USA > Wisconsin > Milwaukee County > Memoirs of Milwaukee County : from the earliest historical times down to the present, including a genealogical and biographical record of representative families in Milwaukee County, Volume II > Part 115
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Harry McCabe, M. D., a leading practitioner of medicine in Milwaukee, was born in Watertown, Dodge county, Wis. He is the son of Thomas and Catherine (Dugan) McCabe, the former a native of County Caven, Ireland, and the latter of Boston, Mass. The father was a private in the Twenty-third Illinois infantry dur- ing the Civil war and rendered distinguished service. Dr. McCabe received his preliminary education in the public schools of Mil- waukee, and after graduation at the South Division high school entered the Wisconsin College of Physicians and Surgeons at Mil- waukee, in which he graduated four years later with the degree of Doctor of Medicine. Since that time he has been acting as a mem- ber of the faculty of his alma mater and interne at St. Joseph's Hospital, and he has come to be recognized as an authority in his profession. Reared in the Catholic faith Dr. McCabe is today one of the most devout communicants of the church of that denomina- tion. Professionally he is identified with the American Medical Association, the State Medical Society of Wisconsin and the Mil- waukee County Medical Society ; and fraternally with the Knights of Columbus, the Catholic Order of Foresters and the Modern Woodmen of America. In the matter of politics he espouses the Democratic cause, but has never sought public preferment for himself. Dr. McCabe is unmarried.
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John E. Eldred, Jr., an enterprising business man of the younger generation in Milwaukee, was born in the Cream City on Aug. 20, 1875, a son of John E. Eldred. He improved the op- portunities afforded by the public schools of his native city, and after completing a high school course matriculated at Armour In- stitute, in Chicago. When the trustees of the latter institute had granted him a degree he returned to Milwaukee and entered the insurance business. This line of work has not only furnished him a livelihood ever since entering it, but has also grown to large proportions under his direction. In his political relations he is a staunch adherent of the tenets of the Republican party, but has never found the leisure to devote to becoming the candidate of his party for public office of any character. Like his father, he is allied in religious matters with the Presbyterian church. Prob- ably nowhere is Mr. Eldred better known than in Masonic circles, having attained to the Thirty-second degree in the Wisconsin Con- sistory of Sublime Princes of the Royal Secret. He is actively en- rolled in Lafayette Lodge, No. 265, Free and Accepted Masons ; Calumet Chapter, No. 73, Royal Arch Masons; Ivanhoe Com- mandery, No. 24, Knights-Templar; Kilbourn Council, Royal and Select Masons; Wisconsin Lodge of Perfection, Wisconsin Coun- cil, Princes of Jerusalem, Wisconsin Chapter, Rose Croix, and Tripoli Temple, Ancient and Accepted Order of Nobles of the Mys- tic Shrine. He is also prominently identified with the Milwaukee Athletic Club. On May 7, 1902, Mr. Eldred was united in mar- riage to Miss Caroline Patton, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilford M. Patton. They have no children.
