BIOGRAPHY: Franklin DRAKE, Mifflin County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by P. S. Barr Copyright. All rights reserved. http://files.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/mifflin/ _______________________________________________ The Commemorative Biographical Encyclopedia of the Juniata Valley, Comprising the Counties of Huntingdon, Mifflin, Juniata, and Perry, Pennsylvania. Chambersburg, Pa.: J. M. Runk & Co., 1897, Volume I, pages 514-515. FRANKLIN DRAKE, retired farmer, of Wayne township, Mifflin county, Pa., was born December 22, 1825, at Drake's Ferry, Huntingdon county, Pa. He is a son of Samuel and Catharine (Beard) Drake. His grandfather, Samuel Drake, Sr., born in New Jersey, established Drake's Ferry in Huntingdon county. (See sketch of D. S. Drake, of Huntingdon). One of his sons was Samuel Drake, Jr., the father of Franklin Drake. This son was born in 1801, at Drake's Ferry. He received an excellent education in the subscription schools of Huntingdon county, and was especially noted for his fluency as a reader. Early in life he worked on the farm with his father through the day, and in the mornings and evenings, when there was the heaviest travel, he assisted at the Ferry. In 1830 he gave up ferry work, devoting his time to farming, and about this time erected the large stone dwelling still standing on the furnace property. Prior to 1837 he spent two years on the canal, one year as steersman for Captain Fields, and one year running on his own account a boat owned by Richard Miles, of McVeytown. In the spring of 1837, selling the homestead farm to Capt. James Caldwell, of Mexican war fame, Samuel Drake removed to Newton Hamilton, buying a Wayne township farm of 100 acres of highly improved land, on which he erected a fine barn, and made other improvements. In 1864 he removed from this farm to Mt. Union, where he died in 1866, at the house of his daughter, Mrs. Ross. Samuel Drake married Catharine Beard, of a Mifflin county family, of Scotch-Irish descent. They had seven children, as follows: Franklin, of Newton Hamilton; Nancy, born January 1, 1827, wife of Alfred Walker, both deceased; Catharine, born December 28, 1829, wife of Alexander Taylor, both deceased; William, born March 31, 1832, died in California; James, born May 6, 1834, died in early life; Sarah Ann, born July 16, 1839, who was also called away in youth; Mary Rebecca, born July 25, 1845, widow of John Ross, of Mount Union, Pa. The mother of these children died at Mt. Union, in the year 1870. Samuel Drake, or as he was generally known throughout Huntingdon and Mifflin counties, "Uncle Sam," was a very robust man, of a genial, happy disposition, which was manifested by his constant habit of singing. He was highly respected for his unsullied integrity. He was a very active member of the Baptist church, in which he became a convert in early life. He was guided even in the most trivial actions by his conscientious convictions of duty. "Uncle Sam" took considerable part in public affairs, and was for three years one of the commissioners of Mifflin county, elected on the Whig ticket. He was first a Whig and died a Republican. He was a "mighty hunter," having in his early days shot many of the bears and other wild animals that infested the forests. His son, Franklin Drake, attended the public schools of Newton Hamilton during the winter months, working on the farm during the summer, until, at the age of eighteen, he began to learn bricklaying and stone masonry, at which he worked for several years. Later, in connection with Joseph Ewing, he bought the Gaff farm, which they cultivated together for two years. He then sold out his interest to Ewing, worked a rented farm in Shirley township, Huntingdon county, for three years. Selling off his farm stock, he moved to "Long Hollow," in Wayne township, Mifflin county, where he bought a small farm and also carried on mason work until 1892, when he retired to live with his son, John P. Drake. Franklin Drake was married at Concord, Franklin county, to Elizabeth Jane, daughter of Mitchel McKim, a Franklin county farmer of Scotch-Irish descent. They have three children; Catharine (Mrs. George P. Foster), of Huntingdon, Pa.; Rosa Belle, (Mrs. John H. Green), of McKean county, Pa.; and Annie Elizabeth (Mrs. Thomas Chapman), deceased. Mrs. Elizabeth J. (McKim) Drake departed this life in 1856. Mr. Drake was again married April 3, 1860, to Elizabeth Jane Birely, born in Shippensburg, Pa. They had three children, as follows: John P.; George A., a farmer, living on the old James Drake homestead in Wayne township, married Miss Alice Caldwell; and Samuel R. Franklin Drake, who is well-known throughout the county, and everywhere respected for his honesty, integrity and manliness, has always been an industrious and hard- working man, a kind husband, an indulgent father and a worthy citizen. He is an active and consistent member of the Methodist Episcopal church, of which he was formerly one of the trustees. He takes an active part in politics, and is a staunch Republican. He has acceptably filled the office of school director in Wayne township. He was also elected constable. John P. Drake, eldest son of Franklin and Elizabeth J. (Birely) Drake, was born February 26, 1861, in Wayne township, near Newton Hamilton. Educated in the public schools, he passed his life upon his father's farm until he was twenty years of age, when he learned wagon-making with S. Ewing. After this he was engaged for four years in the store of B. E. Morrison. Since that time he has cultivated the John McDowell farm in Wayne township. John P. Drake was married June 14, 1894, to Elizabeth, daughter of James and Elizabeth (McManigal) Dysart, of Newton Hamilton. Their children are: one son, who died in infancy; and Rebecca Elizabeth Drake, born March 11, 1897. Mr. Drake is a Republican. He is a member of the P. O. S. A. and of the I. O. O. F.