History of Hancock County, Illinois, together with an outline history of the State, and a digest of State laws . 29,931 Prairie. 771 Rock Creek 861 Rocky Run 573 Sonora 881 St. Albans 548 St. Marys 578,974 Walker 565,970- Warsaw 637,653 Wilcox 637,643 Wythe 635 CHAPTER XXVI. THE CRIMINAL REC-ORD 977 CHAPTER RAILWAYS 98B Industrial 167 The Crib 176 Court- House 190 Mormon Temple 261 Old Jail 279 Kinderhook Plates 360 Carthage College 437 Mississippi Bridge 983 .Quinby, Jesse B 743 Randolph, James M 723 Khca, James 818 Sharp, Thomas C 387 Smith, Joseph 343 Stark, James


History of Hancock County, Illinois, together with an outline history of the State, and a digest of State laws . 29,931 Prairie. 771 Rock Creek 861 Rocky Run 573 Sonora 881 St. Albans 548 St. Marys 578,974 Walker 565,970- Warsaw 637,653 Wilcox 637,643 Wythe 635 CHAPTER XXVI. THE CRIMINAL REC-ORD 977 CHAPTER RAILWAYS 98B Industrial 167 The Crib 176 Court- House 190 Mormon Temple 261 Old Jail 279 Kinderhook Plates 360 Carthage College 437 Mississippi Bridge 983 .Quinby, Jesse B 743 Randolph, James M 723 Khca, James 818 Sharp, Thomas C 387 Smith, Joseph 343 Stark, James 225 St. Clair, Gen. 101 Tressler, D. L 441 Turuey, S. T 763 Walker, George 351 Walker, H. IVL 783 Walton, Fred 793 Walton, Wesley 585 Weakley, Peter E 495 Wilcox, L. L 803 Williams, 773 S. Infants 1036 Adoption of Children 1027 Church Organization 1027 (iame 1028 Millers 1030 Paupers 1030 Public and Private Con-veyances 1032 Wagers and Stakeholders. 1083 Sunday ... 1034 Definition of Commercial Terms 1034 Legal Weights and Meas-ures 1034 Bees 1037 Dogs 1037 Cruelty to Animals 1038 Names 1038. HISTORY OF ILLINOIS. FORMER OCCUPANTS. MOUND-BUILDERS. The numerous and well-authenticated accounts of antiquitiesfound in various parts of our country, clearly demonstrate that apeople civilized, and even highly cultivated, occupied the broadsurface of our continent before its possession by the present In-dians; but the date of their rule of the Western World is so re-mote that all traces of their history, their progress and decay, lieburied in deepest obscurity. Nature, at the time the first Euro-peans came, had asserted her original dominion over the earth; theforests were all in their full luxuriance, the growth of many cen-turies; and naught existed to point out who and what they w^erewho formerly lived, and loved, and labored, and died, on the conti-nent of America. This pre-historic race is known as the Mound-Builders, from the numerous large mounds of earth-works le


Size: 1136px × 2200px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublisherchicagoccchapman