OKGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of OKGenWeb State Coordinator. Presentation here does not extend any permissions to the public. This material can not be included in any compilation, publication, collection, or other reproduction for profit without permission. Files may be printed or copied for personal use only. ===================================================================== FRED F. BRYDIA Vol. 3, p. 1012-1013 It has been said that the lure of the newspaper and printing business never fails eventually to call back to the colors one who has once been a devotee, but there can be no measure of doubt that Mr. BRYDIA has had no occasion thus far to resume such allegiance during the period of this specially successful career in another field of business activity, that of extending loans on farm properties. In this line of enterprise he is substantially established at Ada, the judicial center of Pontotoc County, and he is known and valued as one of the reliable and progressive business men and public-spirited citizens of this thriving Oklahoma city. Mr. Brydia was born at Forest, Livingston County, Illinois, on the 23d of May, 1880, and is a son of Charles S. and Harriet E. (FUNK) Brydia, the other surviving children of whom are here mentioned: Truman W. is associated with his brother Fred F., of this review, in the farm load business at Ada; Mrs. N. B. HANEY, Jr., is the wife of one of the well-known capitalists and influential citizens of this city; George S. is a merchant at Prophetstown, Illinois; Mrs. J. G. ALCORN is the wife of the manager of the American Creosote Company, at Shreveport, Louisiana; Miss Gustie is the representative of a book company at Springfield, Ohio; and Charles S. is engaged in the newspaper business at Pontiac, Illinois. Fred F. Brydia designates the public schools of Illinois as the medium through which he received his early education, but he was afforded also advantages that lie extraneous to established curriculums of school work and that have consistently been pronounced as offering a definite equivalent of a liberal education, for when but five years of age he acquired in his father's newspaper office at Fairbury, Illinois, his initial knowledge of the printing business. He became in time a skilled compositor and he continued to be identified with newspaper work, in various capacities, until 1908. For approximately twenty years of this interval he was editor of newspapers in his native state-the Clinton Weekly Times, in DeWitt County, Illinois, and of the Livingston County Democrat, at Pontiac, that state. In 1908, the year following the admission of Oklahoma to statehood, Mr. Brydia came to this vigorous young commonwealth, and for a few months he traveled from Oklahoma City as representative of an insurance company. Later he was for a short time identified with newspaper work at Calvin, Hughes County, but since the winter of 1908 he has been established in the family load business at Ada, with his brother Truman W. as his able and valued coadjutor at the present time. He is a member of the Ada Commercial Club, and takes a lively interest in its work, and is always on the alert to give his enthusiastic support to all measures and enterprises tending to advance the social, educational, industrial and commercial interests of his home city, county and state. He is a member of the Ada Country Club and is affiliated with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and with the blue lodge and chapter of the Masonic fraternity, as well as with the adjunct organization, the Order of the Eastern Star, of which his wife likewise is an active member. At Fairbury, Illinois, on the 17th of June, 1903, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Brydia to Miss Jessie F. RAMSEY, her paternal grandfather having been one of the first settlers of Livingston County, in which Fairbury is situated. Mr. and Mrs. Brydia have one child, Marvine, who was born in the year 1907. Typed for OKGenWeb by: Dorothy Marie Tenaza, January 10, 1999.