BIO: T. F. CASEY, Clearfield County, PA
 
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From Twentieth Century History of Clearfield County, Pennsylvania,
and Representative Citizens, by Roland D. Swoope, Jr.,
Chicago: Richmond-Arnold Publishing Company, 1911, pages 977 & 978.
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  T. F. CASEY is owner and proprietor of the Central Hotel, a comfortable and 
well patronized hostelry at Curwensville, Pa., and also owner of a valuable farm 
on the borough line.  This farm is in a high state of cultivation but is more 
valuable on account of being underlaid with fire brick clay and coal.  Mr. Casey 
was born near Corsica, Jefferson County, Pa., on August 5, 1861, eldest son of 
John L. and Margaret (Daly) Casey.
  John L. Casey was a native of Ireland, emigrating to New York City at the age 
of nineteen.  He was a graduate of Dublin University and was well fitted for the 
occupation of contracting builder, which he followed the remainder of his life.  
The family moved to DuBois in the early 80's, where Mr. Casey died after a 
lingering illness of several years and was buried in the Catholic cemetery at 
DuBois.  He was married to Margaret Daly at Grampion Hills in 1856.  To this 
union were born ten children, seven of whom are living.  Mrs. Casey still lives 
at her pleasant home at 519 South Main Street, DuBois.  One daughter, Mrs. 
Reyburg and family also live in DuBois.  Two daughters, Mrs. James Marshall (the 
eldest) and Mrs. Rosco Zimmers, reside in Nebraska and Mrs. James Gaffey in 
Olean, N. Y.  J. D. and F. A., both in the U. S. mail service, reside 
respectively in Buffalo, N. Y., and Harrisburg, Pa.
  T. F. Casey obtained what education he got in the public schools of Jefferson 
and Clearfield Counties before the age of fourteen, when he started to battle 
with the world for a living for the large family left to his care by the father, 
who did not regain his health after about this time.  His first work was on 
farms, he afterward working in the pine woods where he learned to be an expert 
camp cook.  He remained in the woods in this capacity several years.  This was 
an excellent preparation for operating a restaurant, which he established in 
DuBois in 1889.  After building up what was then said to be the best restaurant 
business in that section of the state, he sold in 1893, at a good price, buying 
the Central Hotel, DuBois, Pa., which place he conducted successfully for ten 
years.
  Before leaving the hotel he became interested in life insurance and took up a 
special agency with the New York Life Insurance Company.  Mr. Casey proved very 
successful in this line, to which he was well adapted.  He stuck to this 
business for two years after he sold the hotel, or until the big Hughs shakeup.  
Business becoming slack, he started to look for work and found it at the Central 
Hotel, Curwensville, buying the property from L. C. Bloom and the hotel business 
from E. C. Lewis; he took possession on Thanksgiving Day, 1905, two years after 
buying the farm from the Vorice Clark Estate.  Mr. Casey is known as one of the 
town's hard workers and a representative citizen; he says he likes the place, is 
going to build a country home and live his days out here.
  The Central Hotel under Mr. and Mrs. Caseys' management is a well kept, 
orderly, up-to-date hotel and is patronized by the best of the traveling public.  
Mrs. Casey, herself, being a high class cook, looks after the culinary 
department of the house at all times and sees that everything going to the 
tables is first class.  Mr. Casey was married to Mary, daughter of Philip and 
Margaret Reitzel (now) of Winterburn, Pa., in Williamsport, on October 7, 1885, 
theirs being the first license recorded in Clearfield County under the marriage 
license law of 1885.  The Caseys were residents of DuBois sixteen years, Mr. 
Casey having been watchman on the big mill one year, and connected with 
restaurant three years, hotel ten years, and insurance two years.
  In politics Mr. Casey was known as an aggressive democrat, always ready to 
fight for what he thought was right.  His standing in DuBois was shown when in 
1892 he ran for chief burgess against James P. Rosco, a well known prominent 
Republican and came within fifty-three votes of winning, although the normal 
Republican majority was over 500.  He was one of the organizers of the Volunteer 
Fire Department, served two years as its treasurer and two years as assistant 
chief.  He was three years a member of Council, being chairman of the Fire 
Apparatus Committee, also serving on the Water Committee at the critical time 
that had much to do with the building up and making one of the best country 
towns in the United States.  He was a charter member of the Elks, being one of 
its first officers, also a charter member of the Royal Order of Moose, 
Curwensville, being its first ruler.  This was the youngest Moose lodge in the 
state to buy and own their own home.  Mr. Casey is probably one of the best 
known sportsmen in the county, taking an active interest in everything 
pertaining to the propagation and protection of game and fish.  He is a director 
of the McGonigal Rod and Gun Club of Karthaus, Pa., one of the best equipped and 
most prominent clubs in western Pennsylvania.