Edward Payson Bacon, one of the most successful men among the pioneers of Wisconsin and one who may be said to have grown up with the manufacturing and commercial interests of the Cream City, prominently identified with the grain interests of this city and a leading member of the Chamber of Commerce for more than forty years, is the man who is the subject of this sketch. Edward P. Bacon was born in Reading, Schuyler county, New York, May 16, 1834, the son of Joseph F. and Matilda (Cowles) Bacon. He is descended from a long line of New England ancestors on both his father's and mother's side, who lived in Masachusetts and Con- necticut for many generations. His grandfather was a fife-major in the Revolutionary war. On his mother's side he traces his an- cestry back to John Cowles, who immigrated to Massachusetts from England about 1635. Mr. Bacon's father was reared upon a farm, but upon reaching his majority he determined to learn the tailor's trade, and followed this vocation for several years. When Edward was only four years of age his family moved to Geneva, N. Y., where his father was engaged in various pursuits. The family was not well-to-do and it was necessary for Edward to work when not in school and during his vacations. When quite young he was placed with a farmer by his father, but owing to some dissatisfaction he was removed, returned home at the age of eleven and again attended school. He was fond of study and
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wanted to fit himself for college, but had to leave school early and begin to earn his living. At thirteen years of age he was employed as an errand boy in a store ; he was industrious and soon was pro- moted to a better position. Two years later he left this work and entered an academy at Brockport, N. Y., where he lived in the fam- ily of a cousin, who gave him a home. But in a few months he was forced to give up his studies and he found employment in a store in Brockport, but a year later entered the service of the New York & Erie Railroad, in May, 1851. as clerk in the freight office at Hornellsville, N. Y. He remained in this employ four years, located successively at Corning. Elmira and New York city. All during this period he clung to his early determination to enter college, but the necessity of aiding in the support of his father's family compelled him to abandon the idea. He rose rapidly in the service of the railroad, was promoted from one position to another, and became chief clerk in the general freight office, having charge of the accounts with agents over the entire road. When the Michigan Southern & Northern Indiana railroad, now the Lake Shore & Michigan Southern railroad, was completed to Chicago, in 1855. Mr. Bacon was offered and accepted the charge of the freight office of the road in that city, as he was far-sighted enough to see that there was more opportunity of advancement in railroad service in the West than the East. His idea in this regard proved true, and the following year he was appointed freight agent of the Milwau- kee & Mississippi railroad at Milwaukee, the first road which was built west of Lake Michigan and north of Chicago. When the line was extended to Prairie du Chien, in 1857, Mr. Bacon was placed in charge of the entire freight department. He remained in the service of the road nearly a decade and successively filled the offices of auditor. general freight agent and general ticket agent. Ile was placed in charge of the various departments when they were organ- ized, and after systematizing them, turned them over to others and continued his work of organization. Mr. Bacon has the honor of being the inventor of the present coupon ticket case, which is in general use all over the country, and the railroad men owe him a debt of gratitude for this convenient and labor-saving device. Mr. Bacon was not content to remain the paid employe of others, and in 1865 formed a partnership with Lyman Everingham, the freight agent at Milwaukee of the La Crosse & Milwaukee railroad, under the firm name of Bacon & Everingham, grain commission mer- chants. This new line proved most successful, but Mr. Bacon worked too hard and in 1874 withdrew from the partnership and (levoted a year to travel and the recovery of his health. He then bought an interest in a wholesale grocery house and reorganized it under the name of Bacon, Goodrich & Company, but he was not satisfied with this line of business, and the three-year limitation under which he had sold out his commission business having ex- pired, he formed a partnership with Oren E. Britt and M. P. Aiken, and again engaged in handling grain, under the name of E. P.
