
  was born at Wilkinsburg, Pa., and early in life learned the trade of a
  wheelwright and wagon-maker. In 1845, he removed to Beaver county, purchasing
  a farm in New Sewickley township, where he followed his trade, and engaged in
  agricultural pursuits until his death. This property is now owned by his son,
  Theodore. He died at the age of eighty-six years, and was buried in Oak Grove
  cemetery, near Freedom. His wife, Ann Hamilton, was born in Warren county,
  Ohio, in 1806, and died at the age of seventy-nine. Their children were:
  James I., the father of the subject hereof; William; George, who married Mary
  Beal; Elizabeth, the wife of Hiram Phillip; Mary, the wife of Rev. John Brown;
  David; and Theodore, who married Kate Campbell.
  
  James I. Park was born at Wilkinsburg, Allegheny county, Pa., and learned the
  carpenter's trade, but early in life removed to Freedom, Beaver county, where
  he became a contractor and lumber dealer. He was very successful, and is now
  living in retirement near Freedom, where he owns a fine farm. He was first
  married to Emiline McDonald, a daughter of William and Rebecca (Magee)
  McDonald, who was of Scotch-ancestry, and she died leaving four children, as
  follows: William A., a record of whose life appears elsewhere in this Book
  of Biographies; John H., the subject proper of this sketch; Annie V., the
  widow of Milton McCullough; and George I., who is also identified with the
  Park Fire Clay Company. Mr. Park formed a second union, in this instance with
  Mary Dean, a daughter of Samuel Dean, and they had two children: Mabel D. and
  Nellie D.
  
  John H. Park was reared on the farm and studied in the public schools. He
  assisted his father in the lumber trade and later entered the field of
  business on his own account, opening a general store at Park Quarries, which
  he conducted under the firm name of J. H. Park & Co. He also opened a stone
  quarry there, and in 1882 established another at New Galilee, from which he
  furnished fine sand stone for building, - shipping it to Pittsburg and
  Philadelphia. In 1885, the Park Fire Clay Company was organized at Park
  Quarries, with J. I. Park, president; W. A. Park, treasurer, and John H.
  Park, superintendent. They have a capacity of 250,000 brick per day, and
  three hundred and fifty men are employed. The product is nearly all from
  Beaver county. The general office is at Rochester, Pennsylvania. They have
  filled large paving contracts in Pennsylvania and adjoining states, and ship
  brick to all parts of the United States and Canada. John H., and W. A. Park
  built a railroad three miles in length, connecting their establishment at
  Park Quarries with the main line of the Pennsylvania Company at Conway, in
  1884, and this they later sold to the Ohio River Junction Railroad Company.
  Of this the subject of this sketch is now president.
  
  BEAVER COUNTY  353
  
  He is a man of great energy, is sagacious and possessed of keen foresight. He
  has always exerted his greatest efforts in whatsoever he has undertaken, and
  the fruit of his work is evidenced by the prosperous condition of the plants
  under his supervision.
  
  Mr. Park was joined in hymeneal bonds with Jennie M. Sproat, a daughter of
  James Sproat, of Economy township, Beaver county, and they are the parents of
  three children, namely: Emma, aged nineteen years; William, who is seventeen;
  and Lizzie, who died at an early age.