
Hay, Milton
         
         
         
         b. July 3, 1817, in Fayette County, Kentucky; d. September 15, 1893, in Springfield, Illinois. In the fall of 1832, Hay came
            to Springfield, Illinois, with his family. Six years later, Hay became a student in the law firm of
            Stuart and Lincoln. After being admitted to the bar in 1840, he settled in Pittsfield, Illinois, to practice law. He formed
            a
            legal partnership there with Edward D. Baker. In 1858, Hay returned to Springfield, where he continued to practice law with
            new
            law partner Stephen T. Logan. In 1859, Hay was associated with Lincoln in the famous People v. Harrison murder trial, and
            he also
            worked with Lincoln as a bar examiner. His partnership with Logan lasted until 1861. Hay also formed brief partnerships with
            various lawyers including John M. Palmer, Antrim Campbell, and Shelby Cullom. Hay became the senior member of the firm Hay,
            Greene, and Littler until his retirement on December 31, 1879. Hay was a member of the 1870 state constitutional convention,
            and
            after the adoption of that constitution, he was a member of the state legislature. Milton Hay was the son-in-law of Stephen
            T.
            Logan.
         
         John J. Duff, A. Lincoln: Prairie Lawyer (New York: Bramhall House, 1960), 285, 295; Illinois State
               Journal (Springfield, Illinois), September 16, 1893, 4; John Palmer, ed., The Bench and Bar of Illinois:
               Historical and Reminiscent (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1899), 1:196-98.  Illustration courtesy of the
               Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.