Adjutant General Allen Curtis Fuller (1822 - 6 December 1901) was the adjutant general of Illinois from November 11, 1861 to January 1, 1865, during the American Civil War.
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Allen C. Fuller was born in Connecticut in 1822. He studied in Towanda, Pennsylvania and under James Rood Doolittle in Warsaw, New York.[1] He became a lawyer and lived in Belvidere, Illinois from 1846[2] until his death in 1901.[3] From before the war until July 1862, he was a judge of the Illinois Circuit Courts.[2] After the war, he was elected as the representative of Boone County in the Illinois House of Representatives. He became Speaker of the House, and afterwards served two terms in the Illinois Senate from 1867 until 1872.[3][4]
In 1890, he built a Queen Anne style summer house near Lake Superior in Bayfield, Wisconsin, in search of relief for his asthma or hay fever. The house is now known as the "Old Rittenhouse Inn".[5][6]
Fuller was eponymised in Camp Fuller.[7]