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Bacon & Company. Mr. Britt having become disabled in a rail- road accident, the firm was dissolved in 1877 and the business was continued by Mr. Bacon alone until 1890, when two old and trusted employes, George H. D. Johnson and George W. Powers, were taken into partnership. This house is one of the largest of its kind in the Middle West, and the extent of its business is not exceeded, and probably not equaled, by any other house. Since 1865 Mr. Bacon has been associated with the Milwaukee Chamber of Com- merce and has always taken an active interest and played a con -- spicuous part in the commercial life of the city. In 1883 he was one of the leaders in a contest that was waged by the Milwaukee Chamber of Commerce to secure better rates from the railroads having terminals in both Milwaukee and Chicago, which resulted in the establishment of more favorable freight rates, which were of great importance to the business interests of the city. Mr. Bacon was a member of the board of directors of the Chamber of Com- merce for ten years-six years as a director, two years as vice- president and the last two as president of that organization. He has represented the Milwaukee Chamber of Commerce at various commercial conventions, was elected to represent Milwaukee as a member of the National Board of Trade, and was elected vice- president of that organization from year to year for five years, serving from 1884 to 1889. He was one of the committee from the National Board of Trade to urge the passage of the Interstate Commerce Act, at the time that bill was pending before Congress. At various times Mr. Bacon has been sent as a delegate to appear before different committees of Congress to oppose the adoption of free silver and to advocate various measures affecting the wel- fare of the commercial interests of this country. In 1892, at the time of the great Milwaukee fire, Mr. Bacon was the first to call a meeting of the citizens for the relief of the sufferers, and prompt action was taken to care for the many homeless. He has always been of a religious turn of mind and it was his purpose in early life to enter the ministry. When he first located in Milwaukee, in 1856, he affiliated with Plymouth Congregational church and was a member and active worker in that church for sixteen years. At the end of that time he transferred his membership to Im- manuel Presbyterian church, with which he has since been con- nected. Mr. Bacon is always actively interested in the welfare of his fellow men and was one of those who were instrumental in the organization and establishment of the Young Men's Christian Association, of Milwaukee, in 1857, filling the office of vice-presi- dent and acting president of that organization for a periof of years. From 1879 to 1881 he served as president and placed the society upon a substantial financial basis, and it was largely through his efforts that the association secured one of the most practical build- ings owned by any association in the Middle West. Mr. Bacon has been for the past sixteen years one of the trustees of Beloit College and has established a fund for assisting young men to secure a college education, the thing that he so desired in his youth.
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On May 18, 1858, Mr. Bacon was united in marriage with Emma Rogers Hobbs, of Paterson, N. J. Four children were born to them. The oldest and youngest, both daughters-one in the bloom of young womanhood and the other a beautiful child-were taken from them by the angel of death within the span of a few short weeks, in 1879. The other children were Lillian, the wife of Rollin B. Mallory, of Milwaukee, and Frank Rogers, now a prominent busi- ness man of Milwaukee. Mr. Bacon was bereft of his wife by death in 1892, and he was re-married in 1895 to Mrs. Ella (Dey) Baird, of Pelham Manor, N. Y., daughter of John H. Dey, for many years associate-editor of the New York Evangelist. Mr. Bacon has been foremost for many years in the movement to se- cure effective governmental regulation of railroad rates, both state and national, and he devoted a large share of his time for a period of six years in promoting national legislation on the subject, which resulted in the passage by Congress, in 1903, of the Elkins law, making the payment or the receiving of rebates a criminal offense ; and in 1906 of the so-called Hepburn bill, enlarging the powers of the Interstate Commerce Commission, and making its orders and rulings operative without resort to the courts for their enforce- ment. In this work he served as chairman of the executive com- mittee, appointed by successive Interstate Commerce Law Con- ventions during the years 1900 to 1905, which consisted of dele- gates from nearly every state and territory in the Union, repre- senting the principal commercial organizations of the country. Mr. Bacon is one of the best examples of what a man by his own per- severance, endowed liberally by the kind hand of nature, may ac- complish by dint of hard work and unfaltering determination to succeed.
