John R. Baer
John R. Baer, who has been an active factor in business and
official circles but is now living retired in Oskaloosa, is a
native son of Indiana, having been born in Rockville, Parke
county, on the 11th of March, 1839. His father, George W. Baer,
was a native of Virginia and when a young man went to Ohio, where
he remained until after his marriage to Elizabeth Lundy, a native
of that state. Soon, however, they removed to Parke county,
Indiana, and in 1843 went to Sarcoxie, Missouri. In the fall of
1845 they came to Oskaloosa, which was then a small village,
having few business enterprises and but a small number of houses.
The father followed the tailor's trade for a short time and then
engaged in general merchandising, while later he bought, sold and
shipped stock for many years. In this way he accumulated a
handsome competency, but he lost his capital by financially
accommodating a friend. In early life he was an old-line whig, and
under the laws of Iowa filled the office of collector and
treasurer of the county for one term, act ing in the latter
capacity in 1847-8. He was a member of the Methodist Episcopal
church and died in that faith in 1892, at the age of seventy-eight
years. His wife, an earnest Christian woman, passed away in May,
1855, when thirty-five years of age, dying of cholera. In their
family were seven children, of whom three are yet living, namely:
John R.; Amelia, who is the widow of Reason Wilson, of Oskaloosa;
and George T., of the Indian Territory. Those deceased are:
Rebecca, wife of John W. Murphy; Mary; Martha Henrietta; and
Lloyd. George W. Baer had two children: Elizabeth, the wife of L.
D. Fowler, of Washington, D. C.; and Byron, of Nebraska.
John R. Baer was educated in the public schools and when a boy
began clerking for the firm of Hardy, Searle & Young, with
whom he remained for three years. He afterward spent two years on
his father's farm in Oskaloosa township and was next employed by
Benjamin Roop until the spring of 1860, when he drove across the
country with ox-teams to a town seventy-five miles west of Denver,
Colorado, there prospecting for gold. In the fall, however, he
returned in the same manner to Oskaloosa, being fifty-two days on
the outgoing trip and thirty-one days on the return trip. He then
became a clerk for George M. Downs, of this city, the store being
on the present site of the courthouse. In the previous fall he
cast a vote for Abraham Lincoln, which was his first ballot. He
continued, clerking until the 15th of July, 1861.
On that date Mr. Baer, responding to his country's call for
troops, became a member of Company C, Seventh Iowa .Volunteer
Infantry, which was the second company raised in Mahaska county.
He was present with his regiment at the capture of Forts Henry and
Donelson, in the battle of Shiloh and the siege and battle of
Corinth, He also participated in the battle at Pulaski, Tennessee,
where he was detailed for service in the commissary department
under Captain Palmer and Han. C. C. Carpenter, ex-governor of
Iowa, and thus acted until mustered out on the roth of August,
1864, at Chattanooga, Tennessee.
When the war was over Mr. Baer returned to Oskaloosa and clerked
for the firm of Jones & Tullis in a general store for two
years. In the meantime Mr. Tullis purchased his partner's
interest, and Mr. Baer bought the interest of John W. Tullis, and
the firm of Tullis & Baer was formed and so continued for a
year. At the end of that time our subject sold his interest to his
partner and began dealing in stock, which he bought and shipped
for three years. He next removed to Beacon, this county, where he
became a clerk in the coal company's store, owned by the firm of
Evans, Jones & Baer, the last named being his father. After
three years the father sold out and John R. Baer withdrew from the
store and joined his father in the partnership under the firm name
of Baer & Son. Two years later the father sold his interest to
J. P. Davis and the firm of Davis & Baer existed for one and a
half years. The junior partner then returned to Oskaloosa and
became a bookkeeper in the hardware store of C. Cooper, by whom he
was employed for two years. He was next deputy sheriff of Mahaska
county for a year and a half under Sheriff Barr, and when his.
former employer sold his hardware store to W. H. Todd, Mr. Baer
returned to the store, where he acted as bookkeeper for a year,
when the business was sold to Knapp & Spaulding. Mr. Baer then
went upon the road as a traveling salesman until the fall of 1885,
when he was elected on the republican ticket to the position of
county auditor, which he filled for four years, proving a capable
official and retired from the office as he had entered it with the
confidence and good will of all concerned. Re-entering commercial
life, he went upon the road for George Hall & Company,
wholesale hardware dealers, with whom he continued for two years
and later he was on the road for Huber & Kalbach Company,
hardware dealers, for two years. He afterward served as deputy
county auditor under J. B. Cruzen and W. T. Martin, filling the
office for eight years, or until January, 1905, since which time
he has lived retired.
On the 8th of November, 1866, Mr. Baer was married to Miss Frances
Carnahan, a native of Ohio, who died in 1900, at the age of
fifty-two years. Their children are: Nellie A.,the wife of C. C.
Pike, of Oskaloosa: Grace L, wife of C. W. Carr, of the same city;
and Bernice L. Mr. Baer belongs to Triluminar lodge, No. 18, A. F.
& A. M., having been made a Mason in 1866. He also holds
membership relations with Phil Kearney post, G. A. R., and in
politics is a stalwart republican, having stood loyally by the
party which was the chief defense of the Union and of the
administration during the dark days of the Civil war. He is a
representative citizen of the town and county, interested in all
movements which are a matter of civic pride, and his efforts in
behalf of general improvement and progress have been effective and
far-reaching.