Advertisement

Henry C. Andrews

Advertisement

Henry C. Andrews Veteran

Birth
Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death
Oct 1892 (aged 46–47)
Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, USA
Burial
Meadville, Crawford County, Pennsylvania, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec. B; Lot 7
Memorial ID
View Source
Henry C. Andrews, a native of Pittsburgh, was a grandson of the founder of the Presbyterian Banner. By profession, he was a druggist, and, after his marriage in Pittsburgh to Eliza McClure, he was a resident of several places in western Pennsylvania, in Clarion county holding a position of superintendent of an oil works, his death occurring in Pittsburgh, with burial in Meadville, Pa.

He was a veteran of the Civil War, having served through that entire conflict as a member of a Pennsylvania regiment of infantry, assistant to the surgeon, Dr. McCann.

Henry C. and Eliza McClure Andrews were the parents of: Ida, married Horton Penrose; William, deceased; Harry, deceased; Cyrus K., a member of the firm of Andrews & Wilkinson in Pittsburgh; Sarah Lillian, married to William James Wilkinson; Jessie, died in infancy.
Genealogical and Personal History of Western Pennsylvania, V. III, p. 654, 1915, openlibrary.org.
Henry C. Andrews, a native of Pittsburgh, was a grandson of the founder of the Presbyterian Banner. By profession, he was a druggist, and, after his marriage in Pittsburgh to Eliza McClure, he was a resident of several places in western Pennsylvania, in Clarion county holding a position of superintendent of an oil works, his death occurring in Pittsburgh, with burial in Meadville, Pa.

He was a veteran of the Civil War, having served through that entire conflict as a member of a Pennsylvania regiment of infantry, assistant to the surgeon, Dr. McCann.

Henry C. and Eliza McClure Andrews were the parents of: Ida, married Horton Penrose; William, deceased; Harry, deceased; Cyrus K., a member of the firm of Andrews & Wilkinson in Pittsburgh; Sarah Lillian, married to William James Wilkinson; Jessie, died in infancy.
Genealogical and Personal History of Western Pennsylvania, V. III, p. 654, 1915, openlibrary.org.


Advertisement