Louis Kepler Hyde.
- -In every flourishing community there are certain men, who by their
enterprise, straightforward business methods and public spirit maintain the
prosperity and progressiveness of the place, and among such citizens of
Titusville no one is more worthy than he whose name forms the heading of
this brief tribute to his merit. His paternal grandfather came to this
section of Pennsylvania from Lebanon, Connecticut, about 1820, and from that
time to the present the Hydes have been representative citizens of the
western part of the Keystone state. In 1633 William Hyde, the progenitor of
this family in the United States, arrived on these shores from England, his
native land. (See Chancellor Walworths Genealogy of the Hyde Family.) The
maternal great-grandfather of Louis Kepler Hyde, a Mr. Kepler, came here
from Wurtemberg, Germany, and was very highly educated, speaking six
languages.
The parents of the subject of this outline are Charles
and Elizabeth (Kepler) Hyde, the former widely and favorably known
throughout this portion of the country as a merchant, lumber dealer, oil
producer, etc., in addition to which varied enterprises he has been
president of three national banks and president of the New Orleans &
Northwestern Railway Company. As a financier and business man he has been
remarkably successful, and the same qualities which have wrought out his
prosperity seem to have been inherited, in a notable degree, by his son.
Louis Kepler Hyde, the last of the Hyde family name
born in Hydetown. Crawford county, is now in the prime of early manhood, his
birth having occurred July 30, 1865 In 1867 his parents removed to
Titusville, and from 1868 to September, 1887, he was a resident of
Plainfield, New Jersey, to which attractive suburb of New York City his
parents moved in 1868 Eleven years ago he returned to Titusville, where he
has since made his home. He was given excellent educational advantages; from
1874 to 1879 he attended Charlier Institute, at No. 158 West Fifty-ninth
street, New York; for the succeeding four years he was a student under the
tutelage of Dr. Pingry, of Elizabeth, New Jersey, and Mr. Leal, of
Plainfield, same state, for three years and one year respectively. He then
entered the academic department of Yale College, in New Haven, Connecticut,
and in June, 1887, he was duly graduated at Yale. Many of the pleasant
associations of his college days he keeps up through his club relationship,
as he is identified with Chapter Phi (mother chapter) of the D. K. E.
Society at Yale; the Plainfield Yale Club; the D. K. E. Club of New York;
and the University Athletic Club of New York. Besides, he belongs to the
Prentiss Club, of Natchez, Mississippi; the Thistle Club and the Canadohta
Club, both of Titusville; and the Tourilli Fish and Game Club of the
Province of Quebec, Canada.
His happy school days finished, Louis Kepler Hyde
settled down to the serious business of life, and in the fall after his
graduation at college he assumed the duties of the vice-presidency of the
Second National Bank of Titusville, and also became assistant cashier of the
Hyde National Bank, of that city. In March, 1889, he was installed as
cashier of the Second National Bank, and has ever since served in that
capacity. In August, 1888, he became the junior member of the firm of
Charles Hyde & Son, which firm of bankers succeeded the Hyde National Bank.
In 1890 Louis Kepler Hyde was made vice-president of the New Orleans &
Northwestern Railway Company; the following year its president, and in 1892
was appointed receiver and general manager for the railroad. He continued to
acceptably fill this responsible position until March, 1898, when he was
elected vice-president and general manager of the railroad, with
headquarters at Titusville, and as such he is still acting.
In the multiplicity of his business cares he never
neglects his duties as a citizen, and is one of the most active and
interested members of the Titusville Relief Association and the Titusville
Industrial Association, of the latter being one of the board of managers. He
is also one of the trustees and treasurer for the Titusville Tannery. In
politics, he stanchly upholds the Republican party platform, believing in
protection for American industries and sound money.
June 30, 1891, Mr. Hyde married Miss Verna Emery, and
their only child, Helen Hyde, was born November 18, 1892. Mrs. Hyde is a
daughter of the late Hon. David Emery and Susan Angeline Emery, the former
an extensive oil producer and merchant of Crawford county for many years,
and known far and wide throughout this region as a man of unusual ability
and judgment.
Our county and its people:
a historical and memorial record of Crawford County, Pennsylvania by Samuel
P. Bates, 1899, pages 699-701.
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