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Beaver Dam, furnishes soldiers, 299.
Beckwith, Jacob, at Ceresco, 58.
Beef River, settlement on, 201.

Bell, John, in election of 1860, 100, 157,
421.

Belmont Gazette, cited, 280.

Beloit, postmaster at, 109.

Benedict, Crystal Eastman, aids Wisconsin
suffrage cause, 20, 23.

Bennett Law, in campaign of 1890, 157.
"Benny Havens Oh," song, 111.
Benton, Thomas H., senator, 280.
Beouchard, Edward, in Brunet's employ,
34-35.

Berlin, Indian village near, 383, 388; suf-
frage work in, 13; furnishes soldiers,
299.

Bigelow, John, editor, 252.

Big Horn Mountains, Indian fighting in,

242.

Birge, Edward A., University professor,
364.

Black Forest, priest from, 160.

Black Hawk, friend of, 410; captured, 206.
Black Hawk War, Blue Mounds in, 112;
Menominee Indians in, 286.

Black Mesa, in Arizona, 241.
Black River, in Ohio, 397.
Black Rock Desert, trail across, 131.
Blackwell, Henry, at Madison, 14.

Blaine, James G., in election of 1884, 157.
Blake, Lillie Devereux, suffragist, 14.
Blane, William Newnham, tours America,
54.

Blanton, Prof. Smiley, donor, 421.
Bloodgood, Wilkie, Čivil War soldier, 217.
Blount Papers, in Draper Collection, 260.
Blue Mounds, fort site marked, 112.
Boardman, Charles R., University student,
364.

Bonner, Robert, editor, 201.
Booth, Edwin, autograph, 422.
Boscobel, suffrage work in, 12.
Boston, Radisson at, 357.
Bourassa, Judith, married, 205.

Bracken, Charles, Wisconsin pioneer, 280-
281.

Breckenridge, J. C., in election of 1860,

157.

Brigham, Ebenezer, at Blue Mounds, 112;
in Territorial Council, 269–270.
Brothertown Indians, in Wisconsin, 415.
Brown, Amy M., donor, 171.
Brown, John, hanged, 341.

Brown, Mrs. Lephia O., early suffragist, 13.
Brown, Rev. Olympia, Racine suffragist,

13; vice-president of Wisconsin Wo-
man's Suffrage Association, 14; presi-
dent of Wisconsin Woman's Suffrage
Association, 16; portrait of, frontis-
piece; donor, 17.

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Brunet Falls, resident, 38-39.

Brunson, Alfred, at Chippewa Falls, 37.
Bryan, William Jennings, in electoral
campaigns, 157-158.

Bryant, Gen. Edwin E., adjutant general of
Wisconsin, 360-361; favors woman
suffrage, 14.

Buchanan, James, president, 101; makes
West Point appointments, 220.
Buffalo, in Wisconsin, 386; hunted, 127-
129.

Buffalo (N. Y.), lake port, 389, 391, 394,
396; described, 395.

Buffalo Bill. See William F. Cody.
Buffalo Lake, wild rice in, 287.
Buford, John, U. S. general, 240.
Bunker Hill, lakes steamboat, 395.

Bunn, Judge Romanzo, of United States
District Court, 109.

Bunnell, Levi, Winona and Its Environs,
cited, 412.

Burchard, George W., adjutant general,

378.

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Camp Cheatham, in Civil War, 421.
Camp Douglas, militia training ground,
378-379.

Camp Randall, "Old Abe" at, 113; in
Civil War, 210; uniforms at, 363.
Camp Verde, in Arizona, 241.
Canadian Historical Review, cited, 212.
Canandaigua (N. Y.), described, 394.
Cancer, treated by priest, 164–165.
Canright, Eldon J., "Some War-time Let-
ters," 171-200, 301-319.
Captain Jack, Indian leader, 132.
Captina Hills, location, 110.
Carney, F., at Marinette, 418.
Carpenter, Matthew H., conducts lawsuit,
338-339.

Carpet-bag government, in Louisiana, 238.
Carron, Menominee chief, 286.
Cartaret, Sir George, befriends Radisson,
357.

Cartter, David K., in Chicago convention
of 1860, 103.

Carver, Jonathan, cited, 412.

Cary, Alfred, newspaper proprietor, 341.
Cass, Lewis, ridiculed by Lincoln, 48.
Cassoday, John B., decision on school
suffrage, 17.

Catholic History, cited, 159.

Catholics, in Manitowoc County, 163–165.
Catt, Mrs. Carrie Chapman, in Milwaukee,
26.

Cedar Rapids (Iowa), on westward route,

126.

