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Bios: DAVID L. CUNNINGHAM : Lawrence County, Pennsylvania

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  Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Lawrence Co transcribers.
  Coordinated by Ed McClelland

  Copyright 2004.  All rights reserved.
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  Biographical Sketches of Leading Citizens
  Lawrence County Pennsylvania
  Biographical Publishing Company, Buffalo, N.Y., 1897
  
  An html version with search engine may be found at 
  
  http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/lawrence/1897/
  
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    DAVID L. CUNNINGHAM,
    
    [p. 186] a leading resident and business man of Ellwood City, is a large
  landed proprietor and a heavy dealer in real estate in the above-named city.
  He was one of the first as well as one of the most active and enterprising
  business men from the very date of the city's incorporation, and during the
  years of subsequent growth has kept pace with the developments, and still
  occupies a prominent position in commercial circles as he did at the
  beginning. He is indigenous to Lawrence County, his birth having occurred in
  Wayne township, where his family were numbered among the oldest residents.
    
    William C. Cunningham, his great-grandfather, was born Oct. 10, 1767; he
  came to Lawrence County from Fayette County in 1796, and settled on a
  two-hundred-acre farm, now the property of J. P. Cunningham, where he died
  Sept. 3, 1852. His wife was Mary Smith, who was born June 24, 1779, and who
  passed away on Feb. 16, 1865.
    
    Their son, Benjamin, born Dec. 17, 1800, in Beaver County, succeeded to the
  ownership of the land, which he had helped to clear, and besides purchased an
  adjacent piece that contained 170 acres. He put up a log-house, and after his
  farm was cleared, he discovered that the clay banks on his place could be
  suitably worked into good brick; so he set right to work, manufactured a
  large quantity, and built the comfortable brick farm-house, now the residence
  of J. P. Cunningham. He laid down his labors and entered into rest when he had
  reached three score years, and his wife filled out the allotted space of three
  score years and ten. Martha Cunningham bore her husband the following
  children: Elias; William W.; Joseph; David; Mary; Henderson; and several
  others who died before attaining adult age.
    
    William W. Cunningham, the father of our subject, on arriving at manhood's
  estate, purchased fifty acres of unimproved land adjoining the parental
  estate, where he built himself a log-house, and brought the land into
  subjection and productiveness with axe and plow. He married Nancy Vaneman,
  whose father was George Vaneman of Moravia, Lawrence County. Mrs. Cunningham
  became the mother of Keziah, Slemons, Maria M., David L., Amos B., Sophia,
  Wiley and Frank, all of whom are living. Overwork caused Mr. Cunningham's
  health to fail, and he was only forty-two years of age when he was removed
  from the midst of his sorrowing family, being laid to rest in 1869. The wife
  and children carried on the farm with substantial success, and met with a
  fair reward for their pains, which enabled them to undertake needed
  improvements, among which was the replacing of all the old structures about
  the place with new buildings. Mr. Cunningham held a firm belief in Republican
  principles, and gave considerable time and attention to the consideration of
  political questions, though never aspiring to public office. During the Civil
  War, he was drafted, but was not called on for duty in the field of action.
    
    David L. Cunningham, in whose life the chief interest of this personal
  history is centered, attended the district schools in Wayne township, and
  worked on the homestead until his marriage to Miss Agnes Parker, daughter of
  John Parker of Wampum, this county. This second great event in his life
  having been celebrated in due form, he went to housekeeping with his young
  wife on a farm of eighty-four acres near New Wilmington, in Mercer County.
  There they built a good house and barn, improved the land, and lived in peace
  and full contentment until 1890. At that date Ellwood City was springing into
  prominence in Lawrence County as a growing young city, full of rich
  opportunities for those who would but seize them and take advantage of them.
  After thoroughly looking the ground over, and becoming convinced of Ellwood
  City's splendid adaptation as a business center, he decided to rent his farm,
  and to merge himself in with the commercial life of the place. He erected one
  of the first buildings used for a store, and for two years Mr. Cunningham was
  engaged in dealing in merchandise on the corner of Seventh Street and Lawrence
  Avenue, where his office is now located. He has built eight dwelling-houses,
  all of which are rented except the handsome brick residence on the corner of
  Fifth Street and Fountain Avenue, which is familiar to all Ellwood City
  residents as the Cunningham home. In co-operation with George B. Nye, Mr.
  Cunningham owns a farm of thirty-five acres which they have laid out for a
  cemetery, and eight hundred acres in the oil district of Slippery Rock
  township with Robert C. Aiken. He was elected constable and tax collector of
  the city in 1892, which has been his only elevation to an official position.
    
    Mr. Cunningham is one of the men who are chiefly responsible for the fine
  showing of the Ellwood City of to-day; from the very outset he possessed a
  firm belief in the city's future prosperity, and lost no time in assisting in
  bringing that good time along with success in his own business ventures. He is
  a man of recognized business methods, and has been of invaluable assistance in
  building up his adopted city. He is possessed of acute perceptions, and
  understands value in realty more thoroughly than many men with vastly more
  experience in common life. Combining thrift and energy, he has made for
  himself an admirable business man, and his dealings manifest an interest in
  his client's affairs as well as in his own profit.