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Missouri v. Iowa

State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. (7 How.) 660 (1849), is a 9-to-0 ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States which held that the Sullivan Line of 1816 was the accepted boundary between the states of Iowa and Missouri. The ruling resolved a long-standing border dispute between the two states, which had nearly erupted in military clashes during the so-called "Honey War" of 1839.

Missouri v. Iowa
Decided February 13, 1849
Full case nameState of Missouri v. State of Iowa
Citations48 U.S. 660 (more)
7 How. 660; 12 L. Ed. 861
Holding
The true northern boundary of Missouri and southern boundary of Iowa exists along the line laid by Colonel John C. Sullivan in 1816 pursuant to the Osage Treaty of 1815.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Roger B. Taney
Associate Justices
John McLean · James M. Wayne
John Catron · John McKinley
Peter V. Daniel · Samuel Nelson
Levi Woodbury · Robert C. Grier
Case opinion
MajorityCatron, joined by Taney, McLean, Wayne, McKinley, Daniel, Nelson, Woodbury, Grier

Background

In 1808, the Osage Nation ceded all land east of Fort Clark (in what is now west-central Missouri) and north of the Arkansas River to the United States in what became known as the Treaty of Fort Clark.[1] In the wake of the War of 1812, the United States concluded the Treaties of Portage des Sioux, a series of treaties with Native American tribes which (among many other things) further defined the boundaries of the Osage Nation.[2] Colonel John C. Sullivan was appointed to survey the territory and mark the northern boundary line, which became known as the Sullivan Line.[3] However, although the treaty specified a boundary which ran due east, the Sullivan Line tended north slightly and was irregular rather than straight.[3][4]

The admission of the Missouri Territory as a state to the United States was a highly contentious political issue in the United States, as it was caught up in the issue of slavery. Under the Missouri Compromise of 1820, the state was finally admitted into union. The United States Congress wrestled at length over what the new state's boundaries should be, and in the Act of March 6, 1820, Congress established the northern boundary of the state as follows:[5]

Beginning in the middle of the Mississippi River, on the parallel of thirty-six degrees of north latitude; thence west along the said parallel of latitude to the St. Francois River; thence up and following the course of that river, in the middle of the main channel thereof, to the parallel of latitude of thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes; thence west along the same to a point where the said parallel is intersected by a meridian line passing through the middle of the mouth of the Kansas River, where the same empties into the Missouri River; thence, from the point aforesaid, north along the said meridian line, to the intersection of the parallel of latitude which passes through the rapids of the River Des Moines, making said line correspond with the Indian boundary-line; thence east from the point of intersection last aforesaid, along the said parallel of latitude, to the middle of the channel of the main fork of the said River Des Moines; thence down along the middle of the main channel of the said River Des Moines to the mouth of the same, where it empties into the Mississippi River; thence due east to the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi River; thence down and following the course of the Mississippi River, in the middle of the main channel thereof, to the place of beginning.

The citizens of Missouri established the same boundaries in their state constitution of 1820.[5] After another series of intense congressional debates and parliamentary maneuvers, Congress passed legislation approving Missouri's statehood on February 28, 1821, and the President of the United States signed the bill on March 2.[6]

With the state of Missouri carved out of the Missouri Territory, the Missouri Territory was left unorganized territory.[7] In June 1834, the boundaries of the Michigan Territory were expanded to incorporate what remained of the old Missouri Territory.[7][8] Just two years later, Congress split the current state of Michigan from the Michigan Territory in preparation for Michigan's entry into statehood, and renamed the territory the Wisconsin Territory.[7] In June 1838, Congress split the Wisconsin Territory in two: What would become the modern state of Wisconsin remained the Wisconsin Territory, while the remainder of the territory was now called the Iowa Territory.[7][9] The modern state of Iowa was created on December 28, 1846 (with the remaining territory becoming unorganized again until the creation of the Minnesota Territory on March 3, 1849).[7]

Missouri surveyed its northern boundary in 1837. Joseph C. Brown surveyed the boundary according to the description found in the Missouri State Constitution of 1820, which said the northern border of the state began at rapids on the Des Moines River. Brown found a set of small rapids near present-day Keosauqua, Iowa, and ran the border due west from that point.[10] In 1838, the Missouri Legislature passed a law declaring this line its northern boundary, essentially seizing nearly 2,600 square miles (6,700 km2) of land from the Iowa Territory.[10] This territory was agriculturally valuable, and was especially well known for its honey production. In late 1839, the sheriff of Van Buren County, Iowa, arrested the sheriff of Clark County, Missouri, after the latter twice attempted to collect taxes on Iowans living north of the Sullivan Line.[11][12] Three honey trees were chopped down and taken into Missouri, and both states called out the state militia in what became known as the "Honey War" before cooler heads prevailed and both Iowa and Missouri agreed to submit the dispute to the U.S. Supreme Court (which, under the Constitution, had original jurisdiction over the issue).[12][13]

The two states petitioned the Supreme Court for redress in 1847.[14]

Decision

 
Map depicting the border claims made by Iowa and Missouri, and the Sullivan Line.

