Future judge's earliest days in Quincy were harsh

Winter arrived early as a November snow began to fall on the limestone bluffs overlooking the Mississippi River at Quincy.
The year was 1828, and the village's 150 or so residents lived in a couple of dozen mostly log structures. Other than the occasional steamboat stopping at the new river pier on its way from St. Louis to the Galena lead mines, Quincy had few attractions for settlers. Curious strangers brought by chimney smoke from the out country occasionally loafed about town, though only long enough to replenish supplies and move on. A tall, lean, auburn-haired rider led his horse to the hitching post in front of Rufus Brown's inn and tavern on the southeast side of today's Fourth and Maine intersection; this arriving stranger intended to stay.
Nine months earlier, James H. Ralston's father presented his soon-to-be 21-year-old son with two options for his future. Since there was no money for formal schooling, he was encouraged to carry on at the family's Bath County, Ky., farm or be free to do something else. Fortuitously, James chose the latter and traveled with his uncle's large family from Kentucky to their new homestead in the Sangamon River valley near Springfield. After helping his uncle and cousins clear land, build a cabin and plant first-year crops, he learned from a Springfield attorney about an opening for a law clerk in the Quincy office of attorney George Logan. Though Logan found the bright and eager home-schooled applicant to be grammatically raw around the edges, he saw potential. James began what would be his lifelong calling, helping his new mentor with his local law practice and Logan's work with circuit court judge Richard M. Young. Two years later, in October 1830, those gathering at Brown's tavern celebrated J.H. Ralston's admission to the Illinois bar.
No more than a month later snow began to fall in Quincy. James recalled hearing predictions of the severity of the upcoming winter based on the thickness of the woolly worm's coat. By Christmas Eve, the accuracy of that forecast was worth less than the price of that coat. The snow's depth reached over 2 feet and was covered with a layer of ice thick enough to hold a grown man's weight. Pure fear replaced the "ah shucks" attitude about being able to make it through any Illinois winter. An additional 2 feet accumulated during the first two months of 1831. James watched the upward progress of a snowdrift fast approaching the second-story window of his small room above Asher Anderson's store. He saw neighbors helping neighbors keep from starving or freezing to death. Anderson and the other town merchants located supplies from wherever they could and meeting whatever price had to be paid to get them. When it was all said and done, new residents and old-timers alike set a revised demarcation of Quincy's historical events, before and after the big snow.
On April 22, 1832, a courier arrived in Quincy from the state capital in Vandalia. He carried a proclamation from Gov. John Reynolds calling for the organization of a mounted militia. The proclamation confirmed the rumor circulating that the Sauk Indian brave Black Hawk, with an estimated 500 braves and 800 women and children, had crossed the Mississippi from west to east in early April. Black Hawk's intentions were unclear. However, what was more than clear was he had returned to Illinois in direct violation of an 1830 treaty and against the advice of ruling Sauk tribal members, including Chief Keokuk. Black Hawk was a notoriously clever warrior with no regard for white settlers or their leaders in Vandalia or Washington. There was no doubt his presence was a threat to the peace of the northwestern Illinois frontier.
The able-bodied men in Quincy viewed this call to arms as the opportunity for a real adventure. Never mind that few of them owned a decent weapon or a horse strong and fast enough for a fight to the death with a force of battle-hardened Indians. Even fewer of them had any form of military discipline needed to make sure that orders were followed to the letter in the heat of battle. Four attorneys and likely several more of the 60 to 70 men who filled the Quincy militia roster could be called gentlemen soldiers. Three of the four attorneys joined the fray for the thrill of the hunt, oblivious to what the hunt would ask in return. Friends, and later noted attorneys and politicians all, Will Richardson, O.H. Browning, Archie Williams and J.H. Ralston vowed to be Black Hawk's four horsemen of the apocalypse and bring low the mighty Indian warrior. Good intentions and bravado can be detours on the road to success; James was the only member of the four who saw the 4-month so-called war to its successful and bloody conclusion.
Before the Black Hawk uprising, James met Jane Alexander and after the tussle, in October 1832, they married. She was the oldest daughter of Col. and Mrs. Samuel Alexander. A surveyor by trade, the colonel had come to Quincy to be the registrar of a new land office formed to handle the booming sales of the nearby military bounty land tracts. The couple postponed the wedding for a few weeks so that James's brother, Dr. Joseph Neely Ralston, could be the best man at the wedding. Six months earlier J.H. had persuaded his brother to move his practice from northern Kentucky to Quincy. Thus it was that two Ralstons became productive and influential citizens of Quincy.
Bob Keith is a retired university information systems director. With an intense interest in genealogy, he has written four books based on his paternal and maternal ancestry. Judge J.H. Ralston and Dr. J.N. Ralston are his great-great maternal uncles.
Sources
Asbury, Henry, Reminiscences of Quincy, Illinois…, Quincy, IL: D. Wilcox and Sons, 1882.
Drake, Benjamin, The Sac and Fox Indians and the Late Black Hawk War, Cincinnati, OH: George Conclin, 1839.
Fourth Census of the United States, 1820. (NARA microfilm publication M33, 142 rolls). Records of the Bureau of the Census, Record Group 29. National Archives, Washington, D.C. (Kentucky, Montgomery and Bath counties)
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(An 1837 act to permanently locate the seat of government of the State of Illinois)
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Murray, Williamson, Phelps, The History of Adams County Illinois:…, Chicago, IL: Blakely, Brown, and Marsh, 1879.
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Snyder, Dr. J. (John) F. (Francis), "Forgotten Statesmen of Illinois: James Harvey Ralston," Transactions of the Illinois State Historical Society for the Year 1908(1909): 215-232.
Tilson, Gen. John, revised and corrected by Hon. William H. Collins, History of the City of Quincy, Illinois, Chicago, IL: S. J. Clark Co., ca 1880.





