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RICHARD
KANGAS, a successful merchant of Conneaut, was born in
Finland, June 11, 1882, the son of Gabriel and Anna (Hietakangus)
Kangus, the former of whom is deceased. Mrs. Kangas
resides in Finland. There were five children in the Kangas
family: Richard, the subject of this sketch; Elmer, lives
at Warren, Ohio; Anna, married Kansta Lahti, lives in
Massachusetts; Matt, engaged in business with his brother,
Richard; and Helen, lives in Finland.
Richard Kangas came to American 1904 and settled
at Chester, Pa., later going to Canada, where he worked in the
mines. He then went to New York and was employed in the
building of the tunnel under the Hudson River. Mr. Kangas
came to Conneaut in 1908 from Cleveland, and opened his present
place of business in 1915. He employs four men in his bakery
shop and has two trucks on the streets of the city. Mr. Kangas has been successful in his business undertaking and has
an extensive trade.
On Dec. 15, 1908, Mr. Kangas was married to
Miss Emma Nimel, who was born in Finland. To this union
have been born two children: Heimo and Ulyas, both
students.
Mr. Kangas and his family are members of the
Lutheran Church and he belongs to the Modern Woodmen of America.
He is well known as a wrestler, having won many medals in that
particular sport.
Source #2 ~ Page 689 |
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HON.
AMOS AND MARTIN KELLOGG - Amos Kellogg was born in
Alford, Berkshire county, Massachusetts, June 17, 1782, was married
to Paulina Dean, July 30, 1805 and
was the seventh in a family of nine children, all of whom lived to
maturity and reared families of their own. Amos and his
brother Martin, two years his senior, who had previously
married Miss Anna Lester, remained at home as the joint
owners of and cultivating the old homestead until 1811, when one
Colwell, of Albany, New York, who was the owner of a large tract
of wild lands in western Virginia, by representing his land to be
valuable for farming purposes and just coming into market, and
offering him the position of surveyor and general agent for the sale
of his lands, with a liberal compensation, induced Martin,
who was a practical and skillful surveyor, to accept his offer.
Accordingly, after the necessary preparations, June 12,
1811, Martin, with his family, consisting of his wife and two
children, aged respectively seven and three years, started from the
old homestead to seek a new home in the then far West, their outfit
consisting of a pair of horses, wagon, and harness, carrying the
family and household goods. The route taken was from Alford to
Newburg, where they crossed the Hudson river, from thence to eastern
New Jersey, Bethlehem, Allentown, Reading, Harrisburg, Carlisle, and
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania; Cumberland, Maryland; Clarksburg and
Parkersburg, Virginia, to Belpre, Ohio. On arriving at his
destination, after a journey of some 600 miles, occupying some five
weeks, having crossed the Blue Ridge and seen the country, he became
satisfied that nothing could be done in the way of selling lands
that then were hardly worth surveying. He was, therefore, on
the point of turning back, without unloading his goods, when he was
offered a house to shelter him for a season. This induced him
to remain until he could better determine what to do. He
remained at Belpre, on the Ohio river, until the death of his
father, late in the autumn of 1812, when, on the 24th of December of
that year, he started on foot to return to the old homestead,
following the same route traversed on his journey the year previous,
arriving at Alford about January 1, 1813
On the failure of the land enterprise, the death of
their father, and the return of Martin, the brothers
concluded to embrace one of the then many opportunities to exchange
cultivated farms in the East for wild lands in what was then known
as New Connecticut. They accordingly made such exchange,
receiving for the old homestead 1,150 acres of uncultivated land
situated in Ashtabula and Geauga counties. Early in 1813,
Martin returned to Belpre, and with his family removed to their
new lands in Salem, in this county, in time to erect a log house,
one mile north of the present village of Kelloggsville, in which
they spent the winter of 1813-'14.
In February, 1814, Amos with his family, -
consisting of his aged mother, wife, two daughters, aged
respectively eight and six years, and a son, aged two years, with a
hired laborer, - started from their old homestead for their new hoe
in the wilderness of New Connecticut, the outfit being four horses
with two sleighs, carrying the family and household goods.
