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TAINTER, Andrew, lumberman, 267, 270.
Tallmadge, N. P., governor, 199, 390-

400; Wisconsin home, 331; message,
408; opposes first constitution, 411.
Tama (Iowa), Indians at, 491-92.
Taney, Roger, chief justice, 432.
Tanner, Edward, searches for brother,
447.

Tanner, John, Indian captive, 447-48.
Tatnall, Capt. Josiah, in Confederate
service, 249.

Taverns, on military road, 190; in terri-
torial days, 200; for lumbermen,
436-37.

Taycheedah, early history, 328, 428-33;

resident, 399; view of, 428.
Taylor, Thomas, accompanies Peters,
343-44; returns East, 347; letter
to, 362.

Taylor, Col. Zachary, at Fort Crawford,
446.

Tecumseh (Mich.) Democrat, founded,
468.

Telemarken (Norway), folklorist in,

182.

Telesoga, cited, 182.

Temperance reform, in Wisconsin, 206-
207.

Tennessee, in the Civil War, 80, 473.
Texas, constitutional provision, 228; ad-

mission of, 409; Mormons in, 485.
Thanksgiving, proclaimed, 425.
The Medical Pickwick, citation from,
306.

Third United States Infantry, crosses
Wisconsin, 186.

Third Vermont Infantry, in the Civil
War, 60.

Third Wisconsin Infantry, in Army of
Tennessee, 80.

Thirty-first New York Infantry in Vir-
ginia, 69.

Thirty-seventh Massachusetts Infantry,
suppresses draft riots, 76.
Thomas, Gen. George H., in the Civil
War, 80, 426.

Thomas, Marcia A., Memorials of
Marshfield, 301.

Thompson, John, killed in Black Hawk
War, 366.

Three hundred and fifty-second United

States Infantry, in European War,
241-44.

Three hundred and tenth Engineers, in
European War, 212.

Three Oaks (Mich.), museum at, 493;
Acorn, 505.

Thunder, Menominee chief, 328.

Thwaites, R. G., "Black Hawk War,"
cited, 40.

Tipperary Free Press, and emigration,
6.

Titus, W. A., "Historic Spots in Wis-
consin," 184-88, 327-31, 428-33;
sketch, 271, 385, 498.
Toledo (Ohio), railroad to, 312.
Tomah, route to, 141.

Tompkins, Raymond S., The Story of
the Rainbow Division, 504.
Topping, Henry, Baptist minister, 435.
Toronto. See York.

Tortvei, Olaf, sends folk song, 182.
Toul (France), in European War, 241-

42.

Townsend,

Thomas J., immigration
agent, 8; report, 8-9.
Tracy, Mrs. Clarissa Tucker, memorial,
123.

Tracy, Solomon, distributor, 295-96.
"Tragedy of the Wisconsin Pinery,"
42-51.

Trails, in northern Wisconsin, 139-52;
Chicago to Green Bay, 190, 237; in
Chippewa Valley, 367-69; to Four
Lakes, 238, 420; marking of, 237-38,
484. See also Roads.
Trappists, from Illinois, 204.
Treaty of Ghent, negotiations, 282-83,
473.

Treaty of Paris, 1783, 282.
Trempealeau County War History Com-
mission, 258.
Troy, stage line to, 199.
Troy Township, settled, 322.
Tuberculosis, examinations for, 209-26.
Tübingen, Der Volksfreund aus Schwa-
ben, cited, 22-23.

Turtle Creek, Indian village on, 370-71;
Indian word for, 370; water power
on, 434.

Turtle Township, settled, 323, 434-35.
Tuthill, John, accompanies Peters, 343-
44, 347, 354; returns, 362.
Tweedy, John H., Congressional dele-
gate, 400-401.

Twelfth Wisconsin Infantry, colonel,
266.

Twentieth Indiana Infantry, suppresses
draft riots, 76.

Twenty-eighth Wisconsin Regiment, his-
torical sketch of, 495.
Twenty-fifth Wisconsin Infantry, in
Sioux war, 476; historical sketch
of, 495.

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UNION College, graduate, 432.
Union Grove, celebration at, 256.
United States Bureau of Ethnology, re-
ports, 233.

