Crocker brothers were colorful eccentrics of Payson

Julius F. Crocker was born in Payson in 1854, son of Dr. Henry A. Crocker, a physician who practiced in Hannibal, Mo., and moved to Payson before the Civil War. Julius Crocker also became a physician and lived in Payson and later in Melrose.
The elder Crocker practiced medicine and owned one of two taverns in the village of Payson. According to The Quincy Daily Whig in 1854, "This large and commodious building (was) in the most pleasant part of the town; its owner, Dr. Crocker, is a gentleman of fine accomplishments and urbane manners, which fits him well for the duties of his occupation; finally, we may say that this Doctor's house may well be denominated the travelers rest."
Julius Crocker married Harriett Scott, known as Hattie. They produced many children, 10 of whom lived long enough to be named. By 1891, Dr. J.F. Crocker had formed a family band he called the Star Band. In 1891, The Quincy Daily Herald reported that the oldest musician was 8 years old, and the youngest was 3. The youngest one "keeps as perfect time with the drum and cymbals as any older and more experienced musician." They were a success at the Richfield band festival, and planned to use their earnings to purchase new music stands.
The Crocker children, who were listed on the census sheets of the time with a single name and initial, actually bore as many as a dozen names per child. For example, in 1893 Crocker named a new daughter: Jennie Lind Myrtle Star Florence Nightingale Helen Messenger Gould Lorena Baer Brandt Crocker. Her next oldest brother was Mozart Beethoven Bellini Bertini Rosini Czerny Abbe Liszt Gillmore Thomas Crocker.
While these strings of names were unusual, one earlier child's name raised a furor in Payson. Crocker named him Waldo Emerson Napoleon Bonaparte Simon Peter Jesus Christ Crocker.
Several of the most influential and outraged citizens of Payson wrote to Crocker. "We the undersigned, being deeply grieved and shocked at the name you have given your child, the name of our Savior Jesus Christ, and believing it blasphemy, hereby request that you do not apply this name to your child and that you cause this name to be stricken from our county record."
This request was presented personally by the signers to Crocker, along with assertions of his high regard in the community and assurance that such a name would bring reproach on the community and "do his child great injustice should he live to years of understanding."
The good doctor stood firm. He replied that the law had required him to record a birth name for each child, and "he had given this name after mature deliberation, and the name had got to stand."
The aggrieved petitioners registered their protest in the local paper, and announced that they would be collecting signatures for their petition. Eight months later, the county recorder had not received any petitions. It is unclear if further action was taken, but the name seems to have remained unchanged.
In 1893, the Crocker family band performed to a crowd of 500 in Highland Park in Quincy. The Quincy Daily Herald said, "The father plays the cornet, Mrs. Crocker plays the trombone; two children play alto and bass horns, and the little tots play the bass drum and triangle. The kid who taps the latter is only 2 years old. The music furnished is of good quality."
In 1894, the Crockers produced twins, a boy and a girl. Crocker named the boy Brandt Talmage Wendling Ingersol Swing Blaine Columbus Washington Jefferson Lincoln Grant Crocker. The girl was named Josephine Applewhite Anna Bird Laura Thomas Fannie Leach Gregg Chubbuck Brandt Crocker.
There were other ways in which Crocker did not follow convention. When the family lost a baby, the body was preserved in alcohol and placed in a glass display case, where it could be seen for several years before it was finally buried. In 1893 he had two of his children's bodies displayed in his home.
Crocker had a brother, Dr. Frank Crocker, who was a veterinarian in Payson. Frank Crocker had a hair-trigger temper that occasionally caused trouble. In one case he was enraged and choking a young boy into unconsciousness when some bystanders pulled him away. While Crocker was being restrained, the young boy picked up a rock and hit Crocker in the head hard enough to make him unresponsive for three days, and it was feared he would die. Crocker recovered, but lost most of his hearing.
Frank Crocker lived on the square in Payson and during Old Settlers picnics would stable horses for the day at a rather higher rate than normal. In August 1908, at the close of the 15th Old Settlers picnic, one young man, George Reidel of Hull, complained to Mrs. Crocker about the 50-cent fee charged for leaving his horse tied at the barn all day. She called her husband, who arrived with a pistol and took two shots at Reidel. One bullet missed, and a second lodged in his leg. Pandemonium followed, along with an indictment of Frank Crocker a few days later.
The case came to court where Frank Crocker, described as "a conspicuous personage on account of his long flowing whiskers and large spectacles," claimed self-defense and that the Reidel youth had been drinking and carried a knife. The judge had some trouble finding an impartial jury, but eventually testimony began and continued through parts of three days.
The jury deliberated from noon until 11 p.m. Friday and most of Saturday morning before reaching a guilty verdict on the lesser of three charges, "assault to do bodily harm with a deadly weapon without any provocation." The possible punishment was a fine or jail time or both.
On Monday, the judge pronounced the sentence. Frank Crocker was fined $325 and costs, but the jail time requested by the prosecution was not imposed. Total costs for the shooting amounted to $457.45 and were paid by the defendant on the spot.
Later events would underscore the difficulty the jury must have had in determining blame between the two. The victim, Reidel, was arrested later that same month for assault on a young woman in Hull. The following month, Reidel's father was arrested for flagrant violations of the internal revenue law by selling beer by the keg. The following year, Frank Crocker himself was again arrested, this time for choking his wife.
Beth Lane is the author of "Lies Told Under Oath," the story of the 1912 Pfanschmidt murders near Payson, and the former executive director of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County.
Sources:
Dr. Crocker by Beth Lane.
"Aged Payson Man on Rampage," Quincy Daily Whig, Aug. 3, 1909.
"An Abundance of Names," Quincy Daily Journal, Aug. 19, 1893.
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