Bedford County PA Archives Biographies.....Sams, John W. ************************************************ 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 JOHN W. SAMS, who has an untarnished record for service in the Civil War, is a prominent citizen of East providence, Bedford County, Pa., where he has held various township offices, discharging the duties thereof with faithfulness and efficiency. A son of Andrew and Mary (Welch) Sams, he was born March 18, 1821, in Fulton County, Pennsylvania, where his grandfather Sams, who emigrated from Germany to Pennsylvania when a young man, was one of the earliest settlers. Andrew Sams lived in Fulton County until 1826, when he came with his wife and children to Bedford County, and settled in Monroe, where he remained five years. In 1831 he took up land in East Providence, and by dint of persistent toil partly cleared the farm now owned and occupied by his son, John W. Sams. He married Mary Welch, whose father, Francis Welch, an Irishman by birth and breeding, emigrated to this country at an early day, and for fifty-two years prior to his death was a Justice of the Peace in Fulton County, Pennsylvania. She died on the home farm March 25, 1856, and he survived her but little more than three years, passing away July 2, 1859. John W. Sams has lived in East Providence township since a boy of ten years, and was here educated. He attended first a subscription school, which was held in a rudely constructed log cabin, having slab seats resting upon wooden pegs ranged around the sides of the room, boards fastened to the rough-hewn logs by wooden hinges furnishing desks for the children to write upon. He was afterward a pupil in one of the first public schools organized in this section of the State. He has been engaged in agricultural pursuits from his earliest youth, and, having succeeded to the ownership of the parental homestead, has a well-appointed farm of eighty acres, on which he has inaugurated the more valuable improvements. On August 28, 1864, he enlisted in Company K, Two Hundred and Eighth Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry, in which he served as a Corporal. With the Army of the James he participated in many engagements, including among others the battle at Fort Steadman, on March 25, 1865. A few days later, on April 2, in the works before Petersburg, he was under fire sixteen hours, bravely returning shot after shot. That a ball sped from his rifle killed the Confederate General, A. P. Hill, is a fact substantiated by an eye witness, the Captain of Company E, Two Hundred and Eighth Pennsylvania. On June 1, 1865, he was mustered out of service, and has since resided on his homestead. He is a straight Republican in politics. The office of School Director he held for many terms, that of clerk of the township election board for fifteen consecutive years, for a similar period serving as Justice of the Peace. Since 1843 he has been identified with the Christian church. On November 25, 1851, Mr. Sams married Miss Rachel Myers, a daughter of George and Catherine (Enslow) Myers, late of East Providence. She was a woman of many Christian virtues and a consistent member of the Lutheran church. She died July 22, 1895, in the seventy-second year of her age, leaving two children, namely: Harriet V., wife of Augustus Foor, of East Providence township; and Martha M. C., who has charge of her father's household. Source: Bedford Biographical Review, 1899, Bedford Co., Pa