
William E. GALEENER, who
resides on his farm in Tunnel Hill Township,
has an admirably planned and well-stocked nursery at Vienna, and is
well patronized by the people of the
village and county. He is a native
of Warren County, Ohio, born October 30, 1841, and is of the early
pioneer stock of that State. His father, the late S. B.
GALEENER, was
also
a native of Ohio, and was there reared to the life of a farmer. In
1857 he came
with his family to Illinois, and first engaged in farming in Edgar
County, whence he removed to Union
County in 1866. While there he
devoted himself to general farming and to raising small fruit. In 1876
he came to Johnson County to settle, taking up his residence in Tunnel
Hill, and
still continued to till the soil; he also made brooms in the
winter time when he could do nothing else. He was a hard worker from
boyhood, and his industry was well rewarded by the
comforts with which
he was enabled to surround his old age. His death occurred in 1887, and
the last sad rites for the dead were solemnized in Odd Fellows'
Cemetery, Vienna, where
he was laid to rest. His venerable wife
survives him, and makes her home with our subject. She is a native of
Clermont County, Ohio, and bore the maiden name of Nancy MALSBARY.
She
has been the mother of twelve children: Missouri Jane, who died in
Warren County, Ohio; William Elwood; Samuel, who died in Ohio in 1849,
during the prevalence of the cholera
epidemic; Rachel, who also fell a
victim to the cholera in that year at Montgomery, Ohio; Mary Emeline,
wife of Elwood FINLEY, a fruit grower at Cobden, Union County; three
children,
two being twins, who died in infancy; Herbert Francis, a
resident of Tunnel Hill, whose occupation is that of railway bridge
carpenter; Percy Hosbrooks, station agent at Harrisburgh; Nancy
Alice, wife of Abraham FLICK, a farmer at St. Francisville; and Stephen
Clifton, railway agent at Eldorado.
William Elwood GALEENER, of whom this sketch is written, is the second
child of the family in order of birth. His early life was passed much
as that of other farmers' boys, with plenty
of hard work to strengthen
his muscles when he was not improving his mind in the district school,
which he attended until he was fifteen years old. He continued to live
with his parents
until he was twenty-four years old, although he had
begun to work for himself when he attained his majority. He came to
Vienna in November, 1869, with the little money that he had
accumulated, which was not, however, enough for his purpose—to start in
the nursery business—so that he had to begin life here in debt. But he
was not lacking in enterprise, and his
resolution
to do his best under all circumstances, together with his capacity for
sustained and intelligent labor, was a guarantee of his future success.
In 1876 he bought a farm of sixty acres
in Tunnel Hill Township, and
removing his nursery to it, he farmed and attended to his nursery, and
in the busy years that followed conducted his affairs profitably. He
placed his land under
a thorough system of cultivation, planted a large
quantity of fruit of different sorts, and made many excellent
improvements, including the erection of a neat and comfortably arranged
residence. He still continues to live on his farm, but in 1890 he again
established his nursery at Vienna, deeming this village a more
desirable field for carrying on his business. He is
thoroughly
conversant with everything pertaining to horticulture, particularly to
that branch of it to which he is devoted, and has a finely equipped
nursery, and is constantly adding to his stock, which is
always of the
choicest, and is well selected with regard to the requirements of his
customers jand adaptation to the soil. He is strictly honest 'in his
dealings, never
misrepresenting anything, and those with whom he trades
have every confidence in him as a straightforward, trustworthy business
man, and in his judgment in everything pertaining to his
line of
business.
February 8, 1872, Mr. GALEENER was united in marriage to Miss India,
daughter of Capt. William PERKINS, and a native of Johnson County.
Seven children were born of their
pleasant married life: Claude, who is
a student at a school at Fairfield; Amy, at home; Freddie, who died at
the age of two years; John Halbert; George Edwin; William Kenneth and
Mabel. The four last-named are also at home, and all the children are
being well educated and trained to useful lives.
We should be doing but scant justice to our subject did we omit to
mention his patriotic services as a soldier when our country stood in
need of help of the bravest and best of her citizens
to save it from
dishonor and disunion. He was but nineteen years of age when he
enlisted in the Fifty-fourth Indiana Infantry in June, 1862, for a
period of three months. He returned home
at the end of that time with a well-earned record for efficiency and
fidelity to duty under the most trying conditions. In 1864,
nothing
daunted by his former experiences, he again enlisted, becoming a member
of the One Hundred and Thirty-fifth Illinois Infantry, and saw some
hard service at the front. While with his regiment at the Red River
during his first enlistment, he had
the misfortune to be captured by
the enemy, but he was subsequently paroled.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
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