Wilbur A. McNeill
Wilbur A. McNeill, capitalist of Oskaloosa, was born June 12, 1843, in
Springfield, Illinois. The ancestry of the McNeill family in America is
traced back to two brothers who came from Scotland to the new world in
1770. One of these, Archibald McNeill, was a physician and settled in
Georgia. The other, Gen. John McNeill, won his title by service in the
British army and while on leave of absence settled in Kent county,
Maryland. This was only a few years before the outbreak of the
Revolutionary war and he noted the conditions among the colonies that led
to the outbreak of hostilities. His sympathies were aroused in behalf of
the oppressed and he forfeited his commission in 1776 by taking sides with
the American troops in the war of the Revolution. General McNeill was the
father of four children. The eldest, John McNeill, J r., who became a
lawyer by profession, removed to Cumberland, Maryland, in 1800 and was for
many years judge of the orphans court of Allegany county. By his marriage
to Miss Mary Myers there were born five sons and three daughters.
One of these. the Rev. Francis Asbury MeNeill, was the father of the
representatives of the name now living in Oskaloosa. He was born January
1, 1809, and was married in Frederick City, Maryland, to Miss Mary E.
Cronise, who was born in that city March 4. 1812. Dr. McNeill was baptized
by the Rev. Francis Asbury, the first bishop of the Methodist Episcopal
church in America. He joined the church when very young and was received
into the ministry at the age of twenty years. In 1833 he was ordained a
deacon at Baltimore, Maryland, by Bishop Hedding and was ordained elder in
1837 at Jacksonville, Illinois, by Bishop Soule. He found time to pursue a
course of medical studies in addition to his work in the ministry and was
graduated from the University of Maryland at Baltimore in 1834. Locating
at Springfield in the spring of 1835, he there practiced medicine and at
the same time maintained his pastoral connection with the church for over
two years, after which he was located by the conference at various points.
He not only did much for his fellowmen in the way of ministering to
physical and spiritual needs but was also an active factor in political
life and all ardent opponent of slavery. It was this that largely
influenced him to leave Maryland. He made campaign addresses throughout
the state of Illinois in support of William Henry Harrison in 1840 and was
a delegate to the convention which nominated Henry Clay for the
presidency. 'He also attended the Bloomington convention in 1856, which
gave rise to the republican party in Illinois and at the time of the
outbreak of the Civil war was a member of the state legislature. The
newspaper which he published in Ogle county was among the first to
advocate the cause of Abraham Lincoln and of the martyred president he was
a very warm, personal friend and ardent admirer. After the outbreak of
hostilities between the north and the south he was appointed surgeon of
the Thirty-fourth Illinois, Infantry by Governor Richard Yates, but later
resigned on account of ill health and was afterward appointed post
chaplain at Paducah, Kentucky. Subsequently he filled a similar position
in Louisville, Kentucky, but in 1865 left the service. His death occurred
February 1, 1872, at Mount Morris, Illinois. He had always maintained a
high standard of conduct in every relation of Jife and had entertained
principles that constitute the basic elements of good citizenship and
Christian living.
His wife, Mrs. Mary E. McNeill, died at Springfield, Illinois, November 4,
1849, and Dr. McNeill was married again February 2, 1857, Miss Barbara E.
Wagner, of Mount Morris, becoming his wife. Of the children born of his
first marriage there are three living and two are residents of Oskaloosa.
Mrs. Ann Norvella Little, born June 25, 1835, in Washington county,
Maryland, lives in Chicago, Illinois. James Floyd, born October 15, 1841,
in Springfield, where he was reared and obtained his education, enlisted
for service in the Civil war, August 12. 1862. He joined the army for
three years as a member of Company G, One Hundred and Fourteenth Illinois
Infantry, and was promoted to the rank of sergeant major. He served until
the close of the Rebellion and was honorably discharged August 15, 1865,
after which he became clerk in the adjutant general's office in Illinois,
acting in that capacity until the office was abolished. He was married
November 18, I872, to Julia E. Hibbs, of New York city, and they became
the parents of two children, Walter F. and Mabel. Wilbur A. McNeill, of
this review, is the next of the family. Hobart W. McNeill, one of the
leading citizens of Oskaloosa, was born June 18, 1847, at Peoria,
Illinois. His mother dying soon afterward he was reared by an aunt in
Allegany county, Maryland and he attended the University of Virginia until
that school was closed by the Confederacy. He pursued the work of his
senior college year in 1865 at Rock River Seminary in Ogle county,
Illinois, after which he read law and pursued
a course of lectures in the University of Michigan in 1867. He was
admitted to the bar in Springfield, Illinois, the following year and in
1869 located at Eldora, Iowa, where he formed a law partnership with
Ex-Governor Enoch W. Eastman. In 1870 he entered the service of the Iowa
Central Railroad Company, becoming their general agent in 1871. As special
agent of the Iowa Valley Construction Company, which built the central
railroad, he settled its affairs which in two years involved an
expenditure of four million dollars and which were very much complicated.
