BIO: William A. PARK, Beaver County, PA
  
  Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja & Joe Patterson
  
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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. 341-342.
  _________________________________________________________________ 
  
  WILLIAM A. PARK is treasurer of the well known firm, the Park Fire Clay
  Company, and is a respected citizen of Rochester, Pa., where the main office
  of the company is located. He is a man of extraordinary business capacity,
  and energetic and honest in the methods which he pursues. He is a native of
  New Sewickley township, Beaver county, Pa., where he attended the public
  schools and assisted his father in the lumber business. He continued to do so
  until he entered the general merchandizing business with his brother, John H.,
  at Park Quarries. He afterward became identified with the Park Fire Clay
  Company as treasurer, and has since served in that connection. The other
  officers are: J. I. Park, president; J. H. Park, superintendent. The capacity
  of the works is 250,000 bricks per day, and three hundred and fifty men are
  employed. They have filled paving contracts in Pennsylvania and adjoining
  states, and have an established reputation, shipping their product to all
  points in the United States and Canada. In 1884, he, with his brother, John
  H. Park, built a line connecting their establishment with the main line of
  the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, at Conway, but this they have since
  disposed of to the Ohio River Junction Railroad Company of which Mr. Park is
  treasurer. Mr. Park has been located in Rochester for many years, and has
  conscientiously endeavored to further the interests of the town. He is widely
  known throughout the district, and has many friends.
  
  William A. Park is of Irish ancestry, being the great-grandson of William
  Park, who was born in Cookstown, County Tyrone, Ireland, where he received an
  education. He was a man of good character and of high standing in that
  country, as is shown by papers which are now in the possession of the subject
  of this sketch. These papers are evidence of the fact that he became a member
  of Lodge No. 479, F. & A. M., at Tullaghoge, County Tyrone, Ireland, December
  3, 1783. In 1791, on April 26, he was given a demit from that lodge, together
  with one from the Knights Templar, of which he was also a member, -
  accompanied by testimonials as to his character. He landed in Philadelphia,
  Pa., in May, 1791, where he remained for about four years, in the meantime
  learning the trade of stone mason, and then located in Wilkins-
  
  342  BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES
  
  burg, Allegheny county, Pa., where he instituted what was, for many years,
  the only Masonic lodge in that section of the state. He followed his former
  vocation there and many houses now remain standing in that village as the
  result of his work. He lived to reach the advanced age of eighty-eight years,
  and was buried in the Beulah burial grounds. He married Mary McGahey, who died
  at the age of ninety-four years, and they had the following issue: John, who
  married Margaret Duff; David, whose wife was Ann Hamilton; Jane; William, who
  married Nancy Johnson; Robert, who married Elizabeth Loney; and Thomas from
  whom our subject's wife is descended.
  
  David Park, the grandfather of William A. Park, was born at Wilkinsburg, Pa.,
  and there learned the trade of wagon-maker and wheelwright, which he followed
  until he moved upon a farm, purchased by him in New Sewickley township,
  Beaver county, Pa., in 1845. There, in addition to cultivating the soil, he
  plied his trade for many years, dying when eighty-six years old. The property
  is now owned by his son Theodore. The maiden name of David's wife was Ann
  Hamilton, and she was born in Warren county, Ohio, in 1806, and died at the
  age of seventy-nine. Their children were: James F., the father of the
  gentleman first named above; William; George, who married Mary Beal;
  Elizabeth, the wife of Hiram Phillip; Mary, the wife of Rev. John Brown; and
  Theodore, who married Kate Campbell.
  
  James I. Park was born at Wilkinsburg, Allegheny county, Pa., and adopted the
  trade of a carpenter, but early in life removed from his native place to
  Freedom, Beaver county, where he became a contractor and lumber dealer. He
  was very successful, and now owns a farm near Freedom, upon which he is
  living a retired life. He married 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.; John H., a record of whose life
  appears elsewhere herein; Annie V., the widow of Milton McCullough; and
  George I., who is also identified with the Park Fire Clay Company. He formed
  a second union, -  in this instance with Mary Dean, a daughter of Samuel
  Dean, and they have two children: Mabel D. and Nellie D.
  
  William A. Park was joined in the bonds of wedlock with Mary J. Park, a
  daughter of Thomas and Helen (Duff) Park. Thomas Park, a son of William Park,
  the first of the family to locate in this country, was born in Wilkinsburg,
  Allegheny county, Pa., and settled in Penn township, where he became a farmer
  of considerable prominence. He died at the age of sixty-three years. His wife,
  Helen, who now resides with William A. Park, is a daughter of David Duff, and
  they had two children: James Graham, of Cripple Creek, Colo.; and Mary J.
  
  Socially, the subject of this sketch is a member of the Masonic orders, F. &
  A. M., and R. A. M., of Rochester, Pa., and of the Commandery, of Pittsburg.
  He is also a member of the Mystic Shrine, of Pittsburg.