Person:Henry Rouse (12)

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m. 1820
  1. Hon. Henry R. Rouse1823 - 1861
Facts and Events
Name Hon. Henry R. Rouse
Gender Male
Birth[1][7] 9 Oct 1823 Westfield, Chautauqua, New York, United States
Alt Birth[6] 30 Aug 1837 Westfield, Chautauqua, New York, United States
Occupation[7] From 1859 to 1860 Warren, Pennsylvania, United Statesstate legislature representing Warren County
Occupation[6] Warren, Pennsylvania, United Statesattorney
Occupation[6] Warren, Pennsylvania, United Statesteacher
Occupation[6][7] Youngsville, Warren, Pennsylvania, United Statesphilanthropist - left money and land for a poor house and for roads, after his death money was used for a hospital
Occupation[7] Pennsylvania, United Statespioneer petroleum developer
Alt Death[6] 17 Apr 1861 Rouseville, Venango, Pennsylvania, United Statesstruck with boiling oil in an explosion
Death[1][7] 18 Apr 1861 Rouseville, Venango, Pennsylvania, United Statesnear Titusville
Burial[1] Westfield, Chautauqua, New York, United States

Single, no children, left his money to the poor

Image Gallery
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 .

    Henry R Rouse
    Birth: 9 Oct 1823
    Death: 18 Apr 1861 (aged 37)
    Burial: Westfield Cemetery, Westfield, Chautauqua County, New York, USA
    Memorial #: 88231015
    Bio: Rouse, Henry R. Apr.18,1861, ae 37—6-9 Henry Rouse was born in Westfield, NY on October 9, 1823 and died in Rouseville, Venango County, PA His mother's memorial is: Find A Grave Memorial# 88704961 His father's name was Samuel Rouse - Samuel was a drifter and deserted the family when Henry was young.
    Family Members
    Parents
    Sarah Rouse 1802-1850
    Created by: Dolores Davidson (46872356)
    Added: 8 Apr 2012
    URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/88231015
    Citation: Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 13 May 2019), memorial page for Henry R Rouse (9 Oct 1823–18 Apr 1861), Find A Grave Memorial no. 88231015, citing Westfield Cemetery, Westfield, Chautauqua County, New York, USA ; Maintained by Dolores Davidson (contributor 46872356) .

  2.   .

    IS THIS THE SAME PERSON?
    Hiram R Rouse
    Birth: 9 Oct 1823
    Death: 18 Apr 1861 (aged 37)
    Burial: Westfield Cemetery, Westfield, Chautauqua County, New York, USA
    Memorial #: 88458736
    Bio: Rouse, Hiram R. Oct.9,1823—Apr.18,1861
    Created by: Dolores Davidson (46872356)
    Added: 13 Apr 2012
    URL: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/88458736/hiram-r-rouse
    Citation: Find A Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com : accessed 13 May 2019), memorial page for Hiram R Rouse (9 Oct 1823–18 Apr 1861), Find A Grave Memorial no. 88458736, citing Westfield Cemetery, Westfield, Chautauqua County, New York, USA ; Maintained by Dolores Davidson (contributor 46872356) .

  3.   .

    1860 United States Federal Census
    Name: Henry R Rouse
    Age: 38
    Birth Year: abt 1822
    BIRTH STATE: NEW YORK
    Gender: Male
    Home in 1860: Southwest, Warren, Pennsylvania
    Post Office: South West
    Dwelling Number: 90
    Family Number: 91
    Occupation: Lumberman
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Morris Wells 56
    Polly Wells 53
    Henry R Rouse 38
    Source Citation
    Year: 1860; Census Place: Southwest, Warren, Pennsylvania; Roll: M653_1190; Page: 1047; Family History Library Film: 805190

  4.   HISTORY OF VENANGO COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA ITS PAST AND PRESENT, INCLUDING ITS ABORIGINAL HISTORY; THE FRENCH AND BRITISH OCCUPATION OF THE COUNTRY; ITS EARLY SETTLEMENT AND SUBSEQUENT GROWTH: A DESCRIPTION OF ITS HISTORIC AND INTERESTING LOCALITIES; ITS RICH OIL DEPOSITS AND THEIR DEVELOPMENT; SKETCHES OF ITS CITIES, BOROUGHS, TOWNSHIPS, AND VILLAGES; NEIGH- BORHOOD AND FAMILY HISTORY; PORTRAITS AND BIOGRAPHIES OF PIONEERS AND REPRESENT- ATIVE CITIZENS; STATISTICS, ETC., ETC. ILLUSTRATED. Chicago, III.: BROWN, RUNK & CO., PUBLISHERS. 1890.
    page 317.