His report, made in New York city, was printed by the company and was
accepted as a final and, complete settlement of the business. In 1872 he
was the secret agent of the St. Louis & St. Paul Railroad and became
president of the road. In 1873 in connection with W. A. McNeill he
undertook the development of the Mahaska coal fields, organizing the Iowa
Central Company with a capital stock of one hundred thousand dollars and
of the company became president. The stock soon sold at a large premium,
the lowest sales being fifty and the highest one hundred and twenty-five
per cent above par. This corporation was merged into the ConsoIidation
Coal Company, which absorbed several other companies. In 1881 the stock
was sold to the Chicago & Northwestern Railroad Company for five
hundred thousand dollars in cash. In that year H. W. McNeill became
assistant to the president of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul
Railroad Company and in November of the same year resigned to resume the
presidency of the Dubuque International Improvement Company. He formulated
the financial plan whereby was built the Masonic Opera House in Oskaloosa.
He organized and was president of the Oskaloosa Power & Land Company,
capitalized at fifty thousand dollars; the Oskaloosa Tanning Company,
capitalized at twenty-five thousand dollars; the Oskaloosa Edison Light
Company, with a capital of twentyfive thousand dollars; was vice-president
of the Western Union Fuel Company, capitalized at two hundred thousand
dollars; vice-president of the American Coal Company, with a capital of
two hundred thousand dollars: vice-president and manager of the Iowa Iron
Works Company, of Dubuque, capitalized at one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars; vice-president of the Dubuque Steam Heating Company, capitalized
at thirty-five thousand dollars ; vicepresident and manager of the
Rasmussen Western Railway Cable Company, of Chicago, Illinois, capitalized
at two million dollars; was a director of the Fanners & Traders
National Bank of Oskaloosa : and of the Oskaloosa Oatmeal Company with
headquarters at Mason City, Iowa. Few men in the state operated more
largely in business affairs than H. W. McNeill. He thought out new plans
of action, ventured upon untried fields and carried forward to successful
completion whatever he undertook, being systematic at all times in. his
work and utilizing every opportunity to the best advantage. He became one
of the most eminent and prosperous men of the state and was a typical
American citizen, who while promoting individual success also largely
contributed to the commercial and industrial advancement and prosperity of
the county and the commonwealth. He was married May 15, 1869, to Miss
Lizzie Phillips, of Eldora, Iowa, to which place she had removed from
Allegany county, Maryland. She had been a childhood friend and playmate of
her husband and was educated at Dr. Brooks College in Baltimore. There was
one child of this marriage. Anna, born July 12, 1873. H. W. McNeill died
at San Jose, California, January 27, 1900.
Of Dr. McNeill's second marriage there were born four children, of whom
two are living: Catherine M., born in Mount Morris,. Illinois, May 20,
1860, received a liberal literary education and then devoted herself to
the study of vocal music, spending two years in Chicago, after which she
studied for three years under the best masters of London and Paris,
completing her course abroad in 1886. She now lives with her husband, Dr.
Walter Huffmann, in Honolulu. Hawaiian Islands. Frank A. McNeill, born
October 26, 1862, is now living in Tishomingo, Indian Territory.
The life record of Wilbur A. McNeill has been closely interwoven with the
history of Oskaloosa's development and upbuilding in later years. He
acquired his early education in the old Sandstone Seminary at Mount
Morris, Illinois, and in 1861, when but eighteen years of age, responded
to the country's call for troops, enlisting in the Fourth Illinois
Cavalry. He had a horse shot from under him at Shiloh and sustained such
injuries as necessitated his discharge on account of physical disability,
but his patriotic spirit was not to be quenched in this way and in 1862 he
re-enlisted. While skirmishing at Griesson's Bridge below Memphis,
Tennessee, and engaged in a hand-to-hand pistol duel he was severely
wounded, being shot through the right breast, by reason of which he was
again discharged from the service.
In 1873 Mr. McNeill associated himself with his brother H. W. in the coal
business, operating first in Monroe county, Iowa, as secretary and
treasurer of the Iowa Central Coal Company. Through all the changes that
occurred in the organization of the corporations, as mentioned in the
history of H. W. McNeill, W. A. McNeill had personal charge of the
accounting and financial part of the business, which he managed with
marked ability and signal success, and on his brother's death took entire
charge of the business. In 1881 he established the Oskaloosa Livery &
Transfer Company, his arrangements and appointments reaching such a degree
of perfection that his business was unsurpassed by any similar concern in
the state. He is now president of the W. A. Company. of Seattle,
Washington, and the H. W Mc Neill Company, Limited. of Canmore, Alberta,
Canada.
To Wilbur A. McNeill there has come the attainment of a distinguished
position in connection with the great material interests of the state and
his efforts have been so discerningly directed along well defined lines
that he seems to have realized at anyone point of progress the full
measure of his opportunities for accomplishment at this point. A man of
distinctive and forceful intellectuality, of broad mentality and most
mature judgment he has left and is leaving his impress upon the industrial
and agricultural world.