ORR BUFFINGTON


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Orr Buffington

ORR BUFFINGTON, attorney at law, of Kittanning, Armstrong county, senior
member of the firm of Buffington and Gilpin, belongs to an old family which
dates its coming to Pennsylvania back to provincial days, and three
generations have been represented among the most creditable members of the
Armstrong county bar. Mr. Buffington was born April 29, 1858, at Kittanning,
son of Ephraim and Margaret C. (Orr) Buffington.

The early members of the Buffington family in this country were members of
the Society of Friends. They left England several years before Penn�s
arrival in America, and in 1677, five years before that event, we find a
Richard Buffington listed among the taxables at Upland, Chester Co., Pa. This
Richard Buffington was born at Great Marle, upon the Thames, in
Buckinghamshire, England, about 1654. He was the father of the first child of
English descent born in the Province of Pennsylvania. From Hazard�s Annals,
page 468, as well as from the Pennsylvania Gazette, June 28 to July 5,
1739, we learn that “on the 30th of May past” the children,
grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Richard Buffington, Sr., to the
number of 115 met at his home in Chester county, as also his nine sons and
daughters-in-law, and twelve great-grandchildren-in-law. The old man was then
said to be aged about eighty-five.

Thomas Buffington, second son of Richard Buffington mentioned above, was
born about 1680, and died in December, 1739. He married Ruth Cope, and left
among other children a son William, who according to Rupp�s history of
Lancaster county, Pa. (page 112), was first married to Lena Ferree. By his
second wife, Alice (whose maiden name is unknown), he had a son Jonathan.

Jonathan Buffington, son of William and Alice, was born in 1736, and died
Oct. 18, 1801. He owned and operated a flour mill at North Brook, near the
site of the battle of Brandywine, and at the time of that battle (September,
1777) the British troops took possession of the mill and compelled the
non-combatant Friend to furnish food for them. He married Ann Clayton, who was
born in 1739, daughter of Edward and Ann Clayton, and died June 16, 1811.

Ephraim Buffington, third child of Jonathan and Ann (Clayton), was born
March 23, 1767, and died Dec. 30, 1832. He kept a hotel at Westchester, Pa.,
well known in its day as the “White Hall” tavern. Leaving Chester
county about 1813 he moved west over the mountains, settling at Pine Creek, on
the Allegheny river, about five miles above Pittsburgh. On March 4, 1790, he
had married Rebecca Francis, at the old Swedes Church at Wilmington, Del.
Among their sons were Joseph and John.

John Buffington, son of Ephraim and Rebecca (Francis), was born about 1799,
and died March 31, 1832. He married Hannah Allison.

Ephraim Buffington, son of John and Hannah (Allison) was born Aug. 8, 1821,
at Pine Creek, near Pittsburgh. He received an excellent education attending
Allegheny College, at Meadville, Pa., and Jefferson College, at Canonsburg,
and read law with his uncle, Judge Joseph Buffington. He was admitted to the
bar in Armstrong county and practiced the profession for several years, being
located in Kittanning. He then retired from professional work to devote his
time to land interests which required his undivided attention, having coal and
oil property; he was quite extensively engaged in the oil business for some
time. During the Civil War he served as a provost marshal and he was afterward
connected with the internal revenue service for several years, being deputy
collector for Armstrong county. In politics he was a stanch Republican from
the organization of the party. He attended the Protestant Episcopal Church.

On Jan. 21, 1845, Mr. Buffington married Margaret C. Orr, daughter of
Chambers Orr, of South Bend, Armstrong county, Pa., former sheriff of
Armstrong county. Six children were born to this union: Catherine, wife of D.
W. Martin; Warren; Hannah; Frances, who graduated from Vassar College and was
a successful teacher, one of the most competent in the Kittanning schools, a
young woman whose many accomplishments and admirable traits made her untimely
death widely mourned in the community; Joseph, who is a judge of the United
States Circuit court at Pittsburgh; and Orr. The father of this family died in
1892.

Orr Buffington, son of Ephraim and Margaret C. (Orr), received his
preparatory education in private schools in his native town and later attended
Trinity College, at Hartord, Conn., from which he was graduated in 1879. He
carried on his law studies under the direction of Hon. James B. Neale and his
elder brother, Joseph Buffington, and after his admission to the bar of
Armstrong county, in the year 1881, entered into partnership with that brother
for practice. His brother moved to Pittsburgh in 1892, and since 1903 he has
been associated in professional work with Oliver W. Gilpin. His legal career
has been one of hard work and continued success and he has maintained the high
standing attaching to the Buffington name in legal circles. He has, howerver
found time for active participation in the borough government, having given
able service as burgess and as member of the school board; his interest in the
question of public education has always been strong, and he has done his share
in forwarding the cause in his home community.

In 1882 Mr. Buffington married Charlotte M. Hyde (now deceased), daughter
of S. T. Hyde, a prominent lawyer of New York City, and they had a family of
four children: Morgan, who resides in Pittsburgh; Margaret, wife of Jefferson
R. Leason, an attorney of Kittanning; Sydney (deceased); and Kenneth now
attending Amherst College.

Judge Joseph Buffington, for many years a judge of the Tenth district of
Pennsylvania, one whose life work had an intimate connection with the history
of Armstrong county, was born Nov. 27, 1803, at the famous “White
Hall” tavern at Westchester, Pa., then conducted by his father, Ephraim
Buffington. There he lived until his tenth year, when his father settled at
Pine Creek, a few miles from Pittsburgh. At the age of eighteen he entered the
Western University at Pittsburgh, then under the charge of Dr. Bruce and the
venerable Dr. Joseph Stockton. After finishing his classical studies he went
to Butler, Pa., and for some time before he took up the study of law edited a
weekly paper called the Butler Repository and also in company with
Samuel A. Purviance (later attorney general of the Commonwealth), carried on a
small grocery store. He soon entered as a student at law in the office of Gen.
William Ayers, a celebrated lawyer of Pennsylvania, under whose training he
laid a thorough foundation for his professional work. In July 1826, he was
admitted to the bar in Butler county, and to practice in the Supreme court
Sept. 10, 1828. He remained at Butler for about one year thereafter, thence
removing to Kittanning, Armstrong co., Pa., where he passed the remainder of
his life, dying in that borough Feb. 3, 1872. During the early part of his
professional career he had to contend with many hardships, but his ability and
application brought him to the front, and within a few years, he found himself
in possession of a large practice, which afforded him a comfortable income. He
was constantly in attendance upon the courts of Clarion, Jefferson, Indiana
and Armstrong counties, and was connected with all the important land trails
of the region. When the array of legal talent in those days in the section
indicated is recalled, it will be seen that to practice successfully in that
territory required more than ordinary ability, Mr. Buffington�s fellow
practitioners, including such eminent lawyers as Thomas Blair, William F.
Johnston (later governor), H. U. Lee, Darwin Phelps, of Armstrong county, Hon.
Samuel A. Gilmore, Hon. Charles C. Sullivan, Samuel A. Purviance, Gen. J. N.
Purviance, Hon. Thomas White, Daniel stanard, William Banks, of Indiana
county, Hon. Henry D. Foster, Edgar A. Cowan, of Westmoreland county, and
Thomas Sutton, of Clarion county.

From early manhood Judge Buffington took a strong interest in politics. At
the inception of the Antimasonic party, in 1831, he became one of its members,
and served as a delegate to the National convention held in Baltimore in 1832,
when William Wirt was nominated for the presidency. During this period he was
several times nominated for State senator or member of the House, but was
defeated, his party being largely in the minority. In 1840 he became a Whig
taking an active part in the election of General Harrison and serving as one
of the presidential electors on the whig ticket. In the fall of 1843, as the
whig candidate in the district composed of Armstrong, Butler, Clearfield and
Indiana counties, he was elected a member of Congress, and in 1844, he was
again nominated in the same district. During his service in the House he voted
with the whigs on all important issues, voting against the admission of Texas
on the ground of opposition to the extension of slavery. His friend Hon. W. F.
Johnston, having been elected governor, appointed Mr. Buffington in 1849 to
the position of president judge of the Eighteenth Judicial district, composed
of Clarion, Elk, Jefferson and Venango counties. He served in this incumbency
until 1851, when he was defeated in the judicial election by Hon. John C.
Knox, the district being largely Democratic. In 1852, at the Whig State
convention, he was nominated for a judgeship in the Supreme court, but
defeated in the ensuing election by Chief Justice Woodward of Luzerne county.
The same year he was appointed by President Fillmore chief justice of the
Territory of Utah, then just organized. However he declined this honor. In
1855 he was appointed by Governor Pollock judge of the Tenth district of
Pennsylvania, and in the fall of 1856 he was elected to fill that position, to
which he had been appointed for a term of ten years. He continued to serve
until 1866, when was elected for another term of ten years. In 1871 his
failing health admonished him that his judicial labors, too great for any one
man to perform, were much too severe for one who had passed the meridian of
life, and he retired to private life after forty-six years of public service,
principally in connection with the bench and bar. As a lawyer and judge he
will long be remembered as revered by the Armstrong county bar. As a citizen
he was public-spirited, and gave liberally toward every undertaking calculated
to benefit the community. He was for many years an active member of the
Episcopal Church.

Judge Buffington married Catherine Mechling, daughter of Hon. Jacob
Mechling, of Butler county. Their only child, Mary, died in infancy.

According to Arthur�s Etymological Dictionary of Family Names, Orr is
derived from a river and town in Scotland. Or in Welsh and Gaelic signifies a
border, a boundary.

Source: Page(s) PAGES 324-332, Armstrong County, Pa., Her People,
Past and Present
, J.H. Beers & Co., 1914
Transcribed May 1998 by Sue Brosnahan 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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