KLINGENSMITH, JOHN, was born August 26, 1809,
in Westmoreland county, Pa. In 1811 his parents, Peter Klingensmith and
Susannah (Kifer) Klingensmith, came to this county and settled near
Madison Furnace. The following year they returned to Westmoreland county.
In 1824 his father came again, to this county and settled with his family
on what is now called the Cribbs farm, in Monroe township. After a few
months residence here he removed to Williamsburg, and a year later to the
Cathers farm. From thence he went to Reidsburg. During the residence of
the family at Reidsburg the subject of this sketch, assisted by his
brother Samuel, cleared a farm at Williamsburg, to which the family
removed, and where they lived about twenty years.
In 1838 John Klingensmith was married to Catharine
Smith, who was his faithful helpmate until 1885, when she died. They had
four children, Celinda, Reuben, Fianna, and Clarissa, all of whom except
the eldest are married.
Mr. Klingensmiths public life began with his
election as sheriff of Clarion county, in 1849, as an independent
Democratic candidate. He served three years in this office, and at the
expiration of his term removed to Westmoreland county and purchased the
farm on which he was born. He remained about four months, then sold the
farm and returned to Clarion county. The following year he moved into
Madison, in which township he has resided ever since.
Mr. Klingensmith has been both a farmer and a miller.
He had charge of the grist-mill at Reidsburg one year, and of Corbetts
mill on Leatherwood for the same period. For eight years he had charge of
the grist-mill at Madison Furnace. He has a well-improved farm, on which
his homestead is, in Madison township. Along with farming he conducted the
business of a saw-mill, near Corsica, Jefferson county, which he had built
at a cost of about $10,000. He continued in the lumber business eight or
nine years, until the memorable flood of 1865, by which he lost 300,000
feet of lumber in the Allegheny River, and soon after the mill was burned,
entailing an additional loss.
Mr. Klingensmith is a respectable citizen, a true type of the early
settlers of our county, and by his industry and enterprise has contributed
much toward the development of Clarion county.
History of Clarion Co., Pennsylvania: with
illustrations and biographical sketches of some of its prominent men and
pioneers, Syracuse, N.Y.: D. Mason & Co., 1887, pages
648-649.
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