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Preface & Chap I: 20th Century History of New Castle and Lawrence County Pennsylvania and Representative Citizens


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    HISTORY OF LAWRENCE COUNTY
  
  
    
               P R E F A C E
  
  The aim of the publishers of this volume and of the author of the history has
  been to secure for the historical portion thereof full and accurate data
  respecting the history of the county from the time of its early settlement,
  and to condense it into a clear and interesting narrative. All topics and
  occurrences have been included that were essential to this object. Although
  the original purpose was to limit the narrative to the close of the year
  1907, it has been found expedient to touch on many matters relating to the
  current year, 1908.
  
  It is impossible, to enumerate here all those to whom thanks are due for
  assistance rendered and kindly interest taken in this work. We would,
  however, express our obligations to the local press for various courtesies
  extended, and to Rev. Robert M. Russell, of Westminster College, to whom we
  are indebted for the article on that institution. In the preparation of the
  history reference has been made to, and in some cases extracts taken from,
  standard historical and other works on the different subjects treated of.
  
  The reviews of resolute and strenuous lives which make up the biographical
  part of this volume, and whose authorship is for the most part independent of
  that of the history, are admirably calculated to foster local ties, to
  inculcate patriotism, and to emphasize the rewards of industry dominated by
  intelligent purpose. They constitute a most appropriate medium for
  perpetuating personal annals, and will be of incalculable value to the
  descendants of those commemorated. These sketches, replete with stirring
  incidents and intense experiences, are flavored with a strong human interest
  that will naturally prove to a large portion of the readers of the book its
  most attractive feature. In the aggregate of personal memoirs thus collated
  will be found a vivid epitome of the growth of Lawrence County, which will
  fitly supplement the historical statement, for its development is identified
  with that of the men and women to whom it is attributable.
  
  The publishers have endeavored to pass over no feature of the work
  slightingly, but to fittingly supplement the editor's labors by exercising
  care over the minutest details of publication, and thus give to the volume
  the three-fold value of a readable narrative, a useful work of reference, and
  a tasteful ornament to the library. We believe the result has justified the
  care thus exercised.
  
  Special prominence has been given to the portraits of representative citizens
  which appear throughout the volume, and we believe that they will prove not
  its least interesting feature. We have sought in this department to
  illustrate the different spheres of industrial and professional achievement
  as conspicuously as possible. To all those who have kindly interested
  themselves in the preparation of this work, and who have voluntarily
  contributed most useful information, or rendered other assistance, we hereby
  tender our grateful acknowledgments.
  
  THE PUBLISHERS.
  Chicago, October, 1908.
  NOTE
  
  All the biographical sketches published in this volume were submitted to
  their respective subjects or to the subscribers, from whom the facts were
  primarily obtained, for their approval or correction before going to press;
  and a reasonable time was allowed in each case for the return of the
  typewritten copies. Most of them were returned to us within the time
  allotted, or before the work was printed, after being corrected or revised;
  and these may be regarded therefore as reasonably accurate.
  
  A few, however, were not returned to us; and, as we have no means of knowing
  whether they contain errors or not, we cannot vouch for their accuracy. In
  justice to our readers, and to render this work more valuable for reference
  purposes, we have indicated these uncorrected sketches by a small asterisk
  (*), placed immediately after the name of the subject. They will all be found
  on the last pages of the book.
  
  THE PUBLISHERS.
  
  20th Century History of New Castle and
  Lawrence County Pennsylvania and Representative Citizens
  Hon. Aaron L. Hazen
  Richmond-Arnold Publishing Company, Chicago, Ill., 1908
    
    ************************************************
  
  
      CHAPTER I
      TOPOGRAPHY AND GEOLOGY
  
  [p. 21] Topographical ? Geological ? A Geological Section ? Seral
  Conglomerate Sandstone ? Coal ? Petroleum.
  
  
        TOPOGRAPHICAL.
  
