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1892 Victorian Trade Card - Arbuckle Brothers Coffee Company - INDIANA (#15)
SERIES: Pictorial History of the United States and Territories
SCENES: La Salle the First Explorer, 1669-70; Soldiers and Sailors' Monument at Indianapolis; Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811.
SIZE: 5" x 3"
DATE: 1892
LITHOGRAPHER: Donaldson Brothers, N.Y.
CONDITION: Good to very good, I'd say. This card is only lightly soiled, with somewhat worn edges and corners. There are small diagonal creases across each of the corners, and a mild thumb bend and crease at the right center. The back has a small scuff/scrape in the lower right. (Please see scans.)
MULTIPLE ITEM SHIPPING DISCOUNT: I will ship up to 4 cards for the single base shipping charge shown. For purchases of more than 4 cards, the shipping charge will increase by just a small increment for every 4 additional cards.
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REVERSE TEXT: INDIANA.
INDIANA'S first European visitor was La Salle, who in 1669-70 coasted along the Ohio River and opened a trade with the natives. Afterwards he crossed the portage (near South Bend) from the St. Joseph's to the Kankakee. Post Ouiatenon, founded near the site of Lafayette in 1720, was the first military establishment here, followed seven years later by the Post de Ouibache, which Lieut. de Vincennes established on the site of the present Vincennes.
For two-thirds of a century the French made one of their favorite routes from Lake Erie to the Mississippi River across Indiana, ascending the Maumee River, with a long portage near Lafayette, and then descending the Wabash and Ohio.
Louis XV.'s decree established slavery in the Mississippi and Ohio valleys, but the American ordinance, of 1787, set the Northwestern Territory apart for freedom. A strong party in Southern Indiana favored the perpetuation of slavery there, and kept it in actual operation until after the year 1840. In 1811 the eloquence of Tecumseh aroused the Shawnees to hostility against the American Government. General Harrison advanced against them and he was attacked in camp by the Indians before sunrise, but finally repulsed the enemy and inflicted heavy losses upon them, burning their towns and laying waste the country.
During the war of 1812 Indiana suffered severely, and Fort Wayne and other strongholds were assaulted or besieged by the enemy.
SCENES: La Salle the First Explorer, 1669-70; Soldiers and Sailors' Monument at Indianapolis; Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811.
SIZE: 5" x 3"
DATE: 1892
LITHOGRAPHER: Donaldson Brothers, N.Y.
CONDITION: Good to very good, I'd say. This card is only lightly soiled, with somewhat worn edges and corners. There are small diagonal creases across each of the corners, and a mild thumb bend and crease at the right center. The back has a small scuff/scrape in the lower right. (Please see scans.)
MULTIPLE ITEM SHIPPING DISCOUNT: I will ship up to 4 cards for the single base shipping charge shown. For purchases of more than 4 cards, the shipping charge will increase by just a small increment for every 4 additional cards.
--------------------------------------------------------------
REVERSE TEXT: INDIANA.
INDIANA'S first European visitor was La Salle, who in 1669-70 coasted along the Ohio River and opened a trade with the natives. Afterwards he crossed the portage (near South Bend) from the St. Joseph's to the Kankakee. Post Ouiatenon, founded near the site of Lafayette in 1720, was the first military establishment here, followed seven years later by the Post de Ouibache, which Lieut. de Vincennes established on the site of the present Vincennes.
For two-thirds of a century the French made one of their favorite routes from Lake Erie to the Mississippi River across Indiana, ascending the Maumee River, with a long portage near Lafayette, and then descending the Wabash and Ohio.
Louis XV.'s decree established slavery in the Mississippi and Ohio valleys, but the American ordinance, of 1787, set the Northwestern Territory apart for freedom. A strong party in Southern Indiana favored the perpetuation of slavery there, and kept it in actual operation until after the year 1840. In 1811 the eloquence of Tecumseh aroused the Shawnees to hostility against the American Government. General Harrison advanced against them and he was attacked in camp by the Indians before sunrise, but finally repulsed the enemy and inflicted heavy losses upon them, burning their towns and laying waste the country.
During the war of 1812 Indiana suffered severely, and Fort Wayne and other strongholds were assaulted or besieged by the enemy.