Download Free Grant County Wisconsin 1870 Census Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Grant County Wisconsin 1870 Census and write the review.

Offers a guide to census indexes, including federal, state, county, and town records, available in print and online; arranged by year, geographically, and by topic.
Connect with the past and present through this genealogy of the Good Family. This is the Second Edition by this author, containing much more information, pictures and details than the first edition. This edition begins with John Good and Anna Davis and follows their three sons, documenting each generation that follows. Some of the allied families included in this family tree are: Bauer, Bell, Carr, Cook, Cox, Davis, Dixon, Frazier, Gregg, Griffith, Hadley, Holderman, Huntley, Jackson, Jordan, Marshall, Mitchell, Mumpower, Nash, Osborne, Page, Presnall, Rice, Scarlett, Sherman, Stalker, Stanley, Steward, Straight, Thompson, Vant, Way, Wilcox, and more. Information regarding the history of Valton, Wisconsin, is also included. If you are related to any Goods or are a history buff, this second edition is for you. The whole family will enjoy reading this family's history through the generations.
An account of its settlement, growth, development and resources; an extensive and minute sketch of its cities, towns and villages, their improvements, industries, manufactories, churches, schools and societies; its war record, biographical sketches, portraits of prominent men and early settlers; the whole preceded by a history of Wisconsin, statistics of the state, and an abstract of its laws and constitution and of the constitution of the United States.
Daniel Pound was born in 1792 in Essex County, New Jersey. He married Sarah Webster in Scipio, Cayuga County, New York in 1815 and died in Warren County, Pennsylvania on 20 Dec 1843. His descendants moved to Wisconsin and on to Boulder, Colorado.
Hundreds of African American soldiers and regimental employees represented Wisconsin in the Civil War, and many of them lived in the state either before or after the conflict. And yet, if these individuals are mentioned at all in histories of the state, it is with a sentence or two about their small numbers, or the belief that they all were from slaveholding states and served as substitutes for Wisconsin draftees. Relative to the total number of Badgers who served in the Civil War, African Americans soldiers were few, but they constituted a significant number in at least five regiments of the United States Colored Infantry and several other companies. Their lives before and after the war in rural communities, small towns, and cities form an enlightening story of acceptance and respect for their service but rejection and discrimination based on their race. Make Way for Liberty will bring clarity to the questions of how many African Americans represented Wisconsin during the conflict, who among them lived in the state before and after the war, and their impact on their communities