| Name |
Sine, Albert Grant |
- 20180915HAv, pasted from BUfx:
Martha "Mattie" Sine Rice
Birth: Aug. 24 (21 -jcw), 1800
York County, Pennsylvania, USA
Death: May 19, 1870
Monongalia County, West Virginia, USA
[death -- pension payment records.]
Twin to John Sine,
Notes under Jacob Christy Sine in
Chronicles of Core Page 155-- of his sisters:
Martha SINE was the mother of
- Parmelia SINE, who married Benjamin Ammons, and
- Alpheus SINE, the father of Rezin Sine, and
- Milton, the father of Albert Grant Sine.
Through her marriage to Thomas Rice, (John Thomas Rice)
Martha SINE became the mother of
- John,
- Minerva, who married Eli Shuman,
- Mary who married William, son of Moses Mathews, and
- Rebecca, mother of Landora, Jennie and Belle Rice.
Mr. Core does not mention the infant daughter Peggy, named in the will of Stephen Archer 1824, first husband of Martha Sine.
("I leave to my wife Martha and her infant daughter PEGGY,"
next line, "to my wife Martha and OUR daughter")
Martha Sine married Stephen Archer June 12, 1823
Stephen Archer 1775-1824 [He was a widow(er) when he married Martha Sine]
Tennant's of Monongalia County, by John Michael Price
Written: As stated before, Stephen Archer was a long-time friend of the Tennant family. His pension file revealed the following:
- About 1783 at the age of thirty-eight he was married to an eighteen year old woman named Elizabeth. They had at least two daughters whom they named Elizabeth and Mary. Elizabeth was severely handicapped from birth and remained at home. They lived on the property of W. Alexander Clegg. Stephen taught school for many years to support the family but following a period of unsteady nerves he was without a profession and the family borrowed heavily from Mr. Clegg.
In 1818 at the age of 73, without income or assets, Stephen filed for and was awarded a soldier's pension. Sometime after 1820 his wife may have died, for
- on June 12, 1822 at the age of about seventy-seven he married Martha, the twenty year old daughter of William and Margaret Sine of York, Pennsylvania. About May 12, 1824 Stephen Archer died.
An interesting footnote of "pension intrigue" followed his death. From his pension recorded it is revealed that his widow Martha remarried in 1835 to a man name John Rice who subsequently died in 1848. In 1853 via Stephen's service record Martha applied for and was awarded a widow's pension. In 1855 she was awarded 160 acres of bounty land.
From there the story takes an interesting historical turn. In the files is a letter, dated 1881 from the office of one A. Stephen Hough of St. George West Virginia to W. W. Duley. Hough's stationery indicated that he was an "Agent for Subscription Books, Sewing Machines, Pictures, New and Used Inventions, Etc.: In the Letter Mr. Hough alleges the following:
Transcribed as Written:
Dear Sir
I take the liberty of writing you (a case in point) -
Dr. James V. Boughner Morgantown W Va, got a pention for Matty Rice as the Widow of Archie - a Revolutionary soldier and she drew a pension for many years (or as long as she lived.)
My object in writing to you, is to make a plain statement of facts in the case. To wit: Matty Sine at the age of 18 married the Old man Archie and he died.
She then ran off with her Bro in law whose wife was living and went to Ohio from W. Va. An had two children by him. She (Matty) got in the poor house in Ohio and got aquatined with John Rice an Irishman and then got married, they lived together and had 6 children 5 girls and one boy.
Then Boughner got her a pension - Matty swore falsely when she said she was Archies Widow and had not remarried since his death - and each time that her pension papers were made out she swore falsely that she was Archies widow - and Bougher knew it.
Now my object in writing you is to know if Uncle Sam can't pull back all the money off Boughner and make him Smoke for it. Any evidence you want can be turned you by writing to A. Stephen Hough, Saint George West Va Tucker Co please aser by retun mail (enclose-stamp)
Investigation of the files reveals that Matty, regardless of with whom she had children, did in fact reveal that she had remarried but that her second husband had died. The fact that her witnesses were all named Sine - her maiden name - does raise some suspiction. It is unclear whether Boughner ever did indeed Smoke for the allegations made by the vigilant Mr. Hough.
Note: Is this A Stephen Hough related to Asbury Hough that married Margaret Sine daughter of Jacob C. Sine. and why was he so interesting in the life of Martha.