    The growth of Oil City, Franklin, and Titusville in 1861 was marked.
    Every class of business house was being established, as well as blacksmith
    and machine shops. The valley of Oil creek from Oil City to Titusville
    began to assume the appearance of an almost continuous town of clusters
    of shanties and derricks. The towns of McClinlockville, Rouseville, Tarr
    Farm, and Petroleum Center began to come into existence, and from this
    time on their growth was rapid. The drones in this busy time of indus-
    try were few and their stay brief. All were engaged earnestly in the race
    for wealth, and from this aggregate of energy came the grand results of the
    years that succeeded.
    https://archive.org/stream/historyofvenango00bell/historyofvenango00bell_djvu.txt

  5.   HISTORY OF VENANGO COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA ITS PAST AND PRESENT, INCLUDING ITS ABORIGINAL HISTORY; THE FRENCH AND BRITISH OCCUPATION OF THE COUNTRY; ITS EARLY SETTLEMENT AND SUBSEQUENT GROWTH: A DESCRIPTION OF ITS HISTORIC AND INTERESTING LOCALITIES; ITS RICH OIL DEPOSITS AND THEIR DEVELOPMENT; SKETCHES OF ITS CITIES, BOROUGHS, TOWNSHIPS, AND VILLAGES; NEIGH- BORHOOD AND FAMILY HISTORY; PORTRAITS AND BIOGRAPHIES OF PIONEERS AND REPRESENT- ATIVE CITIZENS; STATISTICS, ETC., ETC. ILLUSTRATED. Chicago, III.: BROWN, RUNK & CO., PUBLISHERS. 1890.
    PAGE 475.

    RouseviUe Lodge, No. 262, K. of P., was chartered September 1,
    1870, with nine members. The lodge has increased steadily and now uses
    the Cornplanter lodge room.

  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 HISTORY OF VENANGO COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA ITS PAST AND PRESENT, INCLUDING ITS ABORIGINAL HISTORY; THE FRENCH AND BRITISH OCCUPATION OF THE COUNTRY; ITS EARLY SETTLEMENT AND SUBSEQUENT GROWTH: A DESCRIPTION OF ITS HISTORIC AND INTERESTING LOCALITIES; ITS RICH OIL DEPOSITS AND THEIR DEVELOPMENT; SKETCHES OF ITS CITIES, BOROUGHS, TOWNSHIPS, AND VILLAGES; NEIGH- BORHOOD AND FAMILY HISTORY; PORTRAITS AND BIOGRAPHIES OF PIONEERS AND REPRESENT- ATIVE CITIZENS; STATISTICS, ETC., ETC. ILLUSTRATED. Chicago, III.: BROWN, RUNK & CO., PUBLISHERS. 1890.
    page 663.

    H. R. Rouse, from whom the place derives its name, was born at West-
    field, Chautauqua county, New York, August 30, 1837. After completing
    a course of study at the public schools, he studied law and was admitted to
    the bar. Subsequently he taught school in Warren county, Pennsylvaoia,
    and seems to have acquired a strong personal attachment for that region.
    At the beginning of the oil excitement he was among the first to realize the
    possibilities of wealth offered by this section, and in company with others
    made extensive leases of what afterward proved to be among the most pro-
    ductive territory on Oil creek. His career as an oil operator had but fairly
    begun when it was cut short by a tragic and untimely death. On the 17th
    of April, 1861, the Merrick well was struck, and the unusual volume of oil
    it was producing attracted a large crowd of sight seers, among whom was
    Mr. Rouse. On the evening of that day an ominous explosion occurred at
    the well, resulting in the immediate ignition of the stream of oil pouring
    from it and everything combustible within a radius of several hundred feet.
    Mr. Rouse was discovered about twenty rods from the well, enveloped in his
    burning clothing and already without the sight of either eye. His first con-
    cern was the making of his will, by which, after various bequests to personal
    friends, he bequeathed the bulk of his property to Warren county, Pennsyl-
    vania, one-half to be expended upon the public highways, and the other



    CORNrLANTEll TOWNSHIP. 0(57

    moiety to be applied to the maiutenanco of an institution for the relief of
    the poor of that county. At the request of Mr. Rouse his remains were in-
    terred by the side of his mother in the cemetery at Westfield, New York.

    At the time of the oil discovery the farms embracing the site of the
    village were owned by Archibald Buchanan, John McClintock, and John
    Buchanan. The Buchanan farms were leased for ninety-nine years by H.
    R. Rouse, Samuel Q. Brown, and John L. Mitchell, at a royalty of one-
    fourth of the oil produced. Mr. Rouse drilled the first well. From its lo-
    cation at the mouth of Cherry run a village quickly came into existence and
    received the name of Buchanan Farm. In February, 1861, Allen Wright,
    president of a local oil company, substituted "Rouseville" for Buchanan
    Farm in having his letter-heads printed, and thus conferred upon the jjlace
    its present name. In the svib-leases executed by Mr. Rouse it was stipu-
    lated that the sale of intoxicating liquors should work immediate forfeiture,
    a provision which made the place a temperance town for a time.

    The Reno, Oil Creek and Pithole railroad was completed to Rouseville
    January 31, 1866, and opened to travel on the 5th of March following.
    Passenger travel over the Farmers' railroad (now the Western New York
    and Pennsylvania) was begun August 27, 1866.

  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 History of Warren County, Pennsylvania bySchenck, J. S., [from old catalog] ed; Rann, William S., [from old catalog] joint ed; Mason, D., & co., Syracuse, N.Y., pub. [from old catalog] Publication date 1887 TopicsWarren Co., Pa PublisherSyracuse, N.Y., D. Mason & co.