BIO: G. Dorsey GREEN, 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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  G. DORSEY GREEN, of Patton township, Centre county, has descended 
from a family prominent in civil and military affairs of the 
Commonwealth.
  In 1791-2 Col. Samuel Miles and Col. John Patton, two officers of the 
Revolutionary war, erected Centre furnace, in what is now Boggs 
township, Centre county, which, with a store at that point, was in 
operation under the name of Miles, Patton & Miles as early as May 2, 
1792 - the first blast furnace erected in the county. Col. Patton died 
in 1802, and Col. Miles, who was a resident of Montgomery county, and 
whose interests were represented by his sons, Joseph and John, 
residents of Centre county, died in 1805. The furnace was blown out in 
1809, and laid idle until about 1825, when Joseph Green, Sr., and 
Joseph Miles started it again. Col. Miles had, in 1792, purchased large 
tracts of land on Spring and Bald Eagle creeks, and he, with his sons, 
laid out Milesburg and established the Milesburg Iron Works in 1797, 
which, for a time, were carried on in connection with the Centre 
furnace. After Joseph Green, Sr., came in 1825, the firm name was 
Joseph Miles & Co. John Miles died in 1829. In 1832 Joseph Miles sold 
his interest to Gen. James Irvin, and until 1836 James Irvin & Co. 
conducted the business. Joseph Green, Sr., then retired, and was 
succeeded by Gen. Huston.
  In the Revolutionary war Gen. Miles was colonel of one of the rifle 
battalions, and was taken prisoner at Long Island in 1776. He was 
subsequently judge of the Court of Errors and Appeals, and mayor of 
Philadelphia. Joseph Green, Sr., his nephew, was a carpenter, and came 
from Chester county with Joseph and John Miles to assist in building 
the Iron works, and, as stated above, later became a partner. He built 
and lived in a house that stood upon a lot occupied in 1882 by Harry 
Levi's residence; the kitchen, constructed of stone, was then still 
standing. In 1836 he moved to Milesburg, and became the first 
postmaster at that place. His wife, Hannah (Griffith), was also from 
Chester county, Penn., and their children were: Capt. William G., of 
the U.S.A. (died in 1815 at Lexington, Ky.); Gen. Samuel Miles; Esther, 
married to Joseph Butler; Joseph; Eliza, married to H. L. McMinn; and 
Hannah, married to John Irvin, Jr.
  Of this family, Gen. Samuel Miles Green was the father of G. Dorsey 
Green. The General was born at the iron works near Milesburg, April 13, 
1797. He read law with Hon. John Blanchard, and was admitted to the Bar 
in 1821, contemporary with the late Hon. A. S. Wilson and John G. 
Miles. Shortly afterward he was appointed deputy attorney-general for 
Clearfield county, and subsequently removed to Meadville, Penn., where 
he remained five years, during which time he was employed by the 
attorney-general in the prosecution of some important criminal cases, 
in which he acquitted himself with great credit. He retired from the 
Bar in 1834, became the manager of the Centre County Iron Works, and in 
1836 he removed to Barre Forge, on the Little Juniata, in Huntingdon 
county, where he was extensively engaged in the manufacture of iron 
until 1874, when he returned to his native county, and passed the 
evening of his life on a farm on Buffalo run, with his son, G. Dorsey, 
dying December 21, 1878, in the eighty-fourth year of his age. He was a 
good type of the old-school gentleman, with a hearty and sincere 
manner. Carrying the weight of almost an additional span to the years 
of man's allotted life, he stood as erect as a boy of twenty, and 
retained to a remarkable degree the manly strength and vigor of early 
life, worthy his Revolutionary ancestry. While a resident of Huntingdon 
county he was commissioned a brigadier-general of militia by Gov. 
Porter. Gen. Green was a very genial and kind-hearted gentleman, 
beloved by all. In politics he was originally a Whig, later a 
Republican.
  He married Rachel E., daughter of Greenberry and Elizabeth 
(Bartholomew) Dorsey, of 

COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.  453

Philadelphia. Rachel E. Dorsey was born at Barre Forge, and there died. 
The children of the General and his wife were: G. Dorsey, Hannah E. and 
Joseph A. Greenberry Dorsey and Edward Bartholomew (the father of 
Elizabeth) erected Barre forge on the Little Juniata in 1790.
  G. Dorsey Green was born at Centre Furnace, March 13, 1832. He 
attended the academy at Lewisburg, and subsequently entered college at 
Lawrenceville, N.J. from which institution he was graduated at the age 
of eighteen years. He afterward was in the employ of his father and 
Gen. Irvin, the latter's associated in business at Barre Iron Works, 
first as clerk, then as storekeeper, and later as manager. In 1856 he 
became proprietor of the works, and until 1874 was most extensively and 
successfully engaged in the manufacture of iron. From his works went 
out the blooms from which the wire was made that was used in the 
construction of the suspension bridge across the river at Niagara 
Falls; also the iron work in the bridge across the Allegheny river at 
Pittsburg came from the Barre works. The works made money rapidly; but 
the proprietor was heavily caught in the failure of Jay Cooke, after 
which he sold the plant and retired to a beautiful farm of about 400 
acres of land on Buffalo run, near Bellefonte, where he has since made 
his home and followed farming.
  Mr. Green in his active business life, and in his earlier career, had 
opportunities not afforded to many young men. In 1860 it was his 
privilege to attend the National Republican Convention at Chicago, at 
which President Lincoln was nominated. His brother was a delegate to 
that convention, and he accompanied him. He was an aide on the staff of 
Gov. Packer, which entitled him to the rank of colonel, a title, 
however, he was too modest to assume. In politics he is a Republican. 
He is identified with the Presbyterian Church, and for years was 
superintendent of the Sabbath-school. He is one of the highly esteemed 
citizens in the community in which he resides, and one of the 
substantial men of Centre county.
  Mr. Green was united in marriage with Miss Mary Gregg, a daughter of 
Matthew Gregg, of Centre county, and their children are: Ella Gregg, 
now the wife of W. E. Gray, a lawyer of Bellefonte; Samuel Miles, in 
the employ of a railroad company in California; Elizabeth Dorsey, 
unmarried; Allen McGregor, a resident of California; and George Dorsey, 
now attending medical lectures at the University of Pennsylvania (he 
graduated from the State College in 1896, taking the class honors).