Genealogy Data Page 353 (Notes Pages)

For privacy reasons, Date of Birth and Date of Marriage for persons believed to still be living are not shown.

Richards, James (b. 1818, d. AFT JUL 1880)

Note: leaving a large family
Census: Date: 1850
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1870
Place: Amity, Erie, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1880
Place: Amity, Erie, Pennsylvania

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Richards, Robert (b. 1821, d. 1857)
Occupation: Date: 1850
Place: School teacher
Census: Date: 1850
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania

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Richards, Lucinda (b. 1825, d. 28 FEB 1901)
Census: Date: 1850
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1860
Place: Chambersburg, Franklin, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1870
Place: Shippensburg, Cumberland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1880
Place: Shippensburg, Cumberland, Pennsylvania

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Richards, Thomas (b. ABT 1819, d. AFT 17 JUL 1870)
Note: a distant relative
Census: Date: 1860
Place: Chambersburg, Franklin, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1870
Place: Shippensburg, Cumberland, Pennsylvania

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Elder, Harriet Eliza (b. 27 DEC 1820, d. 12 SEP 1890)
Census: Date: 1860
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1870
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1880
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania

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Cannon, John N (b. 2 JUL 1819, d. 27 FEB 1886)
Census: Date: 1860
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1870
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1880
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania

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Cannon, Mary Elder (b. 23 DEC 1849, d. 13 JUN 1864)
Census: Date: 1860
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania

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Cannon, Sarah Jane (b. 8 SEP 1852, d. ?)
Census: Date: 1860
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1870
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1880
Place: New Alexandria, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1900
Place: Simpson, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1920
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania

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Cannon, Tirzah Melvina (b. 9 MAY 1855, d. ?)
Census: Date: 1860
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1870
Place: Derry, Westmoreland, Pennsylvania
Census: Date: 1900
Place: Elm Grove, Louisa, Iowa

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Elder, Thomas McConnell Reverend (b. 24 MAR 1826, d. ?)
Note: resides in Armstrong county, Pa.

Thomas McConnell Elder, third son of Thomas and Mary (McConnell) Elder was born March 24, 1826. He taught several successful terms of school in Westmoreland and Indiana counties, Pennsylvania. He commenced the study of divinity under the late Rev. James Milligan, D.D., and finished his course in the Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary of Allegheny City. He was licensed to preach in 1858, ordained and installed over churches in Indiana and Armstrong counties was afterwards called to Boston, Massachusetts, and finally located in Armstrong county, Pennsylvania, where he has resided for forty-seven years. He was one of the most progressive men of Armstrong county, and in 1866 founded and became first superintendent of the Pennsylvania State Soldiers Orphan School, from which he resigned in 1871. He also became part owner and editor of the "Dayton Weekly News."

REV. THOMAS McCONNELL ELDER. Among the useful and public-spirited citizens of Dayton, well respected and highly esteemed by all who know him and ever watchful for the progress and prosperity of the place where he has so long had his home, is Rev. Thomas McConnell Edler.

He was born near New Alexandria, Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, March 24, 1826, and is a son of Thomas and Mary (McConnell) Elder. His is a descendant of the Dauphin county Elder family, of whose members many were pioneer settlers of western Pennsylvania. His grandfather, Robert Elder, served five years as a soldier in the Revolutionary war, and at its close (soon after the burning of Hannastown) came to near New Alexandria, where he died many years later at the ripe age of eighty-six years. He was a cabinet-maker by trade. He settled on, and became owner of, a portion of a large body of land, still known as the "Richlands," taken up by Thomas Anderson, a relative of his. Of these lands, the tract known as "Hannasburg", descended through the mother, Mrs. Hannah Elder; the other, known as "Andersonia," by will of said Anderson.
Robert Elder was in politics a democrat, a consistent member of "Old Salem" Presbyterian church (Salem, in whose church-yard still stands an ancient gravestone marked "Thomas Anderson, aged 103 years,'") was married and survived his wife, by whom he had two children: Hannah, who married James Richards, and resided and died on part of the home tract, and Thomas, the father of the subject of this sketch.

Thomas Elder was born in Dauphin county, January 18, 1782, and in 1784 was brought by his parents to Westmoreland county, where he was engaged in agricultural pursuits until his death, in April, 1855.

He was a good citizen, a strong democrat and was a member of the old school Presbyterian church, which he left some years before his death to unite with the Reformed Presbyterian church.

On June 2, 1812, he married Mary McConnell, of Lancaster county, who was of the same religious faith as her husband. Their children were:
Violet W., born March 13, 1813; Patsey M., born September 27, 1815; Robert A., born September 22, 1817; Harriet E., born December 27, 1820; David, born September 4, 1823; Rev. Thomas M., Mary, born November 6, 1828; James M., born November 14, 1829; John M., born December 22, 1832, and William P., born April 12, 1835.