George D. Bailey, a prominent and active business man of Milwaukee, was born in England. March 21. 1856, the son of Moreton and Mary (Lane) Bailey, both natives of England, where the former was born on May 30, 1829, and the latter on Dec. 8, 1829. The pater- nal grandfather, Robert Bailey, died in England; but his wife, Jane, and five children, came to the United States and to Milwaukee in 1849, and there she died. In 1879 the father of our sub- ject, who remained behind when his mother sailed, came to Milwaukee, where he and his wife died. He had been a mine owner and operator in England. His family comprised eight children, seven of whom are living. The maternal grandparents, Wiliam and Susanah Lane, both lived and died in England. Our subject was educated in the English comon schools and came to the United States in 1879, engaging in the meat and gro- cery business in 1884, in which business he continued until 1907, when he retired. On Nov. 25, 1886, he married Miss Mary L., daughter of Gottlieb and Catherine Bertke Seymer, and they are the parents of two children : Edith Annie, a student in high school : and George Earl. deceased. Mrs. Bailey's father was a German by birth, born on May 8, 1836, and he came to Milwaukee with his father, Michael, and step- mother, his own mother having died in Germany. Michael Seymer
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died in Milwaukee in 1896, aged ninety-two years, but his wife is still living here, aged eighty-two. Mrs. Bailey's mother was born in Oak Creek, Wis. Gottlieb Seymer's family was composed of twelve children, eleven of whom are living. He was a farmer for many years, but moved to Milwaukee in 1894 and there he now lives, having re- tired. He was elected city assessor for ten years in succession, and in all he served sixteen years in that office, as a Republican. Our sub- ject is an Episcopalian in religious belief, while in politics he reserves the right to cast his vote unhampered by the party lash, and is there- fore independent. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey are members of the Badger Humane Society, and she is also a member of the Milwaukee Chapter of the Eastern Star, of the Shrine, of the South Side Woman's Club, and of the School Alliance, while he is a member of Milwaukee lodge No. 261, F. & A. M. Mr .. Bailey, by rigid adherence to strict busi- ness principles, by careful attention and foresight, has made for him- self a name in the business circles of this city that is enviable and worthy of emulation. In the period of a scant quarter of a century he has established a competency for his old age of which he is justified in feeling a little vain. In a business in which nine out of ten men fail each year, the man that succeeds eminently and in a comparatively short time stands out in bold relief among his fellows like a moun- tain rising from the plain.
Louis Elschner was born in Germany on June 7, 1858, a son of Henry and Wilhelmine (Selle) Elschner, both natives of Ger- many, who came to Milwaukee in 1884, and there the mother died on March 25, 1896, and the father is living a retired life. The family consisted of eight children, six of whom are living. Our subject was educated in Germany and came to the United States and Milwaukee in 1882 and there he worked for Jacob Weisel for three years in the sausage business. On Sept. 21, 1884, he engaged in the business for himself, in which he continued until 1907, when he retired, after being extremely successful in his line for thirteen years. On Sept. 20, 1884, he married Miss Bertha, daughter of Frederick and Carolina Hafemeister, both natives of Germany. Their union was blessed with four daughters: Lillie, Clara, Olga, and Edna. Our subject's first wife died on July 10, 1901, and on Dec. 24, 1902, he married Miss Julia C. Allen, by whom he has two daughters, Adelia and Gertrude. Mr. Elschner owns the Elschner Flats on First avenue, and a factory at 408 Walker street. In religion himself and his family belong to the Lutheran church, while in politics he belongs to the Republican party. Mr. Elschner made his own way in the world, unassisted. By a careful way of saving his small accumulations he has built up a nice little fortune for his old days, and his great success proves that small begin- nings economically handled can produce profitable results.
John Walter Leonard, a well-known practitioner of dentistry in Milwaukee, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., on March 31, 1872, a son of John and Agnes (Trudell) Leonard, the former of whom was born in New York city and the latter in Montreal, Canada. The parents came to Milwaukee in 1892. The father died on May 30, 1906.
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During the Civil war he was a private in Company E of the Ninety-fifth New York infantry, and with his regiment partici- pated in the battles of Chancellorsville, Gettysburg. Rappahan- nock, the Wilderness and other smaller engagements. Dr. Leon- ard received his education in the public schools of New York city and the New Haven high school, and in 1802 he came to Milwau- kee with his parents. He immediately took up the study of den- tistry and three years later began to practice. All during the time he was attending the dental department of the Milwaukee Medical College, in which he was graduated in 1900, he was active in practice. His thorough knowledge of his subject, gained by prac- tical experience as well as study, has won him a large clientele. Professionally he is alied with the Wisconsin State Dental So- ciety, and in politics he is a staunch adherent of the tenets of the Republican party. His church membership is in the Congrega- tional church of South Milwaukee. In 1802 Dr. Leonard was united in the holy bonds of matrimony with Miss Berdella Mc- Govern, a daughter of Mrs. Ellen McGovern. To bless the union of Dr. and Mrs. Leonard has been born one daughter, Agnes Louise.