Associate Justice John Catron delivered the unanimous opinion of the court.

The state of Missouri alleged that the true border should begin at the "rapids of the Des Moines River," rapids actually on the Des Moines River which were about 9.5 miles (15.3 km) north of the Sullivan Line.[15] The state of Iowa claimed that the rapids in question were the "rapids of the Des Moines River," which in fact were actually rapids in the Mississippi River and the starting point of the Sullivan Line.[15]

Justice Catron reviewed at length the facts which created the boundary dispute.[16] Although he admitted that the Sullivan Line was "not a precisely true" line nor specific to the description contained in the Fort Clark and Portage des Sioux treaties, Justice Sullivan proposed investigating to what degree the federal government had respected the Sullivan Line.[17] He noted that the federal government had signed more than 15 treaties with various Indian tribes, all of which recognized the Sullivan Line as the northern border of Missouri.[18] Second, he proposed to discover how federal agencies had respected the Sullivan Line.[19] Catron noted that territorial governments and federal land agencies had all used the Sullivan Line as the Missouri boundary, and that land sales agents in Missouri and the various territories had been equally respectful of the line as the state's border.[20] Third, Catron noted that the United States had respected the Sullivan Line in establishing the borders of the various territories north of Missouri.[21]

Justice Catron next attempted to construct the phrase "rapids of the Des Moines River" in an attempt to locate these rapids, as called for in federal legislation granting Missouri statehood and in the Missouri State Constitution of 1820. Iowa had claimed that the "Des Moines rapids" on the Mississippi River were the rapids referred to. But Justice Catron expressed deep scepticism of this claim:[22]

The name given in the act of Congress, taken in connection with its context, would assuredly apply to a rapid in the Des Moines River, if a notorious one existed, as the Mississippi River is not mentioned in the call, and the Des Moines is; nor was the Mississippi River to be reached by that line. Then, again, the rapid is fourteen miles long, and no part of it is called for as an opposite point to found the line upon.
It therefore follows that the claim of Iowa to come south to the middle of the rapid throws us on a doubtful and forced construction of the instrument under consideration; and such a construction we are not willing to adopt, even if Iowa could at this day set up a claim to its adoption, which, for the reasons above stated, we think she cannot be allowed to do.

Catron next reviewed Missouri's attempt to locate a rapids on the Des Moines River. In reviewing Brown's attempts to locate such a rapids, Justice Catron noted that Brown encountered ripples, falls, and shoals, but no rapids.[23] None of these constituted a "notorious rapid...by public reputation", and thus Missouri's claim could not be supported either.[24]

Catron then turned the Court's attention to the Missouri constitution, which also mentioned the Sullivan Line. The problem, as both Missouri and Iowa had pointed out, was that the Sullivan Line did not extend far enough west to meet with the western border of Missouri. Catron dismissed this issue. With almost no discussion, he concluded: "This Court is, then, driven to that call in the Constitution of Missouri which declares that her western boundary shall correspond with the Indian boundary line, and treating the western line of a hundred miles long as a unit and then running east from its northern terminus, it will supply the deficiency of a call for an object that never existed."[25]

Catron held that the proper border was the 1816 Sullivan Line.[25] In an extensive decree, the Court described the Sullivan Line, ordered a commission (composed of a surveyor from Iowa and a surveyor from Missouri) to survey and mark the line, and empowered Chief Justice Taney to enforce the decree or appoint commissioners (in the event of death, disability, or refusal to act).[26]

Outcomes

The boundary commission surveyed and marked the border, and the Supreme Court issued orders and decrees in State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 51 U.S. 1 (1850), acknowledging their work and establishing the boundary thereby.

However, by 1895, a 20-mile (32 km) portion of the boundary had been disturbed (by natural or man-made causes was unclear), and the boundary markers removed. To resolve the new dispute, Iowa and Missouri jointly filed suit and asked the Supreme Court to once more intervene. In State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 160 U.S. 688 (1896), the Court again established a commission (this time, adding a surveyor from the state of Illinois as well) to resurvey and remark the missing boundary line. The Court received the report of the second boundary commission, reviewed it at length, and accepted it as the true boundary in State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 165 U.S. 118 (1897).

