Progressive Men of the State of Montana - Illustrated - 1902) USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. Files may be printed or copied for personal use only. "List transcribed and organized by Jack Hannah, JHannah782@aol.com All rights reserved." Page 1572 ROBERT T. HANNAH. - All lands have contributed to the development and civilization of the great northwest of the United States, and no country has made more valuable contributions than Scotland. In Glasgow, the leading commercial port of that country, Robert T. Hannah was born on February 3, 1853. His parents were John and Mary (Thompson) Hannah, both Scotch by nativity, and emigrants from that country to the United States in 1865. They settled at Chicago, where the father followed the business of a merchant tailor for many years, and is now living retired. The mother died there in 1884. Mr. Hannah was educated in the public schools of Chicago, and after leaving school served an apprenticeship of four years at the Vulcan Iron Works as a machinist. From 1875 to 1881 he worked at his trade as a journeyman in Chicago; and from 1881 to 1883 was employed in the railroad shops at Las Vegas and Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Dodge City, Kan. In July, 1883, he came to Livingston, Mont., and went to work in the shops of the Northern Pacific Railroad, where he remained one year, then passed the time at Forsyth and Glendive until 1885, when he located at Billings and has been employed in the machine shops of the Northern Pacific Railroad. In politics Mr. Hannah is a Democrat, and has been at times very active in the service of his party. He served as city councilman from the Second Ward in Billings, and has always manifested a lively interest in the welfare of the community in which he happened to be living. Fraternally he is identified with the Masonic order and the United Workmen, in the former holding membership in Ashlar Lodge No. 29, at Billings, and in the latter in Nickerson Lodge No. 21, at Nickerson, Kan. His first marriage occurred at Chicago in 1880, when he was united with Miss Margaret McEntee, a native of Madison, Wis., where she died in 1881, leaving one son, Robert, who is now twenty-one years old. Mr. Hannah contracted a second marriage in 1886, being united on that occasion to Miss Amelia McEntee, of Madison, Wis., a sister of his first wife, and they have three children: Margaret Marie, aged fifteen; Gertrude May, aged ten; and John Malcolm, aged five.