WILLIAM WALTER THOMAS. Nearly a quarter of a century spent in breeding
strawberries covers the business career of William Walter Thomas, of Anna,
Illinois, who, from a small and humble beginning has built up one of the
largest enterprises of its kind in the country, an industry to the
development of which he has given some of the best years of his life and in
which he has had remarkable success. Mr. Thomas has not confined himself to
his breeding interests alone, for he has always identified himself with
movements of a nature calculated to develop and enlarge the business
activities of Anna, but he takes special pride in the work which he chose as
the medium through which to gain a position among the leading men of his
section, and it has been through individual ideas and original experiments
that the Thomas Pure-bred plants have reached their perfection. Mr. Thomas
is a product of Union county, and was born in 1871, a son of James Thomas, a
native of England, one of the earliest fruit growers of Southern Illinois.
Mr. Thomas attended the district schools of Union county, and from earliest
boyhood has made his own way in the world. At the age of eighteen years he
established himself in a nursery and fruit-growing business, but gave up the
former when he became interested in the growing of strawberry plants, and
year by year this industry has grown until now the Thomas Pure-bred plants
have a reputation that extends all over the country. After long and extended
study as to what was the most perfect soil in which to grow his plants, what
conditions suited them best in climate and what were the hardiest and most
productive varieties, he began to experiment with the different plants, and
he has succeeded in developing a product that it would be hard to better,
either in vigor, stamina, excellence of quality or amount of production. It
is one of Mr. Thomas's chief sources of pride that the same customers
purchase his goods year after year, and he also considers that a pleased
customer is the best advertisement that he can secure for his goods. The
growth of his business has been sure and steady, rather than phenomenally
rapid, but the growth has been constantly increasing, and one of the most
important features of it is that it has been caused as much by the honest
and above-board dealings of the firm as by the excellence of the article Mr.
Thomas has to sell. He is president of the Jonesboro Store Company, at
Jonesboro, Union county, and with a business associate owns and operates 200
acres of land at Makanda, which are devoted to apples, peaches and pears.
This is in addition to his plant business.
Mr. Thomas has been active in political matters, and at present is serving
as chairman of the Republican County and Congressional Committees.
Fraternally, he is connected with Lodge No. 520, of Free and Accepted
Masons, of which he has been master several times, is connected with the
Royal Arch Chapter, and is also affiliated with the Eastern Star, of which
Mrs. Thomas is also a member. They are associated in the work of the
Presbyterian church, and are well and favorably known in church and
charitable work.
In 1890 Mr. Thomas was married to Clola McGuire, who was born in Jackson
county, Illinois, in 1871, and two children have been born to this union:
Edna, a student of Belmont College, Nashville, Tennessee, who now resides at
home and is twenty years of age; and James William, sixteen years old, who
is attending college at Lebanon, Tennessee.
Extracted 16 Jan 2018 by Norma Hass from 1912 A History of Southern Illinois, volume 2, pages 792-793.
Jackson | Williamson | |
MO | Johnson | |
Alexander | Pulaski |