Contact me
  • Home
  • Why "This Game Of Games"?
  • What's Up With That Rooster?
  • The Old Blog
  • Henry Gratiot and Early St. Louis Ball-Playing
  • Baseball In The Illinois Country
  • Thoughts On The Origin and Spread Of The Early Game
    • The Search for Stability: Baseball and the Voluntary Association as a Cultural Organizing Principle in the Trans-Appalachian West
    • Yankee Pioneers, Merchants, and Missionaries: Cultural Diffusion and the Spread of Baseball
    • The Illusive Nature of Town Ball
  • The Great Match Of Base Ball
  • Civil War Baseball
    • 1861
    • 1862
    • 1863
    • 1864/1865
    • Invited To The Field: A Source-Based Analysis of Baseball in St. Louis During the Civil War
    • The Pioneer Baseball Era in St. Louis and the Civil War
    • The Civil War Reminiscences of General Basil W. Duke, C.S.A.
  • Chris Von der Ahe and the Creation of Modern Baseball
  • The Fall Of Von der Ahe
  • 19th Century St. Louis Baseball Clubs
  • 19th Century St. Louis Baseball Grounds
  • Protoball Stuff
  • Research Links
  • Published Work
  • Contact Me

Wayman Crow McCreery

11/11/2015

0 Comments

 
Picture
[Wayman Crow McCreery], son of Phocian R. McCreery and Mary Jane (Hynes) McCreery, was born in St. Louis in the year 1851. His father was born in Kentucky, but had settled in St. Louis eleven years previous to Wayman's birth, and had gone into the dry goods business in partnership with Mr. Wayman Crow, the firm being known as Crow, McCreery & Company. It did a very large amount of profitable business, and Mr. McCreery invested much of his share of the profits in real estate. His name is connected with some of the best buildings in the city, including the building at the corner of Broadway and Chestnut street, now known as Hurst's Hotel, which was erected in 1861, and which was, at that time, the finest building in the city. His enterprise proved a great stimulus to the erection of costly office and public buildings, and his example was very generally followed. His mother, Mary Jane McCreery, was a daughter of Colonel Andrew Hynes, of Nashville, Tennessee, who was a bosom friend of General Andrew Jackson.

Young Wayman received his educational training at the Washington University, where he remained until he was eighteen years of age. He was an apt and industrious pupil and made rapid progress in his studies. On leaving the Washington University he went to Racine, Wisconsin, where he received a thorough university education, graduating with high honors in the year 1871. Returning to the city of his birth and early days, he became connected with the dry goods firm of Crow & McCreery, remaining with it for three years. He then entered the real estate business in partnership with Mr. James Towers, the firm name being McCreery & Towers, with offices at 705 Pine street. The firm continued as thus constituted for a period of twelve years, when Mr. Towers withdrew from the partnership, and Mr. McCreery continued in business alone, at 715 Chestnut street. There is no real estate agent in the West more highly respected or looked up to than Mr. McCreery. He has been appointed sole agent for the magnificent Security Building on Fourth and Locust streets, in which his offices are now located. His principal work during recent years has been the management and control of large and valuable estates, and he has been uniquely successful in the plotting out and development of valuable tracts of land. He was in practical control of the Concordia tract containing fourteen acres, which he subdivided and sold at a very substantial profit for the owners. He also negotiated the ninety-nine years' lease of the corner of Tenth and Olive streets, now occupied by the Bell Telephone Company, and he is practically the pioneer of the long term system in this city.

Mr. McCreery is now consulted by large capitalists as to the best method of investing in St. Louis realty, and is known as one of the most impartial and conservative men in the city. His advice is invariably accepted, and his clients following it have almost invariably made exceedingly handsome profits. Mr. McCreery is now a very wealthy man, but he is kind and courteous to all, and may be regarded as a type of the business men who have forced St. Louis to the front and made it one of the most important cities in the world, commercially, socially and otherwise. He is a notary public, and, although not in practice as an attorney, is well read in real estate law.

