William R. Morrison, destined to be elected a Colonel during the American Civil War, was of Scotch-Irish descent, born on September 14, 1824. Although raised on a farm, upon his father's remarriage following the death of William's mother, they moved into town, where his father operated the old Ditch Tavern, a political and social hub of the region. Morrison became interested in politics at an early age, admitting in later years that by the age of seven or eight he always visited the polls on election day. William was educated in country schools and spent four years at McKendree College.
Finding farming boring, Morrison led an adventurous life, serving in the military, joining the great Gold Rush of '49, taking a boat to Panama and crossing the isthmus by mule and on foot, sailing for Cuba, New Orleans, then back to St. Louis, and home. He married his first wife, Mary Jane Drury on December 4, 1851, who died in 1857. Their two children died in infancy. He later married Eleanora Horne, who died on May 13, 1904. The one child born to them also died in early childhood, leaving Morrison with no surviving children.
His military experience included both The Mexican War, where he enlisted as a private in the Second Illinois-Infantry under Colonel Bissell, and the American Civil War. Serving as a Colonel of the regiment which
he organized, the Forty-ninth Illinois Infantry, he was shot in the hip while serving as brigade commander in the siege of Fort Donelson. His wife took him home to recover, but upon hearing of the disaster at Pittsburgh Landing, he again left for the front.
The major focus of Morrison's life was politics. In 1852 he was elected Circuit Clerk for Monroe County. From 1854 to 1860, and again in 1870-71, he served in the lower house of the State Legislature, having won as a Douglas Democrat. He was Speaker of the House in 1859 and 1860. After being elected to the Thirty-eighth Congress, he resigned from the Army, only to have his resignation refused. General Grant wrote, "Resignation not accepted. Colonel Morrison is too good a soldier to spare." His resignation was only accepted when his matter was taken to President Lincoln.
Morrison was elected to the Forty-third and to the six succeeding Congresses (March 4, 1873-March 3, 1887). He was a delegate to the Democratic National Conventions in 1856, 1868, 1884, and 1888. Morrison was appointed in 1887 by President Cleveland to be a member of the Interstate Commerce Commission and reappointed by President Harrison on January 5, 1892, serving from March 22, 1887 to December 31, 1897. From 1876 until 1896, Morrison was considered a presidential possibility. In both politics and military life, M0rrison was known as a man of great integrity.
In his last years, Morrison resumed the practice of law in Waterloo, where he died September 29, 1909. The home Morrison purchased in 1854 at the corner of Library and Park Streets was left in his will to the City of Waterloo to be used as a public library. The city library, formerly housed in the Siegel Building on Main Street after being organized in 1892 and chartered in 1894, was moved to the Col. Morrison Home in 1911, under the name Talbott Free Library. In 1935 the name of the library was changed to Morrison-Talbott Library to honor both Morrison, who gave the building, and Henry and Mary Talbott, who donated the first books.
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William Ralls Morrison
Sept 14, 1824 - Sept 29, 1909
The library remained in the Col. Morrison Home until 1996, when it was moved next door into the newly built library building.
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