BIOS: Edwin DEAL, Meyersdale, Somerset County, PA File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Candace Roth Copyright 2006. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/somerset/ ________________________________________________ History of Bedford and Somerset Counties, Pennsylvania; Bedford County by E. Howard Blackburn; Somerset County by William H. Welfley; v.3, Pub. The Lewis Publishing Company, New York/Chicago 1906, ppg. 128-133 Edwin DEAL Edwin Deal, an honored and respected citizen of Meyersdale, Somerset county, Pennsylvania, who is now in his eighty-third year, is a remarkable example of good health, energy and mental faculties, well preserved by a life replete with usefulness and good will toward his fellow creatures. His pleasant face and cheery manner are known and have endeared him to young and old, and his numberless acts of charity and kindness are known to but few outside of the immediate family circle. He is descended from an old family of Virginia, whose thrift and industry bore their due share in building up the prosperity of the country. Peter Deal, grandfather of Edwin Deal, was born in the state of Virginia. He was a clever millwright and an exceptionally skilled worker in woods. He built windmills of the old-time wooden construction, cider presses, spinning wheels, looms and all kinds of wooden machinery. He removed to Greenville township, Pennsylvania, after his marriage, and then added farming to his manifold occupations. A number of the grist mills in various parts of the county were of his construction. He married Margaret Stein and their children were: Peter, Jacob, see forward; George, Joseph, Abraham, Eve, married Jacob Fair; and Hannah, married John Findley. Peter Deal died in 1828 at an advanced age. Jacob Deal, second son and child of Peter and Margaret (Stein) Deal, was born near Sheppardstown, Virginia, September 17, 1790. He was about fifteen years of age when his family removed to Somerset county, Pennsylvania, and as he had inherited the mechanical skill of his father, it was but natural that he should adopt the same line of work. He was thrifty and industrious and soon owned a farm of considerable extent, which he cleared and cultivated. He erected a sawmill on his land and in this the virgin forest was converted into lumber with a large amount of profit. He was a man of deep religious conviction, and he and all the members of his family were members of the Lutheran church, of which he was a deacon and elder. His political support was given to the Democratic party, he being what was known as a "Jackson Democrat." He was active in his support of the party and held several political offices. His death occurred November 4, 1869, and he and his wife are buried in the churchyard of the Union Lutheran and Reformed church, in Greenville township. He married Susanna Engle, who was born and raised at what is still called Engle's Mills, near Salisbury, Pennsylvania, August 18, 1790, died April 30, 1860. Their children, fifteen in number, were as follows: Mary, born May 3, 1813; Isaiah, January 22, 1815; Sally, September 11, 1816; Margaret, February 14, 1818; Jeremiah, July 8, 1820; Leah, December 3, 1821; Edwin, see forward; Julia Ann, March 9, 1825, married Abraham Derrimore, of Iowa; Levi, December 1, 1826; Lucinda, March 13, 1829, married Alexander Kelly, of Kansas; Joel, May 27, 1831, is a farmer in Montana; Hettie, June 30, 1832; Jacob, December 14, 1833; Harriet, December 31, 1835; and Lavina, January 12, 1838, married Alexander Lint, of Iowa. Edwin Deal, third son and seventh child of Jacob and Susanna (Engle) Deal, was born on the farm of his father in Greenville township, Somerset county, Pennsylvania, October 11, 1823. This farm adjoined that of his grandfather, Peter Deal, and it was here that all the children of this family were born. His education was as complete as the time and the schools of the district afforded, and at an early age he displayed marked aptitude in handling tools of all descriptions. Until he was twenty-one years of age his life was spent in assisting his father in clearing and cultivating the land in their possession, in attending to the sawmill and helping in the shop. By this time he had acquired great skill in his work and commenced the business of millwright and builder in his own right. He purchased a complete set of woodworking tools, fitted them with handles of his own manufacture, as was the custom of those days, and undertook his first contract. This was the building of a mill for Moses Yoder--the first overshot water-wheel mill in the township, all previously built having been of the under flutter wheel style. About 1850 he built for Daniel Lepley two mills--a sawmill and a gristmill--and these were considered models of their kind. After his marriage he became the manager of these mills and remained in this capacity for a number of years. Subsequently he bought the farm and mill properties in Larimer township, and later acquired other farms and timber lands until he owned about nine hundred acres, some of which is still in his possession. Mr. Deal resided on the farm he had acquired and personally conducted the mill operations until 1888, when he removed to Meyersdale, Somerset county, Pennsylvania. There he erected a gristmill and several dwelling houses, in one of which, an attractive brick residence on Center street, he now lives. He has practically retired from active participation in his business affairs, giving, however, considerable time to a general oversight of the various interests. He has been a lifelong member of the Lutheran church, in which he was baptized at the age of eight days, and has consistently devoted much time and effort to the furtherance of the church interests. He has held various offices in the church, including those of deacon and elder in the county church, and since his residence in Meyersdale has served as elder continuously. Although he would gladly resign this office, he has been earnestly solicited to continue his good work. His wife was and his children with their respective families are communicants at the same church. Politically Mr. Deal was for many years a staunch Democrat, but for the past seventeen years he has given his allegiance to the Prohibition party as being more in accord with the principles to which he has adhered throughout his long and useful life. He has always been firm in his belief in total abstinence