BIO: G. Lloyd ADDLEMAN, Clearfield County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja & Sally Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/clearfield/ NOTE: Use this web address to access other bios: http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/clearfield/1picts/swoope/swoope.htm _____________________________________________________________ From Twentieth Century History of Clearfield County, Pennsylvania, and Representative Citizens, by Roland D. Swoope, Jr., Chicago: Richmond-Arnold Publishing Company, 1911, pages 801 & 802. _____________________________________________________________ G. LLOYD ADDLEMAN, a highly respected citizen of Curwensville, residing on the corner of George and Walnut Streets, and a retired farmer still owning 125 acres of fine land in Pike Township, was born in Center County, Pa., April 30, 1843, and is a son of William and Esther Addleman. William Addleman was of German extraction. He came to Clearfield County in 1849 and was a farmer and lumberman. He reared two families of children, four being born to his first marriage and eight to his second, G. Lloyd being the third in order of birth in the latter. G. Lloyd Addleman attended school in both Lawrence and Pike Townships, the Center and Oakland schools, but when seventeen years of age he went to work in the woods and filled a man's place in the lumber camps. After he married he settled on the Irwin farm in Pike Township, where he lived for three and one- half years, and then purchased the home farm near Curwensville, on which his son, Charles C. Addleman now lives. He continued to reside on that place until the fall of 1902, when he retired from active labor and located at Curwensville, where he is very pleasantly established. He is a stockholder in the Curwensville Building and Loan Association. In politics he is a Republican and he served three terms as road supervisor in Pike Township and one term since coming to this borough. Mr. Addleman married Miss Annie M. Cleaver, who was born in Pike Township, December 15, 1842, a daughter of Nathan and Cynthia (Wrigley) Cleaver, and they have had three children: William H., who died when aged two weeks and three days; Charles C., and Harry B. The latter resides at Curwensville. He was married first to Emma Hipp, who, at death, left three children: Walter, William and Alice. His second marriage was to Mary Grace Hatzenrather. Mr. and Mrs. Addleman are members of the Methodist Episcopal church. He belongs to and takes an interest in the Susquehannah Grange at Curwensville.