Mr. McCreery is a member of the Legion of Honor, and a very active worker in its behalf. A great deal of his spare time is devoted to music. He is the composer of the opera "L'Afrique," which was produced at the Olympic in 1880 with great success. He was also at the head of the St. Louis Musical Union in connection with Mr. Waldauer, and for upwards of seventeen years he has been the musical director at Christ Church Cathedral, and he is also president of the St. Louis Glee Club. Mr. McCreery has always labored earnestly with a view of elevating the music of the city.

He married in the year 1875 Miss Mary Louisa Carr, daughter of Dabney Carr, and granddaughter of Judge Carr, so well known in East St. Louis. They have four children-Mary Louisa, Christine, Wayman and Andrew.

-Old and new St. Louis
I'm stupid busy at work right now and haven't had time to put anything together regarding L'affaire Baldwin so you're getting some recycled stuff from the old blog for the next few days.  Anyway, here's what I wrote seven years ago about Mr. McCreery:

​A first baseman for the Union Club, Wayman Crow McCreery is one of the more fascinating figures in the history of 19th century St. Louis baseball. Besides his musical talents, which are mentioned in the biographical sketch from Old and new St. Louis, McCreery was also a national billiards champion. Augustus Thomas, in A Print of My Remembrance, wrote that McCreery was an outstanding athlete, stating that "(few) men are so physically and intellectually equipped as he was. There was nothing that an athlete could do with his body that in a notable degree Wayman McCreery could not do. He was a boxer, wrestler, fencer, runner, and swimmer, and all-round athlete. In addition to these he was a graceful dancer." 

McCreery's background is fairly typical for a member of the Union Club. He was one of several members of the club to have attended Washington University, which was co-founded by his namesake, Wayman Crow.  McCreery, like many other club members, was also related to the prominent Laclede and Chouteau family of St. Louis. He was related to the family through his marriage to Mary Louise Carr. The Union Club had numerous members who where part of the Laclede/Chouteau family as well as the Lucas family. These two families were the largest landowners in St. Louis and were also the two wealthiest families. The fact that McCreery's daughter, Marie, was named the St. Louis Veiled Prophet Queen in 1896 speaks to his family's high social standing in the city. 
0 Comments
    Welcome to This Game Of Games, a website dedicated to telling the story of 19th century, St. Louis baseball.  

