BIO: Thomas H. HARTER, Centre County, PA

Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by JRB

Copyright 2006.  All rights reserved.
http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm
http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/centre/
http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/centre/1picts/commbios/comm-bios.htm
_______________________________________________________________________ 

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.
_______________________________________________________________________ 

160  COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.

  THOMAS H. HARTER. A definite purpose in life, pursued with resolute, 
vigorous will, is the distinguishing mark of a successful career, and 
no one who reads the following biography can fail to join the many 
friends of the able and energetic editor of the Keystone Gazette, of 
Bellefonte, in their confidence in his future.  Mr. Harter's early 
perception of the path best suited to his talents was the first step, 
and a most important one, in the pathway to prosperity and honor, and 
his alert, forceful and judicious use of all the resources at hand has 
already. placed him in a position to command success.  A ready writer, 
an efficient manager, and a thoughtful student of every phase of human 
life and effort, he is well equipped for his chosen work, and we may 
add also that his characteristic honesty - fearless, outspoken, clear-
sighted honesty - has had much to do with his building up and 
maintaining his influence. 
Mr. Harter belongs to a representative "Pennsylvania-Dutch" family, and 
his history is an in-

COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD.  161

teresting one.  He was born May 28, 1854, at Aaronsburg, Centre county, 
upon a farm which formerly belonged to his grandfather, Andrew Harter, 
a pioneer of what is now Haines township, Centre county, who came from 
Lancaster county, Penn., about the year 1800, and located at the lower 
end of Penn's Valley in the primeval forest, clearing and improving his 
property after the custom of that early day.  For some twelve years a 
blanket took the place of a door in his humble home, and oiled paper 
served as glass for the windows.  Wild beasts from the surrounding 
woods were frequent visitors, and one night his large bull-dog was 
thrown over the fence by one.  Andrew Harter and his wife, Sallie 
(Rupp), had seven children: George (who died in Penn township, Centre 
county), Andrew, Jacob, William, John, Mrs. Henry Swartz and Mrs. 
George Noyer.
  William Harter, our subject's father, was born at the old homestead 
near Aaronsburg in 1812, and passed his life there in agricultural 
pursuits, his death occurring in 1885.  He was a Democrat in politics, 
and in religious faith was a Lutheran.  He married Miss Rebecca Hess, 
who was born in Penn's Valley, Haines township, Centre county, in 1815, 
and is still living in Aaronsburg.  Our subject was one of twelve 
children: (1) Israel, a resident of Canal Fulton, Ohio; (2) Anna (Mrs. 
Fred Kurtz), of Centre Hall, Penn.; (3) Jonathan, a retired farmer in 
Millheim; (4) Sarah (Mrs. Mench), who resides at the old homestead; (5) 
John, a resident of Osceola, Crawford Co., Ohio; (6) William, a butcher 
at Hartertown, Union Co., Penn.; (7) Daniel, a tanner at Smithville, 
Ohio; (8) Rebecca (Mrs. Levi Murray), of Centre Hall; (9) Andrew, a 
tanner at Rockford, Ill.; (10) Aaron, the chief engineer of the 
Harrisburg electric light works; (11) Thomas H., our subject; and (12) 
Kate (Mrs. Samuel Campbell), of Millheim.  The eldest of these is 
upward of sixty years of age, and the youngest thirty-six, all living, 
only one death having occurred in the family in sixty years. 
Thomas Harter's education was not obtained without difficulty, as his 
parents objected to much learning for fear that it "might make him a 
rascal."  Perhaps we may find here the basis of that sensitive 
conscience, inherited and developed, which makes him so careful to 
avoid the least misrepresentation as to known facts.  Conscious of his 
own rectitude, and not sharing his parents' fear of perversion, the lad 
kept up his search for knowledge, obtaining his books by employing his 
spare moments on the farm in the service of others.  He attended school 
until 1871, when he went to Smithville, Ohio, to learn the tanner's 
trade with his brother Dan, and while there he pursued his studies at 
the Smithville Normal School.  On his return in 1872, he learned the 
printer's art with his brother-in-law, Hon. Fred Kurtz, of the Centre 
Hall Reporter, and then attended Penn Hall Academy for a year.  In 1876 
he purchased the Nevada, Ohio, Enterprise, a weekly paper of limited 
circulation, which he soon established on a paying basis.  But he 
longed to plant his feet on his "native heath," and in 1882 he sold the 
Enterprise and bought the Post, of Middleburg, Snyder county.  This 
also was in an unsatisfactory condition, but his industry and zeal 
again worked wonders, and the paper soon came to be recognized as one 
of the most sprightly and interesting of its class.  The advertising 
increased, and the Post was enjoying well-earned prosperity, when, 
desiring a wider field, Mr. Harter disposed of it and, in March, 1894, 
purchased the Keystone Gazette, at a bargain.  His success there was a 
certainty from the first, and the increased popularity of the paper is 
no surprise to those who knew the efficiency of its new proprietor and 
editor.
  Mr. Harter is the author of the famous "Boonastiel" letters, in the 
Pennsylvania-Dutch dialect, which were begun in the Middleburg Post, 
and later published in book form in answer to a demand from the public 
for their preservation in accessible form.  As a critic has said, it is 
a volume of legend, story and song, full of fun and philosophy, and 
every chapter points a moral or adorns a tale.  One thousand copies 
have been issued, and a second edition will soon be prepared which 
will, no doubt, be illustrated.
  In 1876 Mr. Harter married Miss Mary Izora Musser, daughter of James 
Musser, a well-known citizen of Harterton, Union county.  In his 
political affiliations our subject is a Republican, but although firm 
in that faith he has never taken part in partisan work as a candidate 
for office, wishing to deal with the principles rather than the 
machinery of the organization.  Socially, he is a member of the F. & 
A.M.  His chief recreation is hunting and fishing, for which he has 
inherited a liking, and his cheery nature is always ready to take 
advantage of the pleasures which lie within his reach.