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Clan Boyd Society, International
STEPHEN GILL BOYD - PENNSYLVANIA
STEPHEN GILL BOYD, the subject of this
sketch, is the oldest child of
JOHN C. and MARTHA (FARMER) BOYD, and
was born in Peach Bottom Township, this county, on the 6th day of December,1830.
On his paternal side he is descended from an old Scotch-Irish family that
emigrated from the County Antrim. Ireland, in the year 1736, and his maternal
grandparents
emigrated from Shropshire, England, in
the early part of the present century, and settled near Darlington, Hartford
Co., Md. During the minority of Mr. Boyd, his summers were devoted
to working on his father's farm, and his winters to attending the district
school. Upon reaching his majority he repaired to York, and entered, as
a student, the grammar school of the late Dr. Andrew Dinsmore, and spent
his time, until he was twenty-seven years of age mainly in teaching, obtaining
academic instruction at various educational institutions, principally at
White Hall Academy in Cumberland County, Penn., and at Bryansville Academy
in his native township, and in managing his farm, for several years farming
in summer and teaching a district school in winter. In his twenty-seventh
year, Mr. Boyd, in order to obtain a more thorough education, removed with
his family to Lancaster, Penn., and for a term became a student at the
Millersville State Normal School, then under the management of Dr. Wickersham.
From this time until
1866, he devoted his time exclusively
to teaching and study, teaching in
Lancaster County, Lancaster City, and
in Wrightsville, in this county.
In the spring of the year last referred
to, at the request of Prof. S. B. Heiges, who was then county superintendent
of schools of this county, he came to York and joined him in the management
of a normal school, organized for the benefit of the young teachers of
the county, with which school he was connected as one of its principal
teachers for four years. In the fall of this year (1866) he was elected
to a seat in the house of representatives, and was re-clected the ensuing
year. In the spring of 1869, he was elected county superintendent of schools
to succeed Mr. Heiges, and in 1871 he was clected to the presidency of
the Peach Bottom Railway Company, which latter position he filled for the
term of six years, and until the road was completed and put into operation
from York to Delta. In the spring of 1877 Mr. Boyd, in conjunction with
some of the more enterprising citizens of Hartford and Baltimore Counties,
undertook the organization of a company to construct a railroad from Delta
to Baltimore, and on the 21st day of January, 1884, this road was completed
and opened to traffic. Mr. Boyd's conduct as a representative was characterized
by a deep interest in all
legislation calculated to promote the
educational interests of the State
and the material interests of his own
county. During his first term he
finally prepared and secured the passage
of the bill to incorporate the York and Chanceford Turnpike Company, in
which company, after its organization, he served as a director until his
removal to Baltimore, in
1878. During his second term he prepared
and secured the passage of the
bill to incorporate the Peach Bottom Railway
Company, and during this
term also he took an active part in the
passage of the bill giving to the nonaccepting school districts of the
State, their forfeited appropriations from the State treasury, for the
last ten years prior to its passage, and had the pleasure of seeing Manheim
Township, in this county, accept the system during his first year as county
superintendent. In his second year in the office of county superintendent
he co-operated with the board of school control of
the borough of York in the reorganization
of the schools of the borough,
favoring a comprehensive and thorough
course of study, and the borough
superintendency. Mr. Boyd, since his withdrawal
from the management of
the Maryland Central Railroad, in the
autumn of 1884, has been engaged
in educational work, having adopted the
educational platform as a profession. In addition to his labors on the
platform, he frequently appears in print as an essayist, and is the author
of a work on the signification of Indian local or place names. Much of
his life has been given to the study of literary and scientific subjects,
and no small part of it to the promotion of the material interests of his
county.
Source: A Biographical History of York
County, Pa. pges 23-24 published
1886.
Thanks to Karen from Ohio, USA
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