No Bull: Brothers made plenty of contributions

Few families impacted 18th-century Quincy more than the Bulls. Lorenzo and Charles Henry, or C.H., were important in both the business and social circles of the city. The brothers moved to Quincy from Connecticut, and it did not take them long to build a legacy.
In 1833, Lorenzo, 14, moved to Quincy and worked as clerk for Judge Henry S. Snow. Lorenzo worked for the judge for about two and a half years before moving on to work with the largest mercantile company in town, Holmes & Brown Company. In 1837 while working there, C.H. joined his older brother. Already a part of city life, Lorenzo volunteered as part of Engine Company Number One of Quincy’s Volunteer Fire Department.
Lorenzo married Margaret Hunter Benedict in 1844, the same year the brothers opened their own mercantile operation called L. & C. H. Bull. They sold hardware, crockery, agricultural machines, and farm implements. C.H. married Anna Baldwin four years after L. & C. H. Bull opened its doors. When the merchants bought goods from Sheffield, England, L. & C.H. Bull became the first local business to pay government duties at the federal port of Quincy, created in 1853.
C.H. served as the president of the Quincy Public Library, and Lorenzo acted as secretary. They were major patrons for constructing a library building on the southwest corner of Third and Maine, now owned by the Historical Society. The brothers were members of Quincy’s chapter of the American Art Union. The group of 17 included Gov. John Wood. It is a testament to Quincy’s interest in the arts that the organization was so large, considering the entire state of Texas boasted only two members of the AAU. Lorenzo also became a trustee of the Woodland Home for the Orphans and Friendless.
Both Bull brothers had an interest in the transportation industry. Lorenzo helped organize the Quincy streetcar system. Once the system got underway, he functioned as its president for twenty years. In 1851, he became president of the Northern Cross Railroad and rerouted it through Galesburg. As work was done on the line, a special engine took people to Hills Grove; then they took a buggy to Galesburg before getting back on the train that would take them to Chicago. Eventually, this branch would become part of the CB&Q Railroad. Not to be outdone, C.H. helped create the Quincy, Missouri & Pacific Railroad. His railroad’s line included tracks to Omaha as well as the Gulf of Mexico.
While the Bull brothers ran their businesses, people in town would often entrust money to them. The city, as well as the state, had gone through several unsuccessful banking ventures and the people did not have a central banking facility. The local problem reflected the national debate occurring over whether or not the country needed a central bank. President Andrew Jackson in 1832 had vetoed the renewal of the U.S. Bank’s charter, which expired in 1836. In 1861, the Bulls put their money holding practice to use and started a bank on the corner of Fifth and Maine.
The Bulls’ bank became the largest chartered bank in Illinois outside Chicago. Due to their success, the Bulls decided to build an addition to their original bank. Eventually, the State Savings & Loan Trust Company would buy the bank. The building, built in 1892, now holds the Granite Bank Gallery where one can still see original banking vaults and other memories of the building’s first use.
The Bull families did not forget their other civic duties. Perhaps because of their private successes, the Bulls became even more involved in the public sphere. Certainly the Civil War provided them with ample opportunities. The Bull women in particular found ways to aid the war effort.
Both Margaret and Anna joined the Quincy group of Needle Pickets. The Needle Pickets gathered medical supplies and raised money to support families of wounded soldiers..
After the Civil War, the women continued to be active in the community. Both Bull matriarchs joined the literary circle started by Sarah Denman called Friends in Council. The women gathered to read and discuss various works of literature and philosophy. Anna even entertained well-known literary figures such as Ralph Waldo Emerson and Bronson Alcott, transcendentalist and father of Louisa May Alcott.
Education was an important pillar in the Bull family. Every member obtained a higher education; many members of the family went to the East Coast to continue their studies. Lorenzo gave money to build the first school house in Quincy. In the 1860s, Lorenzo led the construction of Quincy Seminary for higher education on Eighth Street between Maine and Hampshire. The building later became the site of the St. Boniface social club. C. H. sponsored the Quincy Conservatory of Music, which began as a private school in 1885 by professor Henry Bretherick. The professor came to Quincy at the urging of Bull.
In addition, C. H. organized and presided over the Graceland Cemetery Association. When the Historical Society of Quincy began in 1896, Lorenzo Bull became its first president. C. H. became the director of the Associated Charities. When Anna Brown died, she wanted her home to be used for senior housing, and C.H. became one of the trustees of the Anna Brown Home for the Aged.
Cheerful Home Daycare found a friend in the Bulls. Lorenzo purchased the Edward Wells house at 421 Jersey and donated it as the first site of Cheerful Home. Lorenzo and Margaret’s daughter, Mary Braman Bull, willed $25,000 to Cheerful Home because of her family’s association with the group.
Many Quincyans remember the Bulls for the beautiful buildings they left behind, most notably the Women’s City Club and Quincy Art Center. The Women’s City Club occupies Lorenzo Bull’s house at 1550 Maine. Mary lived in the house after her parents, and she wanted it to be used for a women’s group after she was gone. The women of Quincy honored this wish by banding together and raising the necessary funds to start the club. The Art Center began in the carriage house of the Bulls, so some call it the “Art Barn.”
The Bulls turned private achievement into success that benefited the community.
Bridget Quinlivan graduated from Quincy University and Western Illinois University. She is a member and volunteer at the Historical Society and an English/writing specialist for the Trio program at John Wood Community College.





