Biography of Harry Clay Hadden HARRY CLAY HADDEN has made for himself excellent rep- utation and worthy success in connection with mercantile enterprise in the City of Princeton, Mercer County, where he is head of the firm of H. C. Hadden & Company, one of the representative establishments of the city. Of Scotch and Irish ancestry, Mr. Hadden was born at Oakdale, Pennsylvania, in January, 1878, and is a son of Alexander A. and Agnes K. (Jackson) Hadden, the former of whom was born in Ireland and the latter in Pennsyl- vania. The Jackson family came from Scotland and settled at South Fayette, near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in an early day. Alexander A. Hadden was reared in his native land and came to the United States about 1875. He be- came a mine superintendent in the coal fields of Pennsyl- vania, and was an expert mine man. He died in 1910. His wife died in 1906. After attending the public schools of his native town and also Oakdale Academy at the same place, Harry C. Had- den found employment, and in the meanwhile attended night school in Duff's Business College, Pittsburgh, Pennsyl- vania, where he gave special attention to the study of bookkeeping and business English. After completing his course he studied surveying, and for eighteen months he worked as a surveyor. He then entered the employ of the Pittsburgh Coal Company and afterward the Boomer Coal & Coke Company, in which the late Marcus A. Hanna, of Cleveland, Ohio, was one of the interested principals, and in the interests of this corporation he came to Boomer, West Virginia, where the company controlled coal mines. In 1909 he came to Princeton and engaged in the general merchandise business on a modest scale. From this nu- cleus, with fair and honorable dealings and effective serv- ice to patrons, he has developed the substantial and well or- dered business of Hadden's Reliable Department Store, which in every sense merits its title of '' reliable.'' Here are handled dry goods and kindred lines, as well as ready- to wear apparel for women and children. The success which has attended the enterprise is the more gratifying to record when it is recognized that Mr. Hadden has depended entirely upon his own ability and efforts in making his way to the goal of prosperity. He is a loyal member of the Princeton Business Men's Club, is a charter member of the Princeton Country Club, is affiliated with the Blue Lodge, Chapter and Commandery of the York Rite of the Masonic fraternity, and also with the Mystic Shrine, and he and his wife hold membership in the Presbyterian Church, of which his first wife likewise was a zealous mem- ber. In 1901 Mr. Hadden wedded Miss Frances J. Scott, of Monongahela, Pennsylvania, and she is survived by three children: Mildred, Harry and Josephine. In February, 1918, was recorded the marriage of Mr. Hadden and Miss Edna French Lipps, daughter of David M. Lipps, who was born in the State of Virginia. The one child of this sec- ond marriage is a son, Earl. From The History of West Virginia, Old and New, page 42-42 Submitted by Valerie F. Crook **************************************************************** USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. Files may be printed or copied for personal use only. ****************************************************************