Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Ind., has transferred its 
			collection of Richard Yates' papers, measuring 8 linear feet, to the 
			Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum in Springfield. The 
			donation will supplement the Yates family collection comprising 15 
			linear feet already held by the presidential library, making it the 
			world's most complete research collection regarding the man who 
			served as Illinois governor from 1860 to 1865, one of the key 
			American political figures of the mid-19th century.
			"Wabash College is delighted to see these papers returning to 
			their proper home in Springfield," said Wabash College's Beth Swift. 
			"The Yates papers we have had at Wabash are but a part of the larger 
			collection at the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, and we are 
			gratified that scholars will be able to study the entire collection 
			in one place. We look forward to the scholarship that will result 
			from this reunification. It is our pleasure to play a part in 
			returning these historically important items to the place where most 
			of them originated." 
			
			  
			"The Richard Yates papers received from Wabash College nicely 
			complement the Yates collection held by the presidential library, 
			filling gaps that have existed in our collection," said ALPLM 
			director Eileen Mackevich. "Researchers will appreciate having these 
			two collections united in one facility. We thank Wabash College for 
			this generous and thoughtful gift."  
			Richard Yates (1815-1873), like Lincoln, was born in Kentucky and 
			moved with his family to Illinois. Yates came to Illinois in 1831, 
			graduated from Illinois College in Jacksonville in 1835, studied law 
			in Kentucky and returned to Jacksonville to work as an attorney 
			after he passed the bar exam in 1837. 
			Yates, a Whig, was elected to the Illinois House of 
			Representatives from 1842 to 1846 and 1849-1850. In 1850, he was 
			elected to the U.S. House of Representatives and served until 1855, 
			when his stance against the repeal of the Missouri Compromise and 
			his identification with the new, anti-slavery Republican Party 
			caused him to be defeated in his pro-slavery district. 
			Yates was elected governor of Illinois in 1860. As the state's 
			commander-in-chief, he sent more soldiers to aid the Union cause 
			early in the war than any other state. He appointed Ulysses S. Grant 
			the mustering officer for the state and afterward colonel of the 
			21st Illinois regiment, putting Grant on the path that would lead to 
			military and political greatness. 
			
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			 Yates was a staunch supporter of President Lincoln and the 
			Emancipation Proclamation and was rewarded with much federal 
			spending in Illinois during the 16th president's tenure. 
			After his service as governor ended, Yates was elected as a 
			Republican to the United States Senate and served from March 4, 
			1865, to March 3, 1871. 
			He died in 1873 and is buried in Jacksonville's Diamond Grove 
			Cemetery. 
			A statue of Yates was erected on the Illinois State Capitol 
			grounds in 1923. 
			His son, also named Richard Yates, was governor of Illinois from 
			1901 to 1905.  
			The Robert T. Ramsay Jr. Archival Center at Wabash College 
			acquired its Yates collection as a donation from the family of 
			Winfred Harbison, a former Wabash College faculty member. Harbison 
			had received the papers from Yates' granddaughter for a planned 
			biography of the governor. Harbison died before completing the 
			biography.  
			The Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum also has 
			collections from Illinois Govs. John Palmer, Richard Oglesby, Len 
			Small, Henry Horner, William Stratton, Richard Ogilvie and Dan 
			Walker. 
			For more information on the presidential library and museum, 
			visit 
			www.presidentlincoln.org. 
			
            [Text from
Abraham 
			Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum 
			file received from the
			Illinois Historic 
			Preservation Agency] 
            
			  
            
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