SINTON
FAMILY
OF
LAWRENCE COUNTY OHIO
Written and
researched by
Sharon M. Kouns

Name: David SINTON Sex: M
Birth:26 Jan 1808 Place:, County
Armagh, Ireland
Marr:22 Jul 1846 Spouse: Jane
ELLISON-213
Death:31 Aug 1900 Place:
Father: John SINTON-662
Mother:MCDONALD-663

History of Adams County by Stivers - DAVID SINTON -The name is
Anglo-Saxon, and in the early history of the family the Sintons were
found settled near the border of Scotland. The ancestors of the
subject went to the north of Ireland with one of Cromwell's colonies.
His father and mother were Quakers. His mother's name was McDonald.
John Sinton, father of David Sinton, was married in Ireland. He
resided in County Armagh, and was a linen manufacturer at the city of
Armagh.
David
Sinton was born January 26, 1808, and in 1811, his father and mother
came to the United States in a sailing vessel, which occupied nine
weeks in the voyage.
John
Sinton located at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and went to merchandising
with his brother-in-law, McDonald. In one year, the partnership was
dissolved, and Sinton removed to West Union, Ohio, where he sold goods
from 1812 and 1825, at which time he closed out his business at
auction.
David
Sinton had two sisters and one brother; the brother, William, died at
West Union, and is buried in the village cemetery there. He had
studied medicine with Dr. William B. Willson, and had qualified
himself for a physician, when death cut him off in his early manhood.
He had just begun the practice of medicine at the time of his death.
One of David Sinton's sisters never left Ireland, but married there.
His other sister, who came with the remainder of the family to this
country, married John Sparks, the banker, and died at Union Landing of
the cholera, in 1833. Mr. and Mrs. Sparks had three children; Mary
Jane, who married a McCauslen and resides near Steubenville, Ohio, and
George Sparks, who resides at Clinton, Indiana. The third child died
an infant at West Union, Ohio.
John
Sparks was born near West Union, Ohio in 1800, and reared there. He
lived awhile in Hillsboro, when a young man, and then began
merchandising in West Union, Ohio, on the corner now occupied by
Miller & Bunn's drug store and was in business there from 1820 until
1830. He went to Union Landing in 1830, and remained there until 1833.
He then returned to West Union, Ohio, and went into the banking
business, where he remained until his death in April, 1847. Bates &
Surtees founded the bank at West Union, Ohio. They were both from
Cincinnati. The bank was an unsound concern, and when it collapsed
Thomas Huston lost $13,000 by its failure. David Sinton had the
cholera at Union Landing in 1833, at the time his sister died of it,
and he came very near dying himself.
He
left West Union in his fourteenth year and went to Sinking Springs in
Highland County, Ohio, where he went into the employment of James
McCague, who kept a tavern and a country store there, and remained at
that place two years. McCague had a branch store at Dunbartown, Ohio,
three miles south of Peebles. David Sinton was in his sixteenth year
when he kept store at Dunbarton, for three or four months. McCague was
a drinking man, and his wife and Sinton attended to all he business.
Sinton says that the sales in the branch store at Dunbarton were
principally whiskey. On Saturday, the furnace hands from the Brush
Creek Forge, Steam Furnace and Marble Furnace, gathered at Dunbarton,
and got gloriously drunk. Whiskey was then about six and on-fourth
cents a quart, and drunks were consequently gotten up very cheap.
David
Sinton went to Cincinnati in 1824 and waited there four months, before
he could get any employment. In that time he improved his mind by
reading Hume's History of England, and other works. Mr. Sinton thought
he could have gotten employment, but he made himself "a hail fellow
well met," with the young men of his own age with whom he became
acquainted and had he participated in their dissipation, but this he
refused to do. He says those young men have been dead and forgotten
for years. While trying to get work, he answered all advertisements,
but with no success. He applied for the position of bookkeeper at
Adams' Commission House on Main Street, but found, on looking at their
books, he could not keep them. He then went to work as a porter or
laborer. He put up twenty tons of bar iron from Pittsburgh, and placed
barrels of sugar in the loft. He had a difficulty with a
fellow-laborer in the same house, and says: "I went to Mr. Adams, and
asked him to discharge the other man. He refused to do so, and I
discharged myself."
