John M. Reynolds[2] (February 26, 1788 – May 8, 1865) was an American lawyer and politician from the state of Illinois who served in all three governmental branches.
Reynolds published Pioneer History of Illinois and a large autobiography titled My Own Times.[3]
Early life
Reynolds was born in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania.[1] His father, Robert Reynolds and his mother, née Margaret Moore, were both natives of Ireland, from which country they emigrated to the United States in 1785, arriving first at Philadelphia. When Reynolds was about six months old, his parents emigrated with him to Tennessee, where many of their relatives had already located, at the base of the Copper Ridge Mountain, about 14 miles (23 km) northeast of the present city of Knoxville. After experiencing raids from Native Americans, the Reynolds moved into the interior of the state in 1794. They were poor, and brought up their children to habits of manual industry.[4]
In 1800 the family moved to near Kaskaskia, Illinois,[1] where Reynolds spent most of his childhood.[4] As part of his upbringing, he adopted the principle and practice of total abstinence from intoxicating liquors. In 1807 the family made another move, this time to the Goshen Settlement, at the foot of the bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River southwest of Edwardsville.[4]
At the age of twenty, Reynolds attended college for two years near Knoxville, Tennessee, where he had relatives, taking courses in classical studies. He then studied law in Knoxville; health problems forced him back to Illinois, but he afterward returned to college and law in Knoxville.[4] In the fall of 1812 he was admitted to the bar at Kaskaskia,[4] and began practicing law in Cahokia, Illinois,[1] opening his first law office there over the winter of 1813–1814.[4] About this time he also learned the French language, which he regarded as being superior to all others for social intercourse.[4]
Military service
With the ranks of private and orderly sergeant, Reynolds served as a scout in campaigns against the western Native Americans during the War of 1812.[citation needed] He also served as Judge Advocate.[4] For this service, Reynolds became known as the "Old Ranger".[4] In 1814, Reynolds opened a law office in the old French village of Cahokia, then the county seat of St. Clair County.[4]
Politics
In the fall of 1818, John Reynolds was elected an associate justice of the Illinois Supreme Court[1] by the Illinois General Assembly.[4] In 1822, he was joined on the court by Thomas Reynolds, but both were defeated for re-election in 1824; John Reynolds went on to become Governor of Illinois in 1830 and Thomas Reynolds became Governor of Missouri in 1840. Despite some biographies stating that the two men were brothers or uncle and nephew, a 1961 historical journal letter states that the two were not related: John Reynolds had a brother named Thomas Reynolds — or Thomas Michael Reynolds in one of his obituaries — but that brother owned a livery stable and dry goods store in Belleville; neither John nor his brother Thomas were any relation to the Thomas that served with John on the Supreme Court.[5]
In 1818, John Reynolds was an unsuccessful candidate for election to the United States Senate.[1] In 1826, he was elected a member of the Illinois House of Representatives for the first time, serving until 1830.[1] Although aligning himself with the Jacksonian Democrats, his moderation earned him respect from both pro-Jackson and anti-Jackson factions.
In August 1830, Reynolds was elected governor of Illinois and took office on December 6, 1830,[1] giving an inaugural address that advocated for free popular education, general internal public improvements, the completion of the Illinois and Michigan Canal, and the improvement of the Chicago harbor.[2] He also advocated and recommended the completion of the first state penitentiary at Alton, at the direct cost of the state.[2] The most significant event of his administration was the Black Hawk War in 1832. He called out the militia, and was field commander, often appearing in person on the battle-grounds. He was recognized by U.S. PresidentAndrew Jackson as Major-General, and was authorized to make treaties with the Native Americans.[4]Asiatic Cholera was a prominent feature of Reynolds' gubernatorial term.[4]
In 1837, while out of Congress and in company with a few others, he built the first railroad in the Mississippi Valley, about six miles (10 km) long, leading from his coal mine in the Mississippi bluff to the bank of the river opposite St. Louis. Not having the funds to purchase a locomotive, the railroad was operated by horse-power. The next spring, the company sold out at great loss.[4]
In 1839 Reynolds was appointed one of the Canal Commissioners[clarification needed] and traveled to Philadelphia to raise funds for that purpose.[4] During that year, he also made a tour of Europe with his wife.[4] He introduced the Latter-day Saint Prophet, Joseph Smith to President Martin Van Buren when Smith was seeking redress for the grievances that the Latter-day Saints suffered in Missouri.[4] This was done by Reynolds with the hope of winning the votes of the growing number of Latter-day Saints in Illinois in latter political contests.[6]
Reynolds was elected in 1846 for one term as a member of the Illinois House of Representatives[1] from St. Clair County;[4] during this term he caused to be built the first macadamized road in the state, from Belleville to St. Louis.[4] He was an unsuccessful candidate for the Illinois Senate in 1848. He was again elected to the Illinois House in 1852, serving as Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives.[1]
Reynolds married twice, to Catherine Dubuque in 1817 and to Sarah E. Wilson in 1836,[5] and had no children.[4] He died in Belleville in May 1865, shortly after the Civil War, and his body was laid there in Walnut Hill Cemetery.[1]
^ abcSuess, Adolph B. (August 20, 1947). "Its Period of Culture". The Romantic Story of Cahokia, Illinois (2nd ed.). pp. 25–26. Archived from the original on January 15, 2003. Retrieved April 9, 2020. Also transcribed at
^ abLivingston, William G. (Winter 1961). "Historical Notes: The Thomas Reynolds Confusion"(PDF). Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 54 (4). Springfield, Illinois: Illinois State Historical Library: 423–430. Archived from the original(PDF) on August 7, 2010. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
^Matthew J. Grow et al, The Standard of Truth Vol 1 of Saints: The Story of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, p. 407