Background
George W. McIlvaine was born at Washington County, Pennsylvania on a farm.
George W. McIlvaine was born at Washington County, Pennsylvania on a farm.
He attended country schools.
At age 23 he was admitted to the bar, and moved to New Philadelphia, Ohio, where he had a legal practice, and where he lived the rest of his life. He established a practice with Joseph Medill, and they purchased the Coshocton Whig newspaper in 1849. Medill soon after left they law partnership and took sole ownership of the paper, which he renamed the Coshocton Republican in 1855.
Medill later sold it, moved to Chicago, and brought the Chicago Tribune.
McIlvaine was first elected Justice of the Peace of Goshen Township, Tuscarawas County, Ohio in 1849, and was elected to a one year term as Mayor of New Philadelphia in 1851. In 1861, McIlvaine was elected a Judge of the Common Pleas, and re-elected in 1866 unopposed.
Failing health compelled him to decline re-nomination in 1885. He died at New Philadelphia December 22, 1887.
His immediate cause of death was a stroke after an extended illness.
McIlvaine was first married to Jane M. Robb in Florence, Pennsylvania. They had one son. They raised three children before she died in 1878. They had no children.
She died February 6, 1918 in Elyria, and is buried at Ridgeview Cemetery in North Ridgeville.