Ezra H. Ripple
Ezra H. Ripple | |
---|---|
Born | February 11, 1842 |
Died | November 19, 1909 67) | (aged
Ezra H. Ripple (February 11, 1842 – November 19, 1909) was a Pennsylvania businessman, politician and soldier.
Personal life
Ripple was born in Mauch Chunk, Pennsylvania to Silas and Elizabeth (Harris) Ripple. He married Sarah H. Hackett on April 22, 1874, with whom he had five children.
Career
He enlisted in the army in March 1864 and fought in the Civil War.[1]:237 He was captured in July 1864 in Charleston, South Carolina and served three months in the Andersonville Prison, and five in the Florence Stockade, from which he escaped but was recaptured.[2]:324 He was honorably discharged June 30, 1865 at Camp Parole, Annapolis.
Following the war he worked in the crockery business and later in mining as a partner of William Connell & Company.[1]:237
In 1877 he served as captain of the Citizens' Corps during the Scranton General Strike, and went on to serve as Colonel when the Corps was reorganized into the Thirteenth Regiment, Third Brigade, Pennsylvania National Guard.[3]
He was elected as the first treasurer of Lackawanna County, Pennsylvania in 1879, and as mayor of Scranton, Pennsylvania in 1886.[2]:324 He was later appointed commissary general, and then adjutant general of the Pennsylvania National Guard. In 1901 he was appointed as Scranton postmaster, and reappointed in 1901, and 1909.
Death
Ripple died November 19, 1909.
References
- 1 2 Hitchcock, Frederick; Downs, John (1914). History of Scranton and Its People, Volume 1. Lewis historical publishing Company.
- 1 2 Throop, Benjamin (1895). A Half Century in Scranton. Press of the Scranton Republican. ISBN 9781293153567.
- ↑ Margo L. Azzarelli; Marnie Azzarelli (2016). Labor Unrest in Scranton. Arcadia Publishing. p. 7.