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The Lincoln Log Cabin State Historic Site is an 86-acre (0.3 km 2) history park located eight miles (13 km) south of Charleston, Illinois, U.S., near the town of Lerna. ...
26-21040 [2] GNIS feature ID. 0624435 [3] Website. www.decaturmi.org. Decatur is a village in Van Buren County, Michigan, United States. The population was 1,819 at the 2010 census. The village is located within Decatur Township.
Dowagiac Creek, Peavine Creek (Dowagiac River), Pokagon Creek, McKinzie Creek. • right. Osborn Creek, Silver Creek. The Dowagiac River is a southwesterly flowing 30.9-mile-long (49.7 km) [3] stream in the Lower Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. It is a tributary to the St. Joseph River which flows, in turn, into eastern Lake Michigan.
Decatur High School (Decatur, Illinois) Spine trauma Jones was participating in a hazing custom on September 6 in which all the freshmen boys were put over the fence on the first day of school. There was a "lively" fight as well. Jones injured his spine severely and died at the end of the month. [14] October 27, 1899 Edward Fairchild Berkeley
Lake of the Woods (French: Lac des Bois; Ojibwe: Pikwedina Sagainan [3], lit. '"inland lake of the sand hills"') is a lake occupying parts of the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Manitoba and the U.S. state of Minnesota. [4] Lake of the Woods is over 70 miles (110 km) long and wide, containing more than 14,552 islands and 65,000 miles (105,000 ...
Jean-Pierre Aulneau de la Touche (21 April 1705 Moutiers-sur-le-Lay, La Vendée, Kingdom of France – 8 June 1736 Massacre Island, Lake of the Woods, New France, now Ontario, Canada) was a Jesuit missionary priest from La Vendée and a pioneering linguist of the Assiniboine and Cree languages. Shortly after his arrival in New France following ...
Newton Woods. / 42.0091°N 85.9712°W / 42.0091; -85.9712. Newton Woods is a 40-acre (16 ha) parcel of oak-hickory forest located in Cass County within the U.S. state of Michigan. The Newton tract was listed, in 1976 by the United States Department of the Interior, as a National Natural Landmark. [2]
About 100 warriors. 21 men. On June 6, 1736, a party of twenty one French explorers led by Jean Baptiste de La Vérendrye were massacred by Lakota and Dakota warriors on an island in Lake of the Woods. The massacre came about as a result of a recent French alliance with the Cree, who, under French protection, had been attacking Lakotas.