  Lawrence County is situated nearly in the center of that tier of
  counties which forms the extreme western part of the State of
  Pennsylvania, its western boundary being the Ohio State line. It is
  bounded on the north by Mercer County, on the south by Beaver County, on
  the east by Butler County, and on the west by the State of Ohio. Its
  superficial area is about 360 square miles. The latitude of the court
  house is about 41 degrees north and its longitude about 3 degrees and 20
  minutes west from Washington. Situated in the Beaver Valley, it is
  drained by that stream and its numerous branches, among which, and the
  most important, are the Shenango and Mahoning Rivers, and the Slippery
  Rock and Neshannock Creeks. There are also the Conoquenessing Creek,
  which flows for about four miles through the southern part of Wayne
  Township, empties into the Beaver River; Deer Creek, in Pulaski
  Township; Little Neshannock Creek, in Wilmington Township; Hettenbaugh
  Run, in Hickory; Big Run, in Shenango; Taylor's and Jameson's Runs, in
  Plaingrove; Little Beaver Creek, in the township of that name, and
  Hickory Creek, in North Beaver.
  
  Along one side or the other of the Shenango, Mahoning and Beaver Rivers,
  from the north and west lines of the county to a point near the old town
  of Moravia, are extensive bottoms, but at the point mentioned the hills
  close in and thence hug the river closely for most of the way to the
  southern line of the county. Along the Mahoning, in the vicinity of
  Edenburg, are found some precipitous bluffs, which afford much
  picturesque scenery; the bottom lands generally alternating with the
  hills on the opposite side of the river. Along the beautiful valley of
  the Shenango the hills are less precipitous, and the land is highly
  cultivated. The lover of fine scenery will find his wishes gratified in
  the Neshannock Valley, where it abounds from the Mercer County line to
  New Castle. As a former historian has truly written, "Broad and fertile
  bottoms alternate with high, steep and, in places, precipitous hills,
  showing perpendicular escarpments of rock, overhung in many localities
  by a dense growth of hemlock, giving the landscape a look of primitive
  wildness seldom [p. 22] found away from mountainous regions. In the
  neighborhood of New Castle the scenery is surpassingly beautiful; the
  hills generally rising gradually to various elevations of from 60 to 300
  feet, being disposed in a system of terraces or plateaus, forming
  enchanting sites for residences, and giving every variety of view. The
  location of the city is scarcely surpassed for pleasing and varied
  scenery by that of any town in the state. The wildest and most
  stupendous views are found along the Slippery Rock and Conoquenessing
  Creeks, where Dame Nature has been prodigal of her material and arranged
  it in the grandest and most picturesque manner. These streams flow
  through deep and narrow gorges walled by perpendicular masses of
  sandstone, over whose loose fragments and bowlders they tumble and foam
  in wild and ceaseless confusion. Here is magnificent field for the
  student of nature, and a splendid region for the summer, tourist and
  pleasure-seeker, and it needs but the advent of a railway to bring
  hither thousands from the busy centers of trade and population."
  
  Lawrence County is sub-divided civilly into one city, three boroughs and
  seventeen townships.
  
  The commercial and civil capital is the city of New Castle, which is
  situated very near its geographical center. Upon this point, a great
  number of roads converge from all the towns and hamlets of the county,
  while several lines of railway traverse the principal valleys, giving
  ample facilities for travel and commerce with all parts of the country.
  
  
        GEOLOGICAL.
  
  Geologically, Lawrence County belongs to the region included in the
  sixth bituminous coal basin of Pennsylvania, the coal belonging to the
  Clarion group, which is the northwest outcrop of the lower measures. The
  rocks of this region belong to the Paleozoic series; that is, the lowest
  sedimentary rocks containing evidences of organic life. On the tops of
  the highest hills is found the ferriferous, or iron-bearing limestone;
  but the greater portion of this once extensive formation has been
  denuded, and carried away to the valley of the Mississippi, and thence
  to the Gulf of Mexico, by "the tremendous washings of the latter ages of
  the glacial epoch, the subsequent attrition of rains and frost, and the
  cuttings of the streams." In the neighborhood of New Castle this
  formation is about seventeen feet in thickness, being underlaid with
  from three to five feet of hard bluestone. This limestone contains about
  ninety per cent of carbonate of lime and is extensively used for fluxing
  purposes in blast furnaces. The bluestone has been extensively used in
  the manufacture of hydraulic cement, quarries of it existing at New
  Castle, and in Taylor, North Beaver, Mahoning and Slippery Rock Townships.
  
