Bissell, William H.
b. April 25, 1811, in Hartwick, New York; d. March 18, 1860, in Springfield, Illinois. Bissell received a medical degree in
1834. He practiced medicine for three years, and then moved to Illinois where he taught
school. In 1844, he was admitted to the bar in Illinois. In 1840, he was elected as a Democrat to the state legislature for
one
term where he met Abraham Lincoln. After serving in the legislature, he practiced law in Belleville until the outbreak of
the
Mexican War. During the war, he was elected colonel of the Second Regiment of Illinois Volunteers. His regiment helped hold
back
the Mexican Army during the Battle of Buena Vista. In 1848, he was elected as a Democrat to the United States House of
Representatives for three terms. While he was there, Jefferson Davis challenged Bissell to a duel, which he accepted. President
Zachary Taylor intervened and Davis withdrew his challenge. This incident made Bissell very popular in Illinois, and six years
later he was elected as the first Republican governor in Illinois. Lincoln was a strategist in Bissell's campaign because
he felt
that the Republicans would have a better chance of getting elected if their candidate were a former Democrat. Bissell's election
gave Lincoln a home state power base for the 1860 presidential election. Bissell died while in office.
Governors of Illinois: 1818-1918 (Springfield: Illinois Centennial Commission, 1917), 23; Robert P. Howard,
Mostly Good and Competent Men: Illinois Governors, 1818-1988 (Springfield: Illinois Issues, Sangamon State
University and Illinois State Historical Society, 1988), 109-15. Illustration courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential
Library, Springfield, IL.