All of these children are dead except Rev. Thomas M. and John M., who still resides on the old home farm.

Mrs. Elder was born August 24, 1792, and died October 3, 1881. She was a daughter of David McConnell, a Scotch-English farmer of Lancaster county, who came to near New Alexandria, Westmoreland county, after the Revolution. He afterwards removed to Salem township, that county, where he died. He was an earnest Presbyterian, and married Martha Whitesides, January 10, 1788, by whom he had twelve children:
Daniel, Thomas W., David and Samuel, and Margaret, Prudence, Mary, Martha, Violet, Elizabeth, Hannah and Rebecca. These have now all passed awa

Thomas M. Elder was educated at Geneva college, from which he was graduated in 1853. He afterwards took a four years theological course at the Reformed Presbyterian seminary, now of Allegheny city. He has been always greatly interested in matters educational. He was the first teacher of the female seminary at Northwood, Ohio; he founded and was principal of the Loyalhanna institute for two years; he was principal of Dayton Union academy from 1862 to 1866, and in the latter was largely instrumental in establishing the Dayton Soldiers' Orphan school, of which he was principal until 1871.

He was licensed to preach the Gospel in 1858, was ordained May 11, 1859, and settled as pastor of the congregation of Rehoboth. He also supplied many important vacancies and had several important calls, among them being one to Baltimore and two to Boston, which he did not accept.

In 1863 he had charge of the mission schools of his church at Fernandina, Florida, where, in the absence of the regular chaplain, he did chaplain work for the 11th Maine Volunteers, and in 1864-65 he superintended church missions in Washington City, D. C. On account of hereditary illness he has largely withdrawn from active church work for some years past, and now lives in comfortable retirement in the village of Dayton.

On September 14, 1848, Mr. Elder was married to Tirzah Mason, daughter of Thomas Mason, of Hannastown, Pa., and the youngest of a family of seventeen children. To them were born two children, one of which died in infancy and McLeod M., a Pullman palace car conductor, now resides in Allegheny city and married to Hannah Knox.

Mrs. Elder died in the summer of 1851, and on October 10, 1854, Mr. Elder was again married, this time to Mary Parker, daughter of Mr. John Lindsay, of Philadelphia, This wife died September 12, 1868. to this second union were born three children: Tirzah T. M., wife of C. S. Marshall, a merchant of Dayton; one which died in infancy, and Argyle W., now engaged as shipping clerk with a wholesale firm in Pittsburgh and married to Edith C., daughter of C. W. Ellenberger.

Rev. T. M. Elder is a republican and was one of the early abolitionists. He has lived a busy, active life, and very many useful and important enterprises attest his industry, energy and the value of his counsel.

He is a man of fine presence and impressive manners, six feet two inches in height, two hundred and twenty-five pounds in weight, and, although gray, has still the years and ability to add other work to a very successful life. He owns a part of his father's landed estate, and two farms in Armstrong county, besides several houses and lots at Dayton. He is a partner of the mercantile firm of C. S. Marshall & Co., is president of Dayton S. O. School association, also of two oil and gas companies, and has been interested and active in every business enterprise of any importance which has existed at Dayton, where he has resided for the last thirty years.

Biographical and Historical Cyclopedia of Indiana and Armstrong Counties, 1891, pages 487-488

Rev. Thomas McConnell Elder

The grandfather of the well-known citizen of Dayton, Robert Elder [and father of Rev. Thomas McConnell Elder], was a soldier through all of those seven long years of the revolutionary war, and, soon after the close of that great struggle for liberty, moved with his family from the vicinity of Harrisburg to Westmoreland county, where he was one of the earliest settlers. He took up an exceedingly fine tract of land near New Alexandria, known as "the Richlands," which is still owned by his descendants. His son Thomas, father of the subject of this biography, who was two years old when the family settled in Westmoreland county, was born in or near Harrisburg. He was reared upon "the Richlands," and on arriving at manhood's estate married Mary McConnell, a native of Lancaster county.

Their son, Thomas McConnell Elder, was born March 24, 1826, near New Alexandria, Westmoreland county. After a good common school education he commenced a more advanced literary course under the tuition of the Rev. Dr. James Milligan, an old Scotsman of fine scholarship, who resided in the neighborhood. He was for some time engaged in school teaching at this period of his life. He was the first teacher of the female seminary at Northwood, Ohio, and principal of the Loyal Hanna Institute in Westmoreland country for two years. He then took a collegiate course at Geneva College, Logan county, Ohio, and finished in 1855. During the period he was in attendance at that college he exhibited something of the energy and influence which characterized him in after-life. He spent one summer in traveling in the western, eastern and middle states, and succeeded in raising for the college an endowment of $18,000.

