Greenbrier County, West Virginia Biography: Frank Nixon MANN ************************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: Material may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material, AND permission is obtained from the contributor of the file. These pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by other organizations. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material for non-commercial purposes, MUST obtain the written consent of the contributor. Transcribed and submitted by Valerie Crook, , 1998. ************************************************************************** FRANK NIXON MANN. In that growing list of industries that distinguish Huntington among the busy cities of the state, one of the important ones, due to volume of the busi- ness and wide distribution of products, is the Huntington Sash, Door & Trim Company, of which Frank Nixon Mann is president and general manager. Mr. Mann has been a lumber manufacturer and planing mill operator for many years, and came to Huntington from the eastern part of the state. He was born in Greenbrier County, July 19, 1861. Back in Colonial times three brothers left Scotland and came to America, one locating in Pennsylvania, another in Mary- land, while the direct ancestor of the Huntington manufac- turer established his home in Gloucester County, Virginia, where he intermarried with the Page family. The grand- father of Frank Nixon Mann was Billie Thomas Mann, who was born in Bath County, Virginia, in 1784, was reared there, was married in Monroe County, West Virginia, and was one of the early farmers established in the Fort Spring neighborhood. At one time he owned a third of all the land in Fayette County. This land later turned out to be exceedingly valuable on account of its coal deposits. He died at Fort Spring in 1876. His wife was Miss Alexan- der, a native of Virginia. James Mann, their son, was born in Greenbrier County, near Fort Spring, in 1832, and when a young man he left that vicinity and spent three years as a farmer in Edgar County, Illinois. About a year after his marriage there he returned to Greenbrier County, and conducted his extensive operations as a farmer, but about 1878 moved into Alder- son, and supervised his farm from that point until his death, which occurred at Alderson, Monroe County, in Jan- uary, 1910. He was a democrat, served three terms as a magistrate, and was for many years an elder in the Pres- byterian Church. James Mann married Elizabeth Nixon, who was born at Springfield, Illinois, March 11, 1838, and is now eighty-four years of age, a resident of Alderson. Prank Nixon is the oldest of her three children. Her daughter May E. is the wife of Dr. Charles P. Nash, a re- tired physician and surgeon at Alderson. Bessie A. died at Alderson at the age of twenty-five, and her husband, Mr. Lide, is now a merchant in Birmingham, Alabama. Frank Nixon Mann acquired a rural school training in Greenbrier County, took his preparatory course in a pri- vate school in the same county, and then entered Hampden Sidney College in Prince Edward County, Virginia. He re- mained there until in his senior year, when he left, in 1884, to take up active business. For about thirty years Mr. Mann was a lumber manufacturer and farmer living at Alderson. His planing mill there burned in 1911, and in 1912 he moved to Huntington and established the Hunting- ton Sash Door and Trim Company, building the plant at Nineteenth and Second Avenue. He is principal owner and president and general manager of the company, which is the West Virginia corporation. Others associated with him in the official personnel are: J. W. Lawton, vice president, and F. L. Faust, secretary and treasurer. This is a large industry with complete machinery equipment for the man- ufacture of all planing and mill work products including stair, porch work, window frames, store fixtures, mouldings and interior trim. The output commands a large sale all over West Virginia and is shipped even to Ohio and Michi- gan points. Mr. Mann is a democrat, is an elder in the First Presby- terian Church of Huntington, and since moving to that city has acquired some interests in real estate, including his home at 1621 Fifth Avenue. In September, 1892, at Alder- son, West Virginia, he married Miss Nancy B. Murray, daughter of Rev. Patrick Murray, who married a Miss Graves. Both her parents are now deceased. Her father was a minister of the Baptist Church. Mrs. Mann is a graduate of the Woman's Western College of Hamilton, Ohio. Without children of their own, Mr. and Mrs. Mann reared two adopted children. The first, Nancy, is now the wife of Garland B. Johnson, a resident of Lynchburg, Vir- ginia, and general sales manager of the Lynchburg Pipe and Foundry Company. The second is Elsworth F., now a stu- dent in the Military Academy at Augusta, Virginia. The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume II, pg. 170-171