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Monthly Archives: January 2022

Elizabeth Aultman Harter’s Lasting Legacy… Part Four, the Matriarch

23 Sunday Jan 2022

Posted by McKinley Presidential Library & Stark County Archives in Guest Blogger

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Archives, Aultman, Banker, business, Canton, Children, Elizabeth Harter, exhibit, Family, George Dewalt Harter, History, Intern, Isaac Harter Senior, Lasting Legacy, Library, Local History, Marriage, Museum, ohio, Research, Single Mother, Stark County

In 1868, Elizabeth became engaged to George DeWalt Harter, the son of well-established Canton banker Isaac Harter Senior, and a banker himself. George was also the first plant manager of Cornelius Aultman’s Mansfield factory. In March 1869, the two married and Elizabeth Aultman became Elizabeth Harter. In January 1870, the two had their first child, Eliza, named after Elizabeth’s mother. The newlywed couple was wrought with grief when their daughter passed away at only six months old. Over the next seventeen years, Elizabeth and George had five more children, consisting of four girls and one boy. Their only son, Cornelius Aultman Harter, passed when he was only four years old on May 17, 1880. On December 8, 1890, George Harter’s death made Elizabeth the sole parent of four daughters, aged 19, 12, 10, and 3. In addition to her professional responsibilities with inheriting her late husband’s business interests, Elizabeth now had to raise four young women on her own.

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Elizabeth Aultman Harter’s Lasting Legacy… Part Three, The Businesswoman

19 Wednesday Jan 2022

Posted by McKinley Presidential Library & Stark County Archives in Guest Blogger

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Archives, Aultman, business, Businesswoman, Canton, Cornelius Aultman, Director, Elizabeth Harter, Entrepreneur, exhibit, George Dewalt Harter, History, Intern, Lasting Legacy, Library, Local History, Manufacturing, Millionaire, Museum, ohio, President, Research, Stark County

Elizabeth Aultman Harter’s involvement in her father Cornelius Aultman’s business was exceptional for a few reasons. First, it was rare for women to be involved in business operations, let alone at the level Elizabeth would reach in her lifetime. Secondly, Elizabeth was only nineteen in 1867 when she began serving on the board of directors for the farm equipment manufacturer Aultman & Taylor Company in Mansfield, Ohio. Despite the common attitude towards women working at this time, her father was incredibly proud and encouraging of his only child.

For over fifty-five years, from 1866 to 1924, Elizabeth was an integral part of the Aultman Taylor Company’s success in the farming machinery industry. Additionally, following the passing of her father and her husband, George DeWalt Harter, Elizabeth inherited their fortunes, along with their responsibilities. Because of this, Elizabeth took on leadership roles at various business and banking institutions.

A C. Aultman & Co. fashion trade card, one from a set of four. The front of these cards commemorated fashion throughout one hundred years prior and the backside advertised the company’s brand of Buckeye Harvesting Machines.

The Genealogy of the Essig Family. Pictured in the bottom left corner, a man uses a Buckeye Binder.

The heading on a piece of Aultman & Taylor Machinery Co. stationary. Mrs. Harter is identified as the vice president of the company in the top left corner of the paper. This heading also features the company’s logo of a starving chicken. It is accompanied by the slogan, “Fattened on an Aultman-Taylor straw stack.” This ironic comment is a reference to the fact that Aultman & Taylor machines leave behind no grain for chickens to feed on.

Elizabeth Aultman Harter’s Lasting Legacy…Part Two

02 Sunday Jan 2022

Posted by McKinley Presidential Library & Stark County Archives in Guest Blogger

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Archives, Aultman, Banker, business, Canton, Children, Elizabeth Harter, exhibit, Family, George Dewalt Harter, History, Intern, Isaac Harter Senior, Lasting Legacy, Library, Local History, Marriage, Museum, ohio, Research, Single Mother, Stark County

On May 14, 1847, Elizabeth Aultman Harter was born to Cornelius and Eliza Wise Aultman in Greentown, Ohio. Throughout her life, Elizabeth would leave a lasting legacy here in Stark County. She would serve on the board of directors for her father’s business, the Aultman Taylor Company, and bring great success to the corporation. She would provide the location for future President William McKinley’s front porch campaign and become the close friend of several other presidents. Along with her stepmother Katherine Barron Reybold Aultman, Elizabeth would create Stark County’s first hospital, which is still caring for hundreds of thousands of patients today. She would become the third president of Canton’s YWCA. Another thing that made Mrs. Harter so outstanding is that she, like her father Cornelius Aultman, was one of Cantons greatest ‘silent’ benefactors, putting many young men through college who otherwise would not have had the opportunity. She was also left a young widow and single mother to four children at the age of forty-three. She was a multifaceted woman who fulfilled numerous roles during her life, as well as overcame several devastating hardships. By the time of her passing on October 25, 1932, Elizabeth had reached various achievements throughout her lifetime, exceptional then, and still remarkable to this day.

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