


| Visitors are free to
print a hardcopy or store on any computer to use these pages for
personal use and research. You MAY NOT copy/paste or
otherwise post to any other website without permission. You
may freely link to this page, but please link to the homepage and not
to one particular county page. An e-mail informing of such a
link would be very much appreciated so we can do the same for you. Do be aware that typos, and other errors may exist, and that they probably occurred during the transcription process. If you find any errors please report them and let me know. Please be sure to include the URL of the page with the error and the page number. If these pages are being used as source material please remember to give credit to Henry Howe and the publisher C. J. Krehbiel & Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, Copyright 1888 by Henry Howe. The edition used in these pages is Volume I: 1900 – Volume II: 1904. Disclaimer
If you are unable to view images on these pages it is most likely because of browser incapability. This book was written in 1888 any may contain language to particular ethnic groups that some may find offensive today. It is essential that history not be “judged” using a modern day point-of-view. The views of the past must be taken in context of how people generally thought “back in the day.” Project Goal
The
goal of this
project is to keep things as simple as possible so that pages load
quickly, but having images on a page will slow load times down
especially if you are using a dial-up connection.
All effort was made to keep as true to the original publication as possible and still produce an easy to read, easy to load Internet transcription. Over time the spelling of certain words and punctuation has changed, and we have remained faithful to the original document. Our transcriptions were composed using Time New Roman 12 pt font. Those text areas that are in smaller print (Times New Roman 10 pt font) were originally published as a two column text which Howe often used as a way to differentiate the words of others from his own.
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