BIO: Samuel BRUGGER, 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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400  COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.  

  SAMUEL BRUGGER. There are no rules for building characters; there is 
no rule for achieving success. The man who can rise from the ranks to a 
position of eminence is he who can see and utilize the opportunities 
that surround his path. The essential conditions of life are ever the 
same, the surroundings of individuals differ but slightly; and, when 
one man passes another on the highway to reach the goal of prosperity 
before others who perhaps started out before him, it is because he has 
the power to use advantages which probably encompass the whole human 
race. To-day among the most prominent business men of central 
Pennsylvania stands Mr. Brugger, whose work as a civil engineer covers 
a wide radius of territory.
  Johann Rudolph Brugger (grandfather of our subject), a son of Samuel 
Brugger, was born in October, 1772, in the District of Brugg, Canton

COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.  401

Aargau, Switzerland, and after his marriage with Catherine Wildi 
located at Veltheim, in the same canton, where he engaged in linen 
weaving. In 1817, with his family, consisting of wife and six children, 
he started for the New World; but during the three-months' voyage one 
of his three sons died and was buried in the ocean. On landing at 
Philadelphia, Grandfather Brugger went up the Susquehanna river to 
McKee's Half Falls, and located at Grubb's Church, five miles from the 
river, where he made his home for several years. He then removed to 
what was then Union county, but is now Snyder county, Penn., locating a 
few miles from the mouth of Mohantongo creek, where his death occurred 
at the age of eighty-two years.
  Gabriel Brugger (the father of our subject) was born in Veltheim, 
Switzerland, June 1, 1804, and was thirteen years old when he came with 
the family to this country. He wedded Catherine Arnold, who was born in 
Chapman township, Union county, Penn., May 19, 1805, and was a daughter 
of George Arnold. Ten children were born of this union: Saloma, now the 
widow of Nathan Forrey, of Sandusky county, Ohio; Rudolph, a farmer of 
the same county; Samuel, the subject of this review; Gabriel, also a 
farmer of Sandusky county, Ohio; Benjamin, a farmer of Murfreesboro, 
Tenn.; George, deceased; Jonathan, a carpenter of Berrysburg, Penn.; 
Mary A., deceased wife of Joseph Vogt, of Clyde, Ohio; William, 
deceased; and Mary E., wife of Silas Malich, of Wayne, Neb. After his 
marriage the father of our subject removed to the old Stone Valley 
church, in Lower Mahanoy township, Northumberland county, Penn., where 
he resided until October, 1839, when he went to Perry township, Union 
county, Penn. (now Snyder county), and located upon a small farm near 
Mr. Pleasant Mills.
  The birth of our subject occurred near the old Stone Valley Church in 
Northumberland county, August 26, 1830. His early education was rather 
limited, he at first attending a German school for a part of a year in 
his native county, where the public-school system had not yet been 
adopted. During the last two years he attended school there, he learned 
to read English, but did not understand what he read. After the removal 
of the family to Union county, he attended the public schools for three 
months, the length of the winter term. By the law then existing the 
citizens of the district could take a vote every three years, and 
reject or adopt the public-school system, and for several years 
afterward there were no public schools.
  At the age of ten years, Mr. Brugger started out to fight life's 
battle, at first working for his board and clothes with an uncle, 
Jonathan Gelnett, of Juniata county, Penn., where he remained three 
years and one-half. Returning home, he was a student in a private 
school for two months during the winter for a couple of year, taking up 
reading, arithmetic and a little penmanship. In the fall of 1846 he 
taught a two-months' term of school in Greenwood township, Juniata 
county, and so successful was he in this venture that he followed the 
profession for several years, alternately teaching and attending 
school. In 1849 he pursued his studies for one session in the Dickinson 
Seminary, at Williamsport, Penn., under Rev. Thomas Bowman, now a 
retired bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church. In the year previous 
his father had given him his time, and he left home with his small 
stock of clothing and school books in a trunk, going to Boalsburg, 
Centre county, where he clerked in the general store of George Jack for 
$5 per month for three months. He next cooked for a party of lumbermen 
in Clearfield county, Penn., for his board. In the winter of 1848-49 he 
taught school at Grahamton, in that county, but in the following spring 
he returned home.
  After attending the seminary at Williamsport for one term, Mr. 
Brugger's funds were exhausted, and he engaged in teaching for a time 
at Mt. Pleasant Mills, Union county, and near Unionville, in Centre 
county. In the summer of 1851 he traveled on foot through Pennsylvania, 
Michigan, Wisconsin, Illinois and Ohio, and back again to his old home. 
He then taught school until 1853, when for five months he attended 
Joshua Hoope's school for boys at Westchester, Penn. He then entered 
the railroad service, with which he has since been mainly connected, 
first going to Unionville, where he was chainman on the Bald Eagle 
Valley railroad. During the summer of 1854 he was rodman on the 
Tangascootak railroad, later taught school at Unionville, and in April, 
1855, he went to Minnesota, for a time being employed as assistant city 
engineer on the streets of St. Paul. In the fall of the same year he 
was engineer in charge of the survey of the Minnesota & Northwestern 
railroad from St. Paul to Cannon river, the first railroad projected in 
the territory.
  On February 14, 1856, Mr. Brugger was married to Miss Margaret 
Peters, who was born at Unionville, Penn., 

402  COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.  

February 29, 1836, and is a daughter of Jacob and Elizabeth (Iddings) 
Peters, also natives of Centre county. Her paternal grandparents, 
Lawrence and Elsie (McGinnis) Peters, were born in Lancaster county, 
Penn., and were among the early settlers of Centre county, where they 
spent their remaining days upon a farm. Joseph and Margaret (Henry) 
Iddings, the maternal grandparents, were natives of Chester county, 
Penn., and were also pioneer farming people of Centre county. The 
brothers and sisters of Mrs. Brugger are as follows: John died in the 
Union service during the Civil war; Joseph died from the effects of his 
army service; Mary A. is the wife of Daniel Schuman, of Missouri; and 
Sarah F. is the wife of Daniel Hall, a blacksmith, of Unionville, Penn. 
Six children blessed the union of our subject and his wife: Walter M., 
a carpenter by trade, but now on the road; Nora I., wife of William F. 
Becker, stationery agent at Harrisburg, Penn.; Caroline A., wife of 
John C. Rumberger, agent for the Central railroad of Pennsylvania at 
Salona, Clinton county, Penn.; Joseph, a farmer of Union township, 
Centre county; and John P. and Elizabeth C., at home.
  After his marriage, Mr. Brugger erected his pleasant home at 
Unionville, Centre county, where he has since resided. From October, 
1856, until November, 1864, he was connected with the construction of 
the Bald Eagle Valley railroad; was next with the Sterling Mountain 
railroad at New York; in 1866 located about fifty miles of the Winslow 
Colliery & Clarion River road; and in 1867 helped to construct the 
Western Maryland railroad. In the following January he went to New York 
as principal assistant engineer on the Boston, Hartford & Erie 
railroad, with which he was connected until 1870, when on account of 
lack of funds work was abandoned. Returning to the Western Maryland 
road, he was resident engineer for three and one-half years, or until 
its completion, when he returned home. For several years he was then 
with the Pennsylvania & Western railroad, and subsequently for three 
years was with the Susquehanna & Southwestern, now called the Beach 
Creek railroad, which extends between Jersey Shore and Mahaffey, Penn. 
Since 1882 he has located the Dickerson Run & Red Stone railroad 
between Dawson and Uniontown, Penn.; the Kettle Creek railroad, between 
Westport and Trout Run, Clinton county; a part of the Southern Central 
between Sunbury and Harrisburg; Chest Creek, between Patton & West 
Dover, Penn.; Clearfield, Conemaugh & Western railroad, between 
Clearfield and Johnstown, Penn.; and at present is their civil 
engineer. The Clearfield & Mahoning railroad, between Clearfield and Du 
Bois, Penn., was located by him in 1892.
  As a civil engineer, Mr. Brugger has few equals in this section of 
the State, and that his work has been eminently satisfactory is shown 
by his long retention with important railroad companies. A great 
student, he owns one of the most elegant libraries in Centre county; is 
a man of broad general information, and well-informed on the leading 
topics of the day. He is one of the most prominent and influential 
citizens of the community, honored and respected by all, and the 
confidence which he receives is justly merited. For the past twenty-two 
years he has been a consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal 
Church, of which he is steward and trustee. He casts his ballot in 
behalf of Democratic principles, but cares nothing for political 
office, though in 1880 he was elected county surveyor. During all the 
time he has been engaged in his profession he made his home on his farm 
at Unionville, consisting of about 160 acres of land, 100 of which have 
been improved. Besides this he owns a piece of land in the Alleghany 
Mountains, which he is clearing and converting into a fruit farm.