Walters, William
b. in Delaware; d. 1846, in St. Louis, Missouri. Walters spent some years as a journeyman printer in Washington City, Delaware.
In January 1836, Walters arrived in Vandalia,
Illinois. On February 10, 1836, he printed the first number of the Illinois State Register newspaper. In the 1836-1837 session
of
the legislature, the Illinois State Register was named the official paper of Illinois. During this session the vote was taken
on
the removal of the state capital from Vandalia to Springfield, Illinois. In 1839, the offices of the state government moved
to
Springfield, and the State Register followed a few weeks later. Walters and George R. Weber were the editors and publishers
of the
paper. On August 10, 1839, the first Springfield edition of the State Register appeared. In 1845, Weber sold his interest
in the
paper to Walters, who continued it until 1846, when the Mexican War began. Walters then leased his office to Charles H. Lanphier,
and enlisted as a private soldier in the Second Regiment of Illinois Volunteers. Walters never saw battle; he died in St.
Louis
before the regiment departed for the war.
History of Sangamon County, Illinois (Chicago: Inter-state Publishing Company, 1881), 388.
Illustration courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.