HON. HENRY P. FORD, the Mayor of
Pittsburg, was born atHudson, N.Y.,
October 15, 1837, son of John and Susan (Carpenter) Ford. During their residence
in Hudson the
family resided on the John Phoenix place. They removed in 1838 to Clarion,
Forest County, Pa., where the father was a lumberman for a
time. He came to Pittsburg, and died there about 1852, leaving
his son Henry an orphan.
Henry P. Ford received a good education in Pittsburg, and attended
different mercantile colleges. At the age of sixteen he found employment with a
large book concern as bookkeeper. By close attention to business he made for
himself a wide reputation as an accountant of ability, careful and exact. His
next position was with the Associated Firemen's Insurance Company, which he
filled with credit to himself and to the satisfaction of all, until the company
closed up its affairs. He was next
the head book-keeper of the Eureka Insurance Company till 1861, when he Went
with Singer, Nimick & Co., with whom he remained for ten years. In 1871 he
severed his connection with this firm to embark in business for himself. On this
occasion he formed a partnership with Mr. Emerson for the manufacture of saws at
Beaver
Falls. He was actively
engaged in this enterprise until 1876, when he sold his interest, and became
book-keeper for the Crescent Tube Company, in which capacity he served until he
was elected secretary and treasurer of the company. In 1881 the firm became the
Pennsylvania Tube Company, with whom he remained as book-keeper for about a
year. Then illness obliged him to give up business entirely. Owing to the death
of a relative he became connected with an extensive lumber business. A
disagreement of partners before Mr. Ford entered the firm resulted in one of the
most remarkable lawsuits ever tried in Pennsylvania, in which many interesting law
points were settled. After three years of litigation the suit was brought to a
successful termination, and Mr. Ford sold his interest to other parties. He has
not been in business since 1885.
Since he was seventeen years old Mayor Ford has been
interested in politics. He was the youngest man who has ever served on a School
Board in Pittsburg, having been secretary of the old
Seventh Ward Board when but nineteen. Afterward he held a position on the Board
for several years. In 1881 he was elected to the Councils from the Eleventh
Ward, and successively re-elected at the end of each term until he was elected
Mayor, in which capacity he took his seat in the city government on April 6,
1896. Beginning on April 2, 1888, he was President of the Select Council until
he vacated that office for his present one. He has been a trustee of the
Carnegie Library for some time, and is serving on some of its most important
committees. By virtue of his office as Mayor he is now a trustee of the
Western
Pennsylvania University and a member of the Allegheny
County Prison Board. Early in his career he was the vice-chairman of the
Allegheny County Republican Committee. He has been a member of Franklin Lodge,
No. 221, F. & A. M., since 1870, and he was secretary of the lodge until his
business took him to Beaver Falls. He is also a member of Duquesne
Chapter, No. 193; of Tancred Commandery, No. 48; Syria Temple of the Mystic
Shrine; and of several other secret
organizations.
In June, 1870, Mr. Ford married Miss Rebecca Gillespie,
daughter of John Gillespie, of Philadelphia, an old and well-known business
man there. They have three children: Sarah, now Mrs. Joseph H. Hunter; Mary G.;
and Catherine G. No man in the city is more intimately acquainted with its needs
and resources than Mayor Ford, and his long experience in public affairs has
qualified him amply to meet every exigency that may arise in the course of his
administration.