Background
Raymond was born in Rome, New York to Benjamin and Hannah Raymond, taking his middle name from his mother"s maiden name.
Raymond was born in Rome, New York to Benjamin and Hannah Raymond, taking his middle name from his mother"s maiden name.
Raymond was educated at Saint Lawrence Academy in Potsdam, New York as well as in Montreal, Canada.
Raymond was twice elected mayor of Chicago. In 1839, he was elected the city"s third mayor, defeating James Curtiss. He ran for reelection the following year, losing to Alexander Loyd.
In 1842, he was elected to a second term as Chicago"s sixth mayor, defeating the incumbent, Francis Cornwall Sherman.
At the time, mayoral terms were one year. During his terms as mayor, Raymond ensured that State Street would be a wide thoroughfare.
During his first year in office, he secured the site of Fort Dearborn for the city of Chicago when it was sold by the federal government. In 1843, after finishing his second term as Mayor, Raymond and Dexter built the first woolen factory in Illinois, in Elgin, Illinois.
Raymond also served as the president of the Fox River Railroad, which connected Elgin to Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.
In the 1850s, he was instrumental in securing the charter for Lake Forest University and building the city of Lake Forest, Illinois. In 1864, approached by J.C. Adams of the Waltham Watch Company, Raymond agreed to put up the money to start a watch company in the Midwest. The men elected to build the company in Elgin, Illinois, which donated 35 acres (140,000 m2) of land to the entrepreneurs.
The building was completed in 1866 and housed the Elgin Watch Company.
The first model the company made was named the B.W. Raymond. Raymond is buried in Graceland Cemetery, Chicago, Illinois.