QUINCY, ADAMS COUNTY, ILLINOIS

Joseph Pierce Muffley (b. Nov. 7, 1854) was my great-grandfather (pictured on left : Joe, his wife Emma and son Albert Muffley. Emma's sister Alice, & her son Herb.). He was 7 when his father Thomas Muffley died early in 1862 in Clarion County Pennsylvania. After Joe’s mother Julia sold the farm in Clarion Co. Penn., May 1, 1865, the family may have gone back to kin in Westmoreland Co. Penn. This probable visit, when Joe was about 11, may have been part of what Joe later remembered as a visit to kin at Pine Run Church and in North Washington. The widow Julianna Maria Wilhelm Muffley with her 5 kids reportedly arrived in Quincy about 1866, by riverboat. The steam paddle riverboat move to Quincy would indeed have been a memorable occasion.

Julia’s brother Adam Biddle Wilhelm had been in Quincy for some time, with an interlude of involvement in the Pike’s Peak Gold Rush. He worked in a saddlery, and helped Julia with lodging and employment for her sons. See the Wilhelm Blog. Adam Biddle Wilhelm moved his saddlery business to 517 Hampshire Street, Quincy, in 1868. Julia and her kids lived (definitely from 1873 to 1878) above Wilhelm Saddlery, and the apartment entrance was off a side alley, up a covered iron staircase. By 1871 (and probably earlier), Joe and his brother Franklin Biddle Muffley both worked in harness making. Joe continued to be a harness maker for all of his working life. Their brother Jacob Milton Muffley worked as a tinner, but tragically died young, on Sept. 10, 1872.

According to the 1880 census of Quincy, Julia lived between 5th and 6th streets, an alley entrance off of Vermont. Her kids Joe, Will, & Sadie, all in their 20s, lived with her. Joe worked as a harness maker, and Will as a bookbinder. Sadie at various times was reported to work as a seamstress. Frank by that time had married Florence Kansas “Cannie” Tyrer, lived nearby, and worked as a commercial traveler.

On Mar. 8, 1882, in Quincy, our Joseph Pierce Muffley married Emma Jane McCreary. She was the daughter of John Skinner and Margaret Williamson McCreary (John b. 1825, Warren Co., Ohio). John was a descendant of Hugh McCreary (b. abt. 1744 in Pennsylvania). Margaret (b. May 29, 1835) has interesting Dutch ancestry, well researched (e.g. Van Voorhees ). John Skinner McCreary was a livestock dealer in Quincy. The McCreary family had previously lived in Springfield, Illinois, where they had initially lived across the street to the west, and up the block to the north, from Abraham Lincoln in 1861 just before Abe moved to Washington D.C. as President. Emma Jane had a brother Abraham Lincoln McCreary. (pictured: Back, from left: Christine, Alice, Marilla. John Skinner & Margaret Williamson McCreary. Silas, Emma, & Abraham Lincoln McCreary.)



The 1884-1885 Quincy directory first places our Joe Muffley at Schott Saddlery, while his brother Frank B. Muffley worked as harness maker at John B. Kreitz. Joe and Emma McCreary Muffley then lived at 525 Maiden Lane, and their son Albert Harold Muffley (my grandfather - pictured here with his mother Emma) was born on Dec. 19, 1885. Frank’s family lived at 92 S. 3rd. Julia and her kids Sadie and Will lived behind 518 Vermont. Will worked as a book binder from then, and Sadie shortly was a seamstress.

QUNICY Continued

By 1887, Joe & Emma Muffley had moved to 318 Maple. Joe continued to work at Schott Saddlery. Will Muffley married Lillie Mae Kimmel (her brother Peter was a harness maker at Schott Saddlery) in 1890. Lillie’s father and uncle worked as steamboat mates, so lived in a succession of river towns. Will & Lillie Muffley were in Omaha in 1900, and later went to Washington, D.C., where Will continued his bookbinding work with the U. S. Government Printing Office. My daughter Lara & I have visited places in D.C. associated with Will and Lillie, e.g. place of employment and place of burial. I have photos of their church and one of their homes.

Julia Wilhelm Muffley died in 1894, and was reportedly buried in Halstead, Kansas, home then of her daughter Sadie. Sadie had married William Henry Lentz, harness maker, in 1892. The Lentz family had a farm near Halstead, Kansas.

The John Skinner McCreary family moved from Quincy to Galesburg, Illinois, sometime after Emma Jane McCreary married Joe Muffley (1882). This probably was after John’s stockyard burned. The insurance had lapsed, and McCreary family fortunes took a dive. In Galesburg Ward 6 in 1900, John McCreary was a day laborer at age 72. This, after years of having several businesses. In 1890 in Galesburg, Silas William McCreary (brother of Emma Jane McCreary Muffley) married Mary Alice “May” Jagger. May Jagger was a sister of Edna Una Jagger, who later married Albert Muffley (son of Joe & Emma Jane McCreary Muffley). Thus, the initial link between Jagger and Muffley was via the McCreary family.

The year 1906 was very eventful. Joe, Emma, and son Albert Muffley lived at 328 Chestnut. Joe was still at Schott Saddlery. Albert worked for George Ertel. Frank B. & Florence Muffley lived at 308 S. 3rd, and Frank worked for Schott. On Jan. 18, 1906, fire began in the harness area and was discovered in the barn and livery stable at Schott Saddlery by 3:10AM. It became one of Quincy’s most destructive fires. Blazing saddles. On June 11, Effie Wilhelm (daughter of Adam Biddle Wilhelm) married Harry J. Eickmeyer in Quincy, and four days later her cousin Albert Harold Muffley eloped to Monmouth with Edna Una Jagger of Galesburg, Illinois. Albert’s mother had wanted him to marry Bertha Slotman (whose photos are in Emma’s album). Previously, when a letter from Albert arrived in Galesburg, sisters of Edna Jagger tried to snatch it away. Edna read the letter on the run, and then ate the letter. With the marriage, Albert’s Uncle Silas William McCreary (married May Jagger) became also a Jagger in-law of Albert. Silas and May (= “Cuz-Unc” & “Cuz-Aunt”) had a son Dick McCreary who soldiered in World War I. Before 1909, any Muffley presence in Quincy probably ended.