BIO: Frank Smith READER, Beaver County, PA
  
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  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. 338-341.
  _________________________________________________________________ 
  
  FRANK SMITH READER, journalist, New Brighton, Pa., was born in Coal Center,
  Washington county, Pa., November 17, 1842. His father, Francis Reader, was a
  native of Warwickshire, England, - his parents removing from there to
  Washington county, Pa., in 1802. His mother, Ellen Smith Reader, of the same
  county, was of Scotch-Irish descent. Her paternal grandfather, Rev. John
  Smith, was a prominent minister of his day, and her maternal grandfather,
  Lieut. William Wallace, was a soldier in the Revolutionary War.
  
  The subject of this sketch worked at farm-
  
  BEAVER COUNTY  339
  
  ing and carpentering, and acquired at the schools of his town, and at Mount
  Union College, Ohio, an academic education. He lived among the scenes of the
  Monongahela Valley, Pa., until 1861, when he enlisted as a soldier, on April
  27, 1861, serving in Company I, 2nd Reg., Va. Inf., in the commands and
  departments of Generals Rosecrans, Reynolds and Milroy, until April, 1862, in
  Western Virginia; he took part in the campaign of Gen. John C. Fremont in the
  Shenandoah Valley, and in that of Gen. Pope in Eastern Virginia, in 1862. His
  regiment returned to Western Virginia in October, 1862. June 1, 1863, the
  regiment was changed to the Fifth West. Va. Cavalry. He was offered a
  promotion in his company but declined it, and was assigned to duty at Gen. W.
  W. Averill's headquarters, July 1, 1863, and afterwards to the headquarters of
  Gen. Franz Sigel and Gen. David Hunter in the Shenandoah Valley, taking part
  in their campaigns. After the victory under Gen. Hunter, at Piedmont, Va.,
  June 5, 1864, he was one of the first Federal soldiers to enter Staunton,
  Va., and there had charge of paroling five hundred wounded Confederates. He
  was captured on this expedition, June 20, 1864, and after being thirty days a
  prisoner, made his escape from a train, with three comrades, twenty miles
  south of Bunkersville Junction, Va., while on the way to Andersonville
  prison. Having undergone eleven days and nights of great suffering, hardships
  and hunger, hiding in the woods by day and traveling by night, he reached Gen.
  Grant's head-quarters at Petersburg, Va., June 30, 1864, having passed through
  the right wing of Gen. Robert E. Lee's Confederate Army. His term of service
  having expired July 10, 1864, and being so broken in health that further duty
  was impossible, he was discharged in August of that year. He taught school the
  following winter, and in July, 1865, accepted a position in the U. S. Civil
  Service, in which he served at different periods for over ten years; he was
  chief deputy collector of internal revenue nearly eight years, and acting
  collector for some months.
  
  On December 24, 1867, Mr. Reader was united in marriage with Miss Merran F.
  Darling, of New Brighton. Her father, Joseph Darling, was a native of
  Vermont, his paternal grandfather serving in the Revolutionary War, and her
  mother, Rebecca Cobb Darling, was a native of Chautauqua county, New York.
  Two sons were born to the couple, Frank Eugene Reader, attorney-at-law, and
  Willard Stanton Reader, journalist. Mr. Reader became a member of the
  Methodist Episcopal church December 15, 1865, and entered the North Missouri
  Conference of the church, in 1868, as preacher in charge of a circuit of nine
  appointments, but owing to the failure of his voice, he was compelled to
  retire after one year's service. He has held an official relation in the
  church ever since, and has been Sunday school superintendent for over
  twenty-two years. Mrs. Reader is a member of the Presbyterian church. Mr.
  Reader is the author of a life of Moody and Sankey, the noted evangelists, -
  and also of the history of the Fifth West Va. Cavalry, be-
  
  340  BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES
  
  sides historical sketches of the Harmony Society, Economy, Beaver county,
  Pa., of New Brighton, Pa., and the Beaver Valley, in which his paper is
  published. On May 22, 1874, he and Major David Critchlow established the
  "Beaver Valley News," at New Brighton; on January 1, 1877, he bought the
  major's interest in the paper, and on February 4, 1883, he began the
  publication of the first daily paper in the county, - "The Daily News." He
  was secretary of the Republican county committee for several years; while in
  that office he prepared and presented in the state legislature the first law
  enacted in Pennsylvania for the government of primary elections; he was
  alternate to the Chicago convention which nominated James G. Blaine for
  president in 1884; he was suggested as a candidate for congress and for the
  state senate, but declined to be a candidate; he served in the council and
  school board of his borough, and held other positions of trust, but never
  solicited any public position.
  
  Frank Eugene Reader, attorney-at-law, New Brighton, Pa., son of Frank S. and
  Merran D. Reader, was born at Greencastle, Mo., December 15, 1868. He
  attended school at New Brighton, Geneva College, Beaver Falls, Pa., and
  entered Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md., in the fall of 1885, from
  which he was graduated in 1888, second in a large class, with the degree of
  B. A. He studied law with Brown & Lambie, a prominent law firm, of Pittsburg,
  Pa., and was admitted, on examination, to the bar of Allegheny county, Pa., in
  1891, and later was examined and admitted to the bar of Beaver county,
  Pennsylvania. He became a partner of the law firm of Moore Bros., Beaver,
  Pa., in 1892, the new firm being Moore, Moore & Reader. In April, 1892, he
  was elected solicitor of the Beaver County Building & Loan Association, New
  Brighton. In 1896, he retired from the law firm and opened an office of his
  own in New Brighton. He was elected secretary of the council of New Brighton
  in March, 1899. On June 3, 1896, he was united in marriage with Miss Jennie
  B. Nesbit, a daughter of Rev. Samuel H. Nesbit, D. D., one of the most
  prominent, able and influential members of the Pittsburg Conference of the M.
  E. church; he was, for twelve years, editor of the Pittsburg "Christian
  Advocate"; presiding elder, and pastor of some of the best charges in the
  conference. A daughter, - Dorothy Nesbit, - was born to Mr. and Mrs. Reader,
  the date of her birth being May 8, 1897. They are members of the Methodist
  Episcopal church.
  
  Willard Stanton Reader, journalist, was born at New Brighton, Pa., September
  28, 1871; he attended the public schools of his native town, and was a pupil
  in Geneva College, Beaver Falls, Pennsylvania. He entered the office of the
  Beaver Valley News as an apprentice, and in 1889 was appointed the New
  Brighton reporter of the paper. September 28, 1892, on his twenty-first
  birthday, he was admitted to partnership in the, business, and has since held
  the position of city editor. In addition to the duties of this position, he
  
  BEAVER COUNTY  341
  
  has written for leading papers in Pittsburg and other cities; has served on
  the Republican county committee, and is now secretary of the board of health
  of his native town. He united with the Methodist church, in January, 1885.
  
  Mr. Reader was united in marriage with Miss Lily Robinson, a daughter of
  Thomas and Mary Robinson, March 1, 1897. Mr. Robinson was a soldier in the
  Civil War, serving his country with fidelity and courage. Both Mr. and Mrs.
  Reader are members of the Methodist Protestant church. They have one child, a
  son, Willard Donald Reader, born December 20, 1897.