See also

References

  1. ^ Monette, History of the Discovery and Settlement of the Valley of the Mississippi..., 1846, p. 547.
  2. ^ Burns, A History of the Osage People, 1989, p. 295; Rodriguez, The Louisiana Purchase: A Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia, 2002, p. 285.
  3. ^ a b Goodspeed, The Province and the States, 1904, p. 442-443.
  4. ^ Conard, Encyclopedia of the History of Missouri: A Compendium of History and Biography for Ready Reference, 1901, p. 339.
  5. ^ a b Shoemaker, Missouri's Struggle for Statehood, 1804-1821, 1916, p. 66-68.
  6. ^ Shoemaker, Missouri's Struggle for Statehood, 1804-1821, 1916, p. 300-301.
  7. ^ a b c d e "The Chain of Title to Iowa," Annals of Iowa, July 1893, p. 137.
  8. ^ Santer, Michigan, Heart of the Great Lakes, 1977, p. 47.
  9. ^ Gue, History of Iowa From the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century, 1903, p. 185-186.
  10. ^ a b Stock, Amazing Iowa, 2003, p. 24.
  11. ^ McCandless and Parrish, A History of Missouri: 1820 to 1860, 2000, p. 112.
  12. ^ a b Erickson and Stuhr, Iowa, 2007, p. 92.
  13. ^ Stock, Amazing Iowa, 2003, p. 24-25; McCandless and Parrish, A History of Missouri: 1820 to 1860, 2000, p. 114.
  14. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 666.
  15. ^ a b State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 662-663.
  16. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 667-670.
  17. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 670.
  18. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 670-672.
  19. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 672.
  20. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 672-673.
  21. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 673.
  22. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 674.
  23. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 674-676.
  24. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 676.
  25. ^ a b State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 677.
  26. ^ State of Missouri v. State of Iowa, 48 U.S. 660, 677-681.

Bibliography

  • Burns, Louis F. A History of the Osage People. Tuscaloosa, Ala.: University of Alabama Press, 1989.
  • "The Chain of Title to Iowa." Annals of Iowa. July 1893.
  • Conard, Howard Louis. Encyclopedia of the History of Missouri: A Compendium of History and Biography for Ready Reference. New York: Southern History Co., 1901.
  • Erickson, Lori and Stuhr, Tracy. Iowa. Guilford, Conn.: Globe Pequot, 2007.
  • Goodspeed, Weston Arthur. The Province and the States: A History of the Province of Louisiana Under France and Spain, and of the Territories and States of the United States. Madison, Wisc.: Western Historical Association, 1904.
  • Gue, Benjamin F. History of Iowa From the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century. New York: Century History Co., 1903.
  • McCandless, Perry, and Parrish, William Earl. A History of Missouri: 1820 to 1860. Columbia, Mo.: University of Missouri Press, 2000.
  • Monette, John W. History of the Discovery and Settlement of the Valley of the Mississippi, by the three great European powers, Spain, France, and Great Britain: and the Subsequent Occupation, Settlement and Extension of Civil Government by the United States Until the Year 1846. New York: Harper & Bros., 1846.
  • Rodriguez, Junius P. The Louisiana Purchase: A Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO, 2002.
  • Santer, Richard Arthur. Michigan, Heart of the Great Lakes. Dubuque, Ia.: Kendall/Hunt Publishing Co., 1977.
  • Shoemaker, F.C. Missouri's Struggle for Statehood, 1804-1821. Jefferson City, Mo.: The Hugh Stephens Printing Co., 1916.
  • Stock, Janice Beck. Amazing Iowa. Nashville, Tenn.: Rutledge Hill Press, 2003.

External links

  • Text of Missouri v. Iowa, 48 U.S. (7 How.) 660 (1849) is available from: Google Scholar  Justia  Library of Congress  OpenJurist 

