- Shadrach Bond
Infobox Governor
name= Shadrach Bond
caption=
order=1st
office= Governor of Illinois
term_start=October 6 ,1818
term_end=December 5 ,1822
lieutenant=
predecessor=
successor=Edward Coles
birth_date= birth date|1773|11|24|mf=y
birth_place=Frederick, Maryland
death_date= death date and age|1832|4|12|1773|11|24|mf=y
death_place=Kaskaskia, Illinois
spouse=
profession=farmer
party= Democratic-Republican
religion=
footnotes=Shadrach Bond (
November 24 ,1773 –April 12 ,1832 ) was a representative fromIllinois Territory to theUnited States Congress . In 1818, he was electedGovernor of Illinois , becoming the new state's first chief executive. In an example of American politics during theEra of Good Feelings , Bond was elected to both positions without opposition.Early life
Bond was born in 1773 in
Frederick, Maryland . He hadIllinois Country connections through his uncle, also named Shadrach Bond, a scout withGeorge Rogers Clark 'sIllinois Regiment in theAmerican Revolutionary War . Because they held some of the same offices in Illinois, the two Bonds are sometimes confused; the uncle is usually known as Shadrach Bond, Sr. The young Bond learned from his uncle of the rich farmland of Illinois Territory, and emigrated to theAmerican Bottom , an especially fertile section of theMississippi River basin. Bond would be an Illinois farmer for the remainder of his life.Political career
As Illinois's first governor, Bond led a new state that had sterling prospects but almost no transportation infrastructure or cash in hand. Bond made transportation his top priority as governor. Because the state had almost no money, the General Assembly passed and Bond signed bills to build privately-operated toll roads and bridges, headed by a road connecting the state's first capital, Kaskaskia on the Mississippi River, with what was then the state's largest city, Shawneetown, on the Ohio River. The road was built and eventually taken over by the state of Illinois as a state highway. After almost two centuries of improvements, much of it is now part of
Illinois Route 12 .Bond was less successful in his advocacy for a canal that would connect
Lake Michigan and theIllinois River (theIllinois and Michigan Canal ). The canal was eventually built in the 1840s, long after Bond had left office.Governor Bond was deeply concerned about
arson . The Illinois criminal law made arsonists eligible for thedeath penalty , along with persons guilty ofrape andmurder . The governor was by no means exclusively concerned with appearing to betough on crime , however. He took steps to abolish thewhipping post andpillory for misdemeanor offenses.Bond's most controversial act was his attempt to veto an act passed by the General Assembly to create a non-capitalized "State Bank of Illinois". The
bank was ready to issuebanknote s based on the prospect of future economic growth within Illinois. Bond considered this dishonorable and felt that there should be no banks chartered by the state government of Illinois until the State had enough specie (gold and silver coin) to support the value of its banknotes. The undercapitalized bank was chartered anyway, and promptly wentbankrupt , justifying Bond's concerns.In retirement
After Bond's single term as governor, he returned to his Kaskaskia farm. He was no longer in the center of Illinois politics, as the General Assembly had moved the state capital from Kaskaskia to Vandalia. President
John Monroe appointed Bond chief record keeper of the Kaskaskia land office, an important job in a land-hungry frontier state. As a respected local leader, Bond also helped to raise the local share of funding to secure the construction of the state's firstpenitentiary at Alton. In the early 1830s Bond was elected grand master of Illinois's first Masonic Lodge.Bond died of
pneumonia on his farm at Kaskaskia in 1832. He is interred in Evergreen Cemetery in Chester. In September 2008, his obelisk - the tallest and most prominent monument in the cemetery - was toppled byHurricane Ike .Honors
In 1817, Illinois Territory named the newly-created Bond County for Shadrach Bond. Allan H. Keith, [http://books.google.com/books?id=1gJ_RVeb5JYC&pg=PA2&dq=richard+bock+sculptor&ie=ISO-8859-1&sig=ngQRYGbj78gEH8yXNlEZrDnRlMU#PPA1,M1 "Historical Stories: About Greenville and Bond County, IL"] . Consulted on August 15, 2007. ] The honor was bestowed for Bond's service as a congressional delegate; he had not yet become governor. Governor Bond Lake in
Greenville, Illinois is also named in honor of Bond.References
Additional references
*CongBio|B000612
* [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/America/United_States/Illinois/_Texts/Centennial_History/Illinois_in_1818/home.html Solon J. Buck, Illinois in 1818] , at Thayer's American history site
*Robert P. Howard, Mostly Good and Competent Men
*Theodore Calvin Pease, The Frontier State 1818-1848
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