BIOGRAPHY: John F. BREHM, Cambria County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by David Monahan. 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. 236-7 ____________________________________________________________ John F. BREHM JOHN F. BREHM, a successful farmer of West Taylor township, who is largely engaged in market gardening, is a son of Frederick and Caroline (Rinebolt) Brehm, and was born at Cambria city, now Johnstown, Cambria county, Pennsylvania, July 8, 1855. Frederick Brehm was born and reared in Germany, which he left at twenty- seven years of age to come to Cambria city, now Johnstown, where he followed his trade as carpenter for nine years. He then removed to a farm in West Taylor township, and was engaged in market and truck farming up to the time of his death, which occurred March 8, 1893, when he was in the sixty-ninth year of his age. He was a hard-working and well-respected man, who had a large circle of friends. He was a patriotic citizen, and served three months as a soldier in the Union army. Mr. Brehm married Caroline Rinebolt, of Ben's Creek, now in the sixty-sixth year of her age, and a resident of Johnstown, where she is a member of the Methodist Episcopal church. Her father, George Rinebolt, was a native of Germany, and a resident of this county for many years before his death, in 1886, at eighty-two years of age. He was a German Lutheran; served as an engineer for the Cambria Iron company for many years, and married Catherine Shainhair, who is well known all over the city of Johnstown, where she still resides, a very active and well-preserved woman for the weight of her eighty-five years. John F. Brehm grew to manhood in West Taylor township, on the farm, where he was carefully trained in all farming employments. He received his education in the common schools, and then turned his attention to farming and market gardening, in which lines of labor he has met with success. He owns a good farm of thirty-six acres, on which he has resided continuously since 1877. Mr. Brehm is in his political views a republican, and while a strong advocate of the principles of his party, is never an aspirant for party favors, his time and energies being given rather to his daily routine of farming and market gardening. On December 21, 1876, Mr. Brehm wedded Mahala Rogers. To this union were born seven children, three sons and four daughters: Annie M.; Charles J.; Earnest; Gertrude E.; Wilder; Florence Helen; and Margaret F. Mrs. Brehm is a daughter of David Rogers, and a granddaughter of David Rogers, Sr., who was a native of Scotland, and a Seven-Day Baptist, and settled in Somerset county, where he reared a large family, and died at Shade Furnace, aged ninety-eight years. David Rogers came from Somerset to Cambria county when a young man, and is now a resident of West Taylor township. His wife was formerly Mary Berkebile, who is now in the fifty-fourth year of her age, and is a daughter of Jesse Berkebile, who was of German descent, and died in his native county of Somerset in 1867, when in the sixty-eighth year of his age.