About
This collection comprises citizen petitions written to the legislatures of the Wisconsin Territory and later the State of Wisconsin, from 1836 to 1891. At the time, petitions were the only direct means for citizens to communicate with the government.
From requesting dams, roads, and money to build schoolhouses, to recording views on slavery, suffrage, and statehood, these petitions reveal what settlers wished to achieve for their communities, and the ways in which they hoped to connect Wisconsin to the expanding commerce and intellectual life of the United States. These petitions are mostly handwritten in blue and iron gall ink; most petitions comprise a title page, the petition itself, and signature pages.
For more information about this collection, visit its Online Finding Aid and View the Online Collection.
The work of flattening, scanning, and describing these petitions was funded by a grant from the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) of the National Archives.
Works
All works are fully transcribed.
Remonstrance against seeking to confirm title on lands that remonstrants have settled on and improved
Remonstrance against Senate Bill No. 8 relating to county commissioners and county judges
Remonstrance against sending an appropriation to the State Agricultural Society
Remonstrance against setting off a portion of Portage County and adding it to Sauk County
Remonstrance against setting off a portion of the town of Salem to form a new town
Remonstrance against setting off certain portions of the town of Beloit into a new township
Remonstrance against setting off certain sections of Iowa County for a new counties
Remonstrance against settling with the Milwaukee and Rock River Canal Company