Mateer Family


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Mateer Family

BENJAMIN FRANKLIN MATEER, of Boggs township, is a representative of
a family numerously represented and highly respected in that section of
Armstrong county. The name was formerly McAteer, and the family, which is of
Scotch-Irish origin, has been in Pennsylvania for several generations.

James Mateer, the founder of this branch in America, was born in Ireland,
and was of Scotch-Irish parentage. Crossing the Atlantic with his wife, Mollie
(Sharon), and family, he settled in the Cumberland valley in Pennsylvania some
time before 1760, seven miles from Harrisburg and one mile from
Mechanicsville, obtaining 414 3/4 acres of land from the Penns, on which he
made his home and devoted himself to farming. There he reared his family. He
served in the Revolutionary war.

Samuel Mateer, son of James and Mollie (Sharon) Mateer, always followed
farming, remaining on the old home place, where he died in 1800. He married
Rosanna Quigley and they reared a family.

John Mateer, son of Samuel, was a native of Dauphin county, Pa., thence
removing in 1806 to Armstrong county with his mother, two brothers and three
sisters and settling in Franklin township, close to what is now
Montgomeryville, on land now owned by the Shawmut Railway Company. He obtained
250 acres of land in what is now East Franklin township, then all in the
woods, and developed a desirable property, putting up a substantial brick
house and frame barn, and making many improvements which added to its value.
In 1855, Mr. Mateer left Armstrong county, moving out to Wayne county, Ill.,
where he died in 1867. In politics he was a Democrat. He married Margaret
Montgomery, who died in 1875, and they had the following children: Washington,
Samuel, Robert, John, Margaret, Nancy Jane, Rosanna, Montgomery and Anthony.

Samuel Mateer, son of John, was born Nov. 27, 1818, in what is now East
Franklin township, Armstrong county, and was raised there. Later he located in
what was then Pine (now Boggs) township, where his son Samuel S. Mateer now
lives, and there passed the remainder of his life, dying in 1900. Farming was
his principal business throughout life, but in his early years he was also a
drover, dealing extensively in stock, which he drove to the eastern markets.
He bought the place of 200 acres in Boggs township now owned by his son
Samuel, at a time when there were neither roads nor bridges in the vicinity,
and the tree under which he pitched his tent the first winter, while he
cleared a place for his house, is still standing. In the spring he went for
his young wife, whom he had married the previous August, 1843, and they worked
together to improve the property, in time being able to build a fine house and
barn. Mr. Mateer was a Democrat and took a prominent part in the public
affairs of the locality, holding the office of justice of the peace for many
years and serving faithfully in various township offices, including that of
school director. Being a carpenter, he in 1859 built the schoolhouse which
still stands on the farm and is known by his name. He also contributed
liberally toward the building of the Presbyterian Church of Concord, and was
one of the trustees of that congregation. He helped to secure good roads in
his neighborhood. He was the promoter of Pine Creek Furnace, and with James E.
Brown, of whom he purchased his farm, and James Mosgrove established the
furnace where the station of that name now stands. Thus he was associated with
many movements which marked the progress of his community. He was a member of
the Masonic fraternity.

In August, 1843, Mr. Mateer married Eliza Ambrose, who was born April 2,
1823, daughter of Benjamin Ambrose, a farmer of Westmoreland county, who came
to Franklin township, Armstrong county, where he reared his family of four
sons and three daughters. Mr. Ambrose was a Whig and a Presbyterian. Mrs.
Mateer died in 1904. She and her husband had the following children, all born
on the home farm in Boggs township where their son Samuel S. now lives: James
E. B., born May 24, 1844, is a farmer of Boggs township (he married Esther S.
Lowry, who died in 1906); John Harvey, born July 31, 1846, a farmer of Boggs
township, married Clara Calhoun; Robert M., born Oct. 5, 1848, graduated from
Jefferson Medical College in the year 1873, and was a prominent physician of
Elderton, this county, until his death, June 18, 1900 (he married Mary
Donnelly); Benjamin Franklin is mentioned below; Samuel S., born May 1, 1853,
married Mary Houser; Annie Jane, born Oct. 25, 1855, married William C.
Calhoun, a farmer in Boggs township; Margaret E., born March 18, 1858, married
Findley P. Wolff, an attorney of Kittanning, and she died June 24, 1910; Mary
Elizabeth, born Dec. 5, 1860, married Joseph Banks, who died in 1888; Ambrose
M., born July 16, 1863, a merchant at Ford City, this county, married Annie M.
Hausholder; Alexander Montgomery, born Oct. 26, 1867, married Hannah
Williamson, and is a farmer of Boggs township. Besides their own large family
Mr. and Mrs. Mateer raised Daniel Cogley, who was born Sept. 7, 1839, and whom
they took into their home as an orphan boy of nine years. He still resides on
the old homestead with Samuel S. Mateer. He was a Union soldier during the
Civil war, enlisting in August, 1862, in Company K, 155th Pennsylvania
Regiment, and serving three years with the Army of the Potomac; after his
discharge he returned to the Mateer farm in Boggs township.

Benjamin Franklin Mateer was born Dec. 5, 1850, and grew to manhood on the
farm. He received the greater part of his education at Dayton, and for ten
years was engaged in school teaching, following that profession in Pine,
Boggs, Valley and Washington townships, this county. Meantime he also followed
farming, and when he gave up teaching settled down to agricultural pursuits in
Boggs township, obtaining 101 acres of land. He has since bought another
eighty acres, and the entire tract is improved and cultivated according to the
most approved modern ideas. Mr. Mateer has erected substantial buildings, and
his work has shown him to be a typical member of the family whose name he
bears, and whose enterprise and advanced methods are proverbial in this part
of the county. He also owns a residence in the borough of Kittanning. Mr.
Mateer has always been a Democrat, but has taken no part in politics and has
never aspired to office.

In 1876 Mr. Mateer was married to Maggie E. Adams, of Valley township, this
county, daughter of Robert and Eliza Adams. They have had four children: (1)
Anna Florence is the wife of Geroge W. Robinson, of Mansfield, Ohio. (2)
Samuel Warren, who lives on the home farm, married Sadie Miller, and they have
two children, William Franklin and Margaret Mildred. (3) Eliza May is married
to B. F. Elwinger, and has one child, Clarence. (4) Margaret Agnes married
John S. Spence, and died June 18, 1910; she left no children.

Source: Pages 396-398,  Armstrong County, Pa., Her People, Past
and Present, J. H. Beers & Co., 1914
Transcribed July 1998 by Joyce Sherry 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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