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John C. Ellenberger
JOHN C. ELLENBERGER, prosperous merchant of Dayton, Pa., one of the
leading business men of Armstrong county, was born at Belknap, Wayne township,
June 26, 1877, son of Samuel Ellenberger.John Ellenberger, great-grandfather of John C. Ellenberger, lived along the
Allegheny river, and there developed a fine farm. His children were: John,
Jacob, Mrs. Rumbaugh, Charles and George. This family came to western
Pennsylvania from a section east of the mountains.Charles Ellenberger, son of John, was born in Armstrong county, in Sugar
Creek township, and became a farmer there, but moved to Wayne township in
young manhood. He bought 160 acres at Belknap, and died in the house now
occupied by his son Samuel, in 1864, his remains being interred in the
Lutheran cemetery in Wayne township. By his first marriage he had the
following children: David, Jacob and Francis, all of whom died in Jefferson
county. He married (second) Anna E. Bargerstock, daughter of John Bargerstock,
who brought his family to American from Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany, when Mrs.
Ellenberger was twelve years old. She died in February, 1890, and is also
buried in the Lutheran cemetery in Wayne township. By this second marriage
Charles Ellenberger became the father of these children: John; Eliza, who
married Sims Marshall; Simon P.; Samuel; Kate, who married George Rumbaugh;
Etta, who married N. A. Miller, deceased; Sadie, who married John Snyder;
Hannah, who married George L. Reed; and two children who died young.Samuel Ellenberger, son of Charles, was born at Belknap, Feb. 2, 1846, and
was educated in the township and Dayton high schools, and at Union Academy.
Taking his father’s homestead, he made farming his occupation. He owns eighty
acres of valuable land in Wayne township, and three sons were born to them:
John C.; Harry M., of Venango county, Pa., connected with the Polk
institution; and Clinton R., also at that institution. In politics Samuel
Ellenberger is a Democrat, and he has served as school director and assessor
of Wayne township, and as jury commissioner of Armstrong county. For years he
has been an important factor in the Concord Presbyterian Church, and is in
every respect a substantial reliable man.John C. Ellenberger, son of Samuel, attended local school and the Dayton
Academy, remaining at home until he was eighteen years old. He then went to
Warren county, where he was employed at the hospital for the insane, and spent
two years there. Following this he went to Rhode Island, and spent four years,
leaving there for New Bethlehem, Clarion county, Pa., where he spent a year
employed in a flour mill. The next year he clerked in a general store, in all
these occupations gaining valuable experience which was of use to him when he
embarked in business for himself in 1902, as a merchant at Belknap, in Wayne
township, Armstrong county. For four years he conducted a flourishing business
at that place, but in 1906 deciding to come into a broader field located at
Dayton. He opened up with a good stock of clothing, men’s furnishings and
shoes, handling the clothing of M. Wile, of Buffalo, and Allen & Allen, of
Philadelphia, and the Walk-Over and Queen Quality shoes, and continues to do
so, experience having proved that these are best suited for his trade, both as
to quality and price. His stock is thoroughly modern, and his commercial
connections are such that he can offer special inducements to his customers.Mr. Ellenberger was first married to Laura Brice, who died four months
afterward. His second marriage was to Edna Shotwell. They have no children.
Fraternally Mr. Ellenberger belongs to Dayton Lodge, No. 738, I. O. O. F. His
religious home is in the Presbyterian Church.Source: Pages 367-368, Armstrong County, Pa., Her People, Past and
Present, J.H. Beers & Co., 1914
Transcribed September 2001 by Linda M. Stitt for the Armstrong County Beers
Project
Contributed for use by the Armstrong County Genealogy Project (http://www.pa-roots.com/armstrong/)Armstrong County Genealogy Project Notice:
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