MY NOTE: Martha would have continued to receive this pension because she had a daughter PEGGY with Stephen Archer.
MY NOTE, MYSTERIES AND QUESTION: Between 1824 and 1835 Who was the brother in law that Martha ran away with.
What 2 children were born to Martha and this brother in law?
Were these two children: Alpheus 1827 and Milton 1828. We may never know, until we discover what brother in law Martha ran off with to Ohio.
Was the brother in law an Archer?,(probably so, there are many Archer's in Ohio and some on the 1830 1840 census in Greene County, PA and Monongalia Co. WV)
Or was he the husband of her two sisters, Sarah or Ruth. No information has been found on these two sisters. Was one of these sisters married and still living in 1824 and if so to WHOM?
According to some listings Martha Sine married John Thomas Rice April 24, 1835. I can't find any marriage record for Martha and John Thomas Rice.
My assessment of the 1830 where it seems Martha and her children are living with her parents:
1830 Census: Western Monongalia, Virginia
M19_191 Page: 420 Image: 833
2 males 0-5 born 1825-1830 (Probably grandsons:
Alpheus 1827 and Milton 1828)
1 male 10-15 bn 1815-1820 probably grandson Unknown name
1 male 70-80 bn 1750-1760 William Sine, Sr. 1763
1 female 5-10 bn 1825-1830 (probably grand daughter)
Permelia Sine born 1828
1 female 10 -15 bn 1815-1820 (grand daughter Margaret Sine Archer born 1823)
2 females 20-30 bn 1800-1810 (daughters Margaret 1802-Rebecca 1809)
1 female 30-40 born 1790-1800 (daughter Martha Sine born 1800)
1 female 60-70 1760-1770 (wife Margaret Christy Sine 1768)
1840 This census would be where her children Alpheus, Milton, Permelia, and Margaret were living with their grand parents:
1840 Census: William SINE
Township: West, Monongalia, Virginia
Roll: M704_567 Page: 133 Image: 268
2 males 10-15 bn 1825-1830 (Alpheus 1827, Milton 1828)
1 male 80-90 bn 1750 - 1760 William Sine, Sr. 1763
1 female 5-10 bn 1830-1835 Grand daughter Permelia 1828 (not quiet in the bracket)
1 female 15-20 born 1820-1825 probably grand daughter Margaret Sine Archer 1823
1 female 30-40 bn 1800-1810 daughter Margaret born 1802
1 female 70-80 bn 1760-1770 wife Margaret Christy Sine 1768
1840 John RICE: Monongalia, Virginia, United States
1 male under 5 bn 1835-1840 son John Jr. 1839
1 male 40-49 born 1791-1800 John bn 1799
1 female under 5 born 1835-1840 Rebecca 1837
1 female 40-49 born - 1791-1800 Martha bn 1800
1850 District 37, Monongalia, Virginia
Martha Rice 49 Rebecca Rice 14
John Rice 11 Manirva Rice 8 Mary Rice 4
1860: District 7, Monongalia, Virginia
Martha Rice 59 Rebecca Rice 23
Minerva Rice 17 Mary E Rice 14
Priscilla J Rice 10/12
(Priscilla (Jennie) daughter of Rebecca)
Landora O Rice 4 daughter of Rebecca
Living on Miracle Run, Maybe she buried in Miracle Run Cemetery.
A. Stephen Hough stated Martha had 6 children with John Rice, 5 girls and 1 boy, Who are the two other girls??
These 2 girls probably born after Milton 1827 and before 1837 and gone from home by 1850
Only three girls are noted: Rebecca, Minerva and Mary
Reference Notes:
- Benjamin Shriver married a Margaret Rice.
- Isaac Davis married a Margaret Rice in 1850 Monongalia
All information or thoughts on the RICE family greatly appreciated.