United States Bureau of Immigration,
17.

United States Geographical Survey,
Bulletin, 365.

United States land offices. See Lands.
United States Rangers, at Four Lakes,
239-40.

Unonius, Gustaf, immigrant, 324.
Updike, Rev. Eugene G., papers, 123-24.
Upham, D. A. J., president of first con-
stitutional convention, 410.
Upham, Dr. Warren, describes rune
stone, 175.

Upper Telemarken, in Norway, 160.
Upsala, University of, 415-19.

Upsi, Bishop Eric, voyages to America,
167.

Utah Territory, governor, 331; Mor-
mons of, 486.

Utilitarian Society, settlement, 208.
Utley, Col. William L., episode with

slaveholder, 252-53; signature, 266.

VAN BUREN, Martin, policy arraigned,
398, 399.

Van den Broek, Father T. J., mission-
ary, 321.

Van Steenwyck, Gysbert, commissioner
of emigration, 5-6.

Varnum, Jacob, United States factor,
284.

Verdun (France), described, 242.
Vermont, journey from, 339.
Vernon Township, settled, 324.
Verwyst, C. A., "Reminiscences," cited,
321; letter, 478-79.

Vicksburg (Miss.), in the Civil War,
72, 86, 266.

Vienna (Austria), advertisements at,

22.

Vienna Township, settled, 324.
Vincennes (Ind.), captured, 472.

Vineyard, James R., in constitutional

convention, 90.

Vinje, Judge Aad J., cited, 500.
Vinland, discovered by Leif Ericson,
154;
name for America, 170-71,
414; on rune stone, 155-56, 171.
Virginia, during the Civil War, 55-74,
77, 251.

Viroqua, route via, 141; resident, 257.
Volksfreund, published, 321.

Voree, founded, 208, 262, 485-86.
Vroman, Charles E., obituary, 258.

WABASHA (Minn.), Indian village at,
369; natives, 383.

Waldo, Capt. C. E., recruiting officer,

59.

Waldseemüller, Martin, Cosmographiae
Introductione, 504.

Wales, Capt. George C., pioneer lum-
berman, 369.

Wales (Wis.), settled, 317.
Walker, George H., Milwaukee pioneer,
192.

Walker, Lieut. Horace, in the Civil War,
57.

Walker, L. P., Confederate secretary of
war, 57.

Walk-in-the-Water, first lakes steam-
boat, 250.

Walker's Point, on Milwaukee harbor,
192.

Walworth County, settled, 193, 314;

wheat raised in, 200; temperance
society, 207; Liberty party, 207-
208; Mormons, 208, 485-86; for-
eigners, 316, 324.

Wamegesako, James, Potawatomi chief,

485.

War of 1812, fur traders in, 282; In-
dians, 428; in New England, 450-
51; on the Great Lakes, 342, 346,
472-73; in Wisconsin, 186, 328, 366,
445.

Warner, —, at Prairie du Chien, 446.
Warren, Edward K., archeologist, 493.
Warren, George, fur trader, 384.
Warren, William Whipple, fur trader,
144; historian, 367.

Warrior, Mississippi steamboat, 40.
Washburn, C. C., candidate for senator,
85.

Washburn County, lakes in, 148.

Washburne, E. B., at Galena, 85; po-
litical career, 86.

Washington, George, favors factory sys-
tem, 279-80; will, 503; relics of,
504.

Washington (D. C.), at opening of Civil

War, 244-46; Indians visit, 372,
485; during European War, 481.
Washington County, foreigners in, 315,
319-20.

Washington Township, settled, 322.
Washingtonians, in Wisconsin, 207.
Waterman, Daniel, militia officer, 474.
Watertown, stage line to, 199; freight

from, 200; foreigners at, 315.
Watson, Wingfield, Mormon, 262.
Waubesa Lake, Indian mounds on, 494.
Waukesha, settled, 192-93; stage line to,
199; church at, 206; college, 206.
Waukesha American Freeman, pub-
lished, 208.

Waukesha County, settlement in, 208;
foreigners, 316-17, 319, 323-24.
Waukesha County Historical Society,

report, 118; meeting, 257.
Waupaca County, foreigners in, 325.
Wau-pa-men, Menominee chief, 234.
Wau-pe-se-pin, Menominee chief, 234.
Waupun, state prison at, 41, 442.
Wausau, lumber town, 201.

