As a merchant of Carlinville for the past twenty-nine years the
gentleman whose name stands at the head of this review is well known. He
is recognized as a substantial and trustworthy citizen, who by
conscientious application to his business has earned the regard of the
entire community. He comes of good German stock and was born on a farm
near Mascoutah in St. Clair county, Illinois, April 26, 1850, a son of
Jacob and Dorothea (Ball) Stadler. The parents were both natives of the
kingdom of Bavaria, Germany, and in their family were six sons and five
daughters, seven of whom survive: John, of this review, Philip, who is
living in Los Angeles, California; Jacob, of Carlinville; George, who
now resides at the old homestead in Carlinville township; Katharina, the
wife of Henry Bartels, of Texas; Mary, who married Jacob Ring, of
Morrisonville, Illinois; and Anna, who became the wife of Fred Stensell,
also of Morrisonville.
Jacob Stadler, the father of our subject,
was reared in his native land and came to America in 1849, taking up his
residence in St. Clair county, Illinois. When he reached his destination
among strangers he had three dollars and fifty cents in his pocket but
secured employment as driver of an ox team and in a few years became one
of the thrifty farmers of the county. He moved to Macoupin county in
1867 and located in Carlinville township, where he owned two hundred and
eighty acres of land under cultivation and eighty acres in timber. He
died in 1906, being then nearly eightv-two years of age. His wife died
in December, 1905, also having nearly reached the eighty-second year of
her age. Mr. Stadler was a member of the Lutheran church but his wife
was a Catholic. He paid for a substitute at the time of the Civil war.
The grandfather of our subject on the paternal side was Anthony Stadler,
who was a farmer in Germany and lived to the age of eighty-seven years.
He had two children: Jacob; and Philip, who came to this country and is
now living near Madison, Monroe county, Missouri. The grandfather on the
maternal side was Franz Ball, also a farmer of Germany. He died at the
age of forty-five and in his family were two daughters, Dorothea and
Mary Ann.
John Stadler passed the first seventeen years of his
life in St. Clair county and received the principal part of his
education in the public schools of that county. He came to Macoupin
county in 1867 and has ever since lived in this county except eight
years which he spent in Christian county. He remained at home until
twenty and one-half years old, when he began working for wages and
banked out coal as top man of the mining shaft in Carlinville, his
father-inlaw, Henry Bartels, Sr., owning the mine. He also engaged as a
miner and was identified with the mining interests for eleven years. He
then entered the liquor business but after three years sold out and
since 1882 has been successfully engaged in the mercantile business.
In September, 1870, Mr. Stadler was married to Miss Dorothea
Bartels, a daughter of Henry and Minnie (Lereke) Bartels. There were
four children born to this union, two of whom died in infancy, the
others being Minnie and John J. Minnie married Henry Stratton and they
had one daughter, Ella. She was again married, her second union being
with William Grunder. They are now living on a farm near New Holland,
Illinois. John J. was married to Flora Swank and they are now making
their home at Los Angeles, California. They have one daughter, Anita.
Mrs. Dorothea Stadler died in 1880, at the age of thirty years, and two
years later Mr. Stadler was married to Fredericka Bartels, a cousin of
his first wife and a daughter of Christian Bartels, whose wife was a
Miss Sohns. There were six children by this marriage, three of whom are
now living: Esther E., who became the wife of H. W. Turney, of Decatur,
Illinois; Ruth, who lives with her sister Esther; and Elmer E., a
carpenter of Carlinville. Mrs. Fredericka Stadler died in 1905, having
reached the age of fifty-six years, and on the 7th of February, 1907,
Mr. Stadler was married to Mrs. Delia L. Stowe, the widow of Ransom P.
Stowe and a daughter of Samuel and Elizabeth H. (Cobb) Van Pelt. Mrs.
Delia Stadler was born in Perry, Pike county, Illinois, September 10,
1865. Her father was born in Lexington, Kentucky, and her mother in New
York state. They were early settlers of Pike county.. Illinois, the
father arriving there when he was only seven years of age. He died at
Bedford, Illinois, at the age of fifty-four and the mother at
Springfield, when she was sixty-nine years old. They had eleven
children, six of whom are now living: Lutitia, who is the wife of P. C.
Hornback; Minnie, the wife of George Belden; Delia L., now Mrs. John
Stadler; Harvey L. and Leon L., both of Springfield, Illinois; and
Olive, who is the wife of I. W. Morgan, of Flora. Illinois. The paternal
grandfather of Mrs. Stadler was William Henry Van Pelt, who married
Lutitia Foley, and the grandfather on the maternal side was Philanthropy
Cobb, whose wife died young.
Mr. Stadler is a firm believer in
the Bible and is a member of the Baptist church, while his wife holds
membership in the Christian church. Fraternally he is identified with
the Modern Woodmen of America. Ever since arriving at maturity he has
been a supporter of the democratic party and, although he has not sought
public office, he served for seven years as township clerk. He has for
many years been an important factor in business circles of Carlinville
and his influence has ever been directed for the good of the community.
He and his wife have many friends whom they have attracted by qualities
of usefulness and unselfishness.
Extracted 20 Oct 2018 by Norma Hass from History of Macoupin County, Illinois: Biographical and Pictorial, by Charles A. Walker, published in 1911, Volume 2, pages 225-227.
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