Family links:
Parents: William A. Sine (1763 - 1842)
Margaret Christy Sine (1768 - 1855)
Spouse: John Thomas Rice (1799 - 1849)
Children: Permelia Sine Ammons (1819 - 1877)*
Margaret Archer (Sine) Moore (1823 - ____)*
Alpheus Sine (1827 - 1916)*
Milton Sine (1828 - 1879)*
Rebecca Rice (1837 - 1903)*
John Thomas Rice (1839 - 1908)*
Minerva Rice Shuman (1843 - 1915)*
Mary Ellen Rice Matthews (1848 - 1889)*
Siblings: Christy Sine (1789 - 1858)*
Mary Sine Matthews (1791 - 1878)*
Jacob C. Sine (1796 - 1873)*
Martha Sine Rice (1800 - 1870)
John Sine (1800 - ____)*
Margaret Sine Wright (1802 - 1881)*
Rebecca Sine Moore (1807 - 1847)*
William Calvin Sine (1807 - 1890)*
*Calculated relationship
Burial:Unknown
Created by: Sylvia Sine Whittaker
Record added: Mar 12, 2013
Find A Grave Memorial# 106581102
transcribed:
Stephen Archer and
Martha Sign was
Married the 12th day
of June in the year
of our Lord 1823,
Daughter of William
Sign and Marget
his wife of Virginia.
She was born on the
21th day of August in
the year 1800 in York
County, Pennsylvania.
|
| Birth |
9 Jun 1866 |
| Gender |
Male |
| biography |
Larry Cox, Sentinel Reporter provided by Sylvia Sine Whittaker (#47119342) |
- 20250216GHLn- noch
Albert Grant Sine
Photo added by Passionate About Genalogy
Albert Grant Sine
BIRTH 9 Jun 1866
DEATH 6 Jul 1931 (aged 65)
BURIAL Mount Olivet Cemetery
Parkersburg, Wood County, West Virginia, USA
MEMORIAL ID38495426 ·
PHOTOS 2
FLOWERS 0
Added by Passionate About Genealogy
Albert Grant Sine, committed suicide July 6, 1931 at the age of 63 He was the founder of Mountain State Business College, Parkersburg, WV.
Source: " Chronicles of Core" Page 154
Albert Grant Sine, Mountain State Business College, Parkersburg, WV.
There are some men who are very hard to "write up". If you state truthfully what they are and what they have accomplished you will be charged with making extravagant statements for unmerited descriptions, Well, for that very reason I find Mr. Sine hard to "write up".
I have known him for many years. I have been in his school quite a number of times. I know the class of students he turns out. I use to know nearly every member of his faculty. Of course I formed a high personal regard for him, and so does everyone that comes in contact with his genial good nature and observes his facility in the transaction of business and knows of the high standards he maintains in his various enterprises, because he is not limited to his school in his activities by any means. But his school is the child of his own creation and naturally perhaps his greatest pride and joy comes to him when he is sitting in his college office, overseeing with great care as he does the daily operations of his big school and of the various students who are in attendance, because he is fundamentally a school man. I have no permission from him to even mention the other large interest he has, some of them extending throughout the entire State in which he resides. That is why the courses show the touch of the business man who is behind them.
There is no using of entering into a description of his school further than to say that it is a model institution in equipment, in arrangement, in the standard of its courses of study, and the high degree of efficiency that is seen everywhere as one passes through "the works". He draws his patronage from a very extensive section of country, consequently his school is made up almost exclusively of more mature class of students that is found in schools in larger cities. The number of his students however far exceed those usually found in big city schools.
Yes, Mr. Sine is my personal friend. He knows how to make a friend and keep him. All his students are his friends and his faculty is devoted to him and he is devoted to them and his students, and there you are, a great big successful school that anyone should be proud to conduct. He puts out some of the finest literature ever issued from any school, public or private, and if I wanted to employ trained office help I am disposed to think I would have to go not further than to make a selection from any recent list of graduates he might submit.
Source -"The BUDGET"--The House Paper of the H. M. Rowe Company, September 1925,
Editorial by H. M. R.
Albert Grant Sine it seems had a good idea in 1888. That year he founded the first institution of higher learning in Parkersburg,--Mountain State Business College. The college, which down through the years has survived two disastrous fires, the Great Depression and three moves, celebrated its centennial anniversary in 1988.
Albert Grant Sine came to Parkersburg, WV from Fairview, WV in 1886 at the age of 20. Two years later he founded the school in a building near Court Square. Despite an original enrollment of only two, the school caught on in popularity and Mr. Sine became on of the most admired business college educators in the state and in the Ohio Valley.