Arriving at Phelpstown, Ontario County, New York, where his wife had
expected to meet her father, two brothers and a younger sister, who
had preceded her the year before and settled in that locality, she
learned for the first time, by a messenger whom she met but a few
rods from the door, that her father had died since she had started
on her journey. They arrived at their new home early in March,
after a journey of more than 500 miles entirely on runners, and
occupying four weeks. On the arrival of Amos with his
family, in the spring of 1814, the brothers, who were still
partners, and held both real and personal property in common,
commenced clearing and opening up their new lands preparatory to
cultivation, and during the following six years, while they so
remained in company, they cleared, fenced, and brought under
cultivation some 200 acres of original forest lands, being very
largely assisted in their labors by John Hardy. They
continued to reside together with their families until Feb., 1815,
when they purchased from the late Hon. Eliphalet Austin, of
Austinburg, a large part of the tract of land now covered by the
village of Kelloggsville, then known as the "Foggerson
settlement." Martin moved upon this tract where he
remained until 1819, when they dissolved their partnership and
divided the property, Amos taking what was known as the
Foggerson farm and Martin going back to the new one.
Amos' business occupations were farming, merchandising,
buying, driving, and selling cattle, and keeping a village tavern.
He was appointed to and held the office of Justice of
the Peace in his native township for one or more terms before his
removal to Ohio, and in March, 1816, was elected one of the Justices
for Salem township. Soon after the expiration of his term in
Salem he removed to Monroe, and in July, 1822, was elected Justice
for that township, which office he held until he resigned to accept
the office of Associate Judge, to which he was elected by the
Legislature, December 31, 1823, and took his seat at the March term,
1824, of which office he discharged the duties until his decease,
April 27, 1830. He was the first Postmaster in Monroe, and
from him was derived the name of the post office and village of
Kelloggsville.
At the time of the severance of two miles in width of
the territory from the south part of Salem, and annexing it to
Monroe, in 1818, the brothers were very much interested and were
probably influential in procuring the annexation for which they did
not at the time receive very many thanks or congratulations from the
citizens of Salem. Having had advantages of a fair New England
common school education, and being a man of good judgment, Amos
was very competent to transact such business as he had been
accustomed to; but having been induced, in 1821, to engage in the
business of a country merchant, and intrusting the management of the
business to younger men, like most enterprises of that kind, the
venture proved a failure, and caused him much embarrassment during
the remainder of his life.
He united with the order of Freemasons in early life,
was a member of the Evergreen Lodge, in Salem, and adhered to that
organization through the troublous times subsequent to the alleged
abduction of Morgan. Politically, he was of the old
Federal School, but ardently supported Mr. Clay for President
in 1824, and Mr. Adams in1828. He was a kind,
indulgent, and sympathizing husband and father, and, in short, "that
noblest work of God," an honest man.
Source #1 - Page 239 |
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MRS. PAULINA
KELLOGG—Paulina Kellogg, wife of Amos Kellogg,
was born in New Marlborough, Berkshire county, Massachusetts, May 21,
1782, and was married in the county of her birth July 30, 1805. She
was the daughter of Captain Walter Dean, who
entered the Massachusetts line at the commencement of the
Revolutionary war, and remained in the service during the entire war,
leaving the service with a captain's commission. Having the advantage
of a common-school education, she taught a district school one season,
but, being the oldest daughter, early the death of her mother made it
necessary for her to assume the entire charge of her father's large
family until her own marriage; after which, the duties of a mother and
the care of her own household devolved upon her. Nine children were
born to her, two of whom died in infancy, and seven reached maturity.
Being a woman of vigorous health, she was able to and
did perform most of the household labor for a large family, composed
of the husband, children, and farm laborers engaged in clearing,
fencing, farming, and keeping a village tavern, and manufactured the
cloth and made much of the clothing for her family. On the death of
her husband, in 1830, she caused herself to be appointed
administratrix of his estate, and with only the aid of her oldest son,
then but eighteen years of age, she continued to keep the tavern,
manage the business, and settle the estate; and to her good
management and wise economy was her family largely indebted for the
retention of a home to which all were very greatly attached. After
giving up the responsibilities of business to her son, who relied upon
her advice and counsel in reference to important transactions with
great confidence, and sought it for many years, she made her home with
him, and spent much of her time with her several sons and daughters',
rendering such assistance in nursing and caring for their young
families as only a devoted mother and grandmother could. Her affection
for and kindly remembrance of her children, grand and
great-grand-children, never faltered, as she was always impartial, and
always anxious to aid them in any lawful enterprise. Except the death
of her husband, to whom she was ardently attached and a most devoted
wife, the death of her youngest daughter Paulina, who married
at the age of twenty and died at twenty-one, was the greatest
affliction of her life. Being her youngest daughter, delicate and
lovely, recently married with fair prospects of a happy and prosperous
life, her death was long and deeply mourned. She died at
Conneaut, in this county, on the
21st day of June, 1875, aged ninety-three years and one month, in the
enjoyment of her mental faculties unimpaired, leaving behind her two
aged sisters, two sons, and two daughters, twenty-four grandchildren,
and nineteen great-grandchildren, to mourn her departure. She was an
affectionate and devoted wife, a kind, indulgent, and wise mother, and
in all relations of life performed her duties with a conscientious
devotion to the right.
