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1833 and Missouri
However, in 1833, Missouri settlers brutally expelled the Latter Day Saints from Jackson County, and the church was unable via a paramilitary expedition to recover the land.
By Karl Bodmer, aquatint made at Saint Louis, Missouri in March or April 1833 when Massika pleaded for the release of Chief Blackhawk following the Black Hawk War.
After the Lewis and Clark Expedition of the early 19th century, white settlers came to the area, many from Kentucky, Tennessee and the Carolinas ; the earliest pioneers appeared to have settled as early as 1818, and the town of Waynesville was designated the county seat by the Missouri Legislature in 1833.
Vigilantes in the public and private sector used force to drive individual Saints from Jackson to nearby counties within Missouri ; eventually, Latter Day Saints were given until the end of November 6, 1833 to leave the county en masse.
The county was organized on January 2, 1833 from part of Ray County, Missouri and named for Charles Carroll of Carrollton, a signer of the Declaration of Independence.
The city of Benton, first settled in 1833 and named after Missouri Senator Thomas Hart Benton, was formally chartered in 1836 when Arkansas became a state.
* John S. Marmaduke, ( 1833 – 1887 ), born in Arrow Rock, was a general in the Confederate Army and later the Governor of Missouri.
* John H. Stover, ( 1833 – 1889 ), born in Aaronsburg, United States Congressman from Missouri.
Missouri became a state on August 10, 1821, and in 1833 the legislature designated most of the southern portion a single county.
Lafayette Park, one of the first public parks created in 1833 by the City of Saint Louis, Missouri, was named in honor of the Marquis de Lafayette in 1854.
) and he was forced to reverse his position, which he claimed was " misunderstood ", but this reversal did not end the controversy, and the Mormons were violently expelled from Jackson County, Missouri five months later in December 1833.
Fort Pierre on the Missouri and the adjacent prairies, c. 1833.
The Evening and the Morning Star was an early Latter Day Saint newspaper published monthly in Independence, Missouri, from June 1832 to July 1833, and then in Kirtland, Ohio, from December 1833 to September 1834.
Printing continued until the office was destroyed by a mob on 20 July 1833, in response to an article published in The Evening and the Morning Star about U. S. and Missouri laws regarding slavery, African-Americans, and mixed-raced Americans.
After the Latter Day Saints were expelled from Missouri in late 1833, printing of The Evening and the Morning Star temporarily resumed in Kirtland, Ohio, in a printing shop owned by Frederick G. Williams.
The Messenger and Advocate was established after a mob had destroyed the printing press of the The Evening and the Morning Star in Independence, Missouri on 20 July 1833, causing the Star to relocate to Kirtland.
Missouri River side-wheel Yellowstone ( steamboat ) | Steamboat Yellowstone struggling over sand bar 1833 -- print based on a painting by Karl BodmerModel of Upper Missouri River stern-wheel steamboat Bertrand ( steamboat ) | Bertrand, which sank on April 1, 1865, after hitting a snag in DeSoto Bend while heading upriver for Fort Benton, Montana Territory
On May 14, 1833, Price married Martha Head from Randolph County, Missouri.
The conflict was preceded by the eviction of the Mormons from Jackson County, Missouri, in 1833.
In October 1833, anti-Mormon mobs drove the Mormons from Jackson County, Missouri.
The Mormons had been given a county of their own to settle in after their expulsion from Jackson County in 1833, but the increasing influx of new Mormon converts moving to northwestern Missouri led them to begin settling in adjacent counties.
Between 1831 and 1833, he served proselyting missions to Missouri and Ohio.

1833 and settlers
* 1833 – The Convention of 1833, a political gathering of settlers in Mexican Texas to help draft a series of petitions to the Mexican government, begins in San Felipe de Austin
The Latter Day Saints were violently driven from the area in late 1833, after protracted conflict with local settlers, but returned in the late 1860s to a much better welcome.
In April 1833, settlers called a convention to discuss proposed changes in immigration, judicial, and other political policies.
Some settlers started drifting into Iowa in 1833.
Attending the Convention of 1833 as representative for Nacogdoches, Houston emerged as a supporter of William Harris Wharton and his brother, who promoted independence from Mexico, the more radical position of the American settlers and Tejanos in Texas.
In 1833 the missions in California were secularized, and their land given in land grants to settlers.
Under pressure from Siouan tribes and European-American settlers, the Pawnee ceded territory to the United States government in treaties in 1818, 1825, 1833, 1848, 1857, and 1892.
The area's earliest white settlers arrived in 1833 and the village was platted in 1851 by John Bower, who is considered the village founder.
The town and surrounding countryside was populated heavily by settlers from eastern Stokes and neighboring western Rockingham counties in North Carolina, who arrived largely between 1815 and 1833.
The first settlers were John Bair in 1831, who settled on Bair Lake, and Daniel Driskel in 1833, who settled on Driskels Lake which was named for Daniel Driskel.
* First settled in 1833 by settlers from New York led by Samuel Dexter, Jr.
Although Elisha Newman made the first land entry in the township of Portland ( June, 1833 ), he did not become a settler until three years later, by which time a few settlers had located in the town.
The first white settlers here arrived in 1833.
It was also ideal for the later white settlers, who founded the city in 1833.
In May 1833, he also left the town, his settlers having abandoned him.
Township privilege was granted in 1833, and soon settlers came from Finland and the northern part of Sweden, which suffered from famine.
While there was never any significant Canadian trade in African slaves, native nations frequently enslaved their rivals and a very modest number ( sometimes none in a number of years ) were purchased by colonial administrators ( rarely by settlers ) until 1833, when the slave trade was abolished across the British Empire.
In January 1833 two Noongars, Gyallipert and Manyat, visited Perth from King George Sound, where relations between settlers and natives were amicable.
The Cathedral parish traces its origin to 1833, when the first group of settlers gathered for Mass.
In 1833, with growing lawlessness amongst traders and settlers, the British government appointed James Busby as British Resident to protect British trading interests.
However, disputes between Mormon and Missourian settlers in Independence led to the expulsion of the Mormons from Jackson County in 1833.

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