Central German Conference, missionary,
111.

"Ceresco, A Pioneer Communist Settle-
ment," by W. A. Titus, 57-62.
Cervera, Admiral Y. Topete, fleet de-
stroyed, 216.

Chaetar, Winnebago captor of Black Hawk,
206.

Chafin, Eugene W., in election of 1912, 158.
Chain Bridge (Va.), camp at, 360.

Chalons (France), in World War, 312, 317.
Chandonnet, Charles, British officer, 204.
Chapin, Rev. Augusta, in Madison, 11.
Chapman, Chandler P., militia officer,
360; adjutant general, 372-374, 376–

877.

Chappell, William, member of Assembly,

210.

Charles II, king of England, court, 357-
358.

Charlton, Mrs. H. H., editor, 17.

Chartists, song quoted, 51–52.

Chase, Salmon P., in Convention of 1860
103, 294.

Chase, Warren, at Ceresco, 58.
Chateau Thierry (France), in World War,
312, 317.

Chattanooga (Tenn.), in Civil War, 66.
Chaumont (France), in World War, 317.
Chequamegon Bay, first habitation on,
353-354; description of, 355.
Chevalier, Barthélemy, daughter of, 417.
Cheyenne Indians, uprising, 242.
Chicago, Indian treaty at, 411; Wisconsin

immigrants at, 389, 401, 403, 406;
described, 168, 405, 506; Convention
of 1860 at, 99; suffrage parade in, 25;
road to, 336, 404; wolf obtained from,
335.

Chicago and Northwestern Railway Com-
pany, buys Milwaukee, Lake Shore
and Western Railway, 416.
Chicago Historical Society, secretary, 253.
Chicago Magazine, career of, 43.
Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railroad,
officials, 361, 375.

Chickamauga, battle ground, 66.
Childs, Ebenezer, at Ceresco, 58-59;
Indian trader, 112.

Chippewa Falls, Brunet's home, 33; first
sawmill, 37, 39.

Chippewa Indians, murder white traders,
35; cede land, 36; customs of, 40; at
war, 411-412; home of, 416.
Chippewa Lumber and Boom Company,
donors, 39.

Chouteau Company, employs Jean Brunet,

33-34.

Church, Archie, University student, 364.
Cilley, Jonathan, in duel, 280, 282.
Civil War, Roster cited, 156.

Clark, Charles E., captain of Oregon, 216.
Clark, George Rogers, in Draper Manu-
scripts, 258, 260.

Clark, Norman, Racine pioneer, 335–336.
Cleveland, Grover, in electoral campaigns,
157.

Cleveland (Ohio), described, 396-397;
hotel at, 405.

Clough, Col. Edgar E., on governor's staff,
374.

Coast Range, explored, 134.

Cobb, Amasa, career of, 208–211.
Cobb, Jerome C., at Ceresco, 58.
Codding, Ichabod, editor, 323.
Cody, William F. (Buffalo Bill), leader in
Indian campaign, 242; scout, 237.
Coetquidan (France), camp at, 316.
Coffee, William, hanged, 277, 283.
Cogswell, James K., rear admiral, 216.
Collins, James, president of Territorial
Council, 267.

Collins, Dr. W. P., favors woman suffrage,
13.

Collins, Wallace, railway official, 375.
Collyer, Robert, cited, 339.

Colorado River, branch of, 130.
Columbia County, Indian sites in, 382.

Columbia University, King at, 217; cus-

toms, 364, 366; secretary, 371.
Columbus (Ohio), canal via, 397.
Confederates, try to capture “Old Abe,”

113.

Congress, territorial delegates, 342.
Conover, Prof. Allan, in the University,
360-361, 363-364, 367.

Cook, C. W., Chicago landlord, 405.
Cooke, Chauncey H., letters of, 63–98.
Cooper, T., Michigan resident, 400.
Coosa River, fighting on, 71-73.
Cornell. See Brunet Falls.
Cornell vs. Barnes, supreme court case, 339.
Council Bluffs (Iowa), on westward route,
126.

Court Oreilles Lake, famine near, 353-
354; description of, 355–356.
Cousins, Phoebe, suffragist, 12.
Cowles, Maj. Elisha A., letter to, 320–324.
Cox, James M., in election of 1920, 158.
Cramer, William E., editor, 373.

Cramer family, in Milwaukee, 217.
Crawford County, represented by Brunet,
36.

Crazy Horse, Sioux chief, 243.

Cree Indians, visited, 352, 354; fur gather-
ers, 358.

Crenneville, Count de, horseman, 239–240.
Crocker, Hans, fruit grower, 215.

