
Robert M.
FISHER, State's
Attorney for Johnson County, is one of the foremost lawyers
of
southern Illinois, one of the most important
civic functionaries of this section, and a
conspicuous figure in its
political life. He is a son of the soil, and springs from one of the
very earliest pioneer families of this part of the State. His father,
William FISHER, was born
in this county in 1816. The father of the
latter, who bore the same name as himself, was from Indiana and
came over the border from that State
to
Illinois as early as 1810, being
one of the first to brave the dangers
and privations of frontier life in the wilderness that then prevailed
here. This part of the country was then under Territorial government,
and but
few white men had ventured to settle among the Indians and wild
animals that then held possession of the forests and prairies. The
elder Mr. FISHER was a man of resolute character,
was strong,
courageous and capable, and his industry was duly rewarded. In dying,
he left behind him a noble record as a pioneer farmer, who had
contributed his quota to the
development of the agricultural resources
of the State.
The boyhood of the father of our subject was passed in arduous toil on
his father's farm, as he was early set to work to clear and break the
land, fence it and place it under cultivation.
As his parents were
poor, he had no chance to attend school. At the age of nineteen, he
took upon himself the cares and responsibilities of domestic life,
marrying Miss Minerva
JOHNSON, who had come to this State from Kentucky
with her parents. After marriage, he and his young wife commenced
making a home on land which he had bought in the
forests, he devoted
his energies to felling the timber that cumbered his farm, and had done
much toward reclaiming it from its native wildness when the hand of
death stayed his labors,
December 25, 1844, while he was yet in
the flush of early manhood, and the county thus lost the services of
one of its most useful citizens, who is worthy of remembrance as one of
its honored pioneers, as well as for being one of its first-born sons.
After the death of the father the mother removed to Massac County, and
there died, in February, 1858.
Robert M. FISHER, of whom we write, is the only survivor of five
children. The others were John. William, Levi and James K. Our subject
was born in Johnson County October 10,
1843, and was but a year old
when deprived of a father's care. He was reared on a farm and became
accustomed to hard work when young. He managed to attend the public
school occasionally, but the most of his education has been obtained
outside of schools. He was ambitious to make the
most of life and
win a name and place for himself in one of the professions,
and having
a decided bent toward the Bar, he
commenced the study of law with John F. McCARTNEY, of Massac, and Judge
DUFF, of Benton, Franklin County. His bright and active
mind easily
mastered the fundamental principles of jurisprudence, and he made such
rapid progress in his studies that the end of nine months' preparation
found him ready for admission
to the Bar and he became a member thereof
in 1869. He did not, however, enter into active practice until the
spring of 1873, when he opened an office at Vienna, where he has since
made
his home. He had continued his legal studies after being admitted
to the Bar, and brought to his professional duties a sound knowledge of
common law, a keen, well-trained, analytical mind, together with a
ready wit and a talent for extemporaneous speaking that have won him
high honors in his profession and have gained him an extensive
patronage.
A man of Mr. FISHER's calibre, inlluence and high personal
standing
is necessarily looked to by his fellow-citizens for counsel
and aid
in public matters and is thus drawn into the civic
life for which he is
so eminently well qualified in all respects, and he has
filled
various oflices of trust. In 1869 he was elected County Superintendent
of Schools, and during the four years
that he occupied that position he
devoted his energies to the advancement of educational facilities in
every part of the county. He was elected Police Magistrate, but
resigned after serving
three years, and his next official post was that
of State's Attorney, to which he was elected in 1876 on a non-partisan
ticket for a period of four years. In 1888, well satisfied with his
first administration of the functions pertaining to that office, the
people again made him State's Attorney, and he is still
acting in
that capacity. He has always affiliated with the Republican party,
is
an able advocate of its principles and is prominent in political
circles. He is a gentleman of true courtesy, genial and frank in his
manner, and among an extensive acquaintance has
gathered many warm
friends.
Mr.
FISHER was first married July 28, 1870, to Miss Mary E. FISHER, a
native of Johnson County. Her death occurred August 1, 1887. Five
children were born of that marriage:
Stella, wife of William H. SHIELDS, of
Eldorado Springs, Mo.; Lucinda, who lives at Mt. Carroll; Walter A.,
who died; and George H. and William M., who are at home with their
parents. Our subject's second marriage was with Mrs. G. O. HAMILTON,
widow of R. W. HAMILTON. She is a native of Williamson County, where
her father was a physician of
much prominence during his life, having
settled there in the town of Bainbridge in 1841. Both he and his wife
were of New England birth and breeding, he from Massachusetts and she
from Connecticut. She died three years before he did. Mrs. FISHER can
trace her ancestry to the branch of the Harrison family to which
President HARRISON belongs. By their present
union Mr. and Mrs. FISHER
have one daughter, whom they have named Amy.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
Back to Biographies
A - L
Back to
Johnson County
Copyright
© Genealogy Trails
All Rights Reserved with Full Rights Reserved for
Original Contributor