I am slowly finding more and more information on William H. Parish. It Appears he was a
soldier, Lawyer and a politician. On the Choisser Family site he is listed as Fighting
along side of his Brother In Law
William Choisser.

Here are some letters William H wrote to his Grand Daughter Alice Martha Parish in
1902.

Illinois Civil War Detail Report






































Here is a Brief history from the Memorial Library.
http://www.memoriallibrary.com/IL/South/Bios/P/Parish~John.htm

WILLIAM H. PARISH, the oldest attorney at law of Harrisburg, Illinois, enjoys the
distinction of being the nestor of the Southern Illinois bar. Now in the octogenarian
ranks, his mind remains active and his judgment keen. A resume of his life is as follows:
    William H. Parish was born September 26, 1827, on a farm four miles from Danville,
Vermilion county, Illinois, a son of Joshua and Sarah (Morgan) Parish. His paternal
ancestor in this country landed here as a Dutch immigrant, and his maternal ancestors
were among the early settlers of Hartford, Connecticut. One of his forefathers, David
Morgan, was one of three brothers, and was a noted hunter and fighter. In one day he
killed the last three Indians who ever raided on the warpath into the Panhandle of West

Virginia, where he died at the age of one hundred and twenty years.
As early as 1819 the Parish family settled at Palestine, Crawford county, Illinois, and a
few years later removed from there to Vermilion county, where Joshua Parish spent a
long and honorable life, his age at death being ninety-seven years. His good wife was
sixty years of age at the time of her death. She was a woman of much culture and
education, and such was her wonderful memory that on her death bed was able to
repeat the whole of Pope's translation of Homer's Iliad.

Joshua Parish in the early days often served as a juror, and he sometimes took with
him to the court at Danville his little son William H., whose recollection of and friendship
for Abraham Lincoln dates from those visits. Lincoln made a marked impression not
only upon the youth but also upon the father, and the latter predicted at that time that if
whiskey didn't kill Lincoln's abilities he would be heard from in important manner in
future years. This early impression made at the court by that great man had much to do
in determining young Parish to read law, which he began in the evening by the home
fireside and at the noon hour while he was still at work in his father's fields. As a boy he
made rapid strides in his school work. At the age of nine years he had mastered the
arithmetic as far as the "double rule of three," and as showing the maturity of his mental
faculties at that early age, it may be stated that when he was ten years old he devolved
a rule for solving problems in compound proportion, the merit of which was at once
recognized. Text books soon appeared which incorporated this rule, and up to the
present time it has continued to be accepted. The early maturity of his reasoning
powers, together with the wonderful memory which he inherited from his mother, made
the study of law easy for him, and he was licensed to practice when in his twentieth year.


In 1847, having purchased from an attorney at Benton, Illinois, a law library, young
Parish entered upon the practice of his profession at that place. It was about this time
that Raleigh was made the county seat of Saline county, and Mr. Parish was asked by
the circuit judge to instruct the newly appointed circuit clerk in his duties. Thus it was
that on April 8, 1848, he found himself in Raleigh, and, there being no other lawyer in
the town, he soon decided to remain there. Several cases were set for trial, and he was
employed in some of them. He was successful in these early cases and he soon had all
he could do in the legal line. Today there is not an attorney in this county that was born
when he began his practice, and there are but few men, if indeed there are any, in
Illinois who have had such a long and honorable career in this profession as has
William H. Parish.

For some years, in company with Robert S. Stinton, Mr. Parish was interested in
operating a store at Raleigh. About the close of the Civil war he removed to a farm in
Saline county, and for a period of eleven years his attention was given chiefly to
agricultural pursuits. Some thirty years ago he came to Harrisburg and entered into a
partnership for the practice of law with James M. Gregg, with whom he was associated
until failing health caused Mr. Gregg to retire, and since that time he has been
associated in practice with his son, John J. Parish.

On December 24, 1850, William H. Parish and Miss Mary Ann Choisser were united in
marriage at the home of the bride, she being then eighteen years of age, and for sixty
years they traveled life's pathway together. She was born on a farm in Saline county,
and died at Harrisburg about two years ago. Her parents were John I. and Nancy
(Sutton) Choisser, the former of French descent and the latter of Welsh. They were
married in 1809 at Shawneetown. For years Mrs. Parish's father was a keelboatman on
the Ohio river. During the war of 1812 he carried the wife of the commander of the port
at New Orleans in a keelboat down the Mississippi river, and was on the river at the time
of the memorable earthquake in that locality, which drove his boat up the river. The
latter part of his life was spent on a farm in Saline county. He died at Raleigh, this
county, about 1865.
Soon after the outbreak of Civil War, Mr. Parish assisted in raising a company in Saline
county, of which he was chosen captain, and as such was sent to Cairo in the brigade
of General John M. McClernand. General Grant, noting the effect of that climate upon
Captain Parish, urged his discharge. After recuperation at home, Captain Parish again
sought the service, and by General Grant was placed in command of the escort to
deliver at Columbus, Kentucky, the exchanged Confederate officers from Jefferson
Barracks; and while doing so he met the Confederate Generals Chatham and Pope.

Captain Parish was reared a Whig, and adhered to that party as long as it existed. After
the birth of the new Republican party he gave to it his co-operation and ardent support,
and has affiliated with it ever since. While he was ever alive to public needs and
questions, it was his preference to confine his attention to his practice rather than to
engage in an active political career. The time came, however, when he was appealed to
to become a candidate for the State Senate, the initial influence coming from
organizations of farmers' clubs with independence from the political parties. An
interesting though not bitter campaign ensued, in which he took an active part, his
speeches at each appearance creating friends and votes. His election followed. Soon
he was accorded recognition in the Senate, and it was not long before he and a handful
of similar members held the balance of power. Among the important positions he filled
was a place on the committee on appropriations and also on the committee on geology
and minerals, being chairman of the last named committee. During his second term, for
he was re-elected to the Senate, his position in the election of United States Senator
put David Davis in the United States Senate and Rutherford B. Hayes in the White
House. Votes were cast for Senator Parish for United States Senator, and it was his
own strength turned to Davis that elected him, and on the famous Electoral Commission
of 1876 it was Senator Davis who cast the deciding vote, thus giving the presidency to
Hayes.

For years Mr. Parish has been regarded as the best consulting lawyer in Southern
Illinois. Close reading and clear reasoning, together with a retentive mind, have
peculiarly fitted him for legal work, and now in ripe age, with faculties unimpaired, his
counsel is still sought and his judgment held in high esteem. It can well be said:


William H. Parish