Archibald Tanner and Margaretta McDowell
Husband Archibald Tanner 1 2 3
Born: 3 Feb 1786 - Cromwell, Middlesex Co, CT 1 3 Christened: Died: 15 Feb 1861 - Warren, Warren Co, PA 3 Buried:
Father: Tryal Tanner ( - ) 1 Mother:
Marriage: Dec 1819 2 3 4
Wife Margaretta McDowell 2 3
Born: 1799 or 1800 - Franklin, Venango Co, PA 2 3 Christened: Died: 28 Jan 1825 - Warren, Warren Co, PA 3 Buried:
Father: Col. Alexander McDowell (1760-1816) 2 Mother: Sarah Parker (1763-1865) 5
Children
1 F Sarah Parker Tanner 2 3
Born: 3 Jul 1821 2 3 Christened: Died: 3 Jun 1849 2 3 Buried:
2 F Laura Margaretta Tanner 3 6
AKA: Laura Margaret Tanner 2 Born: 9 Sep 1823 2 3 Christened: Died: 14 Sep 1909 3 Buried:Spouse: Judge Glenni W. Scofield (1817-1891) 2 3 6 Marr: 20 Nov 1845 3
General Notes: Husband - Archibald Tanner
He was born in Litchfield County, Connecticut, emigrated with his parents to Trumbull county, Ohio, in the year 1802. He commenced his business life at his majority by boating produce down the Ohio River, and came to Warren, Pennsylvania, in 1816 with a small stock of goods and groceries, brought by keel-boat up the river. He had been located for a few previous months in Franklin. With this small stock, his earthly substance then, he commenced a career of commercial success. This he achieved single-handed, where many others failed, in a poor and sparsely settled country, without aid from relatives or patronizing friends. His integrity gained him universal confidence, while his capacity and close attention to business secured him a large measure of success. He prospered and enlarged his business for many successive years, until he was recognized at home and abroad, as the capitalist and business man of Warren.
The latter part of his active commercial life was spent in company with Robert Falconer, esq., and the well-known firm of Tanner & Falconer was long remembered by the descendants of the early settlers, with feelings of sincere respect. Two more honorable dealers never did business in Warren.
In December, 1819, he married, but his married life was short. In 1825 he was left a widower with two infant daughters, only one of whom survived him. Not forgetting his obligations as a citizen nor relaxing his business energies, he added to their burdens the double duties of a widowed parental vigilance.
His political proclivities may be summed up by saying, he was an Adams man while Adams and Jackson headed the parties of the country, subsequently a Whig during the life of that party, and lastly a Republican in full communion. In politics, as in all things, he was an earnest man, acting boldly upon his convictions of right and duty. When in a discouraging minority, he purchased a press and established at his own expense the first newspaper ever printed in Warren County, to maintain the political doctrines he thought right.
In 1819-20 he was treasurer of the county, and for many years prior to 1829-the advent of Jackson's administration-he held the office of deputy postmaster in Warren, with great credit to himself and satisfaction to the people.
But his most prominent characteristics were local pride and public spirit. He led in every enterprise that aimed to promote the interest of the town and county in which he lived. Coming to Warren when it was an ungrubbed plateau, accessible only by the river channel and the Indian trail, he was foremost in all improvements, both useful and ornamental. To roads, turnpikes, boats, and bridges, and all other means of progress, he was the largest contributor and most active friend. In building he had no compeer in the early history of Warren. The first steamboat that ever navigated the Allegheny River, in 1830, was a monument to his enterprise and self-sacrificing spirit.
His last undertaking was the development of the rock-oil fields of Pennsylvania. At Titusville, in company with Hon. L. F. Watson, he sunk the first flowing well.
In his early life he devoted a portion of his leisure time to mechanical improvements. His inventions, though useful in their day, were eventually superseded by changes in business and later discoveries. One of his patents bore the signature of James Madison and another of J. Q. Adams.
Nor was he less a friend to the moral and religious advancement of society. He was one of the pioneers of Presbyterianism in Warren. Having united with that church at its first organization in 1831, he became its chief supporter. In 1832 he was much the largest contributor to the erection of its church building, and for a quarter of a century thereafter, to the support of stated preaching therein. His religion was the result of an earnest, vital conviction of its truth, and was never laid aside or forgotten in the excitements of the hour.
His conscientiousness was largely developed and ever present, prompting him in questions of doubtful morality. Although possessing certain idiosyncrasies of character that occasioned him to differ with many others in his views of right and wrong, he never could be betrayed into an act that was dishonest or dishonorable. While he was an advocate for the doctrine of expediency, few men lived so blameless a life in a moral point of view.
In intellectual capacity Mr. Tanner occupied a prominent position among intelligent business men. His was an original intellect, possessing large self-sustaining resources, ingenious, inventive, eccentric, with a strong appreciation of the ridiculous, a ready adaptation to the details of business and a pride of peculiarity in the mode of accomplishing his purpose. In his later life, his water works, his fence building, his cemetery project and the various enterprises which he either originated or patronized for the development of the country and improvement in the arts, were evidences of these characteristic peculiarities of taste and talent.
His perceptions were quick, and his mental action upon every subject presented, direct and pertinent, overleaping all circumlocution. His conclusions were rather instincts than rational deductions. His views of men and things were often quaint and quizzical, and so abrupt that many of his sayings have passed into proverbs and became the common property of the people.
In judgment he was not infallible, and he often embarked in projects that proved unfortunate pecuniary speculations. Such were his printing, steamboat, turnpike, railroad, bridge, and bank experiences, prompted always by public and patriotic motives, but disastrous in their financial results. To his friends he was always true, to his enemies persistently hostile. To his friends he always made himself useful and reliable, while he was at times exacting and censorious; to his enemies he was uncompromising and defiant, but never cruel.
To his relations he was always kind and often generous, even to involving himself in heavy losses on their account. True to his benevolent impulses, to the last, in his will, he releases all obligations to his estate for such advances.
He was the poor man's friend, if he would work. To the wants of the needy and unfortunate his heart always responded in acts of substantial aid. Industrious and energetic himself, he had no toleration for idleness or dissipation.
In his temper he was self-willed and somewhat hasty, exhibiting at times a degree of petulance and passion that was doubtless largely attributable to his sensitive and very excitable nervous temperament. But underneath all his foibles lay a manly and open heart, sincerely devoted to truth, honesty, and the public good. His courage, moral and physical, no one ever doubted. It had been often tested. He dared to do right in all emergencies, even against the swell of popular sentiment.
He had long been a member of the Masonic order and adhered to it as a benevolent institution. [HWC 1887, 621]
1 J. S. Schenck, History of Warren County, Pennsylvania (Syracuse, NY: D. Mason & Co., Publishers, 1887), Pg 621.
2 —, Biographical Annals of Franklin County, Pennsylvania (Chicago, IL: The Genealogical Publishing Co., 1905), Pg 88.
3 John W. Jordan, LL.D., Genealogical and Personal History of the Allegheny Valley, Pennsylvania (New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1913), Pg 372.
4 J. S. Schenck, History of Warren County, Pennsylvania (Syracuse, NY: D. Mason & Co., Publishers, 1887), Pg 622.
5 J. H. Newton, History of Venango County, Pennsylvania (Columbus, OH: J. A. Caldwell Publishers, 1879), Pg 488.
6
J. S. Schenck, History of Warren County, Pennsylvania (Syracuse, NY: D. Mason & Co., Publishers, 1887), Pg 616.
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