BIO: John C. McCAULEY, Beaver County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja & Joe Patterson Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/beaver.html http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/beaver/bios/bbios.htm Index for this bio book. _________________________________________________________________ BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES. This Volume Contains Biographical Sketches of Leading Citizens of Beaver County, Pennsylvania. Buffalo, N.Y., Chicago, Ill.: Biographical Publishing Company, 1899, pp. 163-164. _________________________________________________________________ DR. JOHN C. McCAULEY. The borough of Rochester. as regards her practitioners of medicine, is unsurpassed by any other in the state of Pennsylvania. There are located within its limits, men who have practiced for many years and who have attained far more than local distinction, being classified with the leading men of the district. Standing prominently to the front is the gentleman whose name heads these lines, a representative of the younger generation of physicians. He is young in years, but hard and continued study in a renowned medical institution, combined with a natural bent for the profession, has given him that skill which ordinarily requires years of experience to acquire. He is in high standing in Rochester, and among his large num- 164 BOOK OF BIOGRAPHIES ber of patients are numbered men of prominence throughout this section of the state. He is a native of Rochester, and is a son of Leander and Martha M. (Andrews) McCauley. David McCauley, the great-grandfather of our subject, was born in County Armagh, Ireland, and lived there until his death. His wife; Jane (Corran), with her son Robert and her other children, came to America in 1819, settling in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. Robert McCauley, who was the grandfather of the subject hereof, was twenty-one years of age when he came to this country. He possessed a superior education, and his vocation in life was that of an instructor, teaching in Pittsburg and in Sewickley township, Beaver county, Pennsylvania. In 1825, he purchased a farm of 250 acres in New Sewickley township, which is now owned by his children, and there resided until his death at the age of seventy years. He married Mary Mitchell, a daughter of John and Elizabeth (Patterson) Mitchell, who died at the age of eighty-two, and their children were: John; David C.; Leander; Robert P.; James; Elizabeth, the wife of James Mathews; Mary, who became the wife of Dr. S. H. Andrews; Emiline; and Martha, who married Joseph Briggs. Mr. McCauley was an active Democrat in his day, and served as assessor and in other township offices. Religiously, he was a member of the Presbyterian church. Leander McCauley attended the public schools and Freedom academy, after which he engaged as a teacher in the schools of Beaver county and also in the state of Ohio. In 1857, he removed to Williams county, Ohio, where he purchased a saw mill, and operated it for a period of five years. He then took up carpentering and pattern making, and later carried on farming on the old homestead for twenty-one years. In 1897, he retired to the town of Rochester, where he erected him a fine home and has since lived. He married Martha M. Andrews, a daughter of John and Elizabeth (Harnit) Andrews, of Enon Valley, Lawrence county, Pa., and four children were born to them, as follows: Wilfred James, who died in infancy; John C., the subject hereof; Mary M., who died at the age of sixteen years; and E. S. H., a physician and surgeon, of Beaver. Religiously, the family are Presbyterians. Dr. John Corran McCauley, after completing his preliminary education in the public schools, began the study of medicine with J. S. Boyd, M. D., of New Brighton, Pennsylvania. He entered into his work with characteristic energy, and in 1890 was graduated from the Homeopathic Medical College, of Cleveland, fully qualified for his chosen profession. He immediately located at Rochester, where he succeeded to the practice of Dr. G. H. Smith. He has built up an extensive patronage, and enjoys the confidence and good will of his fellow-citizens to the fullest extent. In 1893, he built a fine residence in Rochester, with an office in connection. He is a member of the Beaver County Homeopathic Medical Society; the State Homeopathic Medical Society; and the American Institute of Homeopathy. He is also a member of the board of censors of the Cleveland Homeopathic Medical College. He is also on the staff of the Beaver Valley Hospital. Dr. McCauley was united in marriage with Jennie C. Parks, a daughter of Theodore Parks, of New Sewickley township, Beaver county, and they have one child, Mary E., born March 28, 1897.