  At New Castle, one mile east of the postoffice, this formation is
  immediately underlaid by about one foot of coal, of inferior quality,
  mixed with shale. Below the coal seam appears the Tionesta sandstone,
  with a thickness of about sixty feet. Below the sandstone is a second
  stratum of coal about eighteen inches in thickness, and underlying this
  is a stratum of fire clay twelve feet in thickness. Sixteen feet below
  the clay is a third stratum of coal, with a thickness of about four
  feet. The distance of the upper surface of the Tionesta sandstone above
  the surface of Neshannock Creek, at New Castle, is 240 feet. The lowest
  twenty feet consists of shales.
  
  
        A GEOLOGICAL SECTION.
  
  The following is a section showing the stratification on Big Run, below
  New Castle:
  
      Tionesta sandstone, about 50 feet.
      Blue shale, with iron ore, 6 feet.
      Coal, 1½ feet.
      Blue shale (argillaceous), 8 feet.
      Rotten sandstone, 2½ feet.
      Blue and brown shale, with sandstone, 2½ feet.
      Bituminous shale, 2½ to 3 feet. [p. 23]
      Mercer limestone, a small amount.
      Blue shale, 3 feet.
      Shale and concretions of iron ore, interval of 25 to 30 feet.
  
  Section on a creek emptying into the Neshannock, two miles above New
  Castle, in Neshannock Township:
  
      Tionesta sandstone, 50 feet.
      Iron ore, 6 inches.
      Limestone and chert, 2 feet.
      Interval, 8 feet.
      Blue slate, 2 feet.
      Clay, 6 inches.
      Black shale, 1½ feet.
      Light colored shale, 3½ feet.
      Light blue shale, with bands of sandstone, 4 feet or more.
      Interval, 6½ feet.
      Mercer limestone, 1½ feet.
      Light colored shale, with sandy seams, 5 feet.
      Bituminous coal, 6 to 8 inches.
      Slate, 2 feet.
      Bluish crumbly shale, 2½ feet.
      Grayish rotten sandstone, 1½ feet.
      Flaggy sandstone, 8 feet.
      Brown shale, 5 to 6 feet.
      Bituminous shale, 1½ feet.
      Bluish or gray slaty sandstone, 5 feet.
      Sandstone, 70 feet.
  
  Section one mile northwest of New Castle:
  
      Tionesta sandstone, 50 feet.
      Coal and bituminous shale, 3 inches.
      Brown and blue shale, 1 to 3 feet.
      Limestone chert (ferruginous), 2 feet.
      Coal, 12 inches.
      Light colored shale, 6 to 8 feet.
      Argillaceous sandstone, 2 feet.
      Light colored shale, 12 to 13 feet.
      Bituminous shale and coal, 4 feet.
      Blue sandy shale, 6 feet.
      Flaggy sandstone (argillaceous at top), 75 feet or more.
  
  Section at the gas well of the Shenango Iron Works of Messrs. Reis,
  Brown & Berger, bored in 1874-75:
  
      Gravel, 15 feet.
      Blue mud and quicksand, 125 feet.
      Slate rock, 3 feet.
      Slate, 61 feet.
      Sand shale, 54 feet.
      Slate rock, 54 feet. Gas.
      Gray sand, 44 feet.
      Slate rock, 26 feet.
      White sand, 78 feet. Salt water.
      Slate rock, 35 feet.
      Red (sand) rock, 70 feet. Gas.
      Slate rock, 151 feet. Gas.
      Gray sand, 43 feet. Gas.
      Slate, 70 feet.
      Sand shales (very hard), 30 feet.
      Slate, 75 feet.
      Gray sand, 31 feet.
      Red rock, 3 feet.
      Slate, 226 feet.
      Hard shales, 21 feet.
      Slate, 155 feet.
      Sand shales, 47 feet.
      Hard slate, 68 feet.
      Gray sand, 50 feet.
      Slate, 154 feet.
      Gray sand, 8 feet.
      Slate, 64 feet.
      Gray sand, 15 feet.
      Slate, 69 feet.
      Graysand, 17 feet.
      Slate, 103 feet.
      Gray sand, 80 feet.
      Very hard slate, 190 feet.
      Black sand, 10 feet.
      Very hard slate, 30 feet.
      Additional, with about same changes, 525 feet.
      Hard slate at bottom.
      Total, 2,800 feet.
  
  
        SERAL CONGLOMERATE SANDSTONE.
  
  The seral conglomerate sandstone passes under the water level above the
  mouth of the Conoquenessing Creek. There is a bed of what is supposed to
  be the Mahoning limestone, at Wampum Hill, about forty-two feet above
  the Beaver River. At the mouth of the Conoquenessing, large blocks of
  Tionesta sandstone may be seen lying on the surface of the hill, and the
  same is true of Slippery Rock Creek, from its mouth up to the bridge at
  the Mercer Turnpike, where it passes under the water level.
  
  In general, the rocks on Beaver River are not well exposed. The Tionesta
  Sandstone, however, may be seen on both sides of the river, from the
  mouth of the Conoqueessing down towards Brighton, declining gradually to
  a lower level, until at length it sinks into the bed of the river and
  forms the upper fall above brighton. "At the junction of the Shenango
  and Mahoning Rivers the seral conglomerate Sandstone is well seen, and
  also in the immediate vicinity of New Castle. In some portions it is
  highly argillaceous, but above the middle of the bed it is thick-bedded,
  soft, and but little mixed with argillaceous bands. Its whole thickness
  is about 100 feet. The Tionesta measures average sixty feet, and the
  upper or Tionesta Sandstone, which is more solid in this locality than
  the seral conglomerate, may be estimated [p. 24] at about the same
  thickness. Beneath the main seral conglomerate appears a bed of brown
  shale, containing ore well exposed at the west end of the bridge over
  the Shenango River. This ore may be properly considered the
  representative of the upper shale ores."
  
  A very interesting locality to the geologist is the vicinity of Willie
  Roy furnace, on Slippery Rock Creek, near the mouth of Muddy Creek. Here
  extensive deposits of iron ore have been discovered, situated
  immediately upon the upper surface of the ferriferous limestone, which
  is abundant in the vicinity, cropping out along the slopes of the hills,
  especially on or near their summits. This ore yields an average of 40
  per cent of the finest iron often giving 50 per cent.
  
  According to the State Geological Survey, there is, also, "upon the
  highest hills, and located about thirty feet above the limestone a
  three-foot vein of coal. Between the coal and limestone, and next below
  the coal, is a stratum of fire clay, and underlying the clay are shale
  and slate." This ore was at one time extensively mined by the process of
  "stripping," which developed a coarse, gray slate down to within a short
  distance of the ore, below which appeared a stratum of red slate,
  underlaid by six inches of white clay. Below the clay was a stratum of
  flint, about a foot or less in thickness, and under this, lying upon the
  limestone, was found the ore, which lay where the stone was open, in
  pockets. Where the rock was close and compact, the ore was found more
  regularly deposited. The limestone is from ten to twelve feet in
  thickness, and rests upon a thirty-foot stratum of shale and slate.
  Below this comes in the Tionesta sandstone, which is exposed in many
  localities, and forms the remarkable and interesting fall on Muddy
  Creek. Immediately under the sandstone there is a very extensive deposit
  of what is technically known as "blue ore," which is mingled with black
  slate. It is finely exposed near the furnace and also at the falls.
  Beneath this ore-vein are alternate shale and slate.
  
