MINNESOTA AND ITS RESOURCES1853 |
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acres Anthony arrived Assiniboin bands banks beautiful Benton county Blue-Earth bluff boat buffalo building bushels camp canoe carts cents Chippewa church cold commenced Croix crops Dakota distance dragoons early east enterprise extending falls of St farmers farming feet fifty five Fort Snelling forty four Galena Goose river governor half-breeds horses Hudson's Bay Company hundred miles Indians interest island labor Lake Pepin Lake Superior land latitude lodge Louis Mendota mill Minnesota river Mississippi river morning mouth navigation night northwest passed Paul Pembina Point Douglas portion prairie present railroad Ramsey Red river region road route Sauk rapids Sauteux season Selkirk settlement shore side Snelling soil soon sota steamboat Stillwater stream summer territory thirty thousand dollars timber tion to-day town traveller Traverse des Sioux treaty twenty valley voyageurs wild winter Wisconsin wood
Popular passages
Page 244 - So cloudless, clear, and purely beautiful, That God alone was to be seen in heaven.
Page 54 - I hear the tread of pioneers Of nations yet to be ; The first low wash of waves, where soon Shall roll a human sea.
Page 214 - Traverse; thence up the center of said lake to the southern extremity thereof; thence in a direct line to the head of Big Stone Lake ; thence through its center to its outlet ; thence by a due south line to the north line of the State of Iowa...
Page 153 - The proceeds of all lands that have been, or may hereafter be, granted by the United States to the State for the support of a university, shall be and remain a perpetual fund, to be called "The University Fund...
Page 150 - And what are we, That hear the question of that voice sublime? Oh, what are all the notes that ever rung From war's vain trumpet, by thy thundering side ? Yea, what is all the riot man can make In his short life, to thy unceasing roar? And yet, bold babbler, what art thou to Him Who drowned a world, and heaped the waters far Above its loftiest mountains?
Page 154 - The object of the university shall be to provide the inhabitants of this Territory with the means of acquiring a thorough knowledge of the various branches of literature, science, and the arts.
Page 119 - addition" thereto. Rice "bought in" with Irvine; and in the winter of 1848-'49 — just before the passage of the act by Congress organizing the territory — their addition was divided into lots. The mere fact, that a man of the known energy and enterprise of Rice had taken hold of St. Paul, infused new life into the place, and it soon had a name, even beyond the limits of the neighboring regions. This name was sent far and wide over the country when, through the patriotic perseverance and devoted...
Page 215 - Yellow Medicine River on the south side, to extend, on each side, a distance of not less than ten miles from the general course of said river; the boundaries of said tract to be marked out by as straight lines as practicable, whenever deemed expedient by the President, and in such manner as he shall direct...
Page 142 - His imagination produced a tale of fiction called "Striking a Lead," which has already become a part of the light literature of the West. When in the heat of partisan warfare, all the qualities of his mind were combined to defeat certain measures, the columns of his paper were like a terrific storm in mid-summer amid the Alps. One sentence would be like the dazzling arrowy lightning, peeling in a moment the mountain oak and riving...
Page 239 - ... fringes. His dwelling, if he had one, was a wigwam. He lounged on a bear-skin while his squaw boiled his venison and lighted his pipe. In hunting, in dancing, in singing, in taking a scalp, he rivalled the genuine Indian.