Samuel Lockwood (army Officer)
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Samuel Drake Lockwood (August 2, 1789 – April 23, 1874) was an Illinois lawyer and politician who served as the state's
Attorney General In most common law jurisdictions, the attorney general or attorney-general (sometimes abbreviated AG or Atty.-Gen) is the main legal advisor to the government. The plural is attorneys general. In some jurisdictions, attorneys general also have exec ...
, Secretary of State, Justice of the
Illinois Supreme Court The Supreme Court of Illinois is the state supreme court, the highest court of the State of Illinois. The court's authority is granted in Article VI of the current Illinois Constitution, which provides for seven justices elected from the five ap ...
and the state's trustee on the board of the Illinois Central Railroad.


Early and family life

Lockwood was born in Poundridge, New York. His father, Joseph Lockwood (1764-1799), was an innkeeper who died of yellow fever (as did his infant son Cornelius) when Samuel was ten. His mother, Mary (1765-1819), was the daughter of Col. Samuel Drake and would remarry after about a year, to Duncan McCall. Samuel was the oldest of Lockwood's four children, and would be sent to boarding school in New Jersey with his brother Jesse Close Lockwood (b.1791), when his mother moved to Canada with her new husband and young daughter Rebecca (1792-1827; who would marry Jacob Potts in Canada). The Lockwood boys only remained in that school for a few months before their uncle, Francis Drake, assumed responsibility for them. Samuel studied law with Drake and was admitted to the bar in
Batavia, New York Batavia is a city in and the county seat of Genesee County, New York, United States. It is near the center of the county, surrounded by the Town of Batavia, which is a separate municipality. Batavia's population as of the 2020 census was 15,6 ...
in 1811. He had a daughter, Susan (1831- ) by his first wife. On October 13, 1836, in Hamilton County, in Illinois' "Little Egypt" region, Lockwood married Virginia-born Mary Margaret Garner (1800-1875), who would survive him by less than a year. They had a daughter, Ann (1838- ). By 1850, Lockwood also had two 20-year-old male clerks living with his family and sharing his last name (R.A. Lockwood and J. Lockwood), so he may have repaid his uncle's tutelage of himself and his brother by raising other young relatives.


Law career

Lockwood had practiced law in Batavia, the seat of Genesee County, New York for a year before relocating his practice somewhat eastward. He then practiced in Sempronius,
Cayuga County, New York Cayuga County is a county in the U.S. state of New York. As of the 2020 census, the population was 76,248. Its county seat and largest city is Auburn. The county was named for the Cayuga people, one of the Indian tribes in the Iroquois Conf ...
for about a year and a half. From 1815 until August 1818, he had a law partnership in nearby Auburn, New York with George B. Throop. Lockwood ended that practice when he decided to move westward to the new state of Illinois. In 1818, he and a friend, William H. Brown, took a flatboat and descended the
Allegheny River The Allegheny River ( ) is a long headwater stream of the Ohio River in western Pennsylvania and New York (state), New York. The Allegheny River runs from its headwaters just below the middle of Pennsylvania's northern border northwesterly into ...
into the
Ohio River The Ohio River is a long river in the United States. It is located at the boundary of the Midwestern and Southern United States, flowing southwesterly from western Pennsylvania to its mouth on the Mississippi River at the southern tip of Illino ...
before disembarking at Shawneetown, Gallatin County, Illinois. They walked across the new state to Kaskaskia, the first capital, but Lockwood returned to the "Little Egypt" region and settled in Carmi,
White County, Illinois White County is a county located in the U.S. state of Illinois. According to the 2020 census, it had a population of 13,877. Its county seat is Carmi. It is located in the southern portion of Illinois known locally as " Little Egypt". Histo ...
. He moved to Edwardsville around 1823, when he accepted the federal revenue collector job discussed below. Lockwood purchased land further north in Morgan County in central Illinois in 1828, and further land when such became available in the 1830s. He lived in Morgan County for more than two decades. Lockwood would move further north following his judicial retirement, and finally settled with his family in
Batavia Batavia may refer to: Historical places * Batavia (region), a land inhabited by the Batavian people during the Roman Empire, today part of the Netherlands * Batavia, Dutch East Indies, present-day Jakarta, the former capital of the Dutch East In ...
, Kane County, Illinois in 1853.


