John Bannister (Wisconsin pioneer, born 1810) explained

John Bannister
Order:7th
Mayor of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin
Term Start:April 1858
Term End:April 1859
Predecessor:Isaac S. Sherwood
Successor:John Potter
Office1:Judge of Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin
Term Start1:April 1847
Term End1:April 1850
Predecessor1:Mason C. Darling
Successor1:Charles M. Tompkins
Office2:Register of Deeds of Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin Territory
Term Start2:January 1845
Term End2:January 1846
Predecessor2:Oscar Pier
Successor2:S. S. N. Fuller
Term Start3:1839
Term End3:April 1842
Predecessor3:Position established
Successor3:Oscar Pier
Office4:Chairman of the of Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin Territory
Term Start4:April 1841
Term End4:April 1842
Predecessor4:Reuben Simmons
Successor4:George White
Birth Date:10 July 1810
Birth Place:Conway, Massachusetts, U.S.
Death Place:Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, U.S.
Death Cause:Tuberculosis
Restingplace:Rienzi Cemetery,
Children:3
Occupation:Surveyor

John Bannister (July 10, 1810January 20, 1860) was an American surveyor, businessman, and Wisconsin pioneer. He was one of the first settlers at what is now Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, and was the 7th mayor of Fond du Lac. He was also the second postmaster at Fond du Lac and the first register of deeds for Fond du Lac County, and he served at various times as chairman of the county board, probate judge, and justice of the peace.

Bannister was a half-brother of Theodore Conkey, the surveyor and co-founder of Appleton, Wisconsin.

Biography

John Bannister was born in Conway, Massachusetts, in July 1810. When he was five years old, his father died and he moved with his mother to St. Lawrence County, New York, where she remarried.

He came west to the Wisconsin Territory, settling at Green Bay in 1834. In 1836, he traveled south to the area that is now Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, and conducted the first plat for a village at that site. In March of 1838, he returned to that site with his family and settled there permanently. Almost since the time of his arrival, he served as the unofficial surveyor of up until the office of surveyor was formally established in 1848. A post office was established in in 1838. The first postmaster was Colwert Pier, but he resigned after just a few months due to the death of his wife; Bannister was selected as the second postmaster. During these years, he also often served as a justice of the peace, and, in that capacity, he performed the first marriage held in, between Alonzo Raymond and Harriet Pier, a niece of pioneer Edward Pier.[1]

In 1838, Bannister was elected elected the first register of deeds of, serving three years in that role. In 1839, the Wisconsin Territory reorganized county government and established a short-lived system of county commissions, made up of three commissioners elected at large. Bannister was elected one of the three county commissioners for and served three years in that role, becoming chairman of the county commission in 1841. During those years, he also conducted the first census of for the 1840 United States census; he recorded 139 white residents of the county at that time.[1]

In 1847, was incorporated as a village. In the first village election, Bannister was elected an assessor and that same year he was elected county judge. In the second village election, Bannister was elected to the board of trustees; he was elected the 3rd village president in 1849 and ultimately served two years from that election, because no election was held in 1850.

During those years, Bannister was active in the Free Soil Party and was a member of the state central committee in 1849.[2] That fall, Bannister was nominated as the party's candidate for lieutenant governor of Wisconsin. In the general election, Bannister came in a distant third place behind Democrat Samuel Beall and Whig Timothy O. Howe.[3]

In 1852, was re-incorporated as a city. Bannister ran for mayor in the second city election, but lost to George McWilliams.[4] Over the next several years, Bannister was involved in several large business projects in the city, including banks and railroads. After the Free Soil Party disbanded in 1854, Bannister became a member of the Democratic Party. Bannister ran again for mayor in 1858, and this time won the office.[5]

Bannister died of tuberculosis at his home in on January 20, 1860.[6]

Personal life and family

John Bannister was the eldest of three children born to Amos Bannister and his wife Mary ( Nash). After Amos Bannister's death in 1815, John's mother remarried to Asa Conkey and had four more children. Through his mother's family, John Bannister is a descendant of Thomas Nash, who emigrated from England to the Connecticut Colony sometime before 1640.[7] John was named for his paternal grandfather, John Bannister, who served as the captain of a militia company during the American Revolutionary War.

John's younger brother Henry M. Bannister was a scholar at the Garrett–Evangelical Theological Seminary and one of the leading Methodist theologians of his era.[8] Henry married Lucy Kimball, a daughter of Ruel Kimball; her elder brother Alonzo Kimball was the 14th and 16th mayor of Green Bay, Wisconsin.[9] Henry Bannister's daughter, Mary Bannister Willard, became a leader of the temperance movement.

John's younger half-brother, Theodore Conkey, followed him to the Wisconsin Territory and also became a notable Wisconsin pioneer. Theodore, after residing briefly with Bannister in, apprenticed as a surveyor under Albert Gallatin Ellis and became one of the first inhabitants at what is now Appleton, Wisconsin. Another half-brother, Asa Hamilton Conkey, also later came to Appleton and served in several education roles.[9]

Bannister married before moving to the Wisconsin Territory. His son, John A. Bannister, was the first American child born in on June 20, 1839. John A. Bannister did not survive to adulthood. John Bannister and his wife had at least two other sons.[1]

Electoral history

| colspan="6" style="text-align:center;background-color: #e9e9e9;"| General Election, November 6, 1849

References

|-|-

Notes and References

  1. Book: The History of Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin . 1880 . Western Historical Company . 349, 359, 386 - 387, 392, 491, 567 - 572, 583 . November 17, 2024 .
  2. News: Free Soil State Central Committee . Wisconsin Weekly Free Democrat . April 18, 1849 . 2 . November 24, 2024 . .
  3. News: Official State Canvass . Watertown Chronicle . December 26, 1849 . 2 . November 24, 2024 . .
  4. News: City Council . Fond du Lac Journal . April 14, 1853 . 2 . November 24, 2024 . .
  5. News: City Election at Fond du Lac . Beaver Dam Argus . March 12, 1858 . 2 . November 24, 2024 . .
  6. News: John Bannister . . January 25, 1860 . 1 . November 16, 2024 . .
  7. Book: Nash, Sylvester . The Nash Family . 1853 . Press of Case, Tiffany, and Company . 162 . November 16, 2024 .
  8. News: Dr. Henry Bannister, of Garrett Biblical Institute . . April 16, 1883 . 1 . November 17, 2024 . .
  9. Book: Commemorative Biographical Record of the Fox River Valley Counties of Brown, Outagamie and Winnebago . 1895 . J. H. Beers & Co. . 24, 536 - 541, 691 . November 17, 2024 .