Croghan Papers, in Draper Collection, 260.
Crook, Gen. George, in Indian war, 242,
379.

Cullum, Gen. George W., at West Point,
231.

Cunningham's Island, in Lake Erie, 397.
Curtis, George W., in Republican Conven-
tion of 1860, 293.

Custer, Gen. George A., in Indian cam-
paign, 242.

Cuyahoga River, port of, 397.

DABLON, Father Claude, in Wisconsin,
382-384; cited, 385-387.

Daggett, S. S., at Republican Convention
of 1860, 102-104.

Dakota Indians, in Wisconsin, 411. See
also Sioux.

Dallas (Ga.). See Lost Mountain.
Dalton (Ga.), rebel sortie at, 72.
Darlington, militia at, 376.

Davis, Jefferson, at Butte des Morts, 285;
captured, 300.

Dearbornville (Mich.), visited, 399.
Debs, Eugene V., in electoral campaigns,

158.

Decora, Angel, Indian artist, 203.
Decorah, Winnebago chief, 202–203.
Dekorra village, in "Red Bird," 111.
Democratic party, in early Wisconsin, 336,
342-343.

Democratic Review, cited, 49–50.
Densmore, James, editor, 4-5.

Dering, William S., in Territorial Council,
266.

Dernau (Germany), described, 313.

Des Moines (Iowa), on westward route,
126.

Detroit (Mich.), described, 398–399; judge
in, 244.

Detroit River, voyage on, 398.

Dewey, William Pitt, assistant clerk of
Assembly, 209.

Dexter, Judge

400.

Michigan resident,

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Documents: Letters of Chauncey H.

Cooke, 63-98; Letters of Eldon J.
Canright, 171-200, 301-319; A Letter
from Racine in 1843, 320; Charles
Minton Baker's Journal from Vermont
to Wisconsin, 391-401; Letters of
George B. Smith, 401–407.

Dodge, Henry, negotiates treaty with
Chippewa, 36; at Blue Mounds Fort,
112; censured, 282.

Dodge, Mrs. Ira, cited, 292.
Doerflinger, C. H., cited, 110.

Dollard, Des Ormeaux de, defends Canada,

353.

Doolittle, J. R., letter to, 99; senator, 221.
Dorchester (Mass.), settled, 330.
Dorner, Carl, antisuffragist, 20.
Doty, James D., gives geographical name,
208; governor, 265, 278; congressional
delegate, 282; visits Butte des Morts,
285; contest with legislature, 407.
Douglas County, suffrage vote in, 23.
Douglas, Stephen A., in Republican Con-
vention of 1860, 100; debates with
Lincoln, 294–295.

Dousman, Hercules L., lumberman, 37.
Dow, John T., member of "Impartial
Suffrage Convention," 8.

Dowst, N. P., magazine contributor, 46-

47.

Draper, Lyman Copeland, sketch of, 244-
263; portrait, 244.

Dubuque (Iowa), on westward route, 126.
Ducharme, G., publisher, 212.

Dudley, Mrs. Marion V., suffragist, 13;
Suffrage for Woman: A Plea in Its
Behalf, 12.
Dueling, in early Wisconsin, 279–283.
Duffy,
gold seeker, 125.

Du Gay, Antoine, captured, 412.
Duluth, Daniel Greysolson Sieur, explorer,
412.

Dunham, William, at Ceresco, 59.

Dunkirk (N. Y.), railroad terminus, 397.
Dunmore, G. W., chaplain, 297.
Dunn, Charles, judge, 275.
Durand, H. S., letter, 320–324.

Durrie, D. S., Gazetteer of Wisconsin, cited,
156.

Dutch, in the fur trade, 349; ransom Radis-
son, 350; in New York, 391–392.

Dyer, Charles E., historical address, 331,
338-341.

EAGLE Regiment, named, 113.
Edgefield (Tenn.), in the Civil War, 296.
Education, institutions for, 334-335.
Eifel Mountains, ascended, 314.

Eighth Wisconsin Infantry, captain of, 113.
Eliot, Robert, Milwaukee resident, 220.
Elkhorn River, in Nebraska, 126.

Ellis, Rev. Sumner, favors universal suf-
frage, 8.

Ellsworth, Col. E. E., commands Zouaves,
292-293.

Emerson, Prof. Joseph, writes letter, 139.
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, visits Racine, 340.
Emmons, Norman J., Milwaukee resident,
218-220.

Emory, Gen. William H., commands forces
in Louisiana, 238, 340, 379.
Engelmann, Peter, founds Milwaukee Pub-
lic Museum, 110.