He was
disgusted with Cincinnati, and concluded to go home. He went to
Manchester on a steamboat, and from there he walked to West Union.
There he received letters, asking him to return to Sinking Springs. He
went there and remained with his former employer, McCague, at eight
dollars per month, for two years. Then he concluded he wanted to be a
capitalist. He went into partnership with a Methodist preacher, and
bought a still-house for one hundred and fifty dollars. He ran the
still until he paid his debts, and then being ashamed of the business,
he sold out. He guarded a prisoner for nine days in 1826 and got
twenty dollars for it, and then concluded to go to Cincinnati. There
he opened out a commission house for John Sparks, his brother-in-law,
and Daniel Boyle, of West Union, but the venture was not successful,
and the house was closed in six months. He then went to Washington C.
H. in the employ of Dr. Boyd, to take charge of a store. He remained
there for six months at twenty-five dollars per month. Then he
received an offer to go to Hanging Rock at four hundred dollars per
year. He left Washington C. H. and went to West Union to consult his
brother-in-law, John Sparks. He offered Sparks to go to Union Furnace
for two hundred dollars per year, and his board. The offer was
accepted and he went to Union Furnace Landing, where he kept store,
and sold pig iron. He was there three years. The firm was James Rogers
& Co. Rogers, soon sold out, and the firm became John Sparks & Co.,
and Sinton became manager of the furnace at four hundred dollars per
year, when other furnaces were paying one thousand dollars per year
for the same service. Union Furnace had cost seven thousand dollars,
but was much in debt. Sinton made the furnace put out five hundred
tons of iron per year, and made it pay dividends. The output was
mostly hollow-ware. Sinton wanted to push the business. He leased the
furnace at a rental of five thousand dollars per year for five years.
The stack fell down, and the bars gave out. While rebuilding the
stack, he bought great quantities of wood, and had it stored about the
furnace. Before the stack was rebuild, the wood caught fire, and was
all consumed. Sinton was then twenty-eight years of age, and
financially broken up. He had been up three days and nights fighting
fire, and was utterly discouraged. He thought he would go to Mexico,
but lay down and slept eighteen consecutive hours. Twice before he had
lost all he had, and he concluded he would try it again. The men who
had brought in the wood, and worked at the furnace, wanted their
money. Sinton professed his ability to pay, and the men were paid as
they came up, in as small bills, and change as could be used so as to
consume as much time as possible in settling and making payment. He
had one thousand dollars in small bills and change, and managed it so
that he only paid out one hundred dollars on the first day of the run.
The run continued until the third day, when one of the men put a stop
to it by telling the others they were all fools, and then they brought
their money back.
After
the furnace started up, Sinton sold iron at thirty-five dollars per
ton, which he made at a cost of ten dollars per ton. At that time the
furnace made six tons per day. David Sinton built Ohio Furnace during
his lease on Union Furnace. It made ten tons per day, and Sinton ran
it for a year before his lease terminated on Union Furnace. Union
Furnace was then put and sold in partition, and David Sinton and
Thomas W. Means bought it. They then owned and ran both Ohio and Union
furnace.
David
Sinton went to Cincinnati in 1849, where he has resided ever since. He
was married at Union Landing to Jane Ellison, daughter of John
Ellison, of Adams County, Ohio and sister to the wife of his partner,
Thomas W. Means. There were two children of this marriage, Edward, who
died unmarried, at the age of twenty-one, and the wife of Hon. Charles
P. Taft, of the TIMES-STAR, of Cincinnati. Mrs. Jane Sinton died in
1853, at Manchester, Ohio, and is buried there. David Sinton never
remarried.
Mr.
Sinton's father died at West Union, Ohio, Sunday, June 28, 1835, at
the age of seventy-one, of that dread scourge, the Asiatic cholera.
There were seven other deaths that day at the same place, and of the
same disease, and it was the first day of the outbreak of the
pestilence at West Union. David Sinton was then at Union Landing, and
was notified by messenger, but, as was the custom at the time in
cholera cases, John Sinton was buried the same day he died, and when
Mr. Sinton reached West Union his father had been buried two days. Mr.