Political career

In 1821, Illinois voters elected Lockwood the young state's third
Attorney General In most common law jurisdictions, the attorney general or attorney-general (sometimes abbreviated AG or Atty.-Gen) is the main legal advisor to the government. The plural is attorneys general. In some jurisdictions, attorneys general also have exec ...
. During his brief tenure in that office, Lockwood successfully prosecuted the only known duel to come to trial in Illinois. He resigned after only a year when Governor Edward Coles appointed him as Secretary of State after Illinois' first Secretary of State, Elias Kane, was elected to the
Illinois House of Representatives The Illinois House of Representatives is the lower house of the Illinois General Assembly. The body was created by the first Illinois Constitution adopted in 1818. The House under the current constitution as amended in 1980 consists of 118 re ...
. Three months later, Lockwood received an appointment as the Receiver of Public Moneys from President James Monroe; the job involved receiving money for settlers buying public lands from the federal government, and Coles had previously held the job. One of the reasons Lockwood accepted continued appointment from Madison was that it would afford him the time and money to ensure that Illinois would remain a free state, although both Presidents were slave owners. Like Governor Coles, Lockwood resisted slavery advocates (particularly from "Little Egypt") who wanted another Constitutional Convention to adopt a pro-slavery Constitution for the state; voters rejected the proposed convention in April 1824. Meanwhile, after various native American tribes ceded land in the
1821 Treaty of Chicago The Treaty of Chicago may refer to either of two treaties made and signed in the settlement that became Chicago, Illinois between the United States and the Odaawaa (anglicized Ottawa), Ojibwe (anglicized Chippewa), and Bodéwadmi (anglicized P ...
, northern Illinois was developing. In 1824, Lockwood was appointed to the First Board of Canal Commissioners, and became responsible for contracting with engineers to survey the route of the Illinois and Michigan Canal. Planned since 1818, it would connect the Great Lakes (through the soon-to-be-incorporated town of Chicago at the confluence of
Lake Michigan Lake Michigan is one of the five Great Lakes of North America. It is the second-largest of the Great Lakes by volume () and the third-largest by surface area (), after Lake Superior and Lake Huron. To the east, its basin is conjoined with that o ...
and the Chicago River) to the Mississippi River (and the transportation hubs of
St. Louis, Missouri St. Louis () is the second-largest city in Missouri, United States. It sits near the confluence of the Mississippi River, Mississippi and the Missouri Rivers. In 2020, the city proper had a population of 301,578, while the Greater St. Louis, ...
and New Orleans, Louisiana) via the
Illinois River The Illinois River ( mia, Inoka Siipiiwi) is a principal tributary of the Mississippi River and is approximately long. Located in the U.S. state of Illinois, it has a drainage basin of . The Illinois River begins at the confluence of the D ...
in the state's central section. The route was surveyed in the following years, and the first land grants delivered (or bought) in 1827.