Engineering department of the University,

360.

Equal Suffrage Association, Madison, 13.
See also National American Woman
Suffrage Association.

Erie (Pa.), lake port, 397.

Erie Lake, route via, 390; description of
voyage on, 396-398.

Ethnology, material for, 357.
Evansville, suffrage work in, 12.
Excelsior baseball club, 239.

FAIRCHILD, Gov. Lucius, favors woman
suffrage, 8, 11, 14; in Madison, 367–
368.

Famine, in early Wisconsin, 353–354.
Farnsworth, Bristol, in First Wisconsin

Cavalry, 299.

Farnsworth, George P., mother of, 418.
Farnsworth, William, children of, 418.
Farrington, Rev. S., favors universal suf-
frage, 8.

Farwell, Gov. Leonard J., invitation to
Draper, 248, 252.

Fayette, in Lafayette County, 120.
Featherstonhaugh, George W., map of, 206.
Felicity, British sloop, 204.
Fellows, Kate, suffragist, 13.
Fer-en-Tardenois (France), in World War,

317.

Fever River, lead mining on, 34–35.
Field, Alexander P., secretary of Wisconsin
Territory, 273-275.

Fifth Wisconsin Infantry, colonel of, 210.
Finden, Amy Woodforde. See Wood-

forde-Finden, Amy.

Findley, John, murdered, 35.

Fire apparatus, in pioneer days, 346–347.
First Tennessee Volunteers, in Civil War,
421.

"First (The) Traders in Wisconsin," by
Louise P. Kellogg, 348–359.
First Wisconsin Cavalry, member, 111; in
Civil War, 296–300.

First Wisconsin Infantry, militia regiment,
376, 378; mobilized in Spanish-
American War, 381.

Fish, Carl Russell, on the study of history,
112-113.

Fismes (France), in World War, 317.

Fitzpatrick, Edward A., on trade schools,
114.

Fleming Papers, in Draper Collection, 260.
Florence (S. C.), prison at, 299.
Fond du Lac, suffrage work in, 12.
Foote, Horatio, in First Wisconsin Cavalry,
299.

Foote, Samuel A., senator, 280.
Foreigners, in Wisconsin, 389; suffrage for,
3-4.

Forest Conservation, beginnings of, 104–
108.

Forestry Commission, chairman of, 106-
107.

Forsyth, Thomas, Indian agent, 204.
Fort Atkinson, furnishes soldiers, 299.
Fort Beauharnois, French post, 412.
Fort Hamilton, in New York harbor, 237.
Fort Howard, commander at, 288.
Fort St. Antoine, French post, 412.
Fort St. Pierre, French post, 412.
Fort Snelling (Minn.), military post, 413.
Fort Winnebago, Red Bird surrender at,
112; supplies for, 205.

Fortress Monroe, prisoners at, 250.
Forty-second Division, member of, 171.
Forty-third Wisconsin Infantry, colonel,

211.

Foster, Gen. Robert C., Confederate
officer, 421; letters of, 422.
Fourier, François Charles, economist, 57.
Fourteenth Amendment, defines suffrage, 7.
Fourth Wisconsin Infantry, militia regi-
ment, 379.

Fowler, Lydia, lecturer, 5.

Fox Indians, settlement of, 285; hostilities
with, 388.

Fox River, Indian villages on, 382-383,
388, 410; described, 384-386.
Fox-Wisconsin water-way, control of, 284.
France, customs in, 172-178.

Frank, Michael, magazine contributor,
46-47; founds school, 56.

Frauen Zeitung, edited by Frau Mathilde
Anneke, 11.

Frazer, William C., territorial judge, 331.
Freeport (Ill.), home of Nippert family,
110; railroad terminus, 141.

Free-soil party press, in Wisconsin, 4-5.
Frémont, John C., defeated, 102.
French explorers, in North America, 348-
359, 382-388.

Frontenac (Minn.), fort near, 412.
Frontiersmen, history of, 254–257.
Fuller, Henry T., Strong's partner, 338,
340.

Fuller, W. J. A., Milwaukee editor, 219.
Fur trade, in Wisconsin, 348–359.

GAINESVILLE (Ga.), battle at, 368.
Galena and Chicago Union Railroad, ¡ter-
minus of, 141.

V

Galena Gazette, cited, 280.
Galesville, college at, 362.

Gardner, Emma J., communication, 110.
Garfield, James, in electoral campaign, 157.
Garland of the West and Wisconsin Monthly

Magazine, career of, 43–56.

