Bios: STEVENSON, William Marshall : Pittsburgh, Allegheny Co, PA Contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Marta Burns. marta43@juno.com USGENWEB ARCHIVES (tm) NOTICE All documents placed in the USGenWeb Archives remain the property of the contributors, who retain publication rights in accordance with US Copyright Laws and Regulations. In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, these documents may be used by anyone for their personal research. They may be used by non-commercial entities so long as all notices and submitter information are included. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit. Any other use, including copying files to other sites, requires permission from the contributors PRIOR to uploading to the other sites. The submitter has given permission to the USGenWeb Archives to store the file permanently for free access. http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ____________________________________________________ William Marshall Stevenson, librarian for the Carnegie Free Library of Allegheny County, was born in Johnstown, Penna, November 30, 1855. He is of Scotch Irish ancestry and can trace his family history back to Robert Stevenson, who emigrated from Scotland to Ireland in 1677, and was a very prominent man in his day. He is the son of Ross Stevenson and Martha Ann Harbison Stevenson, the father born in Strabane, Ireland, November 12, 1814, and died in Washington, Penna, January 10, 1893, and the mother born at West Lebanon, Penna, in 1831 and is still living. The family consisted of six sons and one daughter: Lizzie Hurst Stevenson, now Mrs Jerome W Potts; Matthew Harbison Stevenson, a practicing attorney of the Pittsburgh bar; Thomas John Stevenson, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, Hannibal, Missouri; Robert Francis Stevenson, a prominent businessman of Washington, Penna; Henry Patterson Stevenson who died May, 1892; and William Marshall Stevenson, the subject of this sketch. Mr Stevenson was graduated with honors from Washington and Jefferson College in 1876, having acted as a tutor in mathematics in his alma mater during his senior year. For two years after his graduation he was instructor in ancient and modern languages in the Placerville Academy, in California, and for the next two years studied music and languages at the leading institutions of the continent, chiefly at the University of Leipsic, the Conservatory at Dresden, and the College of France, Paris. While there he was under the instruction of some of the noted scholars, among them being Breal, the philologist, and Renan, the great French critic. Upon his return to the United States, Mr Stevenson was called to the chair of Greek and Latin at the Pittsburgh Central High School which position he held for four years, resigning to take up the study of law. He entered the office of John D Schafer, was admitted to the bar one year later, and from 1885 to 1890 spent his time equally in the practice of law and in journalism, in the latter case on the staff of the New York Tribune, and later a writer for the Chicago Mail, the Chronicle Telegraph, the Times, and the Commercial Gazette, of Pittsburgh. His connection with the Pittsburg newspapers was in the capacity of musical and dramatic editor and special reporter on legal topics. In 1889 he again visited Europe, this time in the study of the Spanish language and literature, and shortly after his return was elected librarian of the Carnegie Free Library of Allegheny, the first public, tax-supported library founded by Mr Carnegie. Mr Stevenson came to his position when the library had not one volume on its shelves and with noone to help him in his task of organization, and it now contains 50,000 volumes catalogued, and 10,000 pamphlets, documents, and duplicates not catalogued. In 1899 he secured from Mr Carnegie an additional gift of $25,000 for additions and improvements. Mr Stevenson was a delegate to the international conference of librarians held in London in 1897, is a member of the American and Keystone state library associations, the Pennsylvania free library commission, was first president of the West Pennsylvania library club, an honorary member of the Western Pennsylvania historical society, and of the Deutscher Lese Verein. Mr Stevenson is very versatile in his attainments, speaks German, French, Italian, Spanish, and Russian fluently, reads Dutch, Danish, Swedish, Norwegian, Portuguese, Modern Greek and Polish, with the aid of a dictionary, and has studied Sanskrit, Gothic, Turkish, Finnish, Arabic and Chinese. His literary work has been mostly contributions to periodicals and local histories, and in 1899 he published a sketch, "Mr Carnegie and his Libraries," which met with very favorable and enthusiastic reception. In politics he is a republican and in religion a Presbyterian. He has never married, but, as he expresses it, "is wedded to his work." Memoirs of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania; personal and genealogical. Vol. 1