from all intoxicants and narcotics, and attributes his long life and excellent health to this cause. He has also served Larimer township as school director and as justice of the peace. He married, February 7, 1850, Nancy Lepley, born February 8, 1832, died August 16, 1902, daughter of Daniel Lepley. Mrs. Deal was a woman of strong character and many excellent qualities. She was greatly beloved and esteemed for her many charities and kindly disposition, and her death was deeply deplored. She and her husband led an exceptionally happy married life for the period of fifth-two years. They had a family of sixteen children, all of whom are now (1906) living: Herman, born March 15, 1851, a merchant in Meyersdale; he married Agnes Bowman, daughter of Samuel Bowman, of Somerset county. William H., born June 26, 1852, a coal and lumber operator, with mines and mills in West Virginia; married Alice Cook, a daughter of Jesse Cook, and their children are Roy, Earl and Jessie. Louisa, born April 3, 1854; married W. H. Reiber, a farmer of Somerset county, near Confluence, and their children are: Bertha, married William Burnworth, and has children: Ruth and Lucille (the first and only great-grandchildren of Edwin Deal); Art, and Pearl. Matilda, born February 25, 1855; married J. M. Cook, a candy manufacturer of Meyersdale, and has one son, Dalton. Daniel, born August 12, 1856, is in business in Cumberland, Maryland; he married Myrtle Feichner, daughter of Jacob Feichner, of Palo Alto, and has children: Nellie, Jacob, Ferdinand and Helen. Ezra, born September 17, 1857, is a coal operator in Ohio; he married Alice Smith, daughter of Robert Smith, of Cumberland, Maryland, and has children: Robert, George and Mary. Almira, born February 7, 1859, married J. H. Pfahler, a merchant of Meyersdale, and has children: Ralph, Carl and Ida. Levi, see forward. Charles, born September 21, 1861, is a lumberman in Colton, West Virginia; married Anna Griffith, daughter of John Griffith, of Frostburg, Maryland, and has three children, Homer, Walter and an infant son. Anna Elizabeth, born June 6, 1863; married E. J. Boyles, a merchant of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, and has children: Ethel and Marie. Simon, born September 23, 1864, is engaged in the lumber business in Cumberland, Maryland; married Venie Clawson, daughter of George Clawson, of Ellersley, Maryland, and has children: Mary, Edna, Anna Frances, Gladys, Thomas and Loydie. Nancy Agnes, born March 26, 1866, is devoting her life to keeping up a comfortable home for her aged father. Ida Ellen, born September 13, 1867, married E. E. Conrad, the leading photographer of Meyersdale, and has children: Esther, Lucille, Ellsworth, Mary, James and John. Clara, born July 3, 1870, married D. P. Ford, a coal operator; they reside in Madisonville, Kentucky, and have one child, Emily. Calvin E., born March 29, 1872, owns and operates the grist and flour mill in Meyersdale; married Margaret Lenhardt, daughter of Samuel Lenhardt, of Somerset, and has children: Claude and Harry. Harvey, born October 14, 1873, is engaged in business at Meyersdale, is unmarried and resides with his father and sister. Levi Deal, eighth child and fifth son of Edwin and Nancy (Lepley) Deal, was born at Deal postoffice, Somerset county, May 3, 1860. He obtained his education in the old log-house school, called Baker school, in Larimer township. He left the schoolroom at the age of eighteen, and for the succeeding three years was engaged by his father in the saw, planing and grist mill. He then turned his attention to the carpenter and millwright trade, in which he became proficient and at which he worked until 1886. He then decided to go in business for himself, and in the last named year he and his brother Herman embarked in the lumber business, conducting the establishment under the firm name of H. and L. Deal, at Deal's Mills, Somerset county, Pennsylvania. Between the years 1886 and 1895 they had cut about eleven million feet of lumber. In 1895 Levi sold his interest to his brother Herman and purchased a large tract of lumber land at Pinkerton, Pennsylvania, and continued his lumber operations there until 1898, when he formed a partnership with H. C. Huston, of that place. This arrangement existed until 1903, and during this period the firm cut seven million feet of lumber a year, besides two hundred thousand railroad ties, tanbark and telegraph poles. In 1903 Mr. Deal sold his interest in the enterprise to Mr. H. M. Lytle, of Braddock, Pennsylvania. He then took a much-needed vacation of about six months. When he again engaged in active pursuits Mr. Deal gave his attention exclusively to the coal industry. He is at present interested in various commercial enterprises, among them being the following: The Penn-Marva Coal Company, of Garrett, Pennsylvania, of which Mr. Deal is treasurer and general manager; the Erie Coal Company, of Meyersdale, of which he is vice- president and director. He is director in the Scott-Ogilvie Coal Company, which has recently been exchanged for real estate in Columbus, Ohio, valued at $50,000. He is a large stockholder in the following concerns: Livingood Coal and Coke Company, of Meyersdale; Littleton tract of coal land in Wetzel county, West Virginia; the Citizens' National Bank of Meyersdale, of which he is also a director; First National Bank of Garrett, Pennsylvania; International Trust Company, of Pittsburg, Pennsyvlania; Economy Telegraphy Company, Somerset, Pennsylvania. He is vice-president of Bergholtz Mining Company, of Bergholtz, Ohio, which, with his brother Ezra, he controls. In his political relations Mr. Deal affiliates with the Democraic party, and is always ready and willing to lend his assistance to any enterprise tending to advance the interests of the party and the community. Fraternally he holds membership in the B.P.O.E., No. 175, of Johnstown, Pennsylvania. He is a member of the Lutheran church. Levi Deal married, April 14, 1889, Margaret B. Scott, a daughter of David C. Scott, of New Centerville, Somerset county, Pennsylvania, and they have the following children: Leora M., born July 30, 1890; Edwin S., September 7, 1892; James M., September 24, 1893; Marian D., February 3, 1894; and Nancy Marie, March 15, 1895. Mr. Deal's residence on Meyers avenue, Meyersdale, built in 1900, is a beautiful stone structure with all modern ideas embodied to secure telling effect and comfortable living.