
Matteson, Joel A.
         
         
         
         b. August 2, 1809, near Watertown, New York; d. January 31, 1873, in Chicago, Illinois. Matteson married Mary Fish on October
            7, 1832. In 1834, he moved to Illinois and was a contractor on the Illinois and Michigan
            Canal. In 1850, Matteson was elected to the state senate and became the finance chairman. He was elected governor in 1852,
            and
            took office on January 10, 1853. While he was governor, Illinois enacted a common school law, and constructed a prison in
            Joliet.
            Matteson also convinced the legislature to fund the construction of the Executive Mansion, which he and his family occupied
            in
            late 1855. Just after Matteson’s inauguration, he came across a trunk that contained both redeemed and unissued scrip which
            had
            been used to pay contractors when the Illinois and Michigan Canal temporarily ran out of money. In 1856, just before he left
            office, Matteson began redeeming the canal scrip. This went unnoticed until 1859 when Jacob Fry, a former canal official,
            heard
            about the circulation and warned of possible fraud. Matteson was implicated and evidence (some of which was circumstantial)
            proved
            that he had received over $220,000 in state bonds. Despite the evidence and what the public regarded as a confession of guilt
            from
            the former governor, Matteson never went to jail for the fraud.
         
         Governors of Illinois: 1818-1918 (Springfield: Illinois Centennial Commission, 1917), 21; Robert P. Howard,
            Mostly Good and Competent Men: Illinois Governors, 1818-1988 (Springfield: Illinois Issues, Sangamon State
            University and Illinois State Historical Society, 1988), 99-107.  Illustration courtesy of the Abraham Lincoln
               Presidential Library, Springfield, IL.