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Newton Rosborough
NEWTON ROSBOROUGH, farmer and dairyman of Elderton, in Plum Creek township,
Armstrong county, is a descendant of an old established family in this part of
Pennsylvania. His great-grandfather, who was born in the vicinity of
Saltsburg, Indiana county, was a pack peddler, and disappeared while on a trip
to secure a stock of goods. Nothing was ever afterward heard of him or his son
who accompanied him. The Rosboroughs are of Irish extraction, and the
representatives of the name have always been found among the most creditable
citizens in their respective communities. The family sent a large number of
volunteers to the Civil war.Charles Rosborough, father of Newton, was born Dec. 16, 1819, one mile east
of Elders Ridge in Indiana county, on a farm where Iselin now stands. He was
the eldest of a family of fifteen children. He stayed with his father, James
Rosborough, learning the stonemason’s trade, till twenty-three years of age.
On Oct. 4, 1842, he married Elizabeth Frailey, of Elderton, which union lasted
fifty-eight years, five months. After being married they moved to Clarksburg,
Indiana county, living there till March 16, 1848, when he moved to Elderton,
Armstrong county, buying the tannery property of William Cunningham, built by
James Clark, father of Judge Silas Clark, of Indiana. There he followed
tanning and harnessmaking till shortly before his death, which occurred March
4, 1901, in his eighty-second year. His wife, Elizabeth (Frailey), died Oct.
4, 1904, in her eighty-first year. She was of German descent, and was reared
at Elderton, Armstrong county, Pa. Mr. and Mrs. Rosborough were married by the
famous Rev. Alexander Donaldson, founder of the Elders Ridge Academy, one of
the first institutions of its kind west of the Alleghenies and of such high
standing and enviable reputation that pupils came there from every State in
the Union, even California. Mr. and Mrs.. Rosborough had a family of ten
children, namely: James, born Aug. 9, 1843, a farmer, now living at Marchand,
Indiana county, married Ester Allshouse and they have had a family of twelve
children; Mary, died when two years old; Martin, died when five years old;
William, born March 6, 1850, lives in Philadelphia; Newton is mentioned below;
Anna, born Dec. 4, 1854, married J. N. Mahan and is deceased; Della, born July
10, 1857, is the widow of J. A. Altman (they had five children); John, born in
November 1859, died when forty-one years old, leaving a wife, who died shortly
afterward, and three children; Catherine, born Oct. 3, 1863, lives at home;
Edward F., born July 10, 1866, married Laura C. Mulberger, of Elderton, and
they h ad had children, Grace (wife of J.E. Clark), Martha (wife of J.C.
Mulberger), Vernie (died Oct. 26, 1910 in nineteenth year), Frank (deceased),
Bertha and Ruth (at home).The brothers Newton and Edward F. Rosborough now live at Elderton, on the
site of their father’s old home, and own a farm of 320 acres adjoining. They
bough this property a little at al time, adding to their holdings as
prosperity enabled them, acquiring most of it since their father’s death. They
carry on general agriculture and dairying, being extensively interested in the
latter line, which has proved exceptionally profitable, and they are regarded
as leaders among the progressive farmers of the district, their methods and
work typifying them most up-to-date ideas in their chosen field of work.Newton Rosborough was born July 10, 1852, at Elderton, where he has passed
all his life. He attends the Presbyterian Church, and is one of its most
devoted workers, having been an elder for the unusually long period of
thirty-seven years.Source: Page 498-499, Armstrong County, Pa., Her People, Past and
Present, J. H. Beers & Co., 1914
Transcribed October 1999 by Beth Caporali 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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