Among many interesting facts
in connection with the life and work of John Bundy, paternal grandfather of William F. Bundy,
is particularly noted that he sat upon the first grand
jury ever convened in Marion county. The maternal grandfather of William F.
Bundy was also a man of considerable prominence and note in his time. He was
James I. Richardson, born in Tennessee, and came to Illinois about 1826. He
served through the Black Hawk war, enlisting in Captain Dobbins spy
battalion on May 14, 1832, and was active in various engagements of that
brief uprising. He was mustered out of the service on August 16, 1832. He
became the owner of a valuable tract of land, which he entered upon as a
homesteader, but his calling in life did not permit him to live upon the
land continuously. He was a minister of the Methodist Episcopal church, and
served for twenty years in that work. He was presiding elder of his district
for several terms, and was prominently known throughout all southern
Illinois. He died in 1871, leaving the heritage of a worthy life well spent
in devotion to the labors of his church.
William F. Bundy
passed
through the common schools of his home town, and in 1879 attended the
Southern Illinois Normal University
P. 1480
at Carbondale for a year. His
finances were low, and with no one to depend upon for assistance in that way
he was compelled to return to the farm and work for a year before he might
continue his studies. But his inherent perseverance made it possible for him
to surmount all difficulties of that nature, and in 1881 he secured a
position teaching school, by means of which he was enabled to return to the
University at Carbondale for another term. He repeated that performance in
1882 and also in 1884. In 1887 he was so far along with his studies that he
began to read law, and in 1889, after two years of constant application to
his books, he was admitted to the bar, and he has been in active practice
through the intervening years, attaining an unusual measure of success.
From the beginning his
practice was wide in its scope, and he was so fortunate as to experience
none of the lean years which so frequently characterize the early efforts of
men who finally achieve brilliant successes. In addition to his wide
general practice Mr. Bundy is the attorney for the Southern Railway
Company, the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad, the Centralia Coal
Company, the Centralia Electric Company and the Centralia State Bank. Aside
from his official capacity, he is a trustee of the Southern Illinois Normal
University at Carbondale, as well as being a member of the directorates of
the Merchants State Bank and the Centralia Water supply Company.
Mr. Bundy
is a stanch Republican, and has served the party in various capacities
during his career. He was a delegate to the forty-second and forty-third
general assemblies in 1901 and 1903. During the forty-third assembly he was
chairman of the committee on general apportionment and the committee on
judicial department of practice, his labors while chairman of those
committees resulting in much good. As a citizen his influence in a political
way has always been of a nature calculated to serve the best interests of
his community, and he can be depended upon to lend his aid in the
furtherance of any upward movement contributing to the welfare of the
people.
In 1890
Mr. Bundy
married
Miss Mary E. McNally,
a daughter of
James McNally
The latter was a native of New
York who settled in Centralia,
becoming connected with a nail factory in this city, with which he remained
until the dissolution of the firm, his death occurring shortly thereafter.
Three daughters were born to the union of Mr.
and Mrs. Bundy; Dorothy E.,
now a student in Rockford College; Sarah Pauline, attending the Centralia
high school; and Margaret, also a student in the Centralia schools.
Mr. Bundy is particularly
active in Masonic circles, being a member of the Chapter, Knights Templar
and the Chicago Consistory. He is also a member of the Blue Lodge and is now
eminent commander.

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