    Search TGOG
    search engine by freefind

    Categories

    All
    1859
    1860
    1861
    1862
    1863
    1864
    1865
    1866
    1867
    1868
    1869
    1870
    1874
    1875
    1877
    1880
    1881
    1883
    1884
    1885 World Series
    Abbey Grounds
    Abraham Lincoln
    Actives
    Adam Wirth
    Adolphus Busch
    Advance
    Adventures
    Aetnas
    Alex Crosman
    Alfred Bernoudy
    Alma
    Al Spink
    Alton
    American Association
    Andy Blong
    Anheuser-Busch
    Arlie Latham
    Artisans
    Asa Smith
    Athletics
    Atlantics
    Augustus Charles Bernays
    Augustus Solari
    Avian Homicide
    Ballparks
    Baltics
    Basil Duke
    Beer
    Belleville
    Benjamin Muckenfuss
    Benton Barracks
    BFIB
    Bill Hague
    Billy Redmond
    Black Baseball
    Bluff City
    Bob Caruthers
    Bremen
    Browns
    Brown Stockings
    Brown Stockings
    Camp Jackson
    Cardinals
    Carondelet
    Cbc
    Charles Comiskey
    Charles Fowle
    Charles Hunt Turner
    Charles Kearny
    Charles Paul
    Charles Scudder
    Charles Spink
    Charles Turner
    Charlie Houtz
    Charlie Sweasy
    Charlie Sweeney
    Charlie Waitt
    Chris Von Der Ahe
    Collinsville
    Commercial Juniors
    Commercials
    C. Orrick Bishop
    Cranky Old Man
    Cricket
    Curt Welch
    Cyclones
    Dan Devinney
    Dave Foutz
    David Reid
    Davy Force
    Denny Mack
    Dickey Pearce
    Diregos
    Duff Cooley
    Dusty Miller
    East St. Louis
    Eclipse
    E.C. Simmons
    Eddie Fusselback
    Edgar Noe
    Edward Becker
    Edward Bredell
    Edward Finney
    Edwardsville
    Edwin Fowler
    Eh Tobias9483ebbf42
    Elephants
    Empire-juniors
    Empires
    Enterprise
    Equipment
    Excelsior Juniors
    Excelsiors
    Female Baseball
    Ferdinand Garesche
    Frank Billon
    Frank Ellis
    Frank Fleet
    Frank Robison
    Fred Dunlap
    Frederick Benteen
    Gamble Lawn
    George Bradley
    George Knapp
    George McManus
    George Miller
    George Munson
    George Paynter
    Grand Avenue Grounds
    Greenville
    Griff Prather
    Grounds
    Gus Schmelz
    Gustave Gruner
    Harry Diddlebock
    Heinie Peitz
    Henry Clay Sexton
    Henry Gratiot
    Henry Lucas
    Herman Dehlman
    Hermann
    Hickory
    Holly Hall
    Hope
    Ice Box Chamberlain
    Imperial Jrs.
    Imperials
    Independents
    Israelites
    Jack Gleason
    Jack McGeachey
    Jackson Grounds
    Jake Murray
    James Foster
    James Pennoyer
    James Spaulding
    James Yule
    J.B.C. Lucas
    Jeremiah Fruin
    Jerry Denny
    Jimmy Bannon
    Joe Battin
    Joe Blong
    Joe Ellick
    Joe Franklin
    Joe Schimper
    John Berry
    John Clapp
    John Henry
    John Peters
    John Riggin
    John Shockey
    John Young
    Joseph Carr
    Joseph Charless Cabanne
    Joseph Gamble
    Joseph Hollenback
    Joseph Ketterer
    Joseph Scott Fullerton
    J.P. Freeman
    J.P. Riechers & Sons
    Julius Smith
    Jumbo McGinnis
    Kansas
    Lacledes
    Lafayette Park
    Lebanon
    Leonard Matthews
    Liberty
    Lip Pike
    Lone Stars
    Magnolias
    Mark Baldwin
    Maroons
    Martin Burke
    Martin Collins
    Mase Graffen
    Maurice Alexander
    McKendree College
    Merritt Griswold
    Mike McGeary
    Mississippi BBC
    Missouri BBC
    Missouri History Museum
    Morning Stars
    Mutuals
    Mystics
    Nathaniel Lyons
    Nationals
    Native American Ball Games
    Ned Cuthbert
    Niagaras
    O'Fallon
    Old Weird America
    Olympics
    Origins
    Orville Matthews
    Packy Dillon
    Parson Nicholson
    Patsy Tebeau
    Peerless
    Perfectos
    Pidge Morgan
    Polar Stars
    Professionalism
    Protoball
    Pud Galvin
    Quincy
    Reds
    Reeb's Station
    Resolute
    Richard Perry
    Robert Henry
    Robert Lucas
    Robert Niggeman
    Roger Connor
    Rudy Kemmler
    Rufus Gamble
    Sedalia
    Shepard Barclay
    Shurtleff College
    Silver Flint
    Silver King
    Stanley Robison
    St. Charles
    Ste. Genevieve
    St. Louis BBC
    St. Louis University
    Stonewalls
    Sunday Baseball
    Ted Breitenstein
    Ted Sullivan
    The Baldwin Affair
    The Championship Of The West
    The Civil War
    The Cyclone Thesis
    The Illinois Country
    The Interregnum
    The West
    The Willie McGee Game
    Thomas Mcneary
    Tigers
    Tom Loftus
    Tom Miller
    Tom Oran
    Tony Mullane
    Town Ball
    Trick Mcsorley
    Troy
    Turners
    Uniforms
    Union Grounds
    Union-juniors
    Unions
    Unknown Club
    Veto-grounds
    Wallace Delafield
    Washington University
    Wayman Crow McCreery
    W.C. Steigers
    Whites
    Wicket
    William-faulkner
    William Greenleaf
    William-pennoyer
    William-spink
    William-t-sherman
    Willis-walker
    Young-commercials
    Young-union-juniors

    RSS Feed

    Creative Commons License
    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Create a free website
Powered by
Create your own free website

Start your own free website

A surprisingly easy drag & drop site creator. Learn more.
✕