William H. Kalbach
William H. Kalbach, a representative of commercial and financial
interests in Oskaloosa, has attained a position of distinctive
precedence among the business men whose efforts have contributed
to general prosperity as well as individual success. The strong
purpose, safe and conservative judgment and guiding will power
which are' strong characteristics In his business career contain
the secret of his advancement and prosperity. He is one of
Oskaloosa's native sons, born in 1858, his parents being Isaac and
Christina (Koch) Kalbach, both of whom were natives of
Pennsylvania, and of German lineage. The father, whose sketch
appears elsewhere in this volume, is now living in Oskaloosa at
the venerable age of eighty-three years, but the mother died in
1897, in the seventy-sixth year of her age.
William H. Kalbach was reared in Oskaloosa and was a public-school
student until the age of fifteen years, when he entered the
hardware store of Cary Cooper, with whom he remained for six years
as a clerk. He next went to New Sharon, where he established the
private bank of Kalbach Sons & Company, continuing active in
the management of that concern for six years. He then returned to
Oskaloosa and en-
tered into partnership with C. Huber under the firm name of Huber
& Kalbach. This was in 1885 and in 1890 the Huber &
Kalbach Company was organized, which is still in operation,
conducting an extensive wholesale and retail hardware business. In
fact this is the largest enterprise of the kind in Oskaloosa, and
Mr. Kalbach was the active manager until about a year ago, the
development and growth of the business being therefore largely
attributable to his efforts. In 1895 he succeeded Judge William H.
Seevers as president of the Oskaloosa National Bank and is still
acting in that capacity. In 1892 the Union Savings Bank was
organized with Mr. Kalbach as president and he also remains at the
head of this institution. He was one of the promotors of one of
the first independent telephone companies in the state of Iowa,
known as the Home Telephone Company and was active in its
management for six years, when with the other original
stockholders, he sold out the business, being unable to give it
the time required. It had proved a successful venture in every
respect.
In 1884, Mr. Kalbach was united in marriage to Miss Nell Seevers,
who was born in Oskaloosa in 1864, and is a daughter of Judge
William and Caroline M. (Lee) Seevers. There are now two children:
Lee, born in 1888; and Maria, born in 1891. Mrs. Kalbach is a
member of the Episcopal church and Mr. Kalbach belongs to the
Masonic fraternity and Elks lodge. Wherever found he is a social,
genial, affable gentleman, whose friends are legion and all honor
and esteem him for his manly virtues and genuine worth. As a man
his business ability has been constantly manifested in one phase
or another and everything that he undertakes he masters, so that
the extensive and important commercial and moneyed concerns with
which he has been identified have felt the stimulus of his
untiring effort and cooperation and have profited by his keen
discernment and sound judgment.