OKGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by any other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of OKGenWeb State Coordinator. Presentation here does not extend any permissions to the public. This material can not be included in any compilation, publication, collection, or other reproduction for profit without permission. Files may be printed or copied for personal use only. ===================================================================== HON. ALBERT RENER MUSELLER Vol. 5, p. 1844, 1845 One of Oklahoma's lawyers, and one of the assistant editors of this work, whose home is now in Pawhuska, was formerly register of the United States land office at Alva, and his name and influence have been identified in many important ways with the development of this new state where he has lived since 1893. He was born June 3, 1857, at Clayton, Illinois. His father, Rener R. Museller, was born in the province of Aurich, Germany, and was a subject of the King of Hanover. He emigrated to the United States and became a naturalized citizen before his death which occurred in 1864, when the subject of this sketch was only six years old. He was a gunsmith and blacksmith and he married Malissa WALLACE of Winchester, Illinois, who was born in 1837 and still lives at an advanced age in Wichita, Kansas. Malissa Wallace was a daughter of Joseph Wallace, one of the pioneers of Illinois, at whose house in Winchester, Illinois, Stephen A. Douglass lived when he taught his first and only term of village school. The father of Joseph Wallace was Charles Wallace, who married Peggy SHORT in Longford County, Ireland, and in 1776 emigrated to Baltimore, Maryland. These Wallaces were Scotch- Irish, and descendants of the Wallaces who left Scotland and settled in Northern Ireland in the seventeenth century. Albert R. Museller had no inheritance. What he has been able to accomplish in life has been the result of his own effort and ambition. He educated himself and had only the advantages of the common schools of his country, and yet he is a man of liberal education, for which he always says, he is largely indebted to an aunt, Mrs. H.W. CRAIG, of Vermilion County, Illinois, with whom he lived for several years when a boy. He taught school in Illinois and Indiana for several years, read law in Lincoln, Illinois, was admitted to the bar of that state and subsequently in Kansas and also Oklahoma. He resided for several years in Wichita, Kansas, and for four years was judge of the City Court of that city. After coming to Oklahoma, in the year 1893, he was for two years, county judge of Noble County, and for four years was register of the United States land office at Alva, Oklahoma. He is now engaged in the practice of law in Pawhuska. In politics he has been identified with the republican party, although in 1912 he supported the progressive ticket nationally. He is a fluent and ready public speaker, and there are not many cities or towns in Old Oklahoma in which his voice has not been heard discussing the political issues. He has contributed articles to various magazines, chiefly on games and sports and the aborigines of this country. The Indians have always been of great interest to him. He loves God's out of doors, and there are few plants, birds, insects, trees or flowers with which he is not familiar. His chief recreations is artificial bait casting for bass, in which accomplishment he is an adept. Mr. Museller's ready pen has also contribute many articles to the various papers of his state on agricultural subjects. Fraternally, he is affiliated with Wahshahshe Lodge No. 110, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, of Pawhuska, and is a member of the Consistory of Scottish Rite at Guthrie. On May 6, 1880, at New Holland, Illinois, he and Ida R. THOMAS were married. Mrs. Museller is of old New England stock and is a descendant of Gen. Israel Putnam of Revolutionary fame. The Thomases emigrated from Ohio to Illinois in the early years of the nineteenth century. Mr. & Mrs. Museller are the parents of three children. Crete is now the wife of Fred M. MERKLE, who is in the Government service at Perea, New Mexico. Leo, the second daughter, is the wife of Hon. John B. DOOLIN, formerly state fish and game warden of Oklahoma, and their only son, Albert R. Museller, Jr. is occupying a good position with the Southern Pacific Railway at Redwood City, California. Typed for OKGenWeb by Allison Sheldon July 27, 1999. SOURCE: Thoburn, Joseph B., A Standard History of Oklahoma, An Authentic Narrative of its Development, 5 v. (Chicago, New York: The American Historical Society, 1916).