  A second and extensive vein of very hard ore may be seen exposed in the
  bed of the creek, a short distance below the furnace, at James Allen's
  old mill. It lies about thirty-feet below the "blue ore." The limestone
  vein of ore follows the formation for forty miles along the creek to its
  junction with the Beaver River. Five miles southwest of Willie Roy
  furnace is the Lawrence furnace, and the same stratifications are
  continuous between the two points, with similar developments of ore.
  Both the limestone and ore are very abundant, increasing as they
  approach the Beaver River, the ore being of a very fine quality.
  
  Three miles west of the old Lawrence furnace, in Shenango Township, are
  located the famous "Houk banks," where the entire limestone formation
  gives place to an extraordinary deposit of iron ore, fifteen feet in
  thickness. Similar formations and deposits exist also in Wayne Township.
  
  In Neshannock Township there is an extensive deposit of the "blue ore,"
  from six to eighteen inches in thickness, underlying the coal lands of
  the old New Castle Railroad & Mining Company. It occurs at a depth of
  about seventy-five feet below the workable coal vein. Iron ore has also
  been found in considerable quantities in the vicinity of the glass works.
  
  The quarrying of limestone is now one of the leading industries of
  Lawrence County, more than 5,000,000 tons being quarried during the
  year, and more than one-third of this production being within the limits
  of the city of New Castle. From these quarries about 30,000 tons of clay
  are also taken. A comparatively recent report says, "The limestone of
  New Castle and Lawrence County is unexcelled for purity, being high in
  carbonate of lime and low in phosphorous, the supply inexhaustible,
  [p. 25] and the demand from the leading blast furnaces in the country is
  constantly increasing."
  
  
        COAL.
  
  This valuable mineral, it is thought, was first discovered within the
  bounds of Lawrence County, by John Stockman, in Big Beaver Township,
  about the year 1810. It has also been found in various parts of the
  county, most extensively along the Beaver River, in Big and North Beaver
  Townships. It underlies a large area in Neshannock Township, and other
  deposits occur in the west part of Union Township. The land that is
  underlaid with coal is poor farming land. The coal found in the Beaver
  Valley proper is known as the "Beaver Valley gas coal," from the large
  amount of illuminating gas which it contains. It is also an excellent
  coking coal. The workable veins are from three to four feet in
  thickness, and are found at various depths in different localities.
  There are many mines in Big Beaver Township and Wampum is now the only
  point in the county from which coal is shipped. The Beaver Valley coals
  closely resemble those of the well known Pittsburg measures, being in
  continuous seams, or nearly so, while the deposits in Neshannock and
  Union Townships resemble more closely those of the celebrated or Sharon
  block coals, being found in basins, or "swamps," as the miners and
  dealers call them, sometimes several hundred acres,in extent, and again
  only in small "pockets." Near Mercer County shafts have been sunk and
  machinery installed, but the mines are not being worked, perhaps because
  at present mines in Mercer County can be worked more profitably.
  
  In Neshannock Township have been found quite extensive deposits of
  fire-brick and potter's clays, which have been utilized in the
  potteries. Some of the clay found within the city's limits is especially
  adapted to the manufacture of the best kind of brick, and is extensively
  utilized.
  
  At New Bedford are found mineral springs highly impregnated with iron;
  and similar springs are also found on the farm of the late Jesse R.
  Moore, in Neshannock Township.
  
  
        PETROLEUM.
  
  Petroleum was first discovered in the pebble or sand rock deposit, near
  Titusville, in Crawford County, by Colonel Drake, in 1859. These
  oil-sands lie in the middle Devonian system, thus differing from the
  Canada oil limestone which occurs in its lowest part. By geologists and
  oil producers petroleum has been divided into two classes?light and
  heavy oils. The former, which constitutes the great bulk of the
  commercial article, is found in the eastern portion of the oil-producing
  region of Pennsylvania, in the porous formation of the pebble rock;
  while the heavy or "amber" oil is only found in the western portion of
  this territory, and in the closer grained and more compact rock. This
  rock, composed of similar-materials, but varying in texture, produces a
  crude or refined oil, according as it is more or less compact in its
  grain, and dips from the west a little towards the southeast, at the
  rate of some fifteen feet per mile. It consists of about three-fourths
  quartz, etc., and one-fourth cavity, cleaned out by long percolation,
  and now occupied by water and oil. The proportion which the oil bears to
  the water in the bed is not absolutely known, but in many instances the
  actual yield has exceeded 1,500,000 barrels per square mile.
  
