Ivan Dalton Doverspike


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Ivan Dalton Doverspike

IVAN DALTON DOVERSPIKE, youngest son of the late Isaac D. Doverspike,
has inherited and acquired interests in western Pennsylvania which place him,
though still a young man, among the important business factors in his section.
He is regarded as one of the future leaders in his special field of operation,
for though it is recognized that he has had exceptional opportunities it is
equally apparent that he has taken advantage of them in a masterly manner. His
association with his father, many of whose most forcible traits he seems to
possess, was an invaluable experience, and he has shown remarkable aptitude
for the management of large undertakings, with which he has been connected
practically from youth.

Mr. Doverspike was born May 13, 1887, at Eddyville, Armstrong county, and
attended common school there until fourteen years old. Then he came with his
parents to Kittanning, where he completed his grammar school course,
graduating, and afterward attending high school one year. His studies were
continued in the Sayer business college, at Kittanning, from which he was also
graduated, next entering Bucknell College, at Lewisburg, Pa., where he
remained for a short time, changing to the university at Ann Arbor, Mich.
Returning to Kittanning he became engaged in business with his father, who
employed him as foreman in his lumbering operations, and he “flatboated”
lumber down the river to Pittsburgh. He took charge of the boatbuilding,
having a crew of thirty-five men working under him when he was but twenty-one
years old, and he was a pilot on the river, from Oil City to Pittsburgh, for
two summers. Thus he was actively engaged until his father’s death, which
occurred Sept. 16, 1911, gaining a practical knowledge of affairs acquired by
few men. Since his father’s death he has continued alone in the same lines,
having purchased most of his father’s interests with which he had become
familiar. He is engaged in the manufacture of lumber, for the trade, and
principally for the Pennsylvania Railroad Company. He is interested in
twenty-seven oil wells above Oil City, owns eighty acres of coal land in
Bethel township, Armstrong county, lying along the river, eight acres of fire
clay land near Templeton, and other property in Oil City and Ford City,
besides a one-fifth interest in the lands of his father’s large estate. Few
men of his age are directly connected with such large and varied enterprises,
and he is showing ability in their management which has gained him the respect
of his business associates without regard for his youth.

On July 1, 1911, Mr. Doverspike married Edna C. Ashe, who is a daughter of
E. J. and Mattie E. (Ross) Ashe, her parents being members of old families of
Armstrong and Jefferson counties, respectively. Mr. Ashe has been prominent in
politics and public life in Armstrong county, having served two terms as
chairman of the Republican county committee. He was elected county treasurer
and held that office one term, his daughter, Mrs. Doverspike, acting as his
clerk, and during her father’s illness of six weeks she discharged all the
duties of the office. It is a fact worthy of record that her brother, Fred R.
Ashe, was the youngest prothonotary in the State of Pennsylvania up to the
time of his service.

Mr. and Mrs. Doverspike are members of the First Presbyterian Church of
Kittanning. In political sentiment he favors the Republican party.

Source: Pages 448, Armstrong County, Pa., Her People, Past and
Present, J.H. Beers & Co., 1914
Transcribed September 2001 by Mickey Cendrowski for the Armstrong County Beers
Project
Contributed for use by the Armstrong County Genealogy Project (http://www.pa-roots.com/armstrong/)

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