BIO: Alexander F. REID, 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. 218-220.
  _________________________________________________________________ 
  
  ALEXANDER F. REID, a very prominent merchant of Beaver county, has an
  excellent store at New Galilee, carrying a complete line of groceries,
  hardware, boots and shoes, hats and caps, household furnishings, drugs,
  agricultural implements, and, in fact, almost any article for which there is
  a demand. He is a man of enterprise, and his continued efforts to accommodate
  the citizens of the borough, and the courtesy which he extends to his patrons,
  have won for him public favor. He is a native of Ireland, having been born in
  Belfast, November 15, 1838, and is a son of William and Maria (Findlay) Reid.
  William Reid, the father of Alexander F., was born in Belfast, Ireland, in
  1797, and there he received his intellectual training and adopted the
  occupation of a farmer, which he followed throughout his life. He was joined
  in the holy bonds of matrimony with Maria
  
  BEAVER COUNTY  219
  
  Findlay, a daughter of William Findlay, of Scotch-Irish ancestry, and they
  reared the following children: Eliza (Reed) deceased; John, whose business
  was that of a linen shipper; William, who is living a retired life in
  Pittsburg; Jane (Little), deceased; Anna (Williams); Maria, deceased;
  Alexander F., the gentleman whose name heads these lines; Charles, who has
  charge of a department in a linen manufacturing establishment; and Russell,
  whose death occurred at the early age of ten years. Religiously, Mr. Reid was
  a Presbyterian. He was called into the unknown world, in 1857, at the age of
  sixty years.
  
  Alexander F. Reid, after completing his mental training in the public schools
  of Ireland, served a four years' apprenticeship in a grocery and hardware
  store. In the year of 1863, he came to America and landed in New York City;
  but a short time thereafter, he removed to Pittsburg. He subsequently worked
  in Sharpsburg about two years, and in 1870 located in New Galilee, Beaver
  county, Pa., where he engaged in business for himself, - renting a place for
  about eight years. In 1878, he built his present store, a two-story building,
  with dimensions of 80x24 feet, in addition to which there is a warehouse and a
  basement. In this he conducted his store in a very successful manner until
  1883. His wife's health having failed in that year, Mr. Reid removed with his
  family to California, and remained there two years, during which time he
  became a competent druggist and conducted a drug store. Upon returning to New
  Galilee, in 1885, he resumed business in his former location, and has since
  conducted one of the neatest and best arranged stores in that section. Being
  a man of exceptional business qualifications, and having had wide experience
  in his business, he realizes the wants of his customers and satisfies them in
  every way consistent with his own interests. He is a stockholder in the
  Rochester National Bank. He has the respect of his fellow-citizens to a high
  degree, and they are proud to acknowledge themselves his friends.
  
  In 1865, at Sharpsburg, Alexander F. Reid was united in marriage with Mary E.
  Henry, a daughter of Wilson and Eliza (Garvin) Henry, and a granddaughter of
  William Henry. William Henry was born in Ireland, and when a child, came to
  this country with his parents, where they bought a tract of land in
  Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania. They cleared this land of its timber, and
  erected log houses and barns. William acquired property of his own, engaged
  in lumbering and also worked on the river. He followed that and farming all
  of his life. He married Miss Borland and they reared five children, of whom
  Wilson was the second. Wilson Henry, the father of Mrs. Reid, attended the
  schools of Westmoreland county, Pa., and during his youthful days worked in
  the mines and on the river. He rented a farm near Sharpsburg for some years,
  and then bought one of two hundred acres, in 1863. He moved upon it in 1870,
  and was extensively engaged in dairying, fruit growing and general farming,
  which he continued throughout his active life, and became a very prosperous
  man. He was
  
  220  BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES
  
  a Republican in politics. Religiously, he was a Presbyterian, and was ruling
  elder for a number of years. Mr. Henry married Eliza Garvin, a daughter of
  Joseph Garvin, and they reared eleven children, as follows: Samuel, an
  insurance agent at Beaver; Joseph G. (deceased), a railroad agent all of his
  life; William (deceased), a farmer and missionary of West Virginia; Sarah J.
  (Hodil); Mary E., the wife of the subject hereof; Rev. Benjamin C., D. D.,
  who was graduated at Washington and Jefferson College, and received the
  degree of D. D. from Princeton University, and who has been a missionary to
  China for twenty-five years, - returning home but twice; Nancy G. (Wetzig);
  Eleanor (Brown); Wilson, a fruit grower in California; James S., a journalist
  in Washington, D. C.; and Anna M., who is now living at home.
  
  Mrs. Reid was born at Turtle Creek, Pa., attended the schools of Sharpsburg,
  and was a pupil of Sharpsburg Academy. She was married in 1865, and they
  reared eight children, as follows: Anna M.; Jane E.; William H.; Charles W.;
  Agnes Eleanor; Alexander R.; James McArthur; and Benjamin Clair. Anna M.
  (Schueler) was born September 12, 1866, graduated at Geneva College, and
  finished her education in a private institution in California, under Prof.
  Conklin. Jane E., born January 29, 1869, attended the public schools and also
  completed her intellectual training under Prof. Conklin; she married a Mr.
  Miller. William H. was born April 1, 1871, and died in February, 1877.
  Charles W. was born August 13, 1874, and died February 9, 1877. Agnes Eleanor
  was born June 10, 1876, attended the public schools, and then took a course in
  Slippery Rock Normal School, from which she was graduated, in 1895. She then
  taught for two years in the borough schools, and entered the School of
  Designing, where she had the honor of winning the class medal, - a high
  testimonial to her skill and talent. In 1896, she was obliged to give up her
  studies on account of ill-health. Alexander R. was born July 19, 1878, and is
  studying medicine, being a member of the graduating class of 1901. James
  McArthur was born May 20, 1881, and is a student in the preparatory
  department of Geneva College. Benjamin Clair was born October 16, 1884, and
  is attending the public schools.
  
  The subject of this biography is a devout Presbyterian, and is very active in
  church work, having been a ruling elder since 1883. He is a trustee of the
  church. Politically, he is a Republican.