Herman F. Franke, Milwaukee, Wis., a prominent gas and elec- tric light contractor, whose business embraces everything pertaining to gas, electric, or gasoline lights, and who is popularly known as "the heavy light man," was born in the village of Lomira. Dodge county, Wis., Dec. 3, 1866. His parents were Ferdinand and Johanna ( Hesse ) Franke, the former of whom was a native of Hamburg, and the latter of Bremen, Germany. His father came to the United States in 1856 and located at Lomira, Wis., where he ran a blacksmith shop and also conducted a general store. In 1886 he moved to Milwaukee, where he followed his trade of blacksmith and engaged in business for him- self up to the time of his death, which occurred Oct. 19, 1900, at the age of 67. He was highly esteemed by all who knew him as an honor- able and upright man and citizen. of unimpeachable business integrity. and an indulgent husband and father. a faithful member of the Luth- eran church till his death. Herman E. grew to maturity in Wiscon- sin, received his education in the parochial and public schools of Lo- mira, and then served an apprenticeship of three years, learning the trade of a carriage wood-worker. He afterward worked as a carriage wood-worker for the period of five years in St. Louis, Mo. Finally, in 1893, he settled in Milwaukee, where he worked at his trade for a year. In 1894 he embarked in his present business, which he at first conduct- ed on a small scale. As a result of his remarkable push, energy, and business skill, his business has expanded rapidly, until it has grown into the leading enterprise of its kind in the city, and his nande is everywhere associated with the lighting business. In his political views Mr. Franke is a Democrat and a Single-Taxer, and in 1908 he was elected sheriff of the county of Milwaukee after a very aggressive campaign, in which Mr. Franke was the only Democrat dette ] on the county ticket. Ile is a member of the South Side Turnverein : the Deutscher Maennerverein Society ; the Evening Star Lodge, Independent
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Order of Odd Fellows; the Wisconsin Lodge No. 23, Knights of Pythias; Lodge No. 46, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, of which he is treasurer ; Heptasophs; Independent Order of For- esters ; Calumet Club ; Merchants and Manufacturers' Association ; Greater Milwaukee Association ; United Commercial Travelers, and the Traveling Men's Protective Association. He was married on March 5, 1892, to Miss Amalia, daughter of Martin and Margaret Hahn, of St. Louis. His wife is a native of Highland, Ill., and her father and moth- er are natives of Germany and Illinois, respectively. Mr. and Mrs. Franke have one charming daughter, whom they have named Irma.
