78 (page [page 249]). [TN: Note 78 missing from this edition.]

79 (page [page 251]).—The site of Beloit, Wis. This was a favorite camp of the Turtle band of Winnebagoes.

80 (page [page 252]).—Reference is here made to the fact that for several weeks, in 1832, Black Hawk’s party of Sac refugees dwelt upon the shores of Lake Koshkonong. Some interesting prehistoric earthworks surround the lake, showing that its banks were populated with aborigines from the earliest times.

81 (page [page 256]).—See [Note 53].

82 (page [page 259]).—See [Note 24].

83 (page [page 260]).—See Andrew J. Turner’s “History of Fort Winnebago,” in Wisconsin Historical Collections, Vol. xiv; it contains illustrations of the fort, the Indian Agency, etc., and portraits of several of the principal military officers.

84 (page [page 266]).—Reverend Samuel Carlo Mazzuchelli was born in Milan, Italy, November 4, 1807, of an old and wealthy family. Becoming a Dominican friar, he emigrated to Cincinnati in 1828, and two years later was stationed at Mackinac. Being appointed commissary-general of his order in the country west of Lake Michigan, he devoted ten years to constant travel through what are now Wisconsin and Iowa, establishing churches and schools. In 1843 he revisited Italy to raise funds for an academy at Sinsinawa Mound, Wis.; seven years later this developed into the provincial house of the Sisters of St. Dominic. The rest of his life was spent as teacher here, and as parish priest for the large neighborhood. He died in 1864, as the result of responding to distant sick-calls. Mazzuchelli was a man of broad, generous temperament, and in every way a worthy pioneer of the cross. In 1844 he published at Milan, a now rare volume devoted to his experiences in the American wilderness.

85 (page [page 269]).—See [Note 44].

86 (page [page 272]).—See [Note 41].