[78] For New Albany, see Hulme's Journal, in our volume x, p. 44, note 15.—Ed.
[79] Brandenburg is the seat of Meade County, Kentucky, forty miles below Louisville. It was incorporated in 1825, and named after Colonel Solomon Brandenburg, the proprietor.
Leavenworth, named for Messrs. S. M. and J. Leavenworth, is the seat of justice in Crawford County, Indiana. It was located in 1818.
Rome, Perry County, Indiana, was laid out (May, 1818) by one Cummings, and named Washington; in the fall of the same year the name was changed to Franklin; when it was made the county seat in 1819, it was given its present name. See History of Warrick, Spencer, and Perry Counties, Indiana (Chicago, 1885).
Stevensport was incorporated in 1825. Cloverport, originally Jossville, was established in 1828.—Ed.
[80] For Rockport, see Woods's English Prairie, in our volume x, p. 251, note 58.
Owensboro (incorrectly written Owenburg) is the seat of justice for Daviess County, Kentucky. Originally called Rossborough, the name was later changed to that now used, being given in honor of Colonel Abraham Owen, killed in the battle of Tippecanoe. The town was incorporated February 3, 1817.—Ed.
[81] An account of the founding of Evansville is given in Hulme's Journal, in our volume x, p. 45, note 16.
For Henderson, see Cuming's Tour, in our volume iv, p. 267, note 175.—Ed.
[82] For Mount Vernon, see Flint's Letters, in our volume ix, p. 306, note 154. A short account of New Harmony is given in Hulme's Journal, in our volume x, p. 50, note 22.—Ed.