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GENERAL HENRY
KEYES, of Conneaut, Ohio, was born Nov. 16, 1793, in New
Marlborough, Massachusetts, the only child of Elias and Phebe
Keys, who removed from that point to Conneaut township, Ohio, in
1814. Our subject received his education in his native State,
and since arriving in Ohio his life has been spent in farming, he
being now an extensive land owner and capitalist. He has held
numerous offices in this township, having been the first Mayor of
the village of Conneaut. The title by which he is familiarly
known was given him years since, he having been commissioned as
General in the State militia.
Jan. 19, 1819, Mr. Keyes was united in marriage
with Mary Cole, of Conneaut. They had the following
children: Henry P., born Feb. 14, 1820, married Sarah M.
Huntington; Alvin C., born Oct. 25, 1821, married Minnie Rupp,
and both reside at Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Mary C., born Nov. 14,
1823, is the wife of Edward Grant, of Conneaut. Mrs.
Keys died in 1824, and July 9, 1829, the General married
Vesta Bates of Cummington, Massachusetts. They have had
seven children, namely: Marcus B., who married Louisa
Gordon, now deceased; Martin B. married Ann Eliza
Lloyd; Charles W., deceased in 1854; Elias A.,
married Charlotte E. Trenton; Phebe A., Russell M. and
Milo O. All reside in Conneaut except those designated
above. In political matters, General Keyes is a
Republican. He is a member of the Masonic order, Evergreen
Lodge, No. 222, of Conneaut, Ohio.
Source
#1: Page 991 |
ELLIOTT
KIMBALL - The personnel of the executive corps of Ashtabula
County is such as to reflect credit on the county and to maintain
the high prestige always maintained by its officials. He whose
name initiates this sketch is giving a most discriminating and
sat=recorder and maintains his home in Conneaut, Ohio.
Mr. Kimball is a native of the old Keystone
state, having been born in Girard, Erie county, Pennsylvania, on May
12, 1852, and is a son of Albert T. and Mariette (Hall) Kimball,
both of whom were likewise natives of Pennsylvania and both of whom
are now deceased. Elliott Kimball was afforded the
advantages of the public schools of his native city, including the
high school, and after attaining to years of maturity he was there
engaged in the mercantile business for a time. Later he was
the owner of a general store at Clarks Corners, Ashtabula county,
Ohio, where he took up his residence in 1884 and where he served as
postmaster for the long period of nineteen years. He was one
of the most influential citizens of that village and that he gained
unqualified popularity in Ashtabula county had sufficient voucher
when, in 1901, he was elected to the office of county recorder.
He assumed the duties of the office in 1902 and so satisfactory was
his handling of the same that he was chosen as his own successor in
1904 and was reappointed in 1908, so that he is now serving his
seventh consecutive year as incumbent of this important office.
While a resident of Clarks Corners he rendered efficient service as
justice of the peace and he wielded much influence in public affairs
in the village. He has shown marked executive ability and has
the affairs of his present office thoroughly systematized and
effectively managed. Mr. Kimball is a member of the
directorate of the Conneaut Mutual Loan & Trust Company and the
Conneaut Leather Company, both representative concerns of the
county, and is also a director of the Electric Respirone Company, of
Cleveland. His political allegiance is given to the Republican
party, in whose cause he has rendered yeoman service, and he is
prominently identified with the Masonic fraternity, in which his
affiliations include membership in Cache Commandery, Knights
Templars and Al Koran Temple, Ancient Arabic Order of the Nobles of
the Mystic Shrine, in the city of Cleveland. He and his wife
hold membership in the Methodist Episcopal church.
