
Ficklin, Orlando B.
         
         
         
         b. December 16, 1808, in Kentucky; d. May 5, 1885, in Charleston, Illinois. Ficklin was admitted to the bar in 1830 in Belleville,
            Illinois, and he moved to Mt. Carmel, Illinois, to begin the practice of
            law. In 1832, he served in the Black Hawk War as a quartermaster. In 1834, Ficklin was elected to the state legislature and
            also
            was chosen to be the state's attorney for the Wabash circuit. In 1837, Ficklin moved to Charleston, Illinois, and was elected
            to
            the state legislature and was reelected in 1842. From 1843-49 and again from 1851-53, he served in Congress. In 1847, Ficklin
            opposed Lincoln as counsel in the famous In re Bryant et al. slave case. Active in Democratic politics, Ficklin
            served as a presidential elector in 1860 and 1884 and as a member of the Democratic National conventions of 1856, 1860, and
            1864.
            He was a delegate to the 1862 state constitutional convention, and from 1878 to 1880, he served in the state senate.
         
         John J. Duff, A. Lincoln: Prairie Lawyer (New York: Bramhall House, 1960), 131; Edward F. Dunne,
            Illinois: The Heart of the Nation (Chicago & New York: Lewis Publishing, 1933), 3:496; Usher F.
            Linder, Reminiscences of the Early Bench and Bar of Illinois (Chicago: Chicago Legal News, 1879), 110-12; Mark E.
            Neely Jr., The Abraham Lincoln Encyclopedia (New York: McGraw Hill, 1982), 109-10; Charles Edward Wilson, ed.,
            Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois and the History of Coles County (Chicago: Munsell Publishing, 1906),
            795-96; Albert A. Woldman, Lawyer Lincoln (Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1936), 60, 102. 
               Illustration courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.