WILLIAM A. BROKER was born in Lippe-Detmold, Germany, March 19, 1837. He was a boy of eleven years of age when his parents, Samuel and Sophia (Haupfer) Broker, crossed the Atlantic in the spring of 1849 to New Orleans, and thence up the Mississippi River to St. Louis. This was during the year of the great cholera epidemic in that city, and within a few days the father and three of the children died, the mother and William having it severely but recovering. When they were able to leave, the mother and her four small children moved to a farm near Watertown, Wisconsin. About one year later, the mother died of cholera morbus, she being then fifty years of age. Mr. and Mrs. Broker had always been members of the German Reformed Church.
Mr. William Broker is the youngest of the children yet living. He is now a pattern maker for the St. Louis division of the Quincy Railroad, which is located at Beardstown. He has been a resident of the same city since 1851. He was only fourteen years old when he arrived at Beardstown and learned the trade of a practical carpenter-mechanic under C. A. Bushman. After learning his trade, he worked on his own account and later became a carpenter for the old Rockford company. In 1869, when the railroad was bought up by the Quincy company, he became their pattern maker in 1879. He has ever since been regarded as a good, reliable workman, and a true, straightforward man, and his long association with the railroad company is a recommendation of him as a citizen.
He was married in Beardstown to Miss Dorothea Kratz, who was born in Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany, in 1844, and was twelve years of age when her parents emigrated to this country. They have seven children: Frank, living at home, is a machinist; Sophia and Katie are at home, they having been well educated in the high school of the city; William is learning the machinist trade; Minnie, Amelia, and Samuel are at home. Mr. and Mrs. Broker attend the Lutheran Church. Mr. Broker is a Republican and a member of the A. O. U. W. He is highly respected by all.
Biographical Review of Cass, Schuyler, and Brown Counties, Illinois, Biographical Review Publishing Co., Chicago, 1892, page 287.
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