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Samuel Fackler
Biography |
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History of Fulton County, Illinois; together with
Sketches of its Cities, Villages and Townships, Educational, Religious,
Civil, Military, and Political History; Portraits of Prominent Persons
and Biographies of Representative Citizens. Chas. C. Chapman & Co.,
Peoria, Illinois, 1879, page 434, Astoria Township
Samuel Fackler, head salesman in the dry-goods and grocery house
of Wm. Scripps, the well-known banker and merchant; was born in Astoria
in 1842. His father, Franklin Fackler, is sketched above.
Samuel grew to manhood in Astoria, and received a liberal education,
and first entered the employ of Mr. Scripps, as a clerk. With the
exception of 3 years, then in business with G. D. Duncan, Mr. F. has
continued in the service of Mr. Scripps, attaining the position of head
clerk. In 1868 he was married to Miss Isabel Price, daughter of
Benj. Price, of Penn. Geo. D., Lillie B., Nellie C., and Grace M.
are their children. Mr. F. is a consistent and active member of the M.
E. Church.
submitted by Carla Finley
Portrait and Biographical Album of Fulton County, Illinois: containing
full page portraits and biographical sketches of prominent and
representative citizens of the county: together with portraits and
biographies of all the presidents of the United States, and governors
of the state; Biographical Pub. Co., Chicago, IL; 1890; page 315-316;
Transcribed by Margaret Rose Whitehurst
Samuel Fackler comes of sterling pioneer stock, his
parents, Franklin and Caroline (Deary) Fackler, having been early
settlers of this county and his father a pioneer blacksmith of Astoria,
the birthplace and present residence of our subject. The latter is now
numbered among the enterprising, progressive, substantial business men
of his native county, and is no unimportant factor in advancing its
material interests. He has a large, well-appointed hardware store in
Astoria, and commands an extensive trade not only in the village but
among the citizens of the outlying country.
Mr. Fackler was born in this town, December 3, 1842. He is a son
of the late well-known Franklin Fackler, who was born in Augusta
County, Va., December 3, 1807. His father, Samuel Fackler, was, it is
thought, born in Pennsylvania. He was a tanner by trade, and carried on
that business in Stanton, Augusta County, Va., where he spent his last
years.
The father of our subject went to live with an uncle in Loudoun
County when he was a boy and he learned the trade of a blacksmith. He
subsequently returned to Augusta County, and there took unto himself a
wife and followed his trade there until 1835. In the fall of that year,
with his wife and one child, he started with a pair of horses and a
wagon for the wilds of the prairie State, taking cooking utensils along
and cooking and camping by the way at noon and night. The little party
finally arrived at its destination in Fulton County after thirty days'
traveling. Mr. Fackler first located near the present site of Table
Grove. The country around was very thinly inhabited, and where Vermont
now stands, a thriving and flourishing village, there was but one
house. Mr. Fackler built a log cabin, in which his family found shelter
the ensuing winter, and in the spring of 1836 removed from there to the
village of Washington, which was the first name given to Astoria. There
were at that time only two log houses and one store where now a busy
and prosperous town is located. The father of our subject erected a
blacksmith shop in the village, which was the first one there until the
new village was laid out half a mile distant and named Astoria. He then
removed his business to the new village and was the first blacksmith in
that place. He bought property and built a substantial dwelling and
shop, and continued to carry on his trade, with the exception of two
years when he was engaged in farming near Summum, until his death,
which occurred December 15, 1887.
The mother of our subject was born in Shenandoah County, Va. Her
father, John Deary, was a native of Pennsylvania. He was left an orphan
at an early age, and after he had attained manhood he went to Augusta
County, Va., and there married. He was a shoemaker and followed his
trade in Virginia until 1835. In that year he became a pioneer of
Fulton County, buying a tract of Government land near Table Grove. It
consisted of wild prairie and there was a double log house on the place
when he purchased it, in which he lived with his family five years. His
wife, dying, he then removed from there to Astoria and bought a home in
which he lived retired until his death. The maiden name of his wife was
Jane McMullen. She was born in Pennsylvania. The mother of our subject
lived with her parents until her marriage, and was early taught to spin
and weave. In the first years of her married life she cooked by the
fireplace and clad her children in homespun garments of her own
manufacture. This venerable lady now makes her home with her daughter,
Mrs. Nelson. She has witnessed almost the entire development of this
part of Illinois from a wilderness to a well settled and wealthy
county. The early part of her life was passed amid pioneer scenes and
she did not see a railroad until she was nearly fifty years of age.
Mrs. Fackler reared the following six children to useful lives: James
F., who resides in Astoria; J. Thomas, of Astoria; J. A.; Mrs. Nelson,
of Astoria; Samuel, our subject; Lizzie, Mrs. Anderson, who lives in
Henry County, Iowa; and Fannie, Mrs. Jones, who resides in Astoria. Mr.
and Mrs. Fackler were greatly respected by the people among whom they
lived for so many years. They were true Christians, and both joined the
Methodist Episcopal Church in their younger days, though the mother had
been reared to the Lutheran faith.
Samuel Fackler, of whom we write, gleaned his early education in
the pioneer schools of Astoria, and when large enough commenced to help
his father in the shop. At the age of nineteen he entered upon his
mercantile career, engaging as a clerk in the general store of W. H.
Scripps. He continued in that capacity twenty years and in 1883
resigned in order to engage in the hardware business. He has since
devoted his entire attention to it, and has built up one of the most
extensive and profitable trades in this line in this part of the
county. He has a handsome, commodious, and conveniently arranged store,
and carries a full stock of hardware, stoves, tins, etc.
The marriage of Mr. Fackler with Miss Belle Price, a native of
Fayette County, Pa., and a daughter of Benjamin Price, was solemnized
in 1868. Five children were born of that union - George, Lillie,
Nellie, Grace, and Bessie. In the month of April, 1884, the pleasant
home of our subject was invaded by death and the loving wife and
devoted mother was taken from the place in the household that she had
so nobly filled. She was a true, womanly woman, possessing a fine
disposition and other pleasant qualities that endeared her to many
beyond the home circle. She joined the Methodist Episcopal Church
before her marriage, and was always a consistent member thereof.
Mr. Fackler is a sagacious, practical man of business,
possessing the necessary foresight, financial ability and tenacity of
purpose, requisite to success in any walk, and his affairs are managed
with scrupulous honesty and with a conscientious regard for the rights
of others. His honorable course in business, his frank and courteous
bearing, his warm-hearted nature that makes his friendship so
desirable, have won him the confidence of the entire community and have
given him a high place in the regard of all with whom he associates,
either in a business or social way. In him the Methodist Episcopal
Church, which he joined before marriage, finds one of its most earnest
and valued members, who is prominent in its affairs and who carries his
religion into his every day life. In politics he is a Republican. He
has taken an important part in the local Government, has served one
year as a member of the Town Council, and is a member of the School
Board. He is identified with Astoria Camp of M. W. A., and Astoria
Lodge, A. O. U. W.
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