In the year 1874 was solemnized the marriage of Mr.
Kimball to Miss Marian Hogle, daughter of William
Hogle* of Clarks Corners, Ashtabula county,
Ohio, and brief record is here given concerning the five children of
this union: Jennie C. is the wife of R. E. Mygatt, of
Conneaut; Ida M. is the wife of Attorney Charles L.
Whitney, superintendent of the Conneaut Leather Company;
William A., who is engaged in the general merchandise business
at Clarks Corners, married Miss Lena Robinson; Glenn E. is in
business for himself in Corry, Pennsylvania; and R. Floyd is
a clerk in the Fauver & Walker Clothing Company, Conneaut,
Ohio.
Source #4 - Page 1854 |
AMOS KING,
retired farmer and stockman of Jefferson Township, is a veteran of
the Civil War. He was born in Somersetshire, England, March
10, 1840, and is a son of John and Sarah King.
John King brought his family to this country
from England in 1849 and settled in Ashtabula County. He
purchased land near Orwell and became a prominent farmer. To
Mr. and Mrs. King the following children were born: John,
Edward, and James, all deceased; George died in
service during the Civil War, was a member of Company K, 105th Ohio
Volunteer Infantry; Amos, the subject of this sketch; Richard,
a retired farmer, lives at Detroit, Mich; William and Eliza,
both deceased; and Sarah, married Samuel Clark, both
deceased.
Amos King received his education in a log school
house at Orwell and spent his boyhood on his father's farm. He
has always been a farmer and for many years was a widely known
stockman of Jefferson Township.
During the Civil War Mr. King enlisted with an
Ohio outfit and served throughout the war. He was a member of
the 105th Ohio Volunteer Infantry and was taken prisoner at
Richmond, Va. Mr. King engaged in several important
battles of the war and was with Sherman on his famous March
to the Sea.
In 1902 he was married to Elizabeth Swire, a
native of Ashtabula County, and a daughter of George and Mary
Swire, a native of Ireland and the latter of Germany.
Mr. Swire was also a Civil War veteran and is now deceased.
His widow resides at Jefferson. Mr. and Mrs. King have
no children.
In politics Mr. King is identified with the
Democratic party. He is a member of the Grand Army of the
Republic and is among the substantial citizens of the county.
Source #2 - page 1067 |
H. G. KINGDOM,
a prominent attorney of Conneaut and vice-president of the Citizens
Banking and Trust Company, is a native of Ohio. He was born in
Trumbull County, in 1876, and is the son of George and Hattie
(Chase) Kingdom.
George Kingdom was born in England and in 1848 came
to Niagara Falls, on the Canadian side, where he remained one year.
He then came to Ohio, locating at Orwell, where he owned and
operated a cheese factory for many years. He and his wife now
live retired at Orwell. They were the parents of three
children: H. G., the subject of this sketch; and
Maud L. and Blaine C., both deceased.
H. G. Kingdom received his education in the
public schools and studied law with Attorney Fisher and with
C. H. Sargent, at Jefferson, where he later served as deputy
clerk of court for three eyras. On June 15, 1902, he was
admitted to the bar and since Mar. 1, 1903, has practice law
continuously at Conneaut. He served as city attorney for two
years.
In 1897 Mr. Kingdom was married to Miss
Bertha A. Durkee, a native of Monroe Township, Ashtabula County,
and a daughter of Charles C. and Emily Durkee. The Durkee
family settled in Ohio in 1816 and Solomon Durkee, great
grandfather of Mrs. Kingdom, served in the American Army
during the Revolutionary War. Mrs. Kingdom was one of the
founders of the Daughters of the American Revolution in Conneaut.
To Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Durkee four children were born:
Milan C., a farmer, lives in Conneaut Township, Ashtabula
County; Zela D., married Fred Brydle, deceased; and
she lives near Conneaut; Fred, Conneaut Township, and Mrs.
Kingdom. Mr. Durkee lives with his daughter Mrs.
Brydle. His wife died in 1900. To Mr. and Mrs.
Kingdom two sons have been born: George D., born in
September, 1903, studying law at Ohio State University; and
Howard C., born Mar. 27, 1914.
