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Senate Years of Service: 1873-1879 Party: Republican
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OGLESBY, Richard James, (cousin of Woodson Ratcliffe Oglesby),
a Senator from Illinois; born in Floydsburg, Oldham County, Ky., July 25, 1824;
orphaned and raised by an uncle in Decatur, Ill.; received a limited schooling; worked as a farmer,
rope-maker, and carpenter; studied law; admitted to the bar in 1845 and commenced practice in
Sullivan, Ill.; during the Mexican War served as first lieutenant of Company C, Fourth Illinois
Regiment; spent two years mining in California; returned to Decatur, Ill., and resumed the practice of
law; unsuccessful candidate for election in 1858 to the Thirty-sixth Congress; elected to the State
senate in 1860 and served during one session, when he resigned to enter the Union Army during the
Civil War; served as colonel, brigadier general, and major general of the Eighth Regiment, Illinois
Volunteer Infantry; Governor of Illinois 1865-1869; again elected Governor in 1872 and served from
January 13, 1873, until his resignation on January 23, 1873, having been elected Senator; elected as a
Republican to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 1873, to March 3, 1879; declined
to be a candidate for reelection; chairman, Committee on Public Lands (Forty-fourth and Forty-fifth
Congresses); Governor of Illinois 1885-1889; retired to his farm, Oglehurst, Elkhart, Ill., where he
died on April 24, 1899; interment in Elkhart Cemetery.
BibliographyDictionary of American Biography;
Johns, Jane Martin. Personal Recollections of Early Decatur, Abraham Lincoln, Richard J.
Oglesby and the Civil War. Edited by Howard C. Schaub. Decatur, IL: Decatur Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolution, 1912; Wilkie, Franc B. A Sketch of Richard Oglesby. Chicago: W.A. Shanholtzer, 1984.
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