Results for A
Wyatt Earp Birthplace
This property
has been placed on the
Na...
Historic Nauvoo
In 1839 the Mormons, or Latter Day Saints, settled at Nauv...
The Prophet's Last Ride
On the morning of June 24, 1844, Joseph Smith and his brot...
The Icarian Community in Nauvoo
A communal society of French Icarians was established at N...
The Gate City of South Florida
In 1842, the U.S. Government began to encourage settlers t...
Exodus to Greatness
Near here, the Mormon exodus to the Rocky Mountains began ...
Eyes Westward
"To your tents O Israel"
On the anniversary of the 2...
Officers' Row Quarters
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in 1852...
Bidamon Stable
Lewis Bidamon, second husband of Emma Smith, built this st...
Nauvoo House
In 1841 church members were commanded to build two “houses...
Results for A
Wyatt Earp Birthplace
This property
has been placed on the
National Register
of Historic Places
By the United States
Department of the Interior
Wyatt Earp
Birthplace
March 19, 1848
Marker is on South 3rd Street south of East 3rd Avenue, on the right when traveling south.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Historic Nauvoo
In 1839 the Mormons, or Latter Day Saints, settled at Nauvoo and made it their chief city. During their residence its population reached 15,000. After long friction with non-Mormons the Mormons were expelled in 1846. Three years later French communists ...
The Prophet's Last Ride
On the morning of June 24, 1844, Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum left their families, homes, and fellow Saints for the last time. Traveling on horseback, they paused on this bluff. Joseph looked admiringly at the unfinished temple and ...
The Icarian Community in Nauvoo
A communal society of French Icarians was established at Nauvoo in 1849. Led by Etienne Cabet, a French political theorist, the Icarians believed that all property must be held communally. The community was incorporated by the Illinois General Assembly in ...
The Gate City of South Florida
In 1842, the U.S. Government began to encourage settlers to relocate to Florida by offering free land. Settlers came from all along the east coast, mostly Georgia, Virginia, and the Carolinas.
In 1870 Henry Sanford acquired 12,548 acres of land ...
Exodus to Greatness
Near here, the Mormon exodus to the Rocky Mountains began on February 4, 1846 in seven years, members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, commonly called the Mormons, had built Nauvoo to a size comparable to Chicago, ...
Eyes Westward
"To your tents O Israel"
On the anniversary of the 200th year celebration of the Prophet Joseph Smith, and the 175th anniversary of the establishment of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, this monument of His prophets Joseph ...
Officers' Row Quarters
Fort Clark was established as a U.S. Army garrison in 1852. The original quarters were crude log huts and houses of palisade construction. In 1857, a new program began to replace badly dilapidated structures with buildings of quarried stone.
Designed and ...
Bidamon Stable
Lewis Bidamon, second husband of Emma Smith, built this structure during the 1860s from the foundation stone of the Nauvoo House. Bidamon owned a carriage “manufactory.” He, and his brothers John and Christian had conducted a number of business transactions ...
Nauvoo House
In 1841 church members were commanded to build two “houses,” a house for the Lord (the Nauvoo Temple) and a house for man to be known as the Nauvoo House. It was to be “a delightful habitation for man, and ...