BIOGRAPHY: M. L. SMYSER, Mifflin County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Patty Frank Copyright 2006. All rights reserved. http://files.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/mifflin/ http://files.usgwarchives.net/pa/mifflin/1picts/runk1897/runk-bios.htm __________________________________________________________________________ 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 437-438. __________________________________________________________________________ REV. M. L. SMYSER, Lewistown, Mifflin county, Pa., is a native of York, Pa. He is one of a large family, sons and daughters of Jacob and Elizabeth (Diehl) Smyser, and is descended from Matthias Smyser, who in 1738, emigrated from Germany, and settled in the vicinity of the town of York. M. L. Smyser received his primary education in the common schools of York and of Baltimore, Md., and was afterwards a pupil at the York Academy. Left an orphan at the age of nine, he was dependent upon his own resources, and at the age of seventeen began teaching. But study went hand in hand with self-supporting work, and by the time he reached his majority, Mr. Smyser had completed his academic studies, and having experienced religion in 1857, was ready to present himself to the East Baltimore Conference of the Methodist Episcopal church in 1863, and to enter upon his theological course. This occupied four years. In 1867, Mr. Smyser graduated to full membership in the Conference and was ordained an elder. He spent his early manhood in the ministry in the State of Maryland, having been stationed at Hampstead, Westminster, Frederick, and Havre de Grace. He was transferred in 1872 to the Central Pennsylvania Conference, and stationed at Bellefonte; among his parishioners there were several distinguished men, one of whom is the present executive head of the State, Governor Hastings. The membership of the Bellefonte congregation was doubled during Rev. Smyser's pastorate of three years. He was also largely instrumental in the building of a new house of worship. In his next congregation, that of Phillipsburg, Pa., he received two hundred and twenty-five converts into membership. At Bloomsburg, Columbia county, Pa., he met with similar success; from this charge he went to Berwick in the same county. Here, also, success attended his ministry - large additions to the membership, increased offerings to mission and other benevolent causes and material prosperity. In 1882, Mr. Smyser was appointed presiding elder of the Danville district, which then comprised forty-two pastoral charges, and in which nearly fifty pastors came under his administration. In 1884, he was elected a reserve delegate to the General Conference, and was appointed by the Board of Bishops a representative from the State of Pennsylvania to the Centennial Conference of American Methodists, held in Baltimore in December. In 1886, he was appointed pastor at Chambersburg, Pa. From that place he went to Bedford, Pa., where his earnest and conscientious labors were again rewarded by the reception of about two hundred converts into the membership. Here he was instrumental in remodeling and improving the house of worship, and in building a new parsonage, costing $5,300. Here Mr. Smyser organized the first Epworth League chapter in the Conference; the well-known League, now of vast proportions, was then only beginning to extend through the church. His next station was Curwensville, Clearfield county, Pa.,; here he received in one year about one hundred converts and was actively interested in the movement towards the erection of a new church edifice, which cost $24,000. He had secured about two-thirds of the required sum, when impaired health compelled him to give up his pastorate, and he became superintendent of the Methodist Bookroom, at Harrisburg, Pa., and was so occupied for two years. Mr. Smyser's appointment to the pastorate of the Methodist Episcopal church at Lewistown was made in 1895; thus far, his faithful ministry has been exercised with success, the membership having been increased by over two hundred, the Sunday-school nearly doubled, and benevolent collections improved. Rev. M. L. Smyser was married December 27, 1865, to Lydia A., daughter of Hon. William H. Margaret (Shunk) Hoffman, of Baltimore, Md., Their children are: Prof. William E., of the faculty of De Pauw University, Greencastle, Ind.; Jenny H.; Margaret G.; and Harry, who died in childhood. Both of Mrs. Smyser's parents are deceased. Their family consisted of six children. Her father was largely interested in the manufacture of paper, in Baltimore, Md. He served several terms in the Maryland legislature, and was a member of the Constitutional Convention of that State in 1863.