Henry Ferge, general contractor and manager of the Northern Construction Company (Incorporated), is a prominent man in building circles, whose enterprise and ability are generally recog- nized and whose opinion on all matters connected with his calling is always received with the greatest deference. He is a native of Milwaukee, of German ancestry. His paternal grandfather, Fred- erick Ferge, was born in Saxony, Germany, and was a pioneer of Milwaukee, where he arrived with his family in 1848. The great possibilities of the young country both attracted and held Mr. Ferge, and he continued to reside at the corner of Twelfth and Galena streets, his first home in the city, until his death. Of the children born to Frederick Ferge and his wife, Elizabeth, eight reached mature years: Charles H., Christopher, Martha, Johanna, Pauline, Matilda, Caroline, and Gottlieb; but only one is living at the present time-Martha, wife of Charles Gunderman, of Ken- osha. Gottlieb, a volunteer in the Twenty-sixth Wisconsin infan- try, was killed at Gettysburg, the grave of so many noble men. Charles H. was born in Eisenach, Germany, at one time the home of Martin Luther. He attended school in Eisenach and learned the shoemaker's trade, at which he was employed in his native city until 1851, when he decided to emigrate to America, where his par- ents had preceded him. He worked at his trade in Milwaukee for several years and was an active member of the Milwaukee volun- teer fire department of his time, known as the old No. 2. In 1856 he took charge of the toll-gate on the Cedarburg plank road at Brown Deer and remained there until 1858, when he removed to Theinsville, Ozaukee county, and was engaged in hauling flour from Cedarburg and Theinsville to Milwaukee, in those days of slow transportation a profitable and necessary business. In 1860 he purchased a farm of twenty-five acres near Theinsville, and this property he managed until he retired from active business in 1889, to make his home in Milwaukee, where he died on April II, 1898. For thirteen years he was assessor of the town of Mequon, Ozaukee county, and he also served as chairman of the town board for several years. He was a staunch Democrat. Of the two children born to him and his wife, Marie (Kemp) Ferge, Henry is the only survivor. Henry Ferge was born in Milwaukee, Aug. 15, 1853, educated in the old log district school in the town of Mequon and in the public schools of Theinsville, and he returned to Milwaukee in 1870. For three years he was apprenticed to Louis
BIOGRAPILICM
Vogel, carpenter and builder, and for six months worked as a jour neyman. He then established himself in business as a general con- tractor, and shortly afterward associated himself with Philip Keip- per, under the firm name of Ferge & Keipper. For nine years this firm carried on a remarkably successful business in Milwaukee, and during this time built the planing mill at the corner of Park street and Fifth avenue, which manufactured sash, doors and blinds, and is now known as the Interior Wood Working Com- pany. Since the dissolution of the partnership of Ferge & Keip- per. in 1896, Mr. Ferge has been in business for himself, and in connection with his work, he organized, in 1900, the Northern Con- struction Company, of which he has always been the active man- ager. The company has erected many notable buildings, among them the following: Court house and the addition to the normal school at Marquette, Mich .: the Munising county court house at Munising, Mich. ; the paper plant in the same city ; the addition to the asylum at Newberry, Mich. ; the addition to the School of Mines at Houghton, Mich. ; the combined smelter at Houghton ; the post- office at Grand Haven, Mich. ; the library building of the Lawrence University at Appleton, Wis. ; the postoffice at Marshalltown, Iowa ; the postoffice at Baraboo; the addition to the Wausau postoffice. etc. The company is at present erecting the addition to the She- boygan postoffice and the new postoffice at Mason City, Iowa, and also twelve buildings for the Naval Training Station at North Chi- cago. The woodwork in the Milwaukee City Hall, Public Library. and the Sentinel building, was superintended by Mr. Ferge, and his company also removed the old postoffice in Milwaukee and laid the foundations for the Wells Building, one of the handsomest office buildings in the West. Mr. Ferge erected the roundhouse and machine shops at Abbottsford, Wis., for the Wisconsin Cen- tral railroad, and the sugar factory at Chippewa Falls. In Milwau- kee he was identified with the construction of the Davidson and Bijou theaters, and with so many other of Milwaukee's largest and most important structures that it would be impossible to mention them in brief space. At present Mr. Ferge has the contract for the carpenter work of the New Auditorium building. Mr. Ferge has not confined his efforts to his own personal advancement, but orig- inated and promoted the organization of the Milwaukee Builders Exchange, of which he is a charter member, and was also active in the organization of the Builders' Club, of which he was first presi- dent, and whose beautiful home is now the gathering-place of men most distinguished in the profession. He is a Republican in polit- ical sympathies, but his active life has left him little time or in- clination to pursue political honors. Mr. Ferge is a member of Co- lumbia Lodge, No. II, Knights of Pythias. On May 3. 1877, Mr. Ferge was married to Miss Caroline Frentz, daughter of John and Dorothy Frentz, of Milwaukee, and three children have gladdened their delightful home: Richard, Alma, wife of Dr. Edward E. Timm : and Harry.
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