KAHLE, JOHN W. Jacob Kahle and his wife Sarah,
with the rest of the family, came from Huntingdon county to what is now
Clarion county, and settled about two miles north of Shippenville, in Elk
township, in 1826, and began clearing and improving a farm. At that time
this locality was somewhat of a wilderness. Bears were quite numerous, and
would sometimes come into the yard in broad daylight. At one time the
family was interrupted, while eating dinner, by the squealing of a pig,
struggling in the clutches of bruin, who wanted some dinner also. At
another time, while on the road to Shippenville, then a little village of
four or five houses, Mr. Kahle, accompanied by his sons George and John
W., was again called to the rescue of a pig, squealing for life, at the
mercy of two bears. After being chased away from the pig, the bears came
out on the road near where the boys were standing. The situation became
frightful. The boys began to utter such terrific cries, which were
mistaken for fierceness, that the bears soon made their way into the
forest. Wolves, deer, and other wild animals frequently made their
appearance on the premises.
John W. Kahle, the subject of this sketch, was born
in Huntingdon county, Pa., December 28, 1821, and lived with his parents
until 1844. That spring he was employed as book-keeper by William B.
Fetzer, at Elk Furnace, and at the end of the first month was given the
general management of the furnace. In 1859 he built on the Allegheny
River, a few miles above Bradys Bend, for Samuel F. Plumer, the first
coke furnace in the county. He has served as manager of furnaces for
fifteen years.
In 1845 he married Ann Cheers, and has since raised a
family of eight children, four boys and four girls, all of whom are living
at present. He moved with his family to Lineville, in the northwestern
corner of Clarion county, in 1860, and there engaged in mercantile
business, and also in farming.
A company of bankers in New York city had purchased a
large tract of land along the Allegheny River, between Oil City and
Franklin, and in 1864 employed Mr. Kahle to superintend the development of
the property for oil. During his connection with the company he was loyal
to their interest. At one time he was offered one hundred thousand dollars
if he would give certain facts concerning the wells tested to the party
offering the money one week before he gave them to the company employing
him. He was urged by some of his friends to accept the offer, and become
rich at once. His reply was, The company are paying me a large salary to
attend to their business. If there is anything to be gained by the first
information given, the company shall have the benefit of it,a reply,
under the circumstances, worthy of being repeated for ages. In 1865 he
recommended the company to bring the operations for oil in that territory
to a close. The company urged him to continue. After satisfying himself
that the income would not pay expenses he resigned.
In 1878 Mr. Kahle was elected a member of the
Pennsylvania Legislature. He was there, as elsewhere, faithful and true to
his constituents. He served eighteen years as school director, and also
was postmaster for several years; his last appointment being March 30,
1870. He resigned in October, 1880, and his daughter Mary was appointed to
the vacancy October 25, 1880, and continued the office in his store until
her resignation. He was a delegate to the National Convention of the
Anti-Monopoly and Greenback parties, which met in Chicago in 1883, and
served on the committee to adopt a platform; also was a delegate to a
National Convention of Greenback-Labor party, which met in Indianapolis,
Ind., in 1884, and State delegate to the convention of Greenback-Labor
party, which met in Erie, Pa., in 1885, serving again on platform
committee.
Mr. Kahle has always been a faithful worker in the
church; before 1862 in the M. E. Church, and since then in the Evangelical
Association. His wife and all his children are faithful servants of their
Master.
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
643-644.
View image of this page of the book on line at ancestry.com. -
Free Trial More
Clarion County History Books
Search Hundreds of 1880s-1890s Pennsylvania County History
Books for biographies and historical information
on your ancestors. View the book page images on line and print them
out for your genealogy file!
Free Access to the old history books - plus birth & death records, census images and ALL other records at ancestry.com
.