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248 wisconsin historical collections vol xlh his instructions by returning an elaborate broadside di viding the population into numerous groups according to their ages he also re-grouped those of his people who were deaf and dumb or blind and included tables of aliens and slaves and coloured wisconsin territory was at the time of its creation of much larger dimensions than the present state it embraced all of the present iowa and minnesota and the country still farther westward to about the site of bismarck n d see article " the boundaries of wisconsin " in vol xi of these collections from which the following map is reproduced the census ordered by governor dodge however covered only those counties in iowa and the present wis consin in which there was considerable settlement it being understood that the greater part of the trans-mis sissippi country was but temporarily attached to wisconsin for administrative purposes the wisconsin counties in what is now iowa were des moines and dubuque both of which were well populated des moines 6,257 dubuque 4,274 but these do not now concern us it will also be seen by the following map that much of the territory east of the river was still owing to the confused state of the public surveys in
Object Description
| Language | English |
| Pagination | xi, 515 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. |
| Page | Wisconsin Historical Collections, Volume XIII (1895) |
| Publisher | State Historical Society of Wisconsin |
| Format-Digital | XML |
| Source Creation Date | 1895 |
| Identifier-Digital | whcvXIII0000 |
| Description | Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, vol. 13, includes the following articles: Events at Prairie du Chien previous to American occupation, by Alfred Edward Bulger; The Bulger papers; Last days of the British at Prairie du Chien, by Alfred Edward Bulger; Papers of James Duane Doty; The territorial census for 1836; Notes on early lead mines in the Fever (or Galena) River region; Significance of the lead and shot trade in early Wisconsin, by Orin Grant Libby; Chronicle of the Helena shot-tower, by Orin Grant Libby; The Belgians of northeast Wisconsin, by Xavier Martin; The story of Chequamegon Bay; Historic sites on Chequamegon Bay, by Chrysostom Verwyst; Arrival of American troops at Green Bay in 1816; Narrative of Spoon Decorah; Narrative of Walking Cloud; and Population of Brown County, June 1830. |
| Article Title | Wisconsin Historical Collections, Volume XIII (1895) |
| Volume | Vol. 13 |
| Series | Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin ; v. 13 |
| Rights | © Copyright 2006 by the Wisconsin Historical Society (Madison, Wisconsin) |
| Publisher-Electronic | Wisconsin Historical Society |
| Publication Date-Electronic | 2006 |
Description
| Language | English |
| Page | 248 |
| Publisher | State Historical Society of Wisconsin |
| Format-Digital | JP2 |
| Source Creation Date | 1895 |
| Identifier-Digital | whcvXIII0270 |
| Author | Thwaites, Reuben Gold, 1853-1913 |
| Page Type | Article |
| Volume | Vol. 13 |
| Series | Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin ; v. 13 |
| Rights | © Copyright 2006 by the Wisconsin Historical Society (Madison, Wisconsin) |
| Publisher-Electronic | Wisconsin Historical Society |
| Publication Date-Electronic | 2006 |
| Full Text | 248 wisconsin historical collections vol xlh his instructions by returning an elaborate broadside di viding the population into numerous groups according to their ages he also re-grouped those of his people who were deaf and dumb or blind and included tables of aliens and slaves and coloured wisconsin territory was at the time of its creation of much larger dimensions than the present state it embraced all of the present iowa and minnesota and the country still farther westward to about the site of bismarck n d see article " the boundaries of wisconsin " in vol xi of these collections from which the following map is reproduced the census ordered by governor dodge however covered only those counties in iowa and the present wis consin in which there was considerable settlement it being understood that the greater part of the trans-mis sissippi country was but temporarily attached to wisconsin for administrative purposes the wisconsin counties in what is now iowa were des moines and dubuque both of which were well populated des moines 6,257 dubuque 4,274 but these do not now concern us it will also be seen by the following map that much of the territory east of the river was still owing to the confused state of the public surveys in |