Waushara County, foreigners in, 325.
Wayne, Gen. Anthony, in Indian war,
279.

Weaver, William L., "History of An-
cient Windham," 303.
Webster, S. R., on investigating com-
mittee, 95, 111.
Webster-Ashburton Treaty, and boun-
dary claims, 406.

Week, Mrs. Nelson A., letter to, 241-44.
Wee-kah, Menominee chief, 234.
We-kaw, Winnebago Indian, 187.
Welsh, in Wisconsin, 314, 316-17.
Welsh language, pamphlets published
in, 11, 16, 19.

Wesacota River. See Brulé.
West Gothland, Swedish province, 156.
West Point (N. Y.), betrayal of, 503.
West Point (Wis.), on Mendota Lake,

early history, 238-40.
West Wisconsin Methodist Conference,
annual meeting, 255-56.
Westrop, Mrs. Sarah, of Madison, 84.
Weymouth (Mass.), records, 299-300.
Whalan (Whealan), James H., in the
Fifth Wisconsin, 58.

Wheat, in territorial Wisconsin, 200,
421, 445; at present time, 501.
Wheatland, settled, 193.
Whigs, in Wisconsin Territory, 208,
403-409, 411-12; organized, 398;
nominations, 399-401.

Whipple, Henry B., bishop of Minne-
sota, 264.

Whistler, Col. William, receives Red
Bird's surrender, 34, 231.
White, Philo, editor, 88; letter, 246-48.
White Church (Va.), camp near, 69.
White Crow, Winnebago chief, 370-71.
White Earth (Minn.), reservation at,
263, 367, 372.

White Oak Church (Va.), camp near,
72.

White Oak Springs, settled, 34.
White River, sources, 150; watershed,
152.

Whitestown (N. Y.), 246.

Whitewater Township, settled, 324.
Whitman, Platt, on Belmont Capitol
Commission, 375.

Whitmarsh, Ruth, married, 302.
Whitney, Daniel, builds lead tower, 36.
Whitney, Lee R., president Archeologi-
cal Society, 487.

Whyte, Lieut. Malcolm, in European
War, 212.

Whyte, William F., "Observations of a
Contract Surgeon," 209-26; cited,
319; aid acknowledged, 483; sketch,

271.

Wickham, James, judge, 495.
Wider Field (The), 135-36, 272-73, 385-
94, 503-505.

Wight, Lyman, Mormon elder, 485.
Wight, William W., gift, 490-91.
Wild rice, in northwest Wisconsin, 44;
on the Upper Fox, 185, 350-51; har-
vested, 420; failure of, 421.
Wilderness (Va.), battle of, 73.
Wiley, -, fur trader, 459.

Williams, Eleazar, missionary, 205;
career, 490-91.

Williamsburg (Va.), battle of, 73.
Willimantic (Conn.), records at, 292,
294.

Wilmot Proviso, and territorial politics,
400.

Wilson, Eliza T., daughter of Fifth Wis-
consin, 54.

Wilson, Thomas B., lumberman, 470.
Wilson, Capt. William, lumberman, 44,
49-50, 267, 469-70; daughter, 54.
Winchell, Prof. N. H., endorses the rune

stone, 157; describes rune stone,
174-76.

Windham County (Conn.), records, 292,
294-96; residents, 303.

Windsor Township, settled, 324.
Winn, I. M., surgeon, 476.

Winnebago County, foreigners in, 325.

Winnebago County Archeological and
Historical Society, organized, 488.
Winnebago Indians, habitat, 31, 184,

238, 327-30, 351, 370-71, 428, 454;
vocabulary, 370, 485; games and
dances, 347, 360, 444; hostilities
with, 33-34, 187, 231, 330, 361; in
Black Hawk War, 38-40, 230-31,
238-39; land cession, 35-36, 190, 235,
239, 384; removal, 239-40; revisit
old homes, 420-21; in European
War, 261-62; studies of, 484.
Winnebago Lake, Indian mounds on,

493; crossed, 186, 349; road along
shore, 189, 429; visited, 327; land
grant on, 330; village, 428; steam-
boat, 431; first mass on shore of,
4.88.

