Albert J. Whieldon and Lolla Marsteller
Husband Albert J. Whieldon 1
AKA: Albert B. Wheildon 2 Born: 5 Dec 1868 - Mercer Co, PA 2 Christened: Died: Buried:
Father: Jacob Whieldon ( - ) 1 Mother: Mary A. Williamson ( - ) 1
Marriage:
Wife Lolla Marsteller 3
Born: Christened: Died: Buried:
Father: James Marsteller ( - ) 3 Mother:
Children
1 M William Clarence Whieldon 3
Born: Christened: Died: Buried:
2 F Florence L. Whieldon 3
Born: Christened: Died: Buried:
3 F Lillian Whieldon 3
Born: Christened: Died: Buried:
4 M Stanley Elwood Whieldon 3
Born: Christened: Died: Buried:
General Notes: Husband - Albert J. Whieldon
He began to deal in lumber when a young man, having charge of a mill in Mercer County, Pennsylvania, where he long owned some real estate. Associating himself with T. J. Wright, he built several houses, which he sold to new residents, and cleared a comfortable sum of money. He was a patriotic citizen of Ellwood City, and a firm believer in the city's continued growth and prosperity, and made valuable real estate investments in building-lot property, located in advantageous positions.
He was a traveling salesman for a Chicago lumber firm, residing at New Castle, Pennsylvania.
About 1897, the Ellwood Lumber Co. was officered as follows: E. Carlton of Cleveland, Ohio, president; Louis Heller, Youngstown, Ohio, vice-president; L. F. Phillips, secretary and treasurer; and Albert B. Wheildon, manager and superintendent. The company, which manufactured lumber for contract woodwork, was established in 1894, and the plant was built on a part of the Nye farm, located on Franklin and Highland Avenues, with a frontage of 208 feet on Franklin Avenue, 205 on Highland Avenue, 295 feet on Railroad Street, and the same on the alley. On the same lot there was also a two-story dwelling house and office. The mill was supplied with steam power, which was generated in a fifty horsepower boiler, and harnessed for service in an engine to correspond; the machinery was like what was generally found in mills of the sort: machines for planing, moulding, resawing, etc. The mill employed five men and sometimes more, and since Mr. Wheildon assumed the management in 1896, the business increased in volume to a significant extent, not even warranted by the large amount of building going on in Ellwood City.
1 J. G. White, A Twentieth Century History of Mercer County Pennsylvania (Chicago, IL: The Lewis Publishing Company, 1909), Pg 406.
2 Editor, Book of Biographies, Lawrence County, PA (Buffalo, NY: Biographical Publishing Company, 1897), Pg 252.
3
Editor, Book of Biographies, Lawrence County, PA (Buffalo, NY: Biographical Publishing Company, 1897), Pg 255.
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