BIO: GEORGE LEWIS SCHUCHMAN, Cumberland County, Pennsylvania Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Joe Patterson OCRed by Judy Banja Copyright 2004. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/cumberland/ _____________________________________________________________ >From Biographical Annals of Cumberland County, Pennsylvania, Chicago: The Genealogical Publishing Co., 1905, pages 628-629 _____________________________________________________________ NOTE: Use this web address to access other bios: http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/cumberland/zeamer/ GEORGE LEWIS SCHUCHMAN, vice-president of the Lindner Shoe Company, of Carlisle, has been a lifelong resident of that city. He was born there May 11, 1843, son of George N. and Mary (Wonderlich) Schuchman, and is of German ancestry. George N. Schuchman was born in 180i in Hessen-Darmstadt, Germany, and there attended school until he reached the age of fourteen years. Later he learned shoemaking, and he was still a young man when he emigrated to the United States. He landed at New York, and thence came to Carlisle. Cumberland county, Pa., where he opened a shoe shop, and where he soon enjoyed what was then considered a flourishing business. The remainder of his days was passed in, that city, and he reached an advanced age, dying Jan. 29, 1888. In Carlisle he married Mary Wonderlich, who was born in Cumberland county in 1803, daughter of John D. Wonderlich, and they became the parents of a family of six children: William, who married Annie Johnson and died in Lincoln, Neb.; John, a resident of Carlisle, who married Elizabeth Pilkay; Annie, who died unmarried; George Lewis; Fred, who married Ellen Nelson, and died in Springfield, Ohio; and Kate, Mrs. T. U. Smith, of Carlisle. The mother of this family passed away Dec. 30, 1889. George Lewis Schuchman attended the public schools of Carlisle during his boyhood, and early began to learn shoemaking with his father, with whom he worked for ten years. He then obtained employment in the shoe factory of Neidich, Green & Co. CUMBERLAND COUNTY. 629 (now the Carlisle Shoe Company), with whom he remained twenty-three years, and when the Lindner Shoe Company was formed, in January, 1892, he was one of the organizers, and was made vice-president of the new concern. With the exception of one year he has held that office continuously since. Mr. Schuchman is one of the influential business men of Carlisle, and has won a high place by steady work and honest methods, so that he commands the respect of his associates wherever he is known. Mr. Schuchman was married in Carlisle, on Jan. 27, 1876, to Miss Ella Ege, and they have had two children, Mary Ege and George W., both of whom are still at home. The family are members of the First Lutheran Church of Carlisle, toward the support of which Mr. Schuchman is a regular contributor. In political faith, he is a Democrat. The EGE family, of which Mrs. Schuchman is a member, is one of the oldest in Cumberland county, and likewise one of the most respected. Her grandfather, Michael Ege, succeeded his father in the furnace business at Boiling Springs, and lived there until his death. He married Mary Galbraith. Their son, Peter F. Ege, Mrs. Schuchman's father, was born at Boiling Springs Nov. 23, 1818, and was reared at that place and at Carlisle, attending school at both places. Later he was a student at Washington and Jefferson College, Washington, Pa., from which he graduated, and he then took up the study of law at that institution, also graduating from that department. He was admitted to the Bar and practiced in Carlisle until after his father's death, when he returned to Boiling Springs to take charge of the furnace. He remained there, continuing the furnace business, until 1858, when he returned to Carlisle, and there he passed theremainder of his life, dying Jan. 3, 1881. He was an able man, and an upright citizen, and worthily upheld the reputation of the honored family to which he belonged. Mr. Ege married Miss Eliza Johns, presumably of Adams county, Pa., who died in Carlisle shortly before her husband, in September, 1879. They had a family of eight children, namely: Mary, Mrs. H. C. Crarg, of Washington, D. C.; Porter F., of Washington, D. C.; Ella, Mrs. Schuchman; Annie, Mrs. F. J. Papst, of Kansas City, Mo.; Ada, deceased, Mrs. J. P. Neibert, of Kansas City, Mo.; Laura, Mrs. Thomas McGuire, of Baltimore, Md.; Edward S., who resides in Chicago, Ill.; and Charles N., who died near Dayton, Ohio. The parents of this family were Presbyterians in religious connection. Mr. Ege supported the principles of the Democratic party, but was liberal in his views on politics as well as on other subjects.