BIO: James Boyd Robison CHALFANT, son of William Mifflin County, PA File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joy Fisher sdgenweb@yahoo.com June 29, 2005, 6:00 pm Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://files.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/mifflin/ _______________________________________________ Author: Biographical Publishing Co. CAPT. JAMES BOYD ROBISON, who served with great credit as a captain in the Union Army during the Civil War, is a man who has attained particular prominence as an attorney-at-law in Bloomsburg, Columbia County, Pa. He resides in a handsome home at Espy, but every day finds him in his office in Bloomsburg looking after his extensive practice. He was born in Bloomsburg, January 3, 1838, and is a son of William and Betsey (Barton) Robison. His great-grandfather was William Robison, who was born in the North of Ireland and was of Scotch-Irish parentage. He was unmarried when he came to America, but subsequently was joined in wedlock with Martha Huston, a native of this country. They resided in the beginning of the last century in the Juniata region, where he was engaged in agricultural pursuits the remainder of his life. In religious attachments he was a strict believer in the Presbyterian faith. He was the progenitor of the following children: James: Hugh; John; Alexander; David; William; Joseph; Margaret; Agnes; Elizabeth; Jane; and Rebecca-Alexander Robison, grandfather of our subject, also took to agricultural pursuits at McVeytown, Pa., where he was born and lived all his life. He married Elizabeth McKee and among the children who blessed that union was William, the father of our subject. William Robison was born in McVeytown, Pa., January 19, 1789, and was reared upon his father's farm, obtaining his intellectual education in the district schools. In 1810 he located near Orangeville, Columbia County, where he opened and conducted a general store for four or five years, and then moved to Bloomsburg with his brother John. They operated a tannery at the corner of Third street and Miller's alley with much success until 1826. In connection with the tannery they built the stone house, corner of Third street and Millers alley. It was first occupied by William and his wife on their marriage, January 30, 1816, and is now the oldest house in town. In 1822 William Robison was appointed sheriff of Columbia County, serving in that capacity for a short time. From 1826 to 1840 he conducted a first-class hotel at the corner of Second and Center streets, where Moyer's drugstore is now located. During this period he was also extensively engaged in staging,-providing the only transportation from Bloomsburg to many points, and he did a very large business. In 1840 he rented his hotel and became interested in farming, purchasing a large farm in Hemlock township, which is now owned by J. Trout, Esq., and continuing there until 1846, when he again returned to Bloomsburg and carried on a mercantile business in the hotel building for eight years. Being past sixty-six years of age, in 1855 he retired from active life and lived happily until his demise, in 1866. Politically he was originally a Democrat and then a Clay Whig, but later became a Republican, remaining so the rest of his life. He owned one-third of the lot on which the court-house stands and presented it to the county. In religious views he was a Presbyterian. Socially, he was a member of the Masonic fraternity. January 30. 1816, he married Betsey Barton, who was born in Bloomsburg, January 36, 1799, and was a daughter of Elisha Barton, one of the early prominent men of Bloomsburg, and this union resulted in the following issue: Alexander, deceased, who married Mary E. Thompson; Jane McKee, wife of Lynd Elliott; Anna Maria, wife of Ariovistus Pardee; Martha Elizabeth, who married Andrew M. Rupert; Harriet, wife of Charles E. Frazer; Ellen Boone, wife of Dr. William B. Hawkins; Emily A., wife of George B. Markle; Isabelle, wife of Nathaniel L. Campbell; William Barton, who died at the age of four years; Mary Augusta, deceased; James Boyd, the subject of this biographical record; Isaiah B., a soldier in the Civil War who gave up his life for the cause of his country at the battle of Peach Tree Creek in 1864; and Hannah Amelia, wife of Fred E. Barber. James Boyd Robison attended the public schools and the Bloomsburg Academy and applied himself with such diligence that he was considered qualified to teach and received an appointment in Mifflin township, Columbia County, January 10, 1854, just one week after his sixteenth birthday. On August 19, of that year, he was awarded the first permanent certificate issued by Carbon County. He taught at