Bedford County PA Archives Biographies.....Nycum, Simon ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Judy Banja jbanja@msn.com May 2003 SIMON NYCUM, one of the prominent citizens of East Providence, Pa., is a prosperous farmer, enterprising business man, and able financier, residing at Ray's Hill. A son of the late John Nycum, he was born December 25, 1818, in Snake Spring, Bedford County, where his paternal grandfather, William Nycum, was a pioneer settler. John Nycum removed from Colerain township, this county, where he lived a few months, to Ray's Hill in 1820 or soon after. A man of untiring energy, willing to seize every advantageous opportunity to improve his financial condition, he bought a tract of land in East Providence, Pa.; and in addition to general farming, he also established himself as merchant, and opened a hotel at Ray's Hill. He managed each industry with ease, and in 1838 further enlarged his operations by erecting a tannery on his farm near his store. This he conducted several years in conjunction with his other work. He also found some time to devote to local matters, serving as Auditor of the township several years. In his early life he was a Whig and later one of the stanchest supporters of the Republican party. He died in 1879, aged eighty-one years. Of his union with Mary Shatzer, of Lebanon County, Pennsylvania, several children were born, three of whom survive, namely: Simon, the subject of this biography; Andrew J., of Everett, Pa.; and John, of Chicago, Ill. Simon Nycum came with his parents to Ray's Hill when about three years of age. A year or two later he began to prepare for the battle of life by entering the subscription school of the district, which was held in a rude log house, furnished with slab seats that were supported by wooden pegs, the writing desks for the older scholars being made of boards fastened up against the sides of the building. He afterward completed his education at an academy in the town of Bedford. While yet a youth he learned the necessary details of general farming on the parental homestead, on which the larger part of his life has been passed. He also assisted his father in the tannery, and by the time he was of age was so thoroughly acquainted with its management that he was given the sole charge of it. He superintended its operations several years, after which he resigned his work to his father. From 1840 until 1847 Mr. Nycum conducted a hotel in addition to farming, and from 1847 till 1867 he ran a grist and flour mill, known as Nycum's Mill, on Brush Creek, East Providence township. About the year 1848 he built a tannery near the mill. This he operated for twenty years or so, in the meantime neglecting not the care and improvement of his homestead property. During these latter years he was engaged largely in agricultural pursuits. The success he has met in his various lines of industry shows that he possesses versatility of talent and a marked degree of executive ability. When the Bedford County almshouse was established, Mr. Nycum was one of the seven men appointed by the governor to select a suitable site and superintend its construction. In politics he is an uncompromising Republican. Fraternally, he is a member of Ray's Hill Lodge, I.O.O.F., to which he has belonged ever since its organization. On February 13, 1838, Mr. Nycum married Mary A., daughter of Joseph Sparks, an early settler of East Providence, Pa. She died February 6, 1892, having borne him ten children, namely: Martha, deceased; William H., a resident of Kossuth County, Iowa; John Q., of Ray's Hill; George W., of Mount Carroll, Ill.; Henry C., of Wilkinsburg, Pa.; Joseph W. S., of Wilkinsburg; Simon F., of East Providence township, Pa.; Mary E., wife of the Rev. John W. Poffenberger, pastor of the Lutheran church at Vandergrift, Westmoreland County, Pa.; Susan E., wife of John S. Hershberger, of Everett, Pa.; and Albert L., of Bedford, Pa. Mr. Nycum is a Deacon of the Lutheran church, of which Mrs. Nycum was also a member. Source: Bedford Biographical Review, 1899, Bedford Co., Pa