missouri, iowa, state, missouri, state, iowa, 1849, ruling, supreme, court, united, states, which, held, that, sullivan, line, 1816, accepted, boundary, between, states, iowa, missouri, ruling, resolved, long, standing, border, dispute, between, states, which,. State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 7 How 660 1849 is a 9 to 0 ruling by the Supreme Court of the United States which held that the Sullivan Line of 1816 was the accepted boundary between the states of Iowa and Missouri The ruling resolved a long standing border dispute between the two states which had nearly erupted in military clashes during the so called Honey War of 1839 Missouri v IowaSupreme Court of the United StatesDecided February 13 1849Full case nameState of Missouri v State of IowaCitations48 U S 660 more 7 How 660 12 L Ed 861HoldingThe true northern boundary of Missouri and southern boundary of Iowa exists along the line laid by Colonel John C Sullivan in 1816 pursuant to the Osage Treaty of 1815 Court membershipChief Justice Roger B Taney Associate Justices John McLean James M WayneJohn Catron John McKinleyPeter V Daniel Samuel NelsonLevi Woodbury Robert C GrierCase opinionMajorityCatron joined by Taney McLean Wayne McKinley Daniel Nelson Woodbury Grier Contents 1 Background 2 Decision 3 Outcomes 4 See also 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksBackground EditIn 1808 the Osage Nation ceded all land east of Fort Clark in what is now west central Missouri and north of the Arkansas River to the United States in what became known as the Treaty of Fort Clark 1 In the wake of the War of 1812 the United States concluded the Treaties of Portage des Sioux a series of treaties with Native American tribes which among many other things further defined the boundaries of the Osage Nation 2 Colonel John C Sullivan was appointed to survey the territory and mark the northern boundary line which became known as the Sullivan Line 3 However although the treaty specified a boundary which ran due east the Sullivan Line tended north slightly and was irregular rather than straight 3 4 The admission of the Missouri Territory as a state to the United States was a highly contentious political issue in the United States as it was caught up in the issue of slavery Under the Missouri Compromise of 1820 the state was finally admitted into union The United States Congress wrestled at length over what the new state s boundaries should be and in the Act of March 6 1820 Congress established the northern boundary of the state as follows 5 Beginning in the middle of the Mississippi River on the parallel of thirty six degrees of north latitude thence west along the said parallel of latitude to the St Francois River thence up and following the course of that river in the middle of the main channel thereof to the parallel of latitude of thirty six degrees and thirty minutes thence west along the same to a point where the said parallel is intersected by a meridian line passing through the middle of the mouth of the Kansas River where the same empties into the Missouri River thence from the point aforesaid north along the said meridian line to the intersection of the parallel of latitude which passes through the rapids of the River Des Moines making said line correspond with the Indian boundary line thence east from the point of intersection last aforesaid along the said parallel of latitude to the middle of the channel of the main fork of the said River Des Moines thence down along the middle of the main channel of the said River Des Moines to the mouth of the same where it empties into the Mississippi River thence due east to the middle of the main channel of the Mississippi River thence down and following the course of the Mississippi River in the middle of the main channel thereof to the place of beginning The citizens of Missouri established the same boundaries in their state constitution of 1820 5 After another series of intense congressional debates and parliamentary maneuvers Congress passed legislation approving Missouri s statehood on February 28 1821 and the President of the United States signed the bill on March 2 6 With the state of Missouri carved out of the Missouri Territory the Missouri Territory was left unorganized territory 7 In June 1834 the boundaries of the Michigan Territory were expanded to incorporate what remained of the old Missouri Territory 7 8 Just two years later Congress split the current state of Michigan from the Michigan Territory in preparation for Michigan s entry into statehood and renamed the territory the Wisconsin Territory 7 In June 1838 Congress split the Wisconsin Territory in two What would become the modern state of Wisconsin remained the Wisconsin Territory while the remainder of the territory was now called the Iowa Territory 7 9 The modern state of Iowa was created on December 28 1846 with the remaining territory becoming unorganized again until the creation of the Minnesota Territory on March 3 1849 7 Missouri surveyed its northern boundary in 1837 Joseph C Brown surveyed the boundary according to the description found in the Missouri State Constitution of 1820 which said the northern border of the state began at rapids on the Des Moines River Brown found a set of small rapids near present day Keosauqua Iowa and ran the border due west from that point 10 In 1838 the Missouri Legislature passed a law declaring this line its northern boundary essentially seizing nearly 2 600 square miles 6 700 km2 of land from the Iowa Territory 10 This territory was agriculturally valuable and was especially well known for its honey production In late 1839 the sheriff of Van Buren County Iowa arrested the sheriff of Clark County Missouri after the latter twice attempted to collect taxes on Iowans living north of the Sullivan Line 11 12 Three honey trees were chopped down and taken into Missouri and both states called out the state militia in what became known as the Honey War before cooler heads prevailed and both Iowa and Missouri agreed to submit the dispute to the U S Supreme Court which under the Constitution had original jurisdiction over the issue 12 13 The two states petitioned the Supreme Court for redress in 1847 14 Decision Edit Map depicting the border claims made by Iowa and Missouri and the Sullivan Line Associate Justice John Catron delivered the unanimous opinion of the court The state of Missouri alleged that the true border should begin at the rapids of the Des Moines River rapids actually on the Des Moines River which were about 9 5 miles 15 3 km north of the Sullivan Line 15 The state of Iowa claimed that the rapids in question were the rapids of the Des Moines River which in fact were actually rapids in the Mississippi River and the starting point of the Sullivan Line 15 Justice Catron reviewed at length the facts which created the boundary dispute 16 Although he admitted that the Sullivan Line was not a precisely true line nor specific to the description contained in the Fort Clