BIO: David F. BOWERSOX, Centre County, PA

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Commemorative Biographical Record of Central Pennsylvania: Including 
the Counties of Centre, Clearfield, Jefferson and Clarion: Containing 
Biographical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens, Etc. 
Chicago: J. H. Beers, 1898.
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  DAVID F. BOWERSOX, a prominent agriculturist of Haines township, 
Centre county, is also known throughout that section as a successful 
veterinary surgeon, and for years his services have been in demand 
whenever an injury or ailment of any live stock required skillful 
treatment.  He possesses mechanical ability of a high order, and with 
no instruction has mastered the blacksmith's trade, being an expert at 
horse shoeing, and he has repaired rifles, guns and other fire-arms, 
and in many ways displays unusual talent in this line.
  Mr. Bowersox belongs to one of the oldest families of Centre county, 
his great-grandfather, George Bowersox, a native of Hanover, Penn., 
having settled in Potter township as a pioneer, following the 
blacksmith's trade and farming.  He and his wife, Catherine Kister, 
each lived to be more than eighty years old, and they reared a family 
of six children: Jacob, David, George, Catharine, Elizabeth and Susan.
  David Bowersox, our subject's grandfather, was born in Centre county, 
and being reared to farming followed that occupation all his life.  He 
married Elizabeth Stover, of Haines township, Centre county, a daughter 
of Adam and Catherine (Weaver) Stover.  In his later years he purchased 
the Stover homestead, and settled there.  He was short and spare in 
build, and died at the comparatively early age of fifty-eight years.  
In politics he was an ardent Democrat, and he belonged to the Lutheran 
Church.  His wife survived him with two sons, John (our subject's 
father) and Philip (who died in Woodward, Penn.).  The widow made her 
home for twenty-eight years with her son John, and died in Coburn when 
more than eighty years old, her remains being laid to rest beside those 
of her husband at Stover's Chapel.
  John Bowersox, the father of our subject, was born April 13, 1825, in 
Haines township, Centre county, and is now living in retirement at 
Coburn.  His education was that which the schools of the time and 
locality afforded, being confined to an attendance for a few months of 
each year at the log school house at Stover's Chapel.  A family lived 
in one part of this building.  The work at home was plentiful at all 
seasons, as in winter he could ride the horse while tramping out the 
grain in the barn, and the summer brought an increase of outdoor work.
  At eighteen he began to learn the trade of cigar maker and 
tobacconist with James Powley, in a shop that stood where the Coburn 
toll-gate has since been built.  After finishing his apprenticeship he 
worked at his trade for a year, but it did not agree with him, and he 
learned the tanner's trade in Aaronsburg with George Royer.  This 
business he followed successfully for thirty-five years, devoting 
especial attention to preparing leather for gloves, which were made by 
his

290  COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.

employees.  His wife, whose maiden name was Mary Frederick, has been of 
great assistance to him, and at that time she made hundreds of dozens 
of pairs of gloves which our subject would take about the country for 
sale.  Their marriage was celebrated October 8, 1846, in Hartley 
township, Union Co., Penn., where the bride's birth occurred May 14, 
1823.  Her father, John Frederick, was a weaver by trade, and depended 
upon his earnings for the support of his family of ten children - five 
sons and five daughters.  He and his wife, Barbara Catherman, were each 
nearly eighty-four years old at death, and both were buried at 
Laurelton, Penn.  Our subject's mother was the third child and third 
daughter.  Her educational advantages were meagre, but a bright and 
active mind has enabled her to gather much practical information on 
various subjects.
  After the death of David Bowersox, our subject's father took the old 
homestead and followed farming there for several years; but in the 
spring of 1883 he removed to Coburn, where our subject built for him a 
residence.  He owns a farm of 123 acres and a great deal of timber 
land.  His industry and thrift, with the help of his economical wife, 
have won a notable success, and both are enjoying the fruits of their 
past labors in well-earned leisure.  An excellent memory enables him to 
review the incidents of his life with remarkable precision, and he 
recalls events that occurred in his third year.  Our subject is the 
eldest of three children, the others being Chestie A., who married 
(first) Henry J. Musser, and (second) A. P. Maize, of Aaronsburg; and 
J. A., who resides in Coburn.
  David F. Bowersox was born December 21, 1849, at the old home in 
Haines township, Centre county, and the district schools of the time 
furnished him his elementary instruction.  Between the farm and the 
tannery there was plenty of work for him to do, and forty days of 
schooling in winter was considered a liberal amount for him.  Every 
opportunity for study was eagerly seized by the bright boy, and as his 
parents permitted him to sit up late at night he was able to lay the 
foundation for a good practical education.  Throughout his life he has 
been a warm friend of good public schools, his own experience 
emphasizing their value.
  On March 11, 1872, Mr. Bowersox was married, in Aaronsburg, to Miss 
Margaret A. Swanger, a native of Penn township, born December 19, 1852.  
Her father, Philip Swanger, was a shoemaker, and he and his wife, Sarah 
(Womer), reared a family of eight children to adult age.  For twelve 
years after his marriage, Mr. Bowersox rented the home farm from his 
father, and although he then removed to another rented farm he returned 
later to the old place.  In February, 1885, he purchased a farm of 
twenty acres, where he now resides, going in debt for it, and to this 
he has since added some mountain land, making a fine estate.  Under his 
careful management the farm has been greatly improved, the barn having 
been remodeled and some new buildings put up.  His extensive veterinary 
practice began in November, 1872, when the epizootic was prevalent, and 
his attention being once turned in that direction, his success in 
treating horses and other live stock was so great as to create a 
constant call for his services.  While he has never graduated from a 
school in which this science is made a specialty, he has read all the 
authorities on the subject, and with his wide experience in practical 
treatment is now an authority himself.
  Mr. Bowersox and his wife are leading members of the Lutheran Church, 
in which he holds the office of deacon.  He also takes an active part 
in Sunday-school work.  Two children, Sarah and John F. D., brighten 
their home.  Courteous and intelligent, Mr. Bowersox is a pleasant 
companion, socially, his conversation being always interesting, while 
in business circles he is equally esteemed as a reliable, successful 
man.  Politically he was a Democrat until a constitutional amendment 
upon the temperance issue was called for, when, having long been a foe 
to intoxicants, he became a pronounced Prohibitionist.  While deeply 
interested in political questions, he is not an office seeker, but has 
served as a judge of election.