Charles Albert Bird
From the Biographical Cyclopedia of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky, published by the John M Gresman Company, Chicago-Philadelphia 1896
CHARLES ALBERT BIRD, a director in the Louis Snider & Sons Paper Company of Cincinnati and one of the substantial citizens of Dayton, was born November 4, 1842 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, of English parentage. He left his home when ten years of age and went to Chicago and subsequently to St Louis and took a position as clerk on a steamboat plying between St Louis and New Orleans, and was in this service when the Civil War began.
He enlisted in the First Missouri Infantry, CSA, commanded by Colonel Bowen, who was afterwards a brigadier general, and continued in the service until 1863, and was present at the surrender of Vicksburg.
He then came to Cincinnati and secured employment in the well known paper house of Louis Snider & Sons, which has since become incorporated and in which company he is a stockholder and director. Mr. Bird is deeply interested in the welfare and progress of the city in which he has made his home for many years, and was elected mayor of Dayton by the Democratic voters in 1893; has been an honored and trusted member of the City Council for eight years; is courthouse commissioner of Campbell County; is a member and Past Master of the Henry Barnes Masonic lodge No 607 of Dayton and is one of the leading spirits in all affairs for the betterment of the community in which he lives.
Mr. Bird was married in November 1873 to Isabella Twaddell, who was born in Cincinnati, April 17, 1852 and where she enjoyed unusual advantages in her school days. They have a group of promising boys: Charles, Albert, Clarence, George and Nelson McKibben.