Jesse Fell
Born into a Quaker family in 1808 in Chester County, Pennsylvania, Fell arrived in Bloomington in 1833.
Fell was the first lawyer in the new county seat of Bloomington, though he left the law in favor of land speculation and town development.
When Lincoln began to travel to Bloomington as a lawyer on the Eighth Circuit, he and Fell became political allies and friends.
In the years before the Civil War, Fell — unlike Lincoln and Davis — supported the goals of the abolition movement and the ideals of racial equality.
When Fell led efforts to locate the state’s first public university (now Illinois State University) in Normal, he hired Lincoln to handle the legal work.
Fell founded the Town of Normal in 1865.
In 1857, Fell became the corresponding secretary for the newly formed Illinois Republican Party. He traveled the state making connections that would serve Lincoln well during the 1858 and 1860 campaigns.
In the lead-up to the 1858 U.S. Senate race, Fell introduced this and other resolutions backing Lincoln at a convention of McLean County Republicans.
“Republicans of Illinois, as with the voice of one man, are unalterably so resolved; to the end, that we may have a big man, with a big mind, and a big heart, to represent our big state.”
— Resolution Of Support For Lincoln, Bloomington Pantagraph, June 7, 1858