Clark County OhArchives Biographies.....Thomas, John H. October 4, 1826 - January 23, 1901 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/oh/ohfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Teresa Dillard teresajd57@earthlink.net September 12, 2005, 1:31 pm Author: From: “A Standard History of Springfield and Clark County, Ohio, Volume II” Prepared Under the Editorial Supervision of Dr. Benjamin F. Prince, President Clark County Historical Society, The American Historical Society Chicago and New York, 1922 John H. Thomas, who died at his home in the City of Springfield on the 23d of January, 1901, was a man whose character and achievement marked him as one of the leading citizens of his home city and country and as one of the essentially representative men of Ohio. Mr. Thomas was born at Middletown, Maryland, October 4, 1826, and was a son of Jacob and Sophia (Bowlus) Thomas. As a youth he was given exceptional educational advantages, as gauged by the average standards of the day, and in 1849 he graduated from Marshall College at Mercersburg, Pennsylvania. In 1861, he became a student of law in the office of Hon. S. W. Andrews at Columbus, Ohio, and later continued his technical studies under the preceptorship of William White, who was at the time one of the ablest and most influential members of the bar at Springfield. After his admission to the bar, Mr. Thomas was engaged in the practice of his profession at Springfield about two years, and gained secure place in the confidence and esteem f this community, the while he made an excellent record in the work of his profession. His popularity was indicated by his election to the office of county recorder of Clark County within a comparatively short time after he had here established his residence, and he was the incumbent of this office at the time of the inception of Springfield’s remarkable development as an industrial center. His practical provision of future possibilities enabled him to take advantage of opportunities here presented ina business way. He became senior member of the firm of Thomas & Mast, in which his coadjutor was the late P. P. Mast, and they were among the first here to engage in the manufacturing of agricultural implements – a field of enterprise in which Springfield has become one of the leading industrial centers of the United States. Mr. Thomas retired for the firm in 1872, after the enterprise had been developed into one of important and prosperous order, and in 1874 he resumed his active alliance with local manufacturing interests by organizing a firm in which his sons, William S. and Findley B., became his associates. The business has been continued with unequivocal success during the long intervening years, and in the manufacturing of all kinds of agricultural implements the Thomas Manufacturing Company is today one of the important industrial concerns of Springfield. Mr. Thomas was significantly a man of thought and action, and his versatility of talent led to his benignant influence being extended prominently into civic and political avenues. In 1868 he was the democratic nominee for representative of this district in the United States Congress, but was unable to overcome the great and normal republican majority in the district. When United States senators were elected by the Legislatures of the respective states, Mr. Thomas became a candidate for the office, his successful opponent having been the late Hon. Calvin S. Brice. Mr. Thomas became a man of wealth and influence, but he ever had a high sense of personal stewardship and realized the objective responsibilities which success imposes. Thus he was most liberal in the support of Charitable and philanthropic agencies and in this connection one of the most noteworthy of his benefactions was his financial gift which made possible the establishing and maintaining of the Mitchell-Thomas Hospital at Springfield. In 1854, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Thomas and Miss Mary Bonser, the daughter of Hon. Jacob Bonser, of Chillicothe, Ohio, and she preceded hom to the life eternal. They are survived by four children: William S., Findley B., Nellie (Mrs. Augustus N. Suimmers) and Mabel (Mrs. L. P. Matthews.) File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/oh/clark/bios/thomas265bs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.poppet.org/ohfiles/ File size: 4.6 Kb