JOHN
McAULEY PALMER, Governor 1869-72, was born on Eagle Creek, Scott Co., Ky, Sept.
13, 1817. During his infancy, his father, who had been a soldier in the war of
1812, removed to Christian Co., Ky., where lands were cheap. Here the future
Governor of the great Prairie State spent his childhood and received such meager
schooling as the new and sparsely settled country afforded. To this he added
materially by diligent reading, for which he evinced an early aptitude. His
father, an ardent Jackson man, was also noted for his anti-slavery sentiments,
which he thoroughly impressed upon his children. In 1831 he emigrated to
Illinois, settling in Madison County. Here the labor of improving a farm was
pursued for about two years, when the death of Mr. Palmer’s mother broke up the
family. About this time Alton College was opened, on the “manual labor” system,
and in the spring of 1834 young Palmer, with his elder brother, Elihu, entered
this school and remained 18 months. Next, for over three years, he tried
variously coopering, peddling and school-teaching.
During the summer of 1838 he formed the acquaintance of Stephen A. Douglas, then
making his first canvass for Congress. Young, eloquent and in political accord
with Mr. Palmer, he won his confidence, fired his ambition and fixed his
purpose. The following winter, while teaching near Canton, he began to devote
his spare time to a desultory reading of law, and in the spring entered a law
office at Carlinville, making his home with his elder brother, Elihu. (The
latter was a learned clergyman, of considerable originality of thought and
doctrine.) On the next meeting of the Supreme Court he was admitted to the Bar,
Douglas being one of his examiners. He was not immediately successful in his
profession, and would have located elsewhere than Carlinville had he the
requisite means. Thus his poverty was a blessing in disguise, for to it he now
attributes the success of his life.
From 1839 on, while he diligently pursued his profession, he participated more
or less in local politics. In 1843 he became Probate Judge. In 1847 he was
elected to the State Constitutional Convention, where he took a leading part. In
1852 he was elected to the State Senate, and at the special session of February,
1854, true to the anti-slavery sentiments bred in him, he took a firm stand in
opposition to the repeal of the Missouri Compromise; and when the Nebraska
question became a party issue he refused to receive a re-nomination for the
Senatorship at the hands of the Democracy, issuing a circular to that effect. A
few weeks afterward, however, hesitating to break with his party, he
participated in a Congressional Convention which nomi- T. L. Harris against
Richard Yates, and which unqualifiedly approved the principles of the
Kansas-Nebraska act. But later in the campaign he made the plunge, ran for the
Senate as an Anti-Nebraska Democrat, and was elected. The following winter he
put in nomination for the United States Senate Mr. Trumbull, and was one of the
five steadfast men who voted for him until all the Whigs came to their support
and elected their man.
In 1856 he was Chairman of the Republican State Convention at Bloomington. He
ran for Congress in 1859, but was defeated. In 1860 he was Republican
Presidential Elector for the State at large. In 1861, he was appointed one of
the five Delegates (all Republicans) sent by Illinois to the peace congress at
Washington.
When the civil conflict broke out, he offered his services to his country, and
was elected Colonel of the 14th Ill. Vol. Inf., and participated in the
engagements at Island No. 10; at Farmington, where he skillfully extricated his
command from a dangerous position; at Stone River, where his division for
several hours, Dec. 31, 1862, held the advance and stood like a rock, and for
his gallantry there he was made Major General; at Chickamauga, where his and Van
Cleve’s divisions for two hours maintained their position when they were cut off
by overpowering numbers. Under Gen. Sherman, he was assigned to the 14th Army
Corps and participated in the Atlanta campaign. At Peach Tree Creek his prudence
did much to avert disaster. In February, 1865, Gen. Palmer was assigned to the
military administration of Kentucky, which was a delicate post. That State was
about half rebel and half Union, and those of the latter element were daily
fretted by the loss of their slaves. He, who had been bred to the rules of
common law, trembled at the contemplation of his extraordinary power over the
persons and property of his fellow men, with which he was vested in his capacity
as military Governor; and he exhibited great caution in the execution of the
duties of his post.
Gen. Palmer was nominated for Governor of Illinois by the Republican State
Convention which met at Peoria May 6, 1868, and his nomination would probably
have been made by acclamation had he not persistently declared that he could not
accept a candidature for the office. The result of the ensuing election gave Mr.
Palmer a majority of 44,707 over John R. Eden, the Democratic nominee.
On the meeting of the Legislature in January, 1869, the first thing to arrest
public attention was that portion of the Governor’s message which took broad
State’s rights ground. This and some minor points, which were more in keeping
with the Democratic sentiment, constituted the entering wedge for the criticisms
and reproofs he afterward received from the Republican party, and ultimately
resulted in his entire alienation from the latter element. The Legislature just
referred to was noted for the introduction of numerous bills in the interest of
private parties, which were embarrassing to the Governor. Among the public acts
passed was that which limited railroad charges for passenger travel to a maximum
of three cents per mile; and it was passed over the Governor’s veto. Also, they
passed, over his veto, the “tax-grabbing law” to pay railroad subscriptions, the
Chicago Lake Front bill, etc. The new State Constitution of 1870, far superior
to the old, was a peaceful “revolution” which took place during Gov. Palmer’s
term of office. The suffering caused by the great Chicago Fire of October, 1871,
was greatly alleviated by the prompt responses of his excellency.
Since the expiration of Gov. Palmer’s term, he has been somewhat prominent in
Illinois politics, and has been talked of by many, especially in the Democratic
party, as the best man in the State for a United States Senator. His business
during life has been that of the law. Few excel him in an accurate appreciation
of the depth and scope of its principles. The great number of his able veto
messages abundantly testify not only this but also a rare capacity to point them
out. He is a logical and cogent reasoned and an interesting, forcible and
convincing speaker, though not fluent or ornate. Without brilliancy, his
dealings are rather with facts and ideas than with appeals to passions and
prejudices. He is a patriot and a statesman of very high order. Physically he is
above the medium height, of robust frame, ruddy complexion and sanguine-nervous
temperament. He has a large cranial development, is vivacious, social in
disposition, easy of approach, unostentatious in his habits of life, democratic
in his habits and manners and is a true American in his fundamental principles
of statesmanship.
Source: Portrait and Biographical Album of Whiteside Co., Ill; Chicago: M. A.
Leeson & Co., 1887
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