Bios: Samuel Weiser, 1816- aft 1889: Allegheny Co Contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Brandy Roberts. deejay1@concentric.net USGENWEB NOTICE: Printing this file by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged, as long as all notices and submitter information is included. Any other use, including copying files to other sites requires permission from the submitters PRIOR to uploading to any other sites. We encourage links to the state and county table of contents. ____________________________________________________________ Extracted from The History of Allegheny County, PA. publication in 1889 by A. Warner & Co. At the time of publication, Samuel Rowe Welser was still alive. The following quote is from pages 341 and 342 of the book. "Samuel Rowe Welser, retired McKeesport, was born in Philadelphia on April 15, 1816, and is of American extraction. When he was twelve years of age, he joined, as a juggler and tumbler, Raymond and Warings' circus, with which and other principle shows he traveled in this country until 1848. He then went to South America as a clown for the circus of Banks, Archer & Rockwell, returning by way of the West Indies. Archer died at Matanzas, Cuba, May 24, 1850, and the show disbanded in Charleston, S.C. soon afterward. The same year Mr. Welser joined Dan Rice's show as a clown, traveling with him from July, 1850 until March, 1851. He was afterward engaged with various leading companies until 1864, his last two seasons being with S.O. Wheeler & Co., Boston. In 1860, Mr Welser was the first and only man to drive four geese hitched to a common tub three feet in diameter down the Monongahela river from Brownsville to McKeesport, PA. In 1854 he came to McKeesport to train horses for Taylor & Wolf's circus, and in 1857 he married Mrs. Julia Stacy, a widow of means, who died February 7, 1886, leaving our subject all her fortune, which included cash, bank-stock and eight houses on Diamond Square and Market Street. Mr. Welser retired from the circus ring in 1864 and has been a resident of McKeesport since 1854. He is a prominent member of the I.O.O.F. and encampment, with which he has been identified thirty years; politically he is a republican."