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Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing) 1 1 Browse Search
Frank Preston Stearns, Cambridge Sketches 1 1 Browse Search
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Harper's Encyclopedia of United States History (ed. Benson Lossing), Kansas, (search)
the name of Kansas Natural History Society......Sept. 1, 1868 Governor Crawford calls for the organization of a cavalry regiment, the 19th Kansas, for Indian service......Oct. 10, 1868 Col. George A. Forsyth engages in an eight days fight with Indians on the north fork of the Republican River......Sept. 17, 1868 State convention of colored people at Topeka ask the legislature to memorialize Congress for negro suffrage......Jan. 20, 1869 Woman suffrage convention at Topeka......Feb. 4, 1869 Eight million acres of the Osage diminished reserve lands opened by Congress to settlement......April 10, 1869 Indian raids on the Republican River......May 21, 1869 Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States ratified by Kansas......Jan. 19, 1870 Legislature adjourns after ratifying the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States......March 3, 1870 First number of Kansas Magazine: issued......Jan. 1, 1872 Liberal Republican Convention a
Frank Preston Stearns, Cambridge Sketches, Leaves from a Roman diary: February, 1869 (Rewritten in 1897) (search)
or no expression. After the service we went into St. Peter's with the ladies, and walked the whole circuit of the church. Our ladies talked meanwhile exactly as they might at an American wateringplace, without apparently observing anything about them. When we came to the statue of St. Peter, P — said, pointing to the big toe: You see there the mischief that can be done by too much kissing. Nearly a third of the toe has been worn away by the oscular applications of the faithful. Feb. 4, 1869. Dr. B. B. Appleton, an American resident of Florence, is here on a flying visit. We have heard from many sources of the kindness of this man to American travellers, especially to young students. In fact, he took - Pinto his house while at Florence, and entertained him in the most generous manner. He has done the same for Mrs. Julia Ward Howe and many others. He lives with an Italian family who were formerly in the service of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, and who were ruined by the re