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W. L. DRAPER,
hardware merchant, Hutsonville, is a native of Crawford
County, Ill., born Sep. 22, 1827. His father Exum
Draper, was a native of North Carolina, born in 1804.
He was brought to Illinois by his parents, who located in
Crawford County in 1816, being among the earliest settlers;
here he was raised on a farm and educated from the common
schools. During his life engaged in agricultural
pursuits and also worked at the trade of a carpenter.
In 1846, he removed to New Orleans, and there died in 1817.
The mother of our subject, Mary Wells, was born in
North Carolina in about 1806, died on the Mississippi River,
while en route to New Orleans, in 1846. They were the
parents of four children, of whom William, our
subject, was the oldest child. He was raised on a farm
and educated from the subscription schools common in his
day. He has however, acquired more than an ordinary
education from observation. In 1846, he removed to New
Orleans with his parents and entered the employ of his
brother-in-law. In 1849, he returned to Hutsonville,
where he embarked on his career in life, a merchant, doing a
general merchandising business on a small capital, and
continued the same until 1863, when he sold his stock of
goods and removed to Terre Haute and engaged in a cotton
speculation, which proved very unsuccessful; he lost over
$40,000 by the transaction, and went into bankruptcy.
In 1870, he embarked in the mercantile business, carrying on
a general store for two years. In 1872, he started a
new hardware store, at which he he is still actively
engaged, carrying a large and complete stock, and doing the
only business of the kind in town. It might be said to
Mr. Draper's credit that he struggled through
bankruptcy, paid his individual debts, and is now one of the
wealthiest men in this part of the county. In York,
Jan. 22, 1850, he married Miss Elizabeth Foster, who
has borne him five children, of whom three are now living,
viz: Beatrice, widow of Frank Boyd,
residing in Iowa; Mattie, wife of Samuel Bennett,
and Henry L., at home. He has been an active
member of the I. O. O. F. for thirty-two years, and has
represented his lodge at the Grand Lodge several times.
He is a thorough and energetic business man, always first in
any public enterprise, and well worthy of the high esteem in
which he is held. Politically, he is a Democrat.
Source: History of Crawford & Clark Cos., Illinois -
Illustrated -
Publ. Chicago: O. L. Baskin & Co., Historical Publishers,
Lakeside Building -
1883 - Page 271 |