BIOGRAPHY: Frank E. FARRELL, 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. 105-6 ____________________________________________________________ FRANK E. FARRELL, Morrellville, Pennsylvania, an enterprising business man, and a member of the firm of Farrell & Kredel, who own and conduct drug stores at Johnstown and Morrellville, is a son of John and Hannah (Grigsby) Farrell, and was born in the city of Philadelphia, April 26, 1865. In the latter part of the eighteenth century we have record of Edward Farrell, of French lineage, as a resident of County Longford, Ireland, where his son, John Farrell, was born. John Farrell left his native island at an early age, settling in Baltimore, where he learned blacksmithing and the trade of machinist. After working for a short time as a machinist he joined the tide of westward emigration, and became a resident of the State of Ohio, where he soon came into prominence as an extensive contractor and road builder. He constructed the present main streets of Zanesville and Cambridge, Ohio, and built in that state over twenty miles of the "National road," or "old pike," besides completing many other contracts of important pieces of work. He married Mary Grace, and died in 1852, leaving a family of eight children, four sons and four daughters, all of whom are now deceased, except one daughter and a son, John H. Farrell, the father of the subject of this sketch. John H. Farrell was born at Somerset, Ohio, November 15, 1840, received his education in the public schools and the Catholic parochial schools of Zanesville, that state. He learned milling and millwrighting, in which lines he was actively engaged in the east and south until May 31, 1889. In 1895 he opened his present grocery store at Morrellville. He made a specialty of changing flouring mills from the old burr to the new roller process, and had charge in New York of the first full roller process that was built in this country until the miller engaged was able to operate it. He managed and constructed roller process mills in Philadelphia, New York, Richmond, Atlanta, Brooklyn, and other cities. In 1889 he came from Selins Grove, this State, to Johnstown, and acted as manager of the Cambria Flouring mills, which were destroyed by the great flood of that year. He is frequently consulted and asked for advice by those who are constructing flouring-mills in this and other states. Mr. Farrell is a republican in politics, and evinced his patriotism during the Civil War, serving for two months in the Seventy-eighth regiment of Ohio volunteers, where he acted as drill-master. A part of the time during the war he was stationed at Philadelphia as inspector of flour. In 1864, Mr. Farrell married Hannah Grigsby, a daughter of James M. Grigsby, a resident of Zanesville, Ohio, and to their union was born one child, Frank E. Farrell, who received his education in the public and private schools of Zanesville, Ohio; Brooklyn, New York, and Philadelphia, this State. He spent several months in the then great dry goods house of Hood, Bonbright & Co., in Philadelphia, and then entered the drug store of D. R. Baird, of Johnstown, which he and his present partner, Kredel, purchased in March, 1889. They also established a branch drug store at Morrellville, and two months later the great flood swept their Johnstown property away. In a short time they reopened their Johnstown drug business in their present establishment, at No. 114 Clinton street. Mr. Farrell now personally supervises the Morrellville branch and Mr. Kredel attends to the Johnstown branch of their extensive business. They carry a large stock of pure and fresh drugs and give special attention to the filling of recipes and compounding of physicians' prescriptions. On April 28, 1896, Mr. Farrell was united in marriage with Bessie Somerville, a daughter of Edwin Somerville, a resident and well-known citizen of West Taylor township, Cambria county. In politics Mr. Farrell has always been a republican, though neither partisan nor politician. He received his pharmaceutical education in the Chicago College of Pharmacy. He is persistent and pushing, and has achieved signal success in the large business that he has built up in such a short time.