Mr. Kingdom was instrumental in obtaining the
Carnegie Public Library for Conneaut, and is the only member left of
the original trustees. One of Mr. Kingdom's pastimes,
which he greatly enjoys, is hunting in Canada, and during the season
of 1923 he killed a moose. Mr. Kingdom is a Republican
and he and his family are members of the Congregational Church.
He is well and favorably known throughout the county.
Source #2 - page 578 |
PERCIVAL F.
KNOWLTON, who is successfully engaged in the insurance
business in Ashtabula, was born in New York, April 15, 1878, and is
the son of Frank E. and Henrietta (Waters) Knowlton.
The Knowlton family is one of the oldest New
York families and P. F. Knowlton's grandfather built the
first frame hose in Delaware County, N. Y. The latch string of
this old house is now in the possession of Percival Knowlton.
Frank E. Knowlton was a cabinet maker by trade and lived in
New York until his death in 1891. His wife died in 1915.
They were the parents of the following children: Bertha A.,
the widow of V. W. Stoddard, lives at Jamestown, N. Y.; P.
F., the subject of this sketch; Delroy B., married
Lillian Parkinson; Bernice M., lives at Jamestown, N. Y.;
and Mae, died in infancy.
P. F. Knowlton spent his boyhood in his native
state and received his education in the schools of Geneva, N. Y.
When a young man he removed to Corry, Pa., where he remained for
three years. In 1900 Mr. Knowlton went to Bradford,
Pa., and became a clerk for the American Express Company there.
He was later cashier and agent for this company at Bradford,
Chautauqua, and Warsaw, N. Y., and Oil City, Pa. and in 1903 came to
Ashtabula as agent until 1912, at which time he purchased the
insurance business of James Reed, which was located at 185
Main Street. This business was established in 1863 and during
this long period of time has developed into the leading insurance
business of the city. Mr. Knowlton is the agent for the
following insurance companies: American National Fire Insurance
Company of Columbus, Ohio; The Detroit Fire & Marine Insurance
Company, Detroit, Mich.; Eagle State & British Dominion of London,
England; Fireman's Fund of San Francisco, Calif.; The Henry Clay of
Lexington, Ky.; The Home Insurance Company of New York; New
Hampshire Fire of Manchester; New Hampshire; Phoenix Assurance
Company of London, England; Norwich Union Fire Insurance Society,
Ltd., Norwich, Eng.; Royal Insurance Company, Ltd., of Liverpool,
Eng.; The Sterling Fire Insurance Company of Indianapolis, Ind.; The
American Guarantee Casualty Company of Columbus, Ohio; The Hartford
Live Stock Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn.; The Hartford Steam
Boiler Inspection & Insurance Company of Hartford, Conn.
Mr. Knowlton is general agent for the New York Indemnity Company
of New York; The Metropolitan Casualty Company of New York; The
Shelby Mutual Plate Glass Insurance Company of Shelby, Ohio; and the
Union Indemnity Company of New Orleans, La. He is a notary
public and automobile registrar for Ohio, as well as secretary of
the Ashtabula Automobile Club.
P. F. Knowlton was married to Miss Frances
Bennett, a native of Corry, Pa., and the daughter of William
and Ellen (Hickey) Bennett, natives of New York. Mr.
Bennett was a pioneer locomotive engineer for the Pennsylvania
Railroad until the time of his death. To Mr. and Mrs.
Bennett three children were born: Mrs. Knowlton; Maud M.,
lives in Buffalo, N. Y.; and William J., married Nan
Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Knowlton have one daughter, Dorothy
A., lives at home.
Mr. Knowlton is a member of the Presbyterian
Church and belongs to the Maccabees and the Ashtabula Chamber of
Commerce. He is a man of keen intellect and of marked business
ability, and is well and favorably known throughout the county.
Source #2 - page 853 |
R. W.
KNOWLTON, a prominent business man of Ashtabula, engaged in
the drug business at 40 Depot Street, is a native of Ashtabula
County, and a member of the county's oldest and most prominent
families. He was born at rock Creek, Ohio, Feb. 22, 1867, and
is the son of Stephen and Mary (Payne) Knowlton.
Stephen Knowlton was born on a farm in Morgan
Township, Ashtabula County, in 1824, the son of Calvin Knowlton,
who was the son of Stephen Knowlton, a native of Connecticut
and a soldier of the Revolutionary War. Stephen Knowlton
was a member of the 5th Company, Colonel Spencer's Regiment
of Connecticut Militia. His son, Stephen, also engaged
in farming and stock raising and died at the age of 84 years.
