BIO: Samuel T. GRAY, 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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COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD, pages 104-105

SAMUEL T. GRAY, [photo] of Patton township, one of the substantial and prominent 
citizens of Centre county, descended from ancestors who came to what is now the 
county, upward of one hundred years ago.  Peter Gray (I), from Frederick Co., 
Md., came to what was then known as the Half Moon country in 1788, and was 
assessed and regarded as belonging to Franklin township, Huntingdon county.  
Accompanying the Grays was the Hartsock family from the same place, and these 
families became the earliest settlers of Patton township of which there is any 
record.  From this Peter Gray has descended the many families of Gray in this 
section of Pennsylvania, a number of whom have never moved very far away from 
the lands he first occupied, and representatives of these families are found 
occupying honorable and useful stations in the various callings of life.
  John Gray, one of the sons of Peter Gray (I), and the one from which Samuel T. 
descended, was born in 1767 and died in 1848; he married Catherine, a daughter 
of Conrad Hartsock, the head of the first family of the name to settle here; she 
died in 1847.  Their children were:  Elizabeth, married to Jonas Stine; 
Catherine, married to Samuel Stine; John (2), married to Mary Mattern; Samuel 
P., married to Sarah Gray; Barbara, married to George Mattern; Sarah, married to 
Franklin Johnson; Susanna, married to Robert Blakely; Hannah, married to David 
McKinney; Eve, married to John Chambers; Isaac, married to Catherine Mattern; 
and Mary, married (first) to Thomas Shivery, and (second) to John Mattern.  It 
will be observed that four of these children married Matterns, and of the same 
family, so that their children were doubly related.  The children of John Gray 
(2) and Mary Mattern were:  Samuel T. is our subject; Catherine married James 
Love; John C. married Rebecca Lias; Miles D. married Anna Wilson, and died in 
1884; Isaac married Sarah Liggett, and died in 1889; George died aged twenty-one 
years; Elizabeth married James Ebbs (deceased); Mary married George Thompson 
(deceased); Harriet married Capt. William C. Dale, of Harrisburg, and Margaret 
married A.C. Hutchinson.  The parents of these children died, the father in 
1856, in his fifty-seventh year, and the mother in November 1871, in her 
seventy-third year.
  Samuel T. Gray, the subject of this sketch, was born July 24, 1824, in Patton 
township, where his father and grandfather before him had lived, and within 
sight of his present home, where he has resided for forty-five years past.  Like 
the sons of the general farmer, he received such educational privileges as the 
schools of the neighborhood afforded, John W. Bowen and Reuben H. Meek being 
among his early teachers.  He remained at home until his marriage in 1852, when 
he came to his present farm and began life for himself.  This farm comprises 
some three hundred acres of land, much of which he has cleared and improved 
himself; it is well watered and lies beautifully; on it are large and commodious 
buildings, both barn and dwelling, and in goodly shape, presenting an inviting 
appearance - indicative of the careful and tasteful farmer that Mr. Gray is.  
The barn was built in 1855, and the house in 1859.  Through industry, economy 
and good management, Mr. Gray has accumulated a competency.  He has given his 
life to the pursuits of an agriculturist, and is to-day one of the successful 
farmers and substantial and influential men of Centre county.  While in no sense 
an office-seeker, he has for years served the people of his township as overseer 
of the poor; was for a number of years justice of the peace, and for six years 
served as auditor of Centre county, his term of office expiring some three years 
ago.
  Samuel T. Gray's wife, whose death occurred June 25, 1893, was Harriet 
Hutchison, a daughter of Benjamin Hutchinson, of Warrior's Mark, Huntingdon 
county, Penn., in his day one of the most prominent men of that section of the 
State.  The children of Mr. And Mrs. Gray were Emma, born in 1853, died in 1870; 
George H.., born in 1855, died in 1856; Mary R., born in 1854, died in 1859; 
William E., born in 1860; Annie Herman, born in 1863, died in 1864; Minnie W., 
born in 1865; died in 1892; Nora; Samuel E., born in 1872, died in 1891.  In an 
obituary notice of Mrs. Gray it was stated that:
  Within the last two years death has entered the home three times and broken 
the family circle.  First within this limit, Samuel was called; then Miss 
Minnie, a bright and charming young lady who had hosts of warm friends; last, 
but not least, was the dear mother, who has always been a true and faithful 
friend and guardian to both husband and children, who will never forget her 
loving kindness and tender mercy.  She leaves a husband and three children to 
mourn her death:  W.E. Gray, Esq., one of the rising young lawyers in 
Bellefonte, and Misses Annie and Nora, who live at home.  Samuel Gray, the 
venerable husband, is one of the most prosperous and highly respected farmers in 
Centre county.  He is also one of the auditors of Centre county, and is an 
honest and upright man.  Mrs. Gray was a Methodist, and was sincere and devoted 
to the cause of Christianity.  She was one of those Christians who live by faith 
and not by sight, letting her "light so shine that men might see her good works 
and glorify her Father in Heaven."  She had a kind heart and was always trying 
to do some kindness.
  Mr. Gray has for many years been identified with the M. E. Church, having 
served as trustee and steward.  In politics he is a Republican as was his father 
before him.