  Says Prof. J. P. Lesley: "The oil is generally found at a certain level,
  independent of any strata; it has an oxidized tint from the possible
  accession of atmospheric air, and when this has occurred to any
  considerable extent, it has transformed a light into a heavy oil." The
  Pennsylvania oils are found at depths varying from 150 to 1,200 feet
  below the surface. [p. 26] Lawrence County is supposed to lie mostly
  within the heavy oil district, which covers an extent of about 1,200
  square miles.
  
  In 1860 there was great excitement in the western part of Lawrence
  County, owing to the discovery that oil existed in that locality. The
  first well in the valley of the Mahoning was put down by D. W. C.
  Strawbridge, some time in that year, about one and a half miles above
  Edenburg, on the northeast side of the river. Oil was found at a depth
  of about 157 feet, but it proved to be only the leakage from fissured
  rock. Several hundred barrels, however, were taken out, when the influx
  of surface water stopped operations. Another well, 230 feet deep, was
  bored on the Angus farm, subsequently owned by J. McWilliams, and the
  production reached 1,000 barrels, when the same difficulty that the
  Strawbridge well had encountered put an end to the working.
  
  The early operators were unfamiliar with the peculiar characteristics of
  the oil-bearing rock, and did not have the necessary mechanical
  apparatus for obtaining the oil. Not until vast sums had been expended,
  and positive knowledge obtained by costly practical experience, did they
  discover the right way to proceed.
  
  Tubing the wells to keep out the surface water was not at first thought
  of. Notwithstanding the numerous failures, hundreds of wells were sunk,
  and the country was covered with derricks. Oil was invariably found at
  about the average depth of 300 feet, and always of the same variety?the
  heavy amber, or lubricating oil. The oil-bearing sand-rock of this
  vicinity has been traced from a little west of the Ohio line eastward to
  the Slippery Rock, dipping gradually toward the southeast. It is very
  close-grained, and acts as a filter, cleansing the oil of a great share
  of the foreign matter which is found in the oils produced on the eastern
  margin of the district. Borings have penetrated it at New Castle, on the
  Big Run, and in the Slippery Rock Hills, west of the creek. It has an
  average thickness of about thirty feet.
  
  Operations were carried on in the Mahoning Valley for about four years,
  and a few isolated wells were worked for a number of years, or well
  along into the seventies, but the surface water gradually compelled the
  abandonment of the whole region. In the hands of a wealthy corporation,
  with the wells cleaned and plugged, a successful business might be
  inaugurated, for there is no doubt that the material exists in large
  quantities, requiring only judicious management to develop a profitable
  industry.
  
  Late in the seventies, at the iron bridge on the Slippery Rock, there
  were three wells in one vicinity producing altogether twenty-three
  barrels of fine lubricatin oil daily. In 1863, Messrs. Smith & Collins
  sunk a well in this vicinity, which yielded altogether about 4,000
  barrels, when the surface water drowned it.
  
  Lawrence County has extensive mineral resources, without counting oil.
  Her coal and iron deposits, her ferriferous limestone, and her fire
  clays and inexhaustible building stone, are tangible assets that, when
  utilized to their fullest extent, cannot fail to make her one of the
  most prosperous counties of the state. A part of this prosperity she is
  already enjoying, but the end is not yet, and with the improved and more
  economical methods of operation that the future will doubtless provide,
  there will come an expansion of wealth and greatness not now conceived
  of, but from which our citizens will all profit in greater or less degree.
  
  ------------------------------------------------------------------------
  
  20th Century History of New Castle and Lawrence County Pennsylvania and
  Representative Citizens Hon. Aaron L. Hazen Richmond-Arnold Publishing
  Company, Chicago, Ill., 1908