Gascogne (France), Brunet's birthplace, 39.
Gatling guns, invented, 236.

Gauthier, Francis, befriended by Brunet,
38; sketch of, 39–42.

Gautier, Charles, officer in Indian depart-
ment, 203.

Genesee County (N. Y.), seat, 394.
Genesee River, crossed, 394.

"Genesis (The) and Early History of the
Wisconsin Natural History Society at
Milwaukee," cited, 110.

Georgian Bay, Indians on, 352.
German-American

Alliance,

woman suffrage, 30.

opposes

German Reformed Church, in town of
Newton, 158–159.

Germans, in town of Newton, 151-154;
oppose slavery, 157.

Germany, emigration from, 160; infantry
tactics, 372.

Gibbon, Gen. John, visits Wisconsin, 368.
Giddings, Joshua R., in Republican Con-

vention of 1860, 293.

Gifford, Elihu B., names Mondovi, 201.
Gilmore, Quincy A., at West Point, 219.
Glory of the Morning, Indian story, 111.
"Gold Bluff," mining region, 134.
Gold mining, account of, 133–141.
Good Thunder, Winnebago chief, 203.
Gorrell, Lieut. James, diary, 251.
Gould, George, batsman, 239.
Gould, Uriah, at Ceresco, 59.
Grand Army of the Republic, parade, 377;
encampment, 111.

"Grand Butte des Morts, A Hamlet with a
History," by W. A. Titus, 284–289.
Grand Pré (France), held by Germans,
311; recovered by Allies, 318.
Grand Rapids, suffrage work in, 13.
Grant, Gen. Ulysses S., in electoral cam-

paign, 157; in Wisconsin, 360; funeral
ceremonies, 377-378.

Grant County, representatives in Terri-
torial Council, 265.

Grass Valley (Cal.), in placer region, 138.
Graves, William R., in duel, 280.
Gray, Hamilton H., introduces woman
suffrage bill, 6.

Great Salt Lake, on western route, 130.
Greeley, Horace, in electoral campaign,
157.

Green Bay (city), traders at, 205; land
office at, 58; road to, 148-149; fur-
nishes soldiers, 299.

Green Bay (water), traders on, 352.

Green Bay Republican, cited, 277.
Green Lake County, Indian sites in, 382.
Green River, branch of the Colorado, 130.
Greytown (Nicaragua), port, 141.
Grignon, Amable, trader, 205.

Grignon, Augustin, Indian trader, 286-
287; interviewed, 251.
Grignon, Charles, trader, 205.
Grignon, Paul, trader, 205.
Grignon, Robert, trader, 285-286.
Griswold, Mrs. Hattie Tyng, suffragist, 15.
Groseilliers, Médart Chouart de, marriage,
349, 352; journal, 352; voyages, 351-
357; death, 359.

Grottkau,
labor leader, 374.
Gudden, Mrs. B. C., sends suffrage letters
to German newspapers, 25.

HAGGART, Mary E., English suffragist, 14.
Hamilton, Alexander, son of, 123.

Hamilton, William S., Wisconsin pioneer,
123.

Hamilton's Diggings. See Wiota.
Hancock, Gen. W. S., in Civil War, 211;
at Grant obsequies, 377-378.

Hanks, John, in Republican Convention of
1860, 293.

Hardee-Casey, tactical system, 372.
Harding, Warren G., election of, 158.
Harnden, Gen. Henry, in First Wisconsin
Cavalry, 299.

Harper, Harry, publisher, 380.

Harper Brothers, publishers, 379–380.
Harrison, Benjamin, in electoral campaigns,
157.

Harvey, Louis P., magazine contributor,
46, 49; critic, 50; editor, 276.
Hatch, K. L., on Wisconsin agricultural
progress, 115.

Hawks, Amanda, married, 332.

Hebert, Gen. Paul O., horseman, 239–240.
Heiman, Gen. Adolphus, letters of, 422.
Henderson Papers, in Draper Collection,

260.

Hennepin, Father Louis, in Wisconsin,
384; captured, 412.

Henni, John Martin, archbishop at Mil-
waukee, 161.

Henry, Patrick, in Draper Manuscripts,
256.

Henry, Prof. William A., enters Univer-
sity, 364.

Hiawatha, meter, 111.
Hildebrand, Mrs. Jennie L., member of

"Impartial Suffrage Convention," 8.
Hill of the Dead. See Butte des Morts.
Hirschinger, Michael, Napoleonic veteran,

110.

"Historic Spots in Wisconsin," by W. A.
Titus, 57-62, 160-165, 382–388.
Historical Frawents, 99–109, 290–300.

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