THOMAS
DONAHUE
Thomas
Donahue, station agent for the B. & O. S. W. R. R., at
Washington, Daviess County, Indiana, and an expert telegrapher, is a
son of Paul and Maria (Kearney) Donahue, and was born in Altoona, Pa.,
December 22, 1853.
Paul Donahue, a native of County Kings, Ireland, came to America in
1848, married Maria Kearney, a native of County Queens, Ireland, and to
this marriage were born six children, viz: Thomas, our subject; Martin,
train dispatcher at Edgerly, Calcasieu Parish, La.; Patrick, of Fort
Wayne, Ind.; Catherine, a public school teacher of Mitchell, Ind.;
Joseph, train dispatcher of Washington, and Edward, of Mitchell. Paul
Donahue found his first employment, in a regular way, on coming to
America, in Pittsburg, Pa., as a railroad section foreman, and was
transferred from point to point along the line until 1855, when he came
to Indiana and settled in Mitchell, Lawrence County, where he continued
in railroad work until his death, in July, 1891.
Thomas Donahue, our subject, attended the public schools of Mitchell,
Ind., until eighteen years of age, when he began his business life as a
section hand on the O. & M. railroad; next he entered the
station as a student of telegraphy, and a year later became night
operator, which position he filled three months, and was then
transferred to Milan, Ind., nineteen months later he was sent to
Vincennes, Ind., where he remained four years, and was then stationed
at Aurora, Ind., for a year and a half; he was then appointed agent for
the company at Medora, Ind., and remained there seven years, at which
time he resigned and went to Cincinnati, Ohio, where he was engaged in
telegraphy two years. Finally, on April 10, 1890, he settled in
Washington, Ind., where he has since filled, in a most satisfactory
manner, the position of agent for his company.
Mr. Donahue was married, in Mitchell, Ind., October 6, 1879, to Miss
Mary Jane Keane, a native of Cincinnati, and this union has been
blessed with four children - Thomas, Helen, Lena, and William. The
family belongs to the Catholic parish of St. Simon, and socially occupy
a high position, owning a very pleasant home on Poplar street, where
their numerous friends always receive a warm welcome. In politics, Mr.
Donahue is a staunch democrat.
History
of the Catholic Church in Indiana. (Logansport, Ind.:A.W.Bowen
& Co., 1898.) Vol. 2, pp 392-393
Submitted
by: John D. McMullen 76354.1337@compuserve.com