F.J. Wehrli – lived in the Pre-Emption house and raised 13 children there
Robert Shimp – his family had a local farm and some served in the fire department
Clarence and Albert Stenger – of the brewery family
Louis Germann – his family started with a harness business in the 1890s
Fred Yanke – Naperville firefighter
Henry Stoner – family started blacksmith shop in 1870s
James and Clarence Kroehler – nephews of Peter
Joe Haas – his brother Bert became a pro ball player
Ernest and William Voss – brother Julian ran for Police Magistrate
Elmer Otterpohl – the family had a butcher shop and sausage business
Leo Koppa – served in the fire department
Clarence and Frank Barley – Clarence was involved in building the YMCA
Fred Shupp, Ray Ballman and Jeff Burke are also listed. They were all Kroehler employees, but kept lower profiles, apparently, since there wasn't much to be found about them. Many of these men also served in World War I.

Peter Kroehler was wildly successful, but the company also weathered quite a few storms. Some storms were literal – like the 1913 tornado that destroyed the first 5th Avenue factory – and some were more figurative such as the Great Depression. Kroehler himself spent two months in the early 1900s quarantined with smallpox. But he continued developing new ways to run his business and build employee morale which resulted in enviable success and loyalty.100 years later, our own businesses in these opening months of 2020 are facing both figurative storms and quarantine. Now it’s our turn to develop new ways to run our businesses and build employee morale so we can also be wildly successful.
By the way, the newly-formed Kroehler team faced the previous year's pennant winners for their very first game. You'll be happy to know that the Kroehler team won!




According to contemporary reports, a wild winter storm
greeted the new year as 1920 dawned in Illinois. The President was Woodrow
Wilson.
The Governor was Frank Lowden. With World War I wrapping up, the nation
was intending to go back to normal, but normal was anything but in the 1920s.
WWI ended in November of 1928, but the Treaty of Versailles
didn't
actually take effect until January 10, 1920. The last soldiers were
coming home from overseas, having experienced more of the world than their
parents or grandparents ever had.
Many of the women who had filled in for their
menfolk were reluctant to take off their trousers, put their dresses back on
and return to the kitchen. Patriotism was high across the nation.
But patriotism was morphing into a nationalism that sowed
suspicion. The rise of communism, socialism and fascism in Europe raised fears
in the U.S. The first "Red Scare" raids in November 1919 and January
1920 were to oust leftist leaders and political and labor radicals. Immigrants
were looked at differently and there were calls to close the borders to
immigration.
The Ku Klux Klan, once a Confederate social club, adopted an
"Americanism" creed that embraced intolerance not only for
immigrants, but also for blacks, Catholics, Jews and various practices they
deemed "immoral."
Naperville was incorporated as a city in 1890 and by 1912
was a commission form of government with a mayor and several commissioners
instead of aldermen and wards. Mayor Charles B. Bowman was a professor at
North-Western College (later renamed North Central College). His commissioners
were Alexander Grush (who owned a meat market), Robert Enck (who was in coal
supply), Charles Rohr (who was a florist), and C.C. Coleman (who was a
druggist.)
The men met at the "new" city hall after moving
from their location above the jail and firehouse which was located about where
the Apple Store is on Jefferson. The local Masons had just built a new building
in 1916 (the Naperville Running Company building) and had moved out of their
rooms above the First National Bank. That building, now La Sorella di
Francesca, became the new city hall.
Naperville's quarries were no longer being worked, so the
main employer in town was the Kroehler Manufacturing Company, renamed in 1915
as the Naperville Lounge Company started incorporating other factories.
While Edward Hospital doesn't look anything like it did in
1920, it did exist as a popular Sanitarium. The YMCA, which does still boast
its original building, had been completed in 1911 and even allowed women to use
the facilities at certain times of the week. Another landmark from the 1920s
that still exists in some form today is Nichols Library, which was built in
1898. 

