Radford, Reuben
         
         
         
         b. 1803, in Virginia. In 1831, Radford became a Springfield, Illinois, merchant. Later that year he bought a store in New
            Salem, Illinois. Lincoln and
            Berry bought Radford’s New Salem stock from William Green in January 1833. In 1837, Radford successfully bid for the contract
            to
            demolish the old Sangamon County courthouse. Also in 1837, Radford received a contract to construct the railroad from Springfield,
            Illinois, to the Sangamon River. In 1849, he was awarded the contract to build the Caseyville-Illinoistown Railroad. In 1850,
            Radford made his living as a carpenter but owned no real estate. On January 1, 1851, he dissolved his partnership with William
            Mauzy.
         
         Roy P. Basler et al., eds., The Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln (New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University
            Press, 1953), 1:15-16; Illinois Daily Journal (Springfield), 25 January 1851, 3:1; Sangamo
               Journal (Springfield, Illinois), 29 December 1831, 3:4; Sangamo Journal, 1 July 1837, 2:5;
            Sangamo Journal, 11 November 1837, 2:1; Sangamo Journal, 24 December 1849, 3:2; Sangamon
            County, Illinois, Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; Benjamin P. Thomas, Lincoln’s New Salem
            (Springfield, IL: The Abraham Lincoln Association, 1934), 7, 61.