According to his obituary, Sines, school had a reputation as one of the best business schools in West Virginia. historian Bernard Allen of WVU and the author of Parkersburg, A Bicentennial History said: On march 16, 1893 Sine Albert Sine married Mattie Timms of Parkersburg, WV. They stayed married until Mrs. Sine's death in 1924.
In addition to the business school, Sine dabbled in real-estate and also started the Imperial Ice Cream Company. The ice cream company was located in the Opera house Block on Market Street, adjacent to the old Camden Theater entrance. He sold his interest in the company in 1923 to devote all his time to Mountain State. Fire, a plague that would continually haunt Sine and eventually contribute to his death in 1931 at the age of 63, damaged the first school building. he then removed to the Camden Square on Market Street, between 7th and 8th streets, approximately where the Department of Welfare office is now located. The move brought rapid growth to the school, but also ushered in an era of turmoil for Sine. According to a brochure prepared for the college's centennial, the era of 1914 began with great promise, but also with question marks. In Europe, war clouds were beginning to gather, reaching the U. S. In 1917.
The exodus of male students to the ranks of soldier deprived Sine of his main source of students, but offered opportunities for women in the work force. According to the brochure, Sine soon took advantage of this. A college poster from the time shoes a group of men lining up at the local draft board. Meanwhile, the same poster says: "These men are leaving offices--who will take their places?" It shows women lining up to enter the college.
From this time on, women would always be included on the college's roles. With the growth of the women's movement following World War I, and in addition to returning veterans, Sine saw the school's enrollment grow during the 1920's to nearly 700 students.
The stock market crash in October 1929 drastically reduced the rolls and if that weren't enough 31 days later on Nov 30, 1929 the worse fire in Parkersburg's history totally destroyed the school. The fire began in the Camden Theater and eventually spread to the entire block, gutting the schools building and completely destroying all records and transcripts.
Sine then bought a three-story structure know as the Cox building on Spring and Sixteenth streets, where the school currently stands. It was owned by Metropolitan Life Insurance Company of New York.
A note to his students at this time said, "Just a line to tell you that everything is moving along nicely here, preparatory to the re-opening of the Old school and we will be functioning in fine shape the first of the New Year.
Source: Albert Grant Sine, by Larry Cox, Sentinel Reporter
bio provided by Sylvia Sine Whittaker
(#47119342)
|
 |
Sine, Albert Grant 1866-1931 fag_ 20250216GHLn- noch
Albert Grant Sine
Photo added by Passionate About Genalogy
Albert Grant Sine
BIRTH 9 Jun 1866
DEATH 6 Jul 1931 (aged 65)
BURIAL Mount Olivet Cemetery
Parkersburg, Wood County, West Virginia, USA
MEMORIAL ID38495426 ·
PHOTOS 2
FLOWERS 0
Added by Passionate About Genealogy
Albert Grant Sine, committed suicide July 6, 1931 at… |
| Residence |
Bef 1886 |
Fairview, Marion, West Virginia, USA |
| Albert Grant Sine came to Parkersburg, WV from Fairview, WV in 1886 at the age of 20. |
- Albert Grant Sine came to Parkersburg, WV from Fairview, WV in 1886 at the age of 20.
|
| Residence |
Aft 1886 |
Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA |
| Albert Grant Sine came to Parkersburg, WV from Fairview, WV in 1886 at the age of 20. |
| Built |
1888 |
Parkersburg, Wood, West Virginia, USA |
| He was the founder of Mountain State Business College, Parkersburg, WV. Albert Grant Sine it seems had a good idea in 1888. That year he founded the first institution of higher learning in Parkersburg,--Mountain State Business College. The college, which down through the years has survived two disastrous fires, the Great Depression and three moves, celebrated its centennial anniversary in 1988. |
- He was the founder of Mountain State Business College, Parkersburg, WV.
Source: " Chronicles of Core" Page 154
Albert Grant Sine it seems had a good idea in 1888. That year he founded the first institution of higher learning in Parkersburg,--Mountain State Business College. The college, which down through the years has survived two disastrous fires, the Great Depression and three moves, celebrated its centennial anniversary in 1988.
|
| Death |
6 Jul 1931 |
- age 65. Suicide: Albert Grant Sine, committed suicide July 6, 1931 at the age of 63
|
| Person ID |
I58394 |
WETZEL-SPRING |