W. H. CARMAN, liveryman, Meadville, was born
in this county in 1847, and is a son of Aaron and Elizabeth (Carr) Carman,
the father a native of New Jersey, a carpenter by trade, and who came with
his parents to this county at an early day; the mother of German and
Scotch origin and a native of Pennsylvania. Our subject, the eldest of a
family of seven children, was reared on a farm, acquired a common school
education, and at the age of fifteen went on the New York, Pennsylvania &
Ohio Railroad as fireman. After acting in this capacity for three and a
half years he was promoted to engineer, ran the lightning train on the
Emlenton, Shippensville & Clarion Railroad and has been credited with
making, while on that road, the fastest time ever made on a narrow gauge
railroad. After five years of this life,
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| Photo from the
Centennial edition of the Daily Tribune-Republican, 1888. |
Mr. Carman embarked in the hotel and livery business,
and in 1879 came to Meadville to engage in his present business, that of
proprietor of the Park Avenue Livery Stable, a two-story structure 50x100
feet, where he has a fine array of roadsters, elegant carriages and wagons
of all descriptions. Our subject was married in 1880 to Miss Turilla
Phipps, a native of Pennsylvania. Mr. Carman is a member of the K. of H.,
A. 0. U. W., and K. of P.
History of Crawford County,
Pennsylvania: containing a
history of the county, its townships, towns, villages, schools,
churches, industries, etc., portraits of early settlers and prominent
men, biographies, history of Pennsylvania, statistical and miscellaneous
matter, Chicago: Warner, Beers & Co., 1885, page 718
.