BIOGRAPHY: John E. HAGEY, Cambria County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Lynne Canterbury and Diann Olsen. Portions of this book were transcribed by Clark Creery, Martha Humenik, Betty Mirovich and Sharon Ringler. 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/cambria/ ____________________________________________________________ From Wiley, Samuel T., ed. Biographical and Portrait Cyclopedia of Cambria County, Pennsylvania. Philadelphia: Union Publishing Co., 1896, p. 255-6 ____________________________________________________________ JOHN E. HAGEY, a man of high standing, and the general manager of Penn Traffic company of the city of Johnstown, is a son of David and Margaret (Kissinger) Hagey, and was born at Martinsburg, Blair county, Pennsylvania, March 8, 1853. The Hagey family is of German origin, and settled in pioneer days in Huntingdon county, where Jacob Hagey, the paternal grandfather of the subject of this sketch, was born, in Woodcock valley. From this valley he went to Marietta, Ohio, where he died in 1855, aged seventy-three years. David Hagey (father) was born in Huntingdon county, December 13, 1825, and is still a resident of Martinsburg, Blair county, to which place he removed in 1850. David Hagey learned the trade of stone-mason, which he followed until some fifteen years ago, and was engaged for many years in building and contracting. He is a member of the German Reformed church, and wedded Margaret Kissinger, who was a native of Martinsburg, and died there July 27, 1884, aged fifty-one years. David Kissinger was of German origin, and after learning the trade of tailor at Reading, removed to Martinsburg, where he died at seventy years of age. John E. Hagey passed the early years of his life at his native place and at Fredericksburg, in the same county, receiving his education in the common schools, where he devoted his attention chiefly to those branches essential to success in business. At sixteen years of age he left the school-room to enter the great school of business life as a clerk in a general mercantile establishment, where he so thoroughly fitted himself for his selected line of life-work that, in October, 1882, he received the position of purchasing agent for the Penn Iron and Mining company, whose plant was located at Vulcan, Michigan. Four years afterwards Mr. Hagey was made general manager of their mines, in which capacity he served until July, 1891, when he resigned to accept his present position as general manager of the Penn Traffic company, Limited, of Johnstown. The stores of this company are extensive, and Mr. Hagey has a regular force of one hundred employees under his personal control in the different departments, which owe a large part of their prosperous upbuilding and present prosperity to his efficient management and careful supervision. He is a republican in politics, and a regular attendant of the Presbyterian church. While not a politician in the generally accepted sense of that term, yet, when only twenty-one years of age, he was elected as auditor of Blair county, and held that office successfully for a term of three years. His early inclination toward business pursuits, instead of professional or political life, was not only characteristic of his special qualifications for industrial or commercial enterprises, but was indicative of the perseverance that is always the forerunner of success. On September 17, 1871, Mr. Hagey wedded Mary N. Brumbaugh, a daughter of Rev. G. W. Brumbaugh, of Fredericksburg, Blair county. Mr. and Mrs. Hagey have one child living, a daughter named Carrie.