Bunn, Jacob
b. March 18, 1814, in Hunterdon County, New Jersey; d. October 16, 1897, in Springfield, Illinois. Bunn came to Illinois in
1836 and resided for a time in Springfield. He soon moved to Beardstown, and afterwards to Naples, but
returned to Springfield on July 1, 1840, and established the grocery firm of McConnell, Bunn, and Company. Bunn soon purchased
the
interests of his partners and established the wholesale house of Jacob Bunn. By 1850, Bunn possessed real estate valued at
$17,000. In 1851, Bunn married Elizabeth Ferguson, who died in 1886. They had four sons and two daughters together. In 1856,
Bunn
was treasurer of the first library association in Springfield. In 1858, his business had assumed such proportions that he
decided
to add a separate department devoted exclusively to banking. For more than twenty years, he conducted the largest business
of its
kind in central Illinois. In 1860, Bunn was a banker with real estate valued at $64,000 and personal property worth $135,000.
Bunn
became a stockholder in the Springfield Watch Company in 1870, and in 1879, he was elected its president and filled that position
until his death. Bunn was a pallbearer at Lincoln's funeral.
Bruce Alexander Campbell, The Sangamon Saga: 200 Years. An Illustrated Bicentennial History of Sangamon County
(Springfield, IL: Phillips Brothers, Inc., 1976), 81; Illinois State Journal (Springfield, Illinois) October 17,
1897, 6:3; Sangamon County, Illinois, Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; Sangamon County, Illinois, Eighth Census
of the
United States, 1860; George W. Smith, History of Illinois and Her People (Chicago: The American Historical
Society, Inc., 1927), 201. Illustration courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield,
IL.