Indiana. General Assembly. House of Representatives--Periodicals; Indiana--Politics and government--Periodicals; Legislative journals--Indiana--Periodicals
Daily accounts of the Indiana House of Representatives session; discussion and voting for the 1818 session
Indiana. General Assembly. House of Representatives-- Periodicals; Indiana-- Politics and government-- Periodicals; Legislative jorunals--Indiana-- Periodicals
Indiana. General Assembly. House of Representatives-- Periodicals; Indiana-- Politics and government-- Periodicals; Legislative jorunals--Indiana-- Periodicals
Indiana. General Assembly. House of Representatives-- Periodicals; Indiana-- Politics and government-- Periodicals; Legislative jorunals--Indiana-- Periodicals
Indiana. General Assembly. House of Representatives-- Periodicals; Indiana-- Politics and government-- Periodicals; Legislative jorunals--Indiana-- Periodicals
Indiana. General Assembly. House of Representatives--Periodicals; Indiana--Politics and government-- Periodicals; Legislative journals--Indiana--Periodicals
Indiana. General Assembly. House of Representatives-- Periodicals; Indiana-- Politics and government-- Periodicals; Legislative jorunals--Indiana-- Periodicals
Indiana. General Assembly. House of Representatives--Periodicals; Indiana--Politicals and government--Periodicals; Legislative journals--Indiana--Periodicals
First Communion photograph taken 20 May 1945 of children and a priest taken on the steps of the old St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church located on the northwest corner of Catholic and Fourth Streets.
Snapshot of the interior of the old St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church on the northwest corner of Catholic and Fourth Streets. The alter is in a central niche, flanked on either side by statuary of Jesus and the Virgin Mary holding baby Jesus. A...
Monroe County (Ind.) -- History; Bloomington (Ind.) -- History; Wylie, Jane Melheme (Jen) (1836 - 1865); Wylie Family -- Correspondence; Women -- Indiana -- Monroe County
Jane asks for assistance with finding a job in Bloomington, expresses home sickness, difficulty getting mail from relatives in the Southern states, requests that the letter be destroyed so that no one else might read it.