Alexander
Falconer
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Alexander Falconer, farmer and hotel-keeper, was born
among the hills of Scotland on Sept. 14, 1805. His
parents, Alexander and Catherine (Brander) Falconer, were
also of Scottish birth, and died in the land of their
nativiety. He came to the United States in 1833, locating
in Maryland, where he helped to build the first railroad
in the State. He enlisted in the First Regiment of the
United States Infantry, Company E, under Captian A. S.
Miller, and served faithfully for eleven years,
participating in the Florida and Mexican wars. He was
wounded at the battle of Oridobee, while fighting the
Indians on the frontier. He was honorably discharged at
Jefferson Barracks, Mo., on Feb. 9, 1846. Upon leaving
the service he came to Clayton County and entered a farm,
which he sold five years later, and engaged in
hotel-keeping. He was married in 1842 to Mary Macgee, a
daughter of John and Margaret (Greer) Macgee, the former
a native of England, the latter of Ireland. To them were
born four children, all now numbered with the dead, viz.:
Willie, George, Bennie and Sammie. Mr. Falconer is a
member of the Presbyterian church, his wife of the Roamn
Catholic. He is neutral in his political views.
source: History of Clayton
County, Iowa, 1882, p. 1074
transcribed by Sally Scarff and Marlene Chaney
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