BIOGRAPHY: Thomas J. ITELL, 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. 328-30 ____________________________________________________________ THOMAS J. ITELL, one of the young and rising lawyers of Johnstown and central Pennsylvania, is a son of John and Lucinda (Eckenrod) Itell, and was born July 4, 1862, in that part of Washington township which is now Portage township, Cambria county, Pennsylvania. Mr. Itell was reared on a farm, attended the common schools, and after teaching three terms entered the State Normal school at Indiana, Pennsylvania, from which he was graduated two years later in the class of 1885. The next year he became principal of the Millville high school, which position he resigned in 1888 to assume the principalship of the Conemaugh borough public schools. In connection with these positions he made use of part of his vacations for conducting teachers' normal classes. His active labors created for a time as a teacher on October 20, 1889, when he became a special reporter on the Johnstown Daily Democrat. In the latter capacity he interviewed many of the prominent men of the boroughs of Johnstown, Conemaugh, Millville, Cambria, Woodvale, Prospect and Grubbtown, upon the question of consolidating them into the present city of Johnstown. Several of these interviews were published in the Democrat every day for two weeks preceding the election in November, 1889, and contributed largely in influencing the favorable vote cast at that election for city organization. After the city of Johnstown was organized on April 1, 1890, he served for two years as principal of the Iron street school, and on June 1, 1892, became a student in the law office of James M. Walters, Esq., at that time solicitor for the City of Johnstown. He was admitted to the Cambria county bar on August 20, 1894, and immediately opened an office in Johnstown, where he has built up a fine law practice. Energetic and progressive, he is a careful student and a hard worker and belongs to that class of men whose success is solely due to their own efforts. In politics Mr. Itell is a democrat, having been one of the nominees of his party for the legislature in 1896, but shared the fate of his party in being defeated. On May 16, 1889, Thomas J. Intell married a school-teacher, Mary C. McMullen, a daughter of H.A. McMullen, of Johnstown, the wedding taking place in St. John's Roman Catholic church of Johnstown. To their union have been born two children, a son and a daughter; John Bryant, and Marie C., aged respectively, now, six and four years. John Itell, the father of the subject of this sketch, was born August 20, 1831, in Allegheny township, Cambria county, and commenced life with no capital but good health, stout hands, and unquestioned honesty. By hard labor and good management he has saved a competence, and owns, in Portage township, two farms, upon one of which he has resided for the last thirty-three years. He is an up- to-date farmer and a consistent member of the Catholic church. On June 18, 1861, he married Lucinda Eckenrod, who was of German descent and a member of the Catholic church, and who died August 15, 1875, at thirty-seven years of age. She was a daughter of Peter Eckenrod, a native of Berks county, Pennsylvania, who came to Allegheny township, Cambria county, and followed farming until his death, which occurred in January, 1870, when in the seventy-first year of his age. John Itell is a son of Joseph Itell, who was born in the canton of Aargau, Switzerland, December 9, 1804, and in 1816 came too this country with his father John Itell, Sr., who died at Morrison's Cove, Blair county, at the ripe old age of ninety-six years. After coming to this country Joseph Itell passed several years in southeastern Pennsylvania and in the State of Delaware, and in 1827 came to Cambria county, where he has followed farming every since. In 1830 he married Catherine Eberly, of French parentage and a native of Loretto, this county. Joseph Itell has always been a democrat in politics and a member of church. He bears up well under the weight of his ninety-two years, and comes of a family noted for its longevity. The Itell family had long been resident in Switzerland, and there spelled their name Eitel.