Bios: MCCORMICK, John Buchanan, Indiana Co, PA SUBJECT: MCCORMICK, John Buchanan SUBMITTER: E.K. Warner EMAIL: wgene@twd.net DATE: Oct 23, 1998 SURNAMES: BARDS, BUCHANAN, CONLEY, McCORMICK as recorded by Prof. J. T. Stewart in "Indiana County, Pennsylvania - Her People, Past and Present" Published by J. H. Beers & Co., 1913 Reformatted by E.K. Warner, September 1998 JOHN BUCHANAN McCormick was born Nov. 4, 1834, in the little village of Sinking Valley, near Tyrone, Huntingdon (now Blair) Co., Pa., of Scotch-Irish parentage, descending from the McCormicks and Conleys on the paternal side, and the Buchanans and Bards in the maternal line. They settled in Colonial times in Franklin and Cumberland counties, Pa., and at Bardstown, Kentucky. In March, 1838, Joseph A. McCormick, father of John B. McCormick, moved with his family from Sinking Valley to Smicksburg, Indiana Co., Pa., on sleds, the growth of timber being so heavy at that time that the snow remained until late in the season of springtime. The lad was now about three years and four months old. At the age of six, barefooted and bareheaded, he followed after the hounds, Ranger and General Jackson; from the hills across the creek to the loop hills and back where the deer would generally take to the water above the village. A tow shirt and tow trousers to cover his nakedness and keep out the sun, with a straw hat (which was soon torn up in the brush), made up his summer costume. In the wintertime later he carried a cowbell while trailing the deer through the snow for his highly esteemed friend, Dr. William N. Sims, to head at well-known crossings. The advantages for education at that time were meager enough. His first teacher was a Mrs. McCumber, wife of a Baptist minister. The McCumbers came from the State of Connecticut. The largest room in their house was the schoolroom, and the seats were two pine slabs, brought from Travis's sawmill, with four legs to each, and placed around the wall. Mrs. McCumber was an accomplished artist in water colors, and her pupils received cards, decorated with flowers, or foxes, dogs, cats, deer, coons and other animals as rewards of merit, handpainted and beautiful, and much appreciated by her handful of "scholars." This no doubt accounts, in part at least, for Mr. McCormick's artistic tastes. He picked up most of his knowledge piecemeal, while all through his life experience has been his best teacher About this time his Grandmother Buchanan; who was the daughter of Rev. David Bard, visited them, and being an artist in mezzotints and other lines she taught him to outline horses, cattle, houses and various other objects with grains of corn on the bottom of wooden seated chairs or table. Those were the little things that started the restless young mind to work out other matters later. He went into the shop to assist his father at the age of eight. At that time all the material for the making and repairing of tarpole wagons was taken from the woods. White oak was used for the tongues, and a tree that would split out eight pieces was selected, and placed heart up to season. For axles hickory was used, split and seasoned. February was the month for cutting. Mr. McCormick said: "My father and I used to cut this timber when I was only able to steady the crosscut saw, and our dinner would be-cold boiled pork and corn pone and sometimes bread, which people now would consider entirely too plain. " At the age of ten he was a fair workman, and turned the material on a tramp lathe and framed and painted a little rocking chair for his baby sister. At the same time he turned clothespins from dry wild cherry to place in the bedrooms of the double porch house in Smicksburg built in 1844, by Hezekiah Christman. When seventeen years of age he was allowed to start in with his uncle, David B. Buchanan, in an old-fashioned cabinet and chair shop, where all the work was done by hand, and he thoroughly mastered the trade in all its details, from the woods to the finishing. At the same time he cultivated a taste for music, and the first violin he played upon was made by himself. His musical talents he turned to advantage. For about five month. in the year, for about twenty-two years, he taught old-fashioned singing school in schoolhouses and churches in Indiana and adjoining counties, where the name of McCormick became as familiar as household words. Trudging from place to place (and he did not wear an overcoat), he estimates that in looking after his schools alone he walked 42,000 miles in the twenty-two years. It was in this manner, and in house painting and graining, he made the money which afterward enabled him to develop and bring forth his turbine wheels. In 1873 Mr. McCormick went to Brookville, Pa., to Brown, Son & Co., where the shops and patterns were burned twice. After the testing of the "Hercules" turbine at Holyoke, McCormick and Brown made an agreement with the Stilwell & Bierce Company, of Dayton, Ohio, which proved very disastrous for them. Mr. McCormick went into their employ to perfect patterns. After six months they had received all of the information they desired, and unknown to him took out patents on the so-called "Victor Turbine", which embodied everything in the "Hercules." Mr. McCormick went to Holyoke in 1877, and engaged with the Holyoke Machine Company to manufacture the "Hercules," remaining with them for about eleven years, putting eighteen sizes, right and left hand, above eighty percent useful, an efficiency percentage which Mr. Emerson highly commended. After perfecting the "Hercules" there was a misunderstanding between Mr. McCormick and the company, and he had to sue them to obtain his rights. Hon. George D. Robinson, ex-governor of Massachusetts, was his attorney and won his suit against the company. Mr. McCormick then brought out a turbine about twenty-five percent stronger as to diameter than the "Hercules," entitled "McCormick's Holyoke Turbine," which was perfected in all sizes at the shops of J. & W. Jolly, Holyoke, Mass. It was also made by the S. Morgan Smith Company, York, Pa., and the Dubuque Turbine & Roller Mill Company, Dubuque, Iowa. James Emerson, the great tester of wheels, said: "Mr. McCormick as a designer and perfecter of hydraulic motors stands upon the top rung of the ladder, has stood there for twenty years without a parallel, not in the United States alone, but upon this planet. " Mr. McCormick has published two musical works, viz.: "School & Concert", 310 pages, and "The Village Choir", 336 pages, said to be the greatest collections in their class in the English language. Mr. McCormick is unassuming about what he has, or has accomplished, but he prizes a few old paintings which he executed many years ago, in particular a night view of "Donati's Comet, as it appeared at Smicksburg in 1858, when it was at its brightest (size 30 by 28 inches); " The Country Boy on Sunday Morning" (size 10 by 12 inches) and the beautiful hills which surround the farm where he makes his home. It seems to be his artistic delight to show and describe the view to strangers. Now, in his seventy-ninth year, Mr. McCormick is working at all kinds of farm labor as though he were compelled to do so to keep the wolf from the door. His greatest delight seems to be the improvement of his land and bringing his farms to the highest state of cultivation, and to find out for a certainty what can be produced per acre on Indiana county soil. ----------------------------------------------------- USGENWEB ARCHIVES NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free genealogical information on the Internet, data may be freely used for personal research and by non-commercial entities as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may not be reproduced in any format or presentation by other organizations or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for profit or any form of presentation, must obtain the written consent of the file submitter, or his legal representative and then contact the listed USGENWEB archivist with proof of this consent.