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Facts and Events
"George Delo was born in Westmoreland in 1773 about the time his father was killed. ... When Mr. [George] Delo married the widow [Eve (Hummel) Loughner] he had nine children and she had six. Of the Loughner children, Barnet, Michael, Samuel and Daniel, were tradesmen, and all violinists; their descendants are numerous. Christianna married Daniel Delo, and Susan married Reuben Fowles, a native of Juniata county; two of their sons were veterans of the civil war - A. R., and William. ... He died March 11, 1848, when he had living nine sons and three daughters. ---Memoirs of Allegheny County, Pennsylvania: Personal and Genealogical, Volume 1, 1904, pp.242-243
References
- George Michael Delo, in Find A Grave.
Family Members Spouse Eva Catherine Kuntz Delo 1778–1820 (m. 1798)
Children Jacob S Delo unknown–1869 Daniel Delo 1799–1877 George Peter Delo 1809–1889 John Delo 1814–1848 Henry Delo 1819–1820 Henry J Delo 1824–1898 Reuben F Delo 1827–1897
- George Delo.
George Delo (1773 – 1848) – George Delo, the son of Michael and Mary (Keiffer) Dillow, was born in 1773. When he was about nine years old (August 1782), George’s father was killed and his brother John captured in an Indian attack while they were clearing land in southwestern Pennsylvania.[1] After her husband’s death, George’s mother, Mary, moved to Westmoreland County, where she had relatives. There she married Jacob Smith.
George married Eva Catherine Kuhns sometime between June 1798 and 1799. Eva Catherine Kuhns was born in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania, in 1778. Eva was the daughter of Bartol and Anna Christina (Heisler) Kuhns. Her parents came from the Palatinate of Germany. Records of old Harrold’s Evangelical Lutheran Church, Westmoreland County show that she was confirmed there on April 20, 1794 at the age of sixteen. George and Eva had ten children.
George’s land transactions indicate that he remained in Westmoreland County until at least 1805 and that he was a distiller in 1798. In 1806 George, Eva and their four children left for the newly opened lands of Clarion County (then it was part of Venango County).[2] It would have been a difficult journey of at least ten days. They probably made the journey with a number of Smiths and Keiffers (relatives) since their names are found as neighbors of George in Clarion County.
George built a sawmill at the mouth of Canoe Creek[3], said to be the first saw mill west of the Allegheny Mountains. He also built a boat bottom scaffold a half mile south of the mill at a place known as Delo’s Eddy, went into the lumber business and flourished financially.[4]
George served his country in the War of 1812, even though he was forty years old and the father of six children. He served as a private with Dale’s 132nd Regiment, Pennsylvania Militia, a member of Captain Henry Neely’s Company.[5] (Henry Neely and his men were from Venango, now Clarion County – George’s neighbors and relatives.) They were sent to Lake Erie by order of General David Mead, 6th Division. Frank S. Delo states: “George Delo was one of the organizers of the Minute Men of Beaver Township, Clarion County, for the defense against the Indians and the English. George and Jacob Keiffer were members of the same company. Their first call to action came August 1813 to go to Lake Erie. The second call was again to Lake Erie, from January 3rd to February 11th, 1814, to protect the builders of Commodore Perry’s victorious fleet. George returned from the excursion a Sergeant.”[6]
On February 20, 1820, Eva Delo died from Tuberculosis. Her infant son, Henry, died about the same time and they were buried together. George then married Eve Hummel Laughnor, the widow of Daniel Laughnor. Daniel Laughnor was killed in 1812 at the mouth of the Kiskiminitas. Eve was the daughter of Christopher Hummel of Hummelstown, Pennsylvania. She brought her four sons and two daughters from her first marriage with her. George and Eve had four more children. It was a very large household!
George’s name is found in the Journals of the History of the Pittsburgh Synod as a member of the building committee to erect the first church in Beaver Township. The church housed both the German Reformed and the Evangelical Lutheran congregations.
In 1842 George purchased 300 acres at Walnut Bend on the Allegheny River, there he planned a trading center and called it Georgetown (He was 70 years old at the time he was starting a new business venture!).[7] His daughter Esther received 160 acres of that land when he died.
George died on March 11, 1848, he was seventy-five. He was buried next to his first wife Eva in Union Cemetery, Beaver Township, Clarion County.
http://www.krepps.net/georgedelo.htm
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