B. H. KELLER is one
of Manchester’s first settlers, as he has always been one of the
town’s most active and successful business men. He is a native
of New York, coming from that state, which has furnished a large
percentage of the population of Delaware county, and to whose
sturdy and enterprising sons the county owes much of its
progress and prosperity. He was born in the town of Auburn,
February 28, 1829. He comes of Pennsylvania parentage, his
father, Joseph Keller, and his mother, Anna Williams, having
been born in the town of Kellersville, in the Keystone State.
They were both descendants of old and respected families of that
locality, the town of Kellersville having been named for
Christopher Keller, a native of Germany, and the paternal
grandfather of the subject of this notice, who settled there
many years ago. The elder Keller was an enterprising merchant
who did a prosperous business at Kellersville for a long time,
dying there at the advanced age of eighty-six. Joseph Keller and
Anna Williams grew up together in the town of Kellersville and
were there married and immediately moved to New York and settled
in Auburn, which the husband had previously visited and
selected as a location. He followed his trade as a tailor in
Auburn for many years, moving in 1850 to Seneca Falls, N. Y.,
where in September, 1866, he died, in the eighty-third year of
his age. His wife died while a resident of Auburn, in 1838, in
early life. These were the parents of eight children, of whom
the subject hereof is the third, and only two of whom besides
himself are now living, these being two brothers: John, who
resides in Houston county, Tenn., and Alexander, who resides in
Robinson, Mich. The deceased brothers and sisters are: Jane,
James M., Lafayette, Charles and Elizabeth.
Our subject received an ordinary common school education,
finishing with an academic course at Willard academy, in Auburn,
N. Y., and served an apprenticeship under his father, when a
lad, to the tailor’s trade. He never liked his trade and he in
consequence abandoned it as soon as he was released from his
obligations to his father, and afterwards served an
apprenticeship to the trade of a shoemaker, and followed that
trade as a journeyman for some time. In 1853 be opened a boot
and shoe store in Cuba, N. Y., which he conducted for three
years. In March, 1856, he came to Iowa and settled in
Manchester, opening a boot and shoe store here in April
following. This was soon after the village of Manchester was
started and ten years before it was incorporated as a town. Mr.
Keller thus became the pioneer boot and shoe man of the place,
if indeed he was not the first exclusive boot and shoe dealer in
the county. He worked at the bench himself in those years and
made the first pair of boots or shoes that was ever made in the
town of Manchester. Beginning, as the town began, in an
unpretentious way, he plied himself industriously to his trade
and watched closely his business growing with his surroundings
through all the years that marked the rise and progress of his
adopted home. Without flattery to him, or a suggestion of
discourtesy to others, it may be stated in this connection that
he has done as much as any man in Manchester towards building up
the solid interests of the place, liberally investing his own
means and cheerfully contributing his own labors to the
prosperity of the community and the public good. He built the
second house that was built on Franklin street, north of the
Clarence hotel. He has built four substantial business houses
besides a number of dwellings. He has been. a member of the city
council two terms and has stood at all times, whether in office
or out, for a strong, vigorous administration of local affairs.
He has been a member of the Delaware County Agricultural Society
for seven years, and has been active in fostering a spirit of
enterprise among the farmers and stock-growers of the county and
in encouraging them in their efforts to build up that interest
on which all others in this county depend. He is now, and has
been for twenty-six years past, the president of the Manchester
Cemetery Association, and Manchester’s beautiful city of the
dead shows abundant evidence of his intelligent supervision. He
is one of the charter members of the Congregational church, and
has been zealous from the beginning in all church work. He is an
enthusiastic. Mason, a charter member of Manchester Lodge, No.
165, of which he was worshipful master during the first seven
years. He is a charter member of Olive Branch Chapter, No. 48,
R. A. M., and a charter member also of Nazareth Commandery, No.
33, Knight Templar.
Mr. Keller married in 1850, while still a resident of New
York, taking to share his life’s fortunes Miss Lucy A. Barre,
who was a native of Chautauqua county, N. Y., a daughter of S.
W. Barre, of York State parentage, and probably of French
Huguenot ancestry.
Mr. and Mrs. Keller have a pleasant home and a large
circle of friends, in whose society they find not the least of
the pleasures of this life. |