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Governor
Thomas Ford
Biography![]()
Thomas Ford, Governor from 1842 to 1846, and author of a very
interesting history of Illinois, was born at Uniontown, Pa., in the
year 1800. His mother, after the death of her first husband (Mr.
Forquer), married Robert Ford, who was killed in 1802, by the Indians
in the mountains of Pennsylvania. She was consequently left in
indigent circumstances, with a large family, mostly girls. With a
view to better her conditions, she, in 1804, removed to Missouri, where
it had been customary by the Spanish Government to give land to actual
settlers; but upon her arrival at St. Louis he found the country ceded
to the United States, and the liberal policy toward settlers changed by
the new ownership. After some sickness to herself and family, she
finally removed to Illinois, and settled some three miles south of
Waterloo, but the following year moved nearer the Mississippi
bluffs. Here young Ford received his first schooling, under the
instructions of a Mr. Humphrey, for which he had to walk three
miles. His mother, though lacking a thorough education, was a
woman of superior mental endowments, joined to energy and determination
of character. She inculcated in her children those high-toned
principles which distinguished her sons in public life. She
exercised a rigid economy to provide her children an education; but
George Forquer, her oldest son (six years older than Thomas Ford), at
an early age had to quit school to aid by his labor in the support of
the family. He afterward became an eminent man in Illinois
affairs, and but for his early death would probably have been elected
to the United States Senate.