Calhoun, John
b. October 14, 1808, in Boston, Massachusetts; d. October 25, 1859, in St. Joseph, Missouri. Calhoun studied law at Fort Plain
in Montgomery County, Illinois. In 1830, he came to Springfield, Illinois, and resumed the study
of law, sustaining himself by teaching school. After serving in the Black Hawk War, the governor appointed Calhoun surveyor
of
Sangamon County. Calhoun convinced Abraham Lincoln to study surveying and to become his deputy. They continued as friends,
although they were active in opposing political parties. Calhoun entered politics in 1835 and in 1838 was elected as state
representative, his first state office. In 1848, Calhoun was appointed as one of three trustees of the state government to
settle
the outstanding affairs of the State Bank of Illinois after its liquidation. He served as mayor of Springfield from 1849 to
1850.
In 1854, he moved to Kansas, where he became the Surveyor General of Kansas and Nebraska.
Bruce Alexander Campbell, The Sangamon Saga: 200 Years. An Illustrated Bicentennial History of Sangamon County
(Springfield: Phillips Brothers, Inc., 1976), 40; History of Sangamon County, Illinois (Chicago: Inter-state
Publishing Company, 1881), 511; John Power, History of the Early Settlers of Sangamon County, Illinois
(Springfield: E. A. Wilson and Company, 1876), 167-68; Sangamon County, Illinois, Seventh Census of the United States, 1850.
Illustration courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.