Shelbyville Area CVB
Get your visitor information at the Lake Area Shelbyville visitor center in downtown Shelbyville.
While a circuit-riding attorney, Lincoln occasionally visited Shelby County. His political beginnings as a Republican also took root here. Visit the Shelby County Courthouse to see the Robert Root painting of the Lincoln-Thornton debate. While less famous than the later Lincoln-Douglas debates, the Lincoln-Thornton meeting is significant because it marked one of Lincoln’s first public speaking engagements as a Republican. It was also the first time he argues the anti-slavery cause as divisive to the country.
Shelbyville has five wayside exhibits by the Looking for Lincoln Heritage Coalition Wayside Exhibit Program to share our story of Abraham LIncoln.
Shelby County became a part of the Eight Judicial Circuit Court system in 1841. City natives can be proud that one of the circuit travelers was Abraham Lincoln, who went from town to town for twenty-five years, including four years to Shelbyville. He never complained about the squalid taverns or impassable roads. Rather, it seemed that he thrived in harsh conditions, and his stamina would later support him during the Civil War. Every spring and fall he would start the circuit in a westerly direction. He would leave Paris, some fifty-five miles from Shelbyville. The trip would take him two or three days. During the nights he would stay at way-side inns or homes of settlers.
Visitor Information
Address: 315 E. Main St. Shelbyville, Illinois 62565
Website: http://www.lakeshelbyville.com/index.htm
Phone Number: 217-774-2244