BIO: Fountain W. CRIDER, Centre County, Pennsylvania Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Wayne Barner Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/centre/ _______________________________________________ Commemorative Biographical Record of Central Pennsylvania: Including the Counties of Centre, Clearfield, Jefferson and Clarion: Containing Biographical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens, Etc. Chicago: J. H. Beers, 1898. _______________________________________________ COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD, pages 73-75 FOUNTAIN W. CRIDER. Foremost among the businessmen of the Bellefonte of today, whose enterprising handiwork in the city's progress and beauty, is conspicuously noticed in the several imposing business blocks, the pride of its citizens and the admiration of strangers which stand as monuments to his enterprise, taste and thrift, is our fellow townsman-Fountain W. Crider. Though yet a young man, Mr. Crider occupies a prominent position in the business circles of the Commonwealth, and is an example of what may be accomplished in a few years, comparatively speaking, by industry, economy and a fixed purpose with a determination to succeed. Our subject is a native of Clinton County, this COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD - 74 State, born near Lock Haven, September 7, 1845. His ancestors and the family are noticed in the sketch of his father, Philip B. Crider, which precedes this, as is also there given, in main, the history of the large manufacturing plant of P. B. Crider & Son. His early boyhood up to the age of fourteen years was passed on the farm, not unlike that of general farmer lads, receiving the benefit of the neighboring schools at the Plum Creek School House. In 1859, then a boy of fourteen years, he entered the employ of John F. Rich & Son, then operating a woolen-mill on Chatham run below Lock Haven. He had, in object, the learning the business of manufacturing woolen goods, and accomplished his purpose, remaining in the mill some three years, excepting a period of three months each year, which were reserved for attending school at Lock Haven. At eighteen he turned his attention to the business portion of his education, and began clerking in the store of J. J. Bisel & Co., of Lock Haven, and after serving for a period as salesman he became bookkeeper, and remained with them two years, during which time he made his first venture in the line of speculation, investing his savings in oil, which he lost. At the age of twenty years he entered the Eastman Business College, at Poughkeepsie, N. Y., and was graduated there from in 1865. While young Crider was deprived of much of his boyhood, he was practically schooled in business, and before reaching his majority was well equipped for the battle of life, and entered the business world not without some knowledge of the roughness of the road he was to travel. But fully prepared and eager for the fray, he launched out, and though he has by no means ever sailed under a cloudless sky, he has stood nobly at the helm, and so wisely directed the barque that he has weathered the storms encountered, and today sails under a triumphant banner upon a smooth sea. On January 1, 1866, young Crider joined his father at Snow Shoe in the manufacture of lumber, and formed the firm of P. B. Crider & Son, which still exists, and is one of the great manufacturing industries of central Pennsylvania. Their business has constantly grown until it has extended into the neighboring counties of Warren, Jefferson, Huntingdon, Clinton and Mifflin, having mills at various points in this territory with general headquarters at Bellefonte. The new life given to the business in the addition of young Crider, who took hold with that energy that youth possesses, and which was so characteristic of his make-up, was marked, and it was not long until the extensions referred to were made, and the firm was in possession of large tracts of timber land, which were so judiciously handled as to result in great profits to the firm some of the tracts involving upward of one hundred thousand dollars. These men became engaged in great interest outside of their lumber deals and the special business of manufacturing; they were large manufacturers of charcoal also. In the sale of timber lands, they reserved the oil, gas and mining rights, and are now possessed of these privileges in Jefferson County; merchandising and farming have been no small part of the business of P. B. Crider & Son, and they are now cultivating in the neighborhood of 1,500 acres. The annual output of lumber at their several mills amounts to millions of feet. In their varied extensive interests they have for years given employment to many men, and kept in circulation great sums of money, which have been of great benefit to this section of the State. Our subject is a most capable and broadminded businessman, enterprising and progressive. In 1888 after the great fire which destroyed some of the best business buildings in Bellefonte. He purchased the site of the present "Crider's Exchange," and erected that most imposing business block which would be a credit and an ornament to a much more pretentious city. It is the finest business block in Bellefonte, and is a structure of modern scientific architectural beauty; built of brick and stone and occupying one of the most conspicuous corners of the borough. His palatial residence, which crowns one of the hills of the mountain-town-one of elegance and grace-is but another evidence of his enterprising spirit and love to see the place of his adoption the ideal "Home of the Governors." Mr. Crider's life has been one of great activity-a busy one; and like most men whose lives are absorbed in great business interests he has given little time to politics, and has evinced no desire for public office. He is in no sense a politician, though he takes an interest in all public questions affecting the good of mankind and the elevation of the race. Since early boyhood he has been identified with the M. E. Church, giving liberally of his means to its support. He has served in the borough council, and made a most efficient record. As may be inferred, Mr. Crider is a man of wealth, and of influence, which is not confined to Bellefonte alone, but extends throughout the State where his connection with great business interests have given him a wide acquaintance. Mr. Crider, too, is a self made man-a man that has risen from the poor country boy to the head of a great industry, and to the presidency of the great banking company COMMEMORATIVE BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD - 75 of Jackson, Crider & Hastings; a man of wealth and influence, which, however, has in no way affected his manhood-his feelings and sympathy for mankind-these are the same as when he himself walked the paths of doubt amid the early struggles, and he is easily approached, greeting one with a smile and extending one that hearty welcome which makes the timid one feel at ease. Commanding in appearance, fine looking, with an intelligent face, his personality is striking, and but to know him is to account for his popularity. He is a great home man, and outside of business hours may be found with his family. Individually, he owns considerable property in Bellefonte and Centre County, other than the block referred to. In politics he is a Republican. On July 21, 1868, Mr. Crider was married to Miss Mary Adeline Sullivan, a daughter of William and Ann (Henderson) Sullivan, of White Deer Mills, Union Co., Penn. Her parents died when she was young, and she was reared by her grandparents, Samuel and - (Barber) Henderson, of Union County, the grandfather being a substantial farmer and a citizen of some prominence there. The wedding occurred at Elmwood, Ill. where Miss Sullivan was visiting an aunt, Mrs. Rynearson. Mrs. Crider was a woman of education and refinement, and a very interesting lady, possessed of the virtues that won her a host of friends. Her birth occurred in Union County, Penn., May 25, 1845, and her death at Bellefonte, April 6, 1879. "She was a very earnest Christian lady, and died in the full hope of a glorious immortality." The children born to this marriage were: (1) Burns H., born August 2, 1869, now a photographer at Easton, Penn., of the firm of Kreidler & Crider. (2) Carrol Low, born August 20, 1872, died August 30, 1891. In January 1891, Carrol had entered the Freshman class, Dickinson College, at Carlisle, Penn., with many bright hopes and a promising future, but his young life was cut short and the hopes of his father blasted, for in less than a year he was summoned higher, having contracted a fatal disease at college. His life had been one of purity and simpleness, and in his last breath he exclaimed: " I am the child of a King; I am not dying but am only going home to see Jesus." (3) May S., born August 28, 1877, is now in school at Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. On December 14, I 882, our subject was again married, this time to Rebecca Jane North, and they have two children, Hugh North, born September 27, 1883, and Mary Isabell, born March 28, 1886, both attending the Bellefonte Academy. The mother of these is a native of Juniata County, Penn., born June 9, 1850, daughter of Hon. James and Susana Matilda (Strouse) North, of Juniata County. She is a lady of refinement and culture, and presides with dignity and grace at their elegant home, which is often the scene of social gatherings. Hon. James North, father of Mrs. Crider, though now nearly four-score years of age, is quite active in the business affairs of Juniata County, where he has long been a resident of prominence in public affairs and in business circles. He has represented that county in the General Assembly of the State, and has been conspicuously connected with the railroad interests of the Commonwealth; prominent, too, as a merchant and banker. His wife died on November 21, 1896. Their children were six in number, namely: Nathaniel died in infancy; Caleb is in the Columbian National Bank at Washington, D.C.; Washington is in the employ of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, as ticket and freight agent (also a dealer in coal and lumber) at Mifflin, Penn.; Rebecca Jane (Mrs. Crider); Hon. Herman H., a lawyer at Bradford, Penn., who has served three times in the General Assembly of the State; and Mrs. W. M. Jacobs, widow of George Jacobs, formerly a lawyer at Mifflin, Pennsylvania.