BIO: H. B. CLARY, 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 953 & 954. _____________________________________________________________ H. B. CLARY,* postmaster at Grampian, Pa., and engaged in business as a painter and paperhanger, was born in Bloom township, Clearfield county, Pa., September 29, 1870, and is a son of John and a grandson of Rev. James Clary. John Clary was born in 1842, in Mercer county, Pa., and when twenty years of age came to Clearfield county, accompanying his parents. His father was Rev. James Clary, who came to Penn township to preach the Baptist faith. When the Civil war broke out, John Clary enlisted for service in the 105th Pa. Vol. Inf., known as the Wildcat regiment, and he was honorably discharged near Petersburg, Va., August 27, 1864. He came home but never fully recovered from the injuries he had received, having been wounded thrice at the battle of Gettysburg and once at the battle of the Wilderness. He survived until 1876, Thanksgiving Day in that year being the day of his burial. He married Mary Ellen Hepburn, in Bloom township, who was born in Greenwood township, a daughter of John Hepburn, and she resides at Bell Landing, Pa. He was a member of the Baptist church. In national affairs he was a Republican but in local matters voted with the Democrats. He served as a school director and as a justice of the peace in Bloom township. While developing a farm and improving it, in Bloom township, he was also interested in lumbering. He had four children: Edgar Early, H. B., Kearney Patton (deceased) and Alice Blanche, who lives at Covington, Ky. Edgar Early Clary, the eldest of the family started to work in a tannery as a laborer and continued until he had worked his way up to the top and is now superintendent of one of the largest tanneries in the country, located at Richwood, W. Va. He married Jennie Neff, of that place. H. B. Clary with his brothers and sisters attended school in Penn and Greenwood townships and afterward he learned the painting and paperhanging trade and for some years worked at it in different parts of the state. At the outbreak of the Spanish-American war he enlisted for service, entering Co. L, 5th Pa. Vol. Inf., of which he became corporal, and continued until the close of the war, returning home unharmed. In 1902 he was appointed postmaster of Grampian and he has shown much public spirit and enterprise both in the manner of conducting the public office as well as in the management of his affairs. He now has two rural mail routes established and the entire business of the office is carried on rapidly and efficiently. In politics he is a Republican and he is a member of the borough council and is also borough auditor. In May, 1900, Mr. Clary was married to Miss Christiana Enzbranner, who was born in Blair county, Pa., December 23, 1876, a daughter of Peter and Margaret Enzbranner, natives of Germany. Mr. and Mrs. Clary have two children, Jean Margaret and Frank Harris. The grandmother of Mr. Clary, Susan Bigler, was a sister of Hon. William D. Bigler, once governor of Pennsylvania.