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Bios: SAMUEL FOLTZ : 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.
  http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm
 
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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/
  
  _____________________________________________________________________

    SAMUEL FOLTZ,
    
    [p. 274] deceased, ex-president of the First National Bank of New Castle,
  was born in Butler Co., Pa., in 1830, and was a son of Norbert Foltz, who was
  born in Strausburg, Germany, Nov. 4, 1774, and died at the age of ninety-five
  at his home in Butler County.
    
    Norbert Foltz learned the trade of a cabinet-maker, and followed the same
  throughout his life; he emigrated to this country when a young man, and
  settled in Butler, Pa., where he met and married Elizabeth Riddle, in 1825.
  Naturally industrious, he was a hard worker, and saved with true German
  thrift most of what he earned, and became a wealthy man for those times and
  that section of the country, being one of the largest land owners in Butler
  County. Norbert Foltz and his good wife reared to Manhood and womanhood seven
  children, as follows: Mary; James Madison; Samuel; John Adams; Francis Marion;
  Julia; and Horatio Nelson.
    
    Samuel, the third child, was born in 1830, and was brought up and received
  an education in his native town. At an early age he formed a desire to become
  a lawver, and so studied the fundamental principles of legal procedure under
  the direction of his wife's uncle, Charles C. Sullivan, and was admitted to
  the bar from that gentleman's office. Our subject became interested in the
  iron business in the fifties, and with his father-in-law, William Stewart,
  owned and operated the Margaret and Will-Roy furnaces in Butler and Lawrence
  Counties respectively, until 1865, when Mr. Stewart moved to Pittsburg, and
  Mr. Foltz came to the city of New Castle, where he made his home until death,
  which resulted Oct. 22, 1878, from injuries he received in a runaway accident.
  During all the years of his residence in New Castle he retained large
  interests in the various industries that are related to the manufacture or
  iron. In 1873 he orgnized the private bank of Foltz & Long, and a year later
  bought stock in the First National Bank of New Castle, becoming president of
  the latter bank, and remaining in that position until his death. He married
  Amanda G. Stewart, daughter of William Stewart, and their union was blessed
  with the following children: William Stewart, Le Roy Sullivan; Margaret
  Stewart (Brown); Samuel; Richard; David; and Mary Amanda, the last three
  deceased. His business interests did not suffer from being handled by strange
  hands, but were taken up where he left them, and admirably looked after by his
  three sonsÑWilliam S., Le Roy S., and Samuel. They were associated with him in
  the private banking business previous to his death, and afterwards carried on
  the Foltz Bank until 1883, when it was consolidated with the First National
  Bank. Upon our subject's death, his oldest son, William S., was elected
  president of the First National Bank, in which capacity he is still retained;
  Samuel is connected with the same institution as cashier.
    
    William Stewart, who has been mentioned above as our subject's
  father-in-law, and also business partner for a number of years, was born on
  Squirrel Hill, now the city of Pittsburg, Pa., Oct. 11, 1802, and was a son
  of William and Elizabeth (Caughy) Stewart, both natives of Glasgow, Scotland.
  William Stewart, Jr., entered the employ of the Butler Sentinel at the age of
  fourteen years, and worked there for a period of several years. He married
  Margaret Sullivan, daughter of Charles Sullivan, a soldier of the American
  Revolution, who settled in Butler County. In 1848, William Stewart engaged in
  the iron business, at first operating the Margaret Furnace in Butler County,
  near Centerville, and later the Will-Roy Furnace in Lawrence County;
  subsequently he returned to Butler County, purchased and operated the
  Winfield Furnace. In 1865, he moved to Pittsburg, where he lived until 1884,
  when he came to New Castle, where be continued to live until his death, June
  29, 1888. His wife, bright and active, enjoyed almost perfect health to the
  day of her death, which occurred May 20, 1884, aged eighty-seven years,
  having been born March 30, 1797, at Chartiers, Allegheny Co., Pa. In politics
  Mr. Stewart was a Whig and later a Republican; in his younger years he served
  very acceptably as cashier in the State Treasury Department under State
  Treasurer Gilmore; he also was honored with an election to the State
  Legislature, representing Mercer, Butler, and Lawrence Counties as one
  district. He was a man of excellent judgment and business qualifications and
  was a regularly ordained local minister in M. E. Church for forty years. In
  view of the steady rise he made from an humble beginning we feel certain that
  the term self-made admirably describes him and his career in business. His
  first business venture was the building of a portion of the Erie Canal. He
  was well-posted not alone to his immediate surroundings and walks in life,
  but also in a broader sense; reading was almost his sole recreation, and he
  made it also a source of great profit. He possessed strong personal
  characteristics, was stern in his decisions and positive in his opinions. He
  was director of the First National Bank of New Castle for several years prior
  to his death, that event terminating his office. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart were
  blessed with five children, as follows: Elizabeth; Mary (McKee); Amanda
  (Foltz), the wife of our subject; Melissa P. (McKee); and Charles William,
  who died in infancy. No man was ever held in higher respect by those he
  employed than Mr. Stewart.