After his course at the Ohio college, he spent four years at the theological seminary of the Reformed Presbyterian church at Allegheny City, graduating and being licensed to preach in 1858. He was ordained to the ministry May 11, 1859, previous to which time he had been regularly called to churches at Baltimore and Boston. He was then called to Rehoboth congregation in Armstrong county, a charge which also embraced territory in the counties of Clarion, Indiana and Jefferson, and in which two or three pastors now preach. Subsequently he received another call from Boston, one from Kossuth, Iowa, and a number from other congregations in various localities. Mr. Elder settled in Dayton about 1860. In 1862 he became principal of Dayton Union Male and Female Academy, a position which he held until 1866. In 1863 he was appointed by his church to take charge of mission schools among the freedmen at Fernandina, Florida, where he spent the summer of that year, serving also as chaplain of the 11th Regt. ME. Vols., then stationed there. In 1864 he was appointed to take charge of missionary operations in Washington, District of Columbia, where he remained until the spring of 1865. During these absences from home his place in the academy was supplied by subordinates. Returning in the spring of 1865, he resigned his position as principal of the Academy in 1866, to take charge as principal of the Dayton Soldiers' Orphans' School, which he opened in the building now known as the Exchange Hotel. During the time he was principal, buildings were erected where those now in use stand, and the school was put upon a firm and sure basis, very largely owing to his efforts. He may be called in fact the successful originator of this valuable institution. During the second year of his connection with the school, in the fall of 1867, Mr. Elder met with a very serious accident. While watching a game of baseball among the children, he was struck with great force by a heavy bat which flew from the grasp of one of the larger boys who was striking at the ball. He was knocked senseless, and for a time it was thought could not recover from the effects of the terrific blow. Providentially his life was spared, but he had received permanent injury from the concussion. The shock was very severe upon his nervous system, and he found to his sorrow that it incapacitated him in a great measure for hard and protracted study. He was thus compelled reluctantly to give up active duty as a preacher, which he had always enjoyed, and to abstain from long-continued and hard study. Shortly after this accident, in the fall of 1868, Mr. Elder met with another great misfortune -- the loss of his second wife. In consequence of the combined effects of this bereavement and of the injury which he had received, he resigned the principalship of the Orphans' School, although strongly urged to remain, in 1871. Since that time he has resided in Dayton, leading a somewhat retired life, but giving his attention to business, and still taking a deep interest in all that pertains to the welfare of his fellow man. He is still a stockholder in and a member of the board of managers of the Soldiers' Orphans' School. In 1880 he was the principal organizer of the Dayton Agricultural and Mechanical Association, and was elected its first president, which office he held for two years. Subsequently he became vice-president and now holds that office. He is also editor of the Dayton News, a recently established but prosperous local journal, which he ably conducts.

In his chosen high calling, the ministry, Rev. Elder was very successful, his labors being attended with the best results. He combined the advantages of broad and thorough scholarship with great native ability, and his discourses were interesting, instructive and full of force, logical and lucid. He is said to have possessed marked eloquence. The genial qualities of nature and the earnestness which were valuable in the varied labors of the minister outside of the pulpit have been preserved , and with his other characteristics command for him the respect and esteem of the people among whom he has dwelt, as well as render him useful to all with whom he comes in contact.

He is a man looked up to in the community where he is best known, and has an influence for good which is exerted in many ways, among others in allaying local strife and obviating litigation between neighbors. As a teacher Mr. Elder has been almost or quite as successful as a preacher, and he is held in most respectful remembrance by many who have made the beginnings of their intellectual life under his guidance. He excels most men in executive ability.

Mr. Elder was united in marriage with Miss Tirzah Mason, of Westmoreland County, September 14, 1848. One son by this marriage, M. M. Elder, is a successful business man of New Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and has a most estimable wife in Miss Hannah Knox, granddaughter of Sheriff Chambers Orr. Mr. Elder's first wife died in 1851, and upon October 10, 1854, he was joined in wedlock with his second wife, Miss Mary P. Lindsay, of Philadelphia, whose death, hitherto referred to, occurred upon September 12, 1868. She left two children: Tirzah (wife of C. S. Marshall, of the firm of C. S. Marshall & Co., Dayton), a graduate of Union Academy, and a most esteemed lady in the community, and A. W. Elder, who is pursuing a medical education and has already spent two years at Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia.

Mr. Elder is still living in Dayton, and it is to be hoped may be spared for many years. And when the time comes that he must pass away, this at least will be said of him, he was a worker of more than ordinary ability in his day and generation.

History of Armstrong County, 1883, pages 600-602
Census: Date: 1880
Place: Dayton, Armstrong, PA
Census: Date: 1860
Place: Oliver, Jefferson, PA

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