Hon. A. M. Fellows
A spirit of enterprise, aggressiveness and initiative, guided
and directed by sound judgment and discrimination, has actuated
A. M. Fellows in all the activities of his career, bringing him
through successive stages of progress and advancement to a place
of prominence in business circles of Lansing, his native city,
and to a position of power in the political life of the state of
Iowa. As president of the Peoples State Bank of Lansing,
and as proprietor of one of the largest lumber concerns in the
county, he is connected in an important way with business
interests, while as a member of the state senate his work is
proving able, constructive and public-spirited- well worthy of a
place in local political history.
Mr. Fellows was born in the city where he now resides, March 1,
1864, and is a son of Judge L. E. Fellows, a sketch of whom
appears on another page of this work. Our subject was reared in
Lansing, acquiring his education in the public schools of the
city and in the Upper Iowa University at Fayette. After
completing his studies he entered the offices of a large lumber
company in Lansing and, commencing at the bottom, learned the
business in principle and detail, winning promotion as his
knowledge increased and his ability developed and rising finally
to be proprietor of the business, which he now conducts,
controlling an important trade in lumber and building materials.
He aided in the organization of the Peoples State Bank,
which was opened for business in October, 1911 with Mr. Fellows
as president and R. G. Miller, cashier. The bank has a capital
stock of forty thousand dollars and has some ninety stockholders,
all prominent business men or prosperous farmers of this
community. A general banking business is carried on and this has
since the beginning steadily increased in volume and is of
extensive proportions at the present time.
Mr. Fellows married in Cresco, Howard county, Iowa, on the 4th of
September, 1899, Miss Elsie Smith, who was born and reared in
that city. She is a daughter of L. E. Smith, editor of the Howard
County Times, and one of the prominent and able men in that
section of the state. Mr. and Mrs. Fellows have six children:
Minerva, now in the junior class at Grinnell College, where she
is president of the Glee Club; L. E., a student at the University
of Wisconsin at Madison; and John and Kenneth, at home.
Although Mr. Fellows is so closely connected with the financial
and general business life of Lansing, and although his activities
along these lines have been so fruitful of good to the community,
they by no means mark the limit of his interests, for following
in his fathers footsteps, he has always borne his full
share in the political advancement of his city and state. He has
held various important positions of trust and honor, serving on
the school board for twenty years and as a member of the city
council for eight years, in addition to being for four years
mayor of Lansing. In November, 1912, he was elected to the state
senate and is a member of the present assembly, serving on a
number of important committees and acting as chairman of the
committee on commerce and trade. He is a practical, progressive
and able politician, giving his vote and influence only to
project of reform and advancement and adhering closely to high
standards of political and public morality. He has served the
state ably and well in important ways, and his name is honored by
his constituents and political opponents alike as that of a man
whose sagacity is far-reaching and whose integrity is beyond all
question.
Mr. Fellows is a member of the Masonic order, belonging to the
lodge at Lansing, in which he has served through all the chairs
and is now past master. He and his wife are affiliated with the
Order of the Eastern Star and Mrs. Fellows has served through all
the chairs of this organization. She is part worthy matron and
has represented the Lansing lodge in the grand lodge of the state
of Iowa. Mr. Fellows belongs also to the Modern Woodmen of
America and the Yeomen. Few, if any, men of Lansing are better
known throughout the state than he, for his activities have
influenced a great many important phases of state development,
his success and the standards which influenced it being counted
today among valuable political and business assets.
-source: Past & Present of Allamakee County; by
Ellery M. Hancock; S. J. Clarke Pub. Co.; 1913
-transcribed by Diana Diedrich
Return to 1913 biography index