Raleigh Earel: Your friendly neighborhood pharmacist

Did you know that Sid Simpson Park was started by a pharmacist? Raleigh Earel owned the land and converted it into a park area. Les Bergman of Bergman Nurseries sold Earel the trees for his new park. This civic service is just one example of how Earel made the world around him a better place.
Earel graduated from Quincy High School in 1902 and started at Heidbreder and Drallmeier soon after. There would eventually be six Heidbreder drug stores in Quincy. Earel would work in at least three of them and own one, Earel and Buss. When he started, Earel lived with his parents north of town. He would make the two-and-a-half-mile trip on his trusty bicycle. Earel's first duties included serving soda and ice cream, both kept cold with ice harvested from Quincy Bay.
In addition to the sodas and ice cream, the drug stores used to see all manner of things that one might not associate with a pharmacy today. They sold toys, paints, oils, and window glass. Earel claimed the stores were the only place to get certain types of furniture, including rocking chairs that became known as shooflies. Earel described these chairs as having two seats that faced each other and rocked, although there are other variations of shoofly rockers.
After his first year working behind the soda fountain, Earel was allowed to start filling prescriptions. Another boy left the pharmacy for school and Earel's high school chemistry work made him the best candidate for the job. With added responsibilities at the store, Earel decided to move into town and actually lived above the store. Living above the store came with its own challenges as customers would call at all hours of the night needing medications. His work did not prevent Earel from enjoying his free time. In the winter of 1905-06, he played center for a basketball team at the YMCA. His team never lost a game that season and Earel never met another venter that could match his height.
About the same time, Earel decided he needed a formal education in pharmaceuticals in order to advance his career. He followed other aspiring pharmacists to the University of Illinois School of Pharmacy in Chicago. Luckily for Earel, the regulations had changed and he did not need as many years of working in a pharmacy as previous classes needed in order to be accepted into school.
He and his roommate marveled at the hustle and bustle that Michigan Avenue offered the two small town men. Earel heard rumors of muggings, but he never saw or personally experienced any such drama. In 1908, Earel graduated as the valedictorian of his class and made a speech at graduation. He also received the alumni medal for highest general average of 95 percent or above.
Earel returned to Quincy and his old store, though his pay did increase now that he had a degree. He also bought himself an Indian motorcycle. He enjoyed the motorcycle rides immensely, even venturing out in cold and rainy conditions. He did take some spills on the bike because of dogs, dips in the road, and once his dad forgot to tell his son that he changed the direction of the driveway. Probably motivated by these incidents, Earel became one of the founding members of a motorcyclists' club. They wanted to "promote the post of motor cycling, for the social meeting of the members, to encourage good roads and improved city streets, to have club runs and race meets and to help keep the city streets free of broken glass."
Two years after returning from school Earel transferred to the 12th and Broadway store as a registered pharmacist. His monthly salary rose to $75. Earel described how he would perform maintenance work himself around the store, until he became so busy that they had to hire professional labor. They sold bulk spices at the store, so Earel made a spice rack in order to better display them. The display is now a part of the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County's pharmacy exhibit.
The year he became the registered pharmacist Earel also married Louise Heidbreder. They moved into a house on Vermont which considerably cut down Earel's commute. Being a family man and living in town meant that Earel had to sell his motorcycle. The couple had a daughter in 1915, named Mary Louise. Unfortunately, Louise died in 1918 when their daughter was only three years old.
Prohibition brought many changes to the country and Quincy was no different. Since anything containing alcohol could not be sold, drug stores had to cut back on some of their inventory. Earel mentioned that they could not even sell certain flavoring extracts because of their alcohol content. They did have a federal permit that allowed the sale of some medicinal liquor, such as anise and kummel to pacify colicky babies. Earel mixed up a caramel sauce for an alleged bootlegger who said it turned his White Mule into Old Bourbon. Earel also heard that bottle of distilled water became gin, but he never heard of any arrests taking place. Even after prohibition, Earel never sold liquor on election days or when the circus was in town.
In the middle of prohibition, Earel married Mary Robinson in 1925. Their joy was cut short in 1930 when Mary Louise was killed in a car accident. Despite his personal tragedies, Earel carried on with an optimistic demeanor that endeared him to those he knew.
They did not even have to be close friends for him to reach out to them.
For instance, he bought a half pound of Stover's chocolate for every member of a group of high school students who regularly visited his store. Back in 1911 he donated some of his own skin for a friend who was having a skin graft operation.
Earel once said, "Without friends, life would be like a garden without flowers." His was a garden overflowing.
Bridget Quinlivan is a recent history graduate from Quincy University and Western Illinois University. She is a volunteer and seasonal employee at the Historical Society and an English/writing specialist for Student Support Services at John Wood Community College.
Sources
Earel, Raleigh. My Life. Royal Publishing, 1968.
Earel, Raleigh. My 60 Years in Pharmacy. 1963.
Quincy Daily Journal. November 11, 1911; February 5, 1915; May 26, 1915.
Quincy Whig. March 10, 1910.