Winnebago War, in Wisconsin, 33-34,
187, 231, 330.

Win-ne-o-me-yah, Indian word for Fond
du Lac, 327.

Winneshick, Winnebago chief, 484.
Wiota, foreigners at, 324.
Wisconsin, origin of name, 364, 398;
boundaries, 232, 249, 401-407, 409,
466-67; topographical description,
13-15; archeological remains in,
260-61, 380-81, 487-88, 493-94; pin-
eries of, 42-51; an Indian reserve,
234; French régime in, 30, 184-85,
250, 327; historic sites, 184-88; first
capitol, 374-75; becomes a state,
400-12; pioneer conditions in, 306-13,
420-27; state sovereignty of, 231-32,
405-406; immigration to, 4-29, 190-
94, 214-26; story of, 30-40, 189-208,
314-26, 397-412.

Wisconsin Archeological Society, publi-
cations, 233; pilgrimage, 260-61, 380;
officers, 487; celebration, 487-88;
photographing mounds, 493-94.
Wisconsin Archeologist, 493.
Wisconsin Central Railroad, completed,
18; immigration agent, 22-23.
Wisconsin Conference, of Methodism,
205.

Wisconsin Historical Society, legislative
investigation of, 94-97, 108-11; an-
nual meeting, 255; new superintend-
ent, 481; new members, 113, 255,
376-77, 481-83; pilgrimage, 260-61,
380; bequest to, 494-95. See also
Society and the State.
Wisconsin History Commission, papers
collected, 495.

Wisconsin Marine and Fire Insurance
Company, incorporated, 202-203.

Wisconsin Phalanx, organized, 208.
Wisconsin River, watershed, 141, 189;
mouth, 250; mines near, 30; Indians
on, 39-40, 330, 444; route via, 139,
184-86, 480; crossed, 189, 239-40;
settlements on, 198; lumbering, 201;
shot tower, 36; description of, 352.
See also Fox-Wisconsin Waterway.
Wisconsin State Board of Control, on
mothers' pensions, 501.

Wisconsin State Journal. See Madison
State Journal.
Wisconsin Territory, organized, 37,

194-97; growth, 197-208; delegates,
194, 397-401, 408; population, 195,
198, 201; first capitol, 196; politics
in, 397-401.

Wisconsin University, graduate, 481;

regents, 483; bonus students at, 500.
Wisconsin War History Commission,
report, 125-28.

Wisconsin Woman's Suffrage Associa-
tion, query, 227.

Wise, Gen. Henry A., in Confederate
service, 251.

Wolcott, Gen. E. B., statue for, 381.
Wolf River, mouth, 350.
"Woman 'Y' Worker's Experiences,"

241-44.

Women, suffrage for, 227-30; of pioneer
days, 423-27.

Wood, Howard I., letter, 466.
Wood, John, first settler of Quincy, 461;
Keyes' partner, 464-65.

Wood, Louis A., The Red River Colony,
354.

Wood County, lands in, 15.

Wool, Gen. John E., in the Civil War,

56.

Wooster, Park, information from, 252.
World War. See European War.
Worm, Ole, Danish scholar, 178-79.
Worterbuch der Ostfriesischen, 160.
Worth, Col. William J., in Wisconsin,
431-32.

Wossingen, file presented, 264.

Wright, David, Belmont pioneer, 375.
Wright, Lieut. Gustav de Neveu, killed

in European War, 331.
Wright, Hiram, regent, 483.
Wright County (Minn.), settled, 24.
Wyocena, tradition of battle at, 230-31.
Wyoming, state historian, 483.
Wyoming Township, settled, 317.

YELLOW River, Indians on, 48, 379.
Yellow Thunder, Winnebago village,

350.

York (Can.), Keyes visits, 341-42.
York Township (Green County), settled,

322.

York Township (Racine County), set-
tled, 317.

Yorktown (Va.), in the Civil War, 66-67.

Youmans, Theodora W., letter, 227.

ZACHAU, August, militia officer, 474.
Zonne, Rev. Peter, emigrates to Wiscon-
sin, 321.

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