His wife, a native of Orange County, N.Y., died at the age of 74
years. The first frame house to be erected in Morgan Township
was built by Calvin Knowlton on May 30, 1830, after he had
moved his family to Ashtabula County from Connecticut by oxen teams.
To Stephen and Mary (Payne) Knowlton three children were
born, as follows: Dwight, died at the age of two and
one-half years; E. P., born in 1865, married Addie
Brockway, and they live at Rock Creek, Ohio; and R. W.,
the subject of this sketch.
R. W. Knowlton received his education in the
public schools of Ashtabula County and studied pharmacy in Chicago.
In 1901 he established himself in business at Ashtabula, and now
owns one of the fine and up-to-date drug stores of the city.
Mr. Knowlton has lived in Ashtabula since 1865.
In 1895 Mr. Knowlton was married to Miss
Jeanette Fortune, a native of Scotland, born in 1870, and the
daughter of George and Isabella (Hunter) Fortune, who came to
this country in 1880, locating in Canada. Later, they removed
to Conneaut, Ohio, where engaged in the building business. He
died in 1923 and his wife lives at Conneaut. Mr. and Mrs.
Fortune were the parents of the following children:
Cornelius, born in 1868, married Hattie Oakes; Mrs.
Knowlton; Margaret, born in 1872, married W. K. Wood;
James, born in 1874, married Delia Richards, lives at
Mansfield, Ohio; William, born in 1877, married Grace Tate,
lives at Conneaut; George, born in 1882, lives at Lorain,
Ohio, married Pearl Montigney; and John, born April
29, 1884, married Ruby Loomis, lives at Conneaut. To
R. W. and Jeanette (Fortune) Knowlton three children have been
born, as follows: Robert R., born in 1897, married on
Nov. 17, 1923, to Florence Kugel, lives in Cleveland; Neal
A., born in 1899, at home; and Margaret E., born in 1903,
at home.
Mr. Knowlton is a Republican, a member of the
Presbyterian Church and belongs to the Knights of Pythias and the
Rotary Club. He is a man of progressive ideas in his business
and a citizen of whom the community is proud.
Source #2 - page 536 w/ photo |
|
TOM B. KNOX is an
enterprising and well known druggist of Ashtabula
Harbor and a member of one of Ohio’s honored pioneer families. He was born at Minerva, Ohio,
May 20, 1888, and is the son of William
S. and Nellie M. (Perdue) Knox.
William S. Knox
is a native of Marietta, Ohio, and the son of
M. G. and Martha (Stratton) Knox,
natives of Ohio.
M. G. Knox was a shipbuilder of the
early days and his father was one of the first shipbuilders on the
Ohio River.
M. G. Knox is now 93 years of age. His son,
William S., was for many years a
prominent printer at Canton,
Ohio, and is now retired. His wife is the daughter of
M. Perdue, a captain of the Civil
War, now deceased. To
William S. and Nellie M. (Perdue) Knox four children were born, as follows:
William Clifton, born in 1886; Tom B., the
subject of this sketch; Ray, born in
1893; and Louise, born in 1895.
Tom B. Knox was educated in the
public schools of Canton,
Ohio, and was a student of
Ohio Northern
University, where he studied pharmacy. He then entered the employ of
Mr. Schnaffer, a druggist of
Ashtabula, where he remained until 1906, at which
time he joined the navy at Cleveland. After four years he returned to
Ashtabula and worked with
Mr. Schnaffer until 1920. He then became a partner of
Mr. HElender, and the business is
known as Helender & Knox. In 1923 they opened another store.
Mr. Helender manages the one on
Bridge Street
and Mr. Knox the one on
Lake Street. They carry a full line of drugs,
stationery and toilet articles and have an extensive trade.
In 1913
Mr. Knox was united in marriage with Miss Florence E. Large, a native of Ashtabula, and the
daughter of Ed and Monia Large of
Ashtabula. To this union one daughter has been
born, Sallie Louise, born in 1914.
Mr. Knox is a Republican, a member of
the Episcopal Church and belongs to the Masonic Blue Lodge and Chapter and
Commandery. He and his wife have
many friends and stand high in the community.
~ Source #2: History of Ashtabula County, Ohio
by Moina W. Large - Vol. I – 1924 – Page 457
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