BIO: Daniel DAUP, 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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  DANIEL DAUP, one of the most skillful and thorough farmers of Potter 
township, belongs to an honored and highly respected family of Centre 
county.  His father, Joseph Daup, a native of Wurtemburg, Germany, was 
born March 9, 1816, and is one of the eight children (six of whom grew 
to adult age) born to Xavier and Christina Daup.  He is the only one of 
the family to come to the United States.
  At the age of fifteen years, Joseph Daup began learning the 
blacksmith trade, and later worked as a journeyman in various country 
shops and towns until he received letters from friends in America, 
telling him of the excellent opportunities here afforded poor young 
men.  Saving his money until he had enough to pay his passage, he, in 
March, 1849, embarked on a schooner at Bremen for New York, which port 
he reached after a long and stormy voyage of sixty-five days, during 
which time the vessel was driven as far north as Greenland.  For a 
short time he remained with acquaintances in New York City, and then 
went to New Jersey where his friends were living, but found it 
difficult to obtain work.  He was first employed in Lewistown, Penn., 
on the construction of the canal and in the stone quarries, where he 
contracted ague, and the few dollars that he had saved went for board.  
As soon as he had sufficiently recovered to travel he crossed the Seven 
Mountains to Potters Mills, Centre county, where he arrived October 14, 
1849, and secured his first work at his trade in the United States, 
being employed by John Haney at $7 per month and board.  After working 
for others for two years he started a shop of his own.
  In the fall of 1850, at Potters Mills, Joseph Daup was united in 
marriage with Catharine Decker, who was born at the Loop, in Potter 
township, November 6, 1823, a daughter of Nicholas and Mary (Pecht) 
Decker, in whose family were five children, the others being Sarah, 
widow of Daniel Auman, of Potter township; Henry, who died in that 
township; John, who died near Boalsburg, Centre county; and Mary, a 
resident of Potter township.  The father of these children was a mason 
by trade, but the later years of his life were spent in farming.  He 
died at the age of seventy-one years, his wife at the age of seventy-
three, and they were buried in the Tusseyville cemetery.  Six children 
were born to Mr. and Mrs. Daup: Elizabeth, now the wife of Aaron Zerby, 
of Penn township, Centre county; Amelia, wife of A. C. Ripka, of Potter 
township; Daniel, of this sketch; Sarah, wife of William Ertel, of Penn 
township; Ellen, wife of Jefferson Heckman, of Gregg township; and 
Hettie, wife of Charles Leister, of Sprucetown, Centre county.
  After his marriage, Joseph Daub located in Centre Hill, where he 
owned his first shop, and carried on business there some four years, 
after which he went to Penn township, and bought another shop and 
several acres of land.  Two years later, however, he sold out, and from 
1858 made his home in Sprucetown, where he followed his trade 
continuously until recent years, when failing health compelled him to 
abandon it.  He died April 27, 1897, aged eighty-one years, one month 
and eighteen days.  For many years he was an active member of the 
United Evangelical Church, in which he acted as class leader, exhorter 
and trustee, and enjoyed the esteem and confidence of all who knew him.  
In politics he was a Democrat, but never cared for official 
distinction.  He and his estimable wife reared a family of which they 
were justly proud, all occupying honorable positions in society.
  Daniel Daup was born March 17, 1856, in Penn township, and when a 
child accompanied his parents to Sprucetown, where he was reared to 
manhood.  His early education was obtained at the Egg Hill school, 
where his first teacher was Mary Hennigh.  At an early age he began

COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.  287

assisting his father in the shop, where he soon acquired a good 
knowledge of the trade, though he never served a regular 
apprenticeship.  He remained with his parents until his marriage, at 
the age of twenty-seven, to Miss Jennie A. Evans, a daughter of Evan 
and Anna (Miller) Evans, who belonged to one of the best families of 
Potter township.  They began their domestic life in Sprucetown, where 
Mr. Daup was employed by his father for one year, and then removed to 
the Rankin farm, in George's Valley, which property he rented for two 
years.  He then took up his residence upon the Dauberman farm, in 
Potter township, where he was a tenant until the spring of 1897, when 
he returned to the Rankin farm, which he had purchased in 1895.  It 
comprises 115 acres of excellent land, which he has placed under a high 
state of cultivation, and made many useful improvements thereon.
  Mr. Daup is a stanch Democrat, yet no politician or office-seeker, 
content with regularly casting his vote for its men and measures at 
State and National elections, but on local affairs he votes independent 
of party ties.  He and his wife are earnest members of the United 
Evangelical Church, in which he is serving as steward and trustee, and 
also as teacher in the Sunday-school.  He is one of the steady-going, 
prosperous farmers of Potter township, one who has made his own way in 
the world, whose integrity is unquestioned, and who, as a citizen, 
holds a prominent place in the estimation of his neighbors and friends.