Summit Hill for seven months and then served for two months on a corps of engineers who laid out the Yeddo Branch of the Hazleton Railroad. In 1855 he entered Lafayette College at Easton, Pa., from which he received the degree of A. M. in 1867, but in 1857 he went to Washington, D. C., where he was engaged in writing patents for the land office for five months. He held a position as bookkeeper at Mauch Chunk, Carbon County, for three months, when he went to Illinois, where he engaged in teaching school and selling books from 1858 to 1859. In August, 1859, he began to prepare himself for the legal profession, entering the office of Jason T. Giebner, a well-known lawyer of Mercer, Mercer County, Pa., in the meantime making enough as a clerk in the sheriff's office to support himself. When the first shot, which startled the world, was fired at Fort Sumter in 1861, opening the real hostilities between the Union Army and the Secessionists, our subject was one of the first to offer his aid to his country. On the day after receiving intelligence of the first encounter he drew up an enlistment paper and headed it with his own name. This was the first enlistment in Mercer County; The company was soon organized and was at first known as the Mercer Rifles, but was mustered in June 17, 1861, as Company G, 10th Regt. Pa. Vol. Reserves, under Capt. A. J. Warner, for a period of three years. Mr. Robison was a sergeant of the company and remained in the service until he received a severe wound in the left hand at the second battle of Bull Run, when he was sent to the hospital, receiving his discharge December 18, 1862. In June of the year following he was elected captain of Company H, of the 35th Regiment, at Harrisburg, Pa., with which he served until August, 1863, when he returned home and thence to Mercer and resumed his studies, being admitted to the bar in November, 1863. During the following winter he taught school at Sandy Lake, Mercer County. On June 1, 1864, he went to Washington, D. C., as a clerk under Capt. J. T. Giebner in the commissary department, who was assigned to the 19th Army Corps under Gen. Sheridan in the Shenandoah Valley. It was his misfortune to be captured by the Rebels on September 26, and on October 17 he was cast into Libby Prison, where the Union men received the treatment commonly accorded Union prisoners of war. On February 17, 1865, he secured his release and returned to Mercer, Pa., where he shortly after was elected district attorney. Serving only a short time, he resigned and moved to St. Louis, Mo., at the beginning of the year, and with two others engaged in the real estate business until 1867. Owing to the weakness of the leading member of the firm in the use of liquor, the business was not a success and had to be abandoned. Removing to Bloomsburg he entered upon the practice of law and was subsequently appointed United States Commissioner. From 1872 to 1875 he served as notary public, and for several years as corporation counsel. The greater part of his life he has been a Republican, and in 1870 he was the party nominee for the State Legislature. In 1880 he was nominated by the Greenback party for Congress, receiving a larger vote than any other on his ticket, but, of course, was defeated. In 1896 he took sides with the Democracy, on the silver issue. In 1881 he purchased a farm near Bloomsburg and conducted it until 1885; he purchased a fine residence in Espy in 1893 and now resides there, but his office and place of business is in Bloomsburg. Capt. Robison is widely known throughout his section as a man of great worth and integrity, and there are none but what hold him in the highest esteem and accord him their confidence. On October 16, 1873, he was joined in Hymen's bonds with Mary Jane Breece, a daughter of Daniel Breece, and the following children bless their home; Martha Elizabeth, a teacher, a graduate of the Bloomsburg State Normal School; James Boyd, a graduate of the Bloomsburg State Normal School, now in Illinois; Bessie Mary, a graduate of the Bloomsburg State Normal School, resides at home; Isaiah Barton, died in infancy; William Daniel, now attending school; Jennie Breece; Emily; Andrew Horace; and Irving Alexander, all attending school. Socially our subject is a member of the following orders: Odd Fellows; Patrons of Husbandry; Grand Army of the Republic; and of Masonic bodies, being a Knight Templar and a member in the Thirty-second Degree, Scottish Rite. Additional Comments: Extracted from: Book of Biographies of the Seventeenth Congressional District Published by Biographical Publishing Company of Chicago, Ill. and Buffalo, NY (1899) This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/pafiles/ File size: 9.5 Kb