Sinton's mother survived until 1866, when she died at the ripe age of
eighty-five.
When
the War of 1861 broke out, pig-iron was eighteen dollars per ton, and
David Sinton had seven thousand tons on hand. Many thought he was
ruined, but he held on to that iron until it went up to seventy -five
dollars per ton, when he sold it. When iron rose in price, he
continued making it, and selling it for cash. In 1863, he began
putting his money in Cincinnati real estate. That real estate, bought
with the proceeds of iron sold at seventy-five dollars per ton,
advanced until it made its owner one hundred and twenty-five dollars
per ton for all the iron he sold at seventy-five dollars per ton.
During
the war, his two furnaces made thirty tons of iron per day for every
day they ran.
Mr.
Sinton attributes his great fortune to judicious investments of the
money he made in the manufacture and sale of pig iron, at the
beginning of and during the late Civil War.
In
Cincinnati, he has taken an active interest in many of the leading
enterprises and he has erected many substantial and elegant buildings
there. He has made a number of munificent public gifts. He presented
$100,000 to the Union Bethel and $33,000 to the Young Men's Christian
Association. He is entirely a self-made man. He is noted for his
strong common sense and self reliance. In business matters, his
litigations, his conclusions, and his manner of execution are his own.
He may be said to be self-educated. His readings on all topics have
been extensive. In literature, science and history he is well
informed, retaining all of any value he ever read, and being able to
converse on all subjects with great interest to his listeners.
Mr.
Sinton was a Whig and has been a Republican in his political views,
but never took any active interest in political matters. During the
war, he was a strong Union man and did all he could with his influence
and means to sustain the Government. His practical religion is
justice, charity and good will to all men. In private relations, he is
characterized by his kindness and benevolence.
Since
the above was written Mr. Sinton has made the princely gift of
$100,000 unconditionally to the University of Cincinnati. He died
August 31, 1900.

I.R. July 19, 1877 - David Sinton paid a visit to his old friend
and partner, T. W. Means of Hanging Rock, last week. His daughter,
Mrs. Taft was with him.
I.R. June 19, 1890 - When David Sinton met John Campbell at the
funeral of T. W. Means, he didn't recognize him and had to be told who
he was.
I.R. Sept. 6, 1900 - DAVID SINTON IN LAWRENCE CO. - David Sinton, a
pioneer iron master of this section, died at his home in Cincinnati
Friday afternoon, aged 93 years. Concerning his career in Lawrence
county, the Commercial Tribune of today says:
"The firm of Jas. Rogers & Co. of Union Furnace, in the Hanging
Rock iron region, wanted a manager, and they offered him $400 per
annum and board. Mr. Sinton accepted the position. The business of the
company was the manufacture of hollow ware, pig iron, etc. It was
succeeded by the firm of John Sparks & Co. and Mr. Sinton, when about
22 years of age, was made general manager of the entire works, shortly
thereafter becoming part owner of the property and business of the
company.
"Here was where the basis of the great fortune was made. Although a
partner is what he believed to be a paying business, Mr. Sinton did
not remit any of his industry. He took his place with the men and did
considerable manual labor. He rebuilt the Union furnace and built the
Ohio furnace, the two having the capacity for producing a large amount
of pig iron for that period. He also accompanied a great quantity of
iron down the river coming frequently to this city and going to
Louisville with the metal. On such occasions the iron was loaded upon
flatboats and on top of heavy bare blankets were spread, and these
served as resting places for the crew. Mr. Sinton took his turn at the
watch and did as much as any of his employees, and when he slept his
bed was a roll of old blankets.
"By degrees the manual part of the labor was dropped, and in a few
years the partners had a competency.
"About this time Mr. Sinton was married to Jane, daughter of John
Ellison of Manchester, O., and his wife was taken to Hanging Rock.
Altogether from eighteen to twenty years were spent in the iron
region."
--CHILDREN-- 1-Edward SINTON-671
Died unmarried at the age of 21.
2-Annie SINTON-672
married: Charles P. TAFT (half-brother to President Taft)
|