HEADER
Fred C Mohney
FRED C. MOHNEY, poultry raiser and farmer of Rayburn township, Armstrong
county, was born in Red Bank township, this county, Aug. 2, 1858, son of Lewis
S. and Rebecca (Shick) Mohney. His great- grand-father, Jonathan Mohney, who
founded the family in America, was born in Germany, and on coming to this
country settled with his wife in Clarion county, Pa. He was a member of the
Reformed Church, the family establishing the first Reformed Church in Clarion
county, and his descendants adhere to the same faith. In politics the men of
this family have all been Democrats.Adam Mohney, son of Jonathan, was the grandfather of Fred C. Mohney. He
owned a large tract of land in Red Bank Township, where New Bethlehem,
Hawthorn, Fairmount, etc., are located. His death occurred in 1832. His
children were as follows: John who died in Clarion county in 1910, at the age
of ninety-two years; Jonathan; Adam; Fred; Susan; Mrs. Hartsell, and Lewis S.Lewis S. Mohney, son of Adam was born in Red Bank township, Clarion county,
in 1824, and died at the age of seventy-seven years. He died at the home of
his son F. C. Mohney, in Kittaning. He enlisted in the support of the Union
cause during the Civil war, but was never called upon to serve. Mr. Mohney
married Rebecca Shick, who was married Aug. 20, 1827, in Red Bank township,
Armstrong county, and died at the age of sixty-eight years, at Hawthorn,
Clarion county. They had the following children: Jacob, who died at Kittaning;
Dr. Adam M., who died in Clarion county; William, who died in the West; Fred
C.; Dr. Christ, who died in Clarion county; Lizzie, Mrs. Jud. McMillan, of
Punxsutawney, Pa., where she died; Charles, who died in Oklahoma; Christina,
John and Monroe, all of whom died in infancy.Fred C. Mohney grew to manhood at Hawthorn, Clarion county, Pa., where his
father had a store, moving there in 1865. He learned the trade of carpenter,
and for many years was employed at such work in Kittaning, where for nineteen
years he was employed by the American Planning Mill Company, becoming foreman
in the planning mill. He became quite well known in that Borough, serving as
member of the city council, and won the confidence of his fellow citizens to
such an extent that in 1908 he was elected county auditor, giving highly
credible service in both capacities. He moved from the borough to engage in
the poultry business, buying a piece of land in Rayburn township one mile from
Kittanning, a valuable property of twenty-four acres to which he has since
given the greater part of his time and attention. He built a fine brick house
there, and has made many other improvements on the place. He is specially
interested in poultry, raising White Leghorn, and Rhode Island Red stock. The
work required scientific care and constant application, but is an excellent
field for a progressive and enterprising worker, and Mr. Mohney has done very
well in all of his undertakings.In 1882 Mr. Mohney was married to Rebecca R. Emhoff, who was born Jan. 12,
1862, in Jefferson county, and when quite young moved to Armstrong county with
her parents, John and Sarah (Mohney) Emhoff, the family settling on a farm
three miles from New Bethlehem. Two children have been born to Mr. and Mrs.
Mohney: Lloyd, born March 7, 1883, is engaged as a druggist at Kittaning; in
1913 he married Jane Ann McIlwain. Olive E., born Jan 12, 1886, died May 27,
1913; she was the wife of Henry C. Holly. from Pittsburgh, now employed as
electrician at Ford City by the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company.Source: Pages 892-893, Armstrong County, Pa., Her People, Past and
Present, J.H. Beers & Co., 1914
Transcribed November 1998 by Nanci Michalkiewicz 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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