David Jacob Eisenhower (
September 23,
1863–
March 10,
1942) was a American engineer, the father of U.S.
President Dwight
David Eisenhower and educator
Milton S.
Eisenhower.
David was born in
Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania, the
eleventh of fourteen children, to Jacob Frederick and Rebecca
Matter Eisenhower. He lived in Elizabethtown until he and his
family moved to a 160-acre ranch near
Hope, Kansas, in 1878. He lived there
until his enrollment at
Lane University, where he mastered Greek and
German.
There, Eisenhower met future wife
Ida Elizabeth
Stover. They were married in 1885 at the University Chapel.
Eisenhower was given, by his parents, another 160-acre farm which
was soon destroyed by locusts. After the farm was destroyed, the
new couple moved to
Abilene, Kansas.
The Eisenhowers had
seven sons:
Arthur Bradford 1886 - 1958Edgar Newton 1889 -
1971Dwight David 1890 - 1969Roy J. 1892
- 1942 Paul Dawson 1894 - 1895Earl Dewey 1898 -
1968Milton Stover 1899 - 1985In 1914,
Eisenower started working as an engineer for the
Home Gas Company,
in which he became the manager for the City of Abelene in 1918. He
retired on the first day of 1931.
David Jacob Eisenhower was
known to be fond of his work, and was an avid reader of English and
American colonial history. His son, Dwight, once said of
him:
:"I remember him as a modest, studious, and intelligent
person . . . His integrity, his training, his discipline of his
sons had resulted in dividends . . .His finest monument is his
reputation in Abilene and Dickinson County . . . His word has been
his bond and accepted as such."
External links
http://www.eisenhower.archives.gov/DJE.HTM