BIO: Samuel A. EISENMAN, 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 713 & 714. _____________________________________________________________ SAMUEL A. EISENMAN, who is the pioneer merchant of the east side of DuBois, Pa., a busy section of one of the most prosperous and rapidly developing towns of Clearfield county, has been located at his present place of business, on East DuBois avenue, since 1885. He was born on his father's farm in Clarion county, Pa., April 2, 1849, and is a son of Joseph H. and Catherine (Hopper) Eisenman. Joseph H. Eisenman was born in Germany and was nine years old when his parents came to America. The father entered land in Clarion county, and became a farmer and also a distiller, living between Freyburg and Shippensville, Clarion county. Joseph H. Eisenman secured a farm near the one his father owned and spent his whole subsequent life in Clarion county. For twenty-two summers he burned charcoal for the Madison and Lucinda furnaces. His death occurred on February 8, 1877, when he was fifty-seven years of age and his burial was in Clarion county. He married Catherine Hopper, who was born in Center county, Pa., and died in 1886. Eight children were born to them, namely: John; Hiram; Mary Ann, who is the widow of Benjamin Hurley; and Samuel A., Ambrose, Amos, Joseph and James. Samuel A. Eisenman spent his early years on the home farm and during this time attended a district school three miles distant for a part of each winter. He was only a boy when he began to earn money for himself by working by the day for neighboring farmers, after that attending school again for a few months. He developed considerable business ability even then and secured his capital for entering into the mercantile line by shrewdly purchasing small tracts of timber, mainly in Elk county. In 1876 he embarked in the mercantile business at Elk City, Clarion county, which he continued for one year and then sold out and became an oil and gas producer in Clarion county. Strangely enough he did not prosper in this line as he had in former undertakings and after five years of experience he gave up working in the oil fields and started all over again in the lumber and rafting business and continued until 1882, when he came to DuBois. For three years afterward he worked for John DuBois, in the latter's saw-mills, and then decided to re-enter the mercantile business, his long experience having taught him much of which he had been ignorant before. He bought the land on which his buildings stand and cleared off the timber, erecting first a store building of 20 x 40 feet dimensions, in which he opened a general store and prospered from the first. As soon as his trade warranted it he put up his present three-story brick and stone block and occupies a store room 30 x 100 feet with his mercantile goods and resides in one of the comfortable apartments fitted up for family use, on the upper floor. Through careful attention and honest dealings he has developed a very large business and is now numbered with the substantial men of the place. In addition to his other enterprise, Mr. Eisenman conducts a flour and feed business, is interested in real estate on the east side, has oil and gas interests in Clarion county and is a stockholder in the Deposit National Bank of DuBois, Pa. On September 21, 1876, Mr. Eisenman was married to Miss Eliza Suffolk, a daughter of the late James Suffolk, of Brookville, Pa., and they have two children: Edgar, who is a graduate of the DuBois High School and now a student in the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia; and Samuel Alvin, his father's namesake. In politics, Mr. Eisenman is a Democrat and fraternally he is a Mason, belonging to the Blue Lodge at DuBois, the Chapter at Brookville, the Consistory at Williamsport and Jaffa Temple, Mystic Shrine, at Altoona. He is a member and liberal supporter of the Baptist church. During his long years of residence here he has given support to every movement designed to promote the general welfare and through example and precept has materially aided in the advancement of the town along the best lines of development.