Judicial and later career

In late 1824, the state legislature reorganized the
Illinois Supreme Court The Supreme Court of Illinois is the state supreme court, the highest court of the State of Illinois. The court's authority is granted in Article VI of the current Illinois Constitution, which provides for seven justices elected from the five ap ...
and the outgoing Governor Coles appointed Lockwood a judge on that Court, with the legislature's approval. Judge Lockwood took office on January 19, 1825 (as perhaps its only anti-slavery member) and served until December 1848. Early on, Lockwood revised the Illinois Criminal Code, and he resigned after the 1848 Constitution (which he helped draft and supported) reduced the Court's membership to three judges. The Court had also reorganized in 1841, after which Lockwood became responsible for the first judicial circuit. In 1837, Lockwood was the only dissenting judge in a case concerning the pre-emption homestead rights of trader Jean Baptiste Beaubien (brought by then fellow Morgan County lawyer Murray McConnell) shortly before the formal closing of Fort Dearborn following the
1833 Treaty of Chicago The 1833 Treaty of Chicago struck an agreement between the United States government that required the Chippewa Odawa, and Potawatomi tribes cede to the United States government their of land (including reservations) in Illinois, the Wiscon ...
. The United States Supreme Court would overrule the other Illinois justices in
Wilcox v. Jackson ''Wilcox v. Jackson'', 38 U.S. (13 Pet.) 498 (1839), sometimes nicknamed the " Beaubien Land Case", available at https://archive.org/stream/historyofchicago01inandr/historyofchicago01inandr_djvu.txt was a legal action decided by the United States ...
in 1839, before the federal government sold the contested land as the "Fort Dearborn Addition" to the town (which had incorporated as a city in 1837). Several times, Lockwood adjudicated cases involving slaves who claimed freedom based on being brought and/or living in Illinois, as well as to Illinois residents who assisted. He upheld slave status on several occasions, both as a trial and appellate judge, citing "comity" with laws of southern states that permitted slavery, and that the slaves were only traveling through the free state. In ''Phoebe v Jay,'' Lockwood, despite his previous anti-convention and abolitionist views, held that the 40 year indenture of Phoebe (entered into in 1814) could be transferred to Joseph Jay's heir, his son William Jay, reasoning that the new state's Constitution superseded the anti-slavery provisions of the Northwest Ordinance. However, Illinois courts began chipping away at the state's Black Code and indenture laws around 1843, led by Judge
John D. Caton John Dean Caton (March 19, 1812, Monroe, New YorkJuly 30, 1895) was an associate justice and chief justice of the Illinois Supreme Court. Caton attended the Utica Academy in Utica, New York. After graduation, he worked as a teacher in Utica. Dur ...
, who threw out a charge against
Owen Lovejoy Owen Lovejoy (January 6, 1811 – March 25, 1864) was an American lawyer, Congregational minister, Abolitionism in the United States, abolitionist, and Republican United States Congress, congressman from Illinois. He was also a "conductor ...
for harboring "Nancy", a black woman without freedom papers. In 1844, Lockwood was the only dissenter in the case of abolitionist William Hayes for assisting "
Sukey Sukey is an organisation which emerged in Britain on 28 January 2011, with the aim of improving communications among participants in the 2010 UK student protests, student demonstrations. Its immediate aim was to counteract the police tactics of ke ...
", slave of Andrew Borders who moved to Galesburg, kidnapped her two sons from jail and sold them southward, the remaining judges upholding the transaction. In 1845, the Court found Joseph Jarrott not a slave, although his mother Pelagie had been since her purchase in 1798 when she was four years old; it thereafter held that slaves born in Illinois after the Northwest Ordinance were born free (overruling ''Phoebe v. Jay''. Nonetheless, the road to abolition was slow. Lockwood participated in two other underground railroad conductor convictions, of Jacksonville's perhaps most visible abolitionist, Julius Willard and his son Samuel Willard (Illinois' governor Pat Quinn pardoned both posthumously in 2014). Lockwood became one of the framers of Illinois' second Constitution in 1848, representing Morgan County at that assembly. He also served as a trustee of Illinois College and the state insane asylum, also in Jacksonville for several years. In 1851 Lockwood was appointed the state's trustee on the board of the Illinois Central Railroad. That caused him to move his family to Batavia, Kane County, Illinois (an abolitionist hotpot in Illinois, especially compared to Jacksonville, much less Little Egypt), so he could catch a train to attend board and other meetings in Chicago. Lockwood continued to serve on that board for the rest of his life. With the demise of the Whig Party, and because he remained anti-slavery, Lockwood joined the new
Republican Party Republican Party is a name used by many political parties around the world, though the term most commonly refers to the United States' Republican Party. Republican Party may also refer to: Africa *Republican Party (Liberia) * Republican Part ...
, whose Presidential candidate in 1860 he knew well from his days in Morgan County and tenure on the Illinois Supreme Court, Abraham Lincoln. In both the 1860 and 1870 federal censuses, Lockwood characterized himself as a farmer in Batavia. President Lincoln characterized Lockwood as "one of the best men in the world" upon receiving a letter from him in December 1864. After the American Civil War, Lockwood also accepted an appointment by Governor Palmer and served on a committee to find a site for an insane asylum in northern Illinois in 1869 (perhaps in part because he was a trustee of the asylum at Jacksonville), at which Mary Todd Lincoln would briefly reside in 1874.,


Retirement and death

Lockwood died at his home in Batavia in 1874, at age 85. After a funeral at the Congregational Church, he was interred in the West Batavia cemetery across from his home (and to which he had donated some land to enable a stone fence). His wife Mary, who died the following year, and 26 descendants would ultimately be buried at that family plot. Some of his family's papers are held by the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library. Batavia named a street after Lockwood. His former home, built in 1849 in the Greek Revival Style and locally known as "Lockwood Hall" and later owned by legislator and public welfare director Rodney Brandon, still exists at 825 Batavia Avenue, off State Route 31.Lyn Wilkerson, Slow Travels Illinois (Lulu.com 2009) p.10, available at https://books.google.com/books?id=DsgdAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA10&lpg


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Lockwood, Samuel D. 1789 births 1874 deaths Illinois Attorneys General Illinois Republicans People from Batavia, Illinois People from Morgan County, Illinois People from Pound Ridge, New York Secretaries of State of Illinois Justices of the Illinois Supreme Court Illinois Whigs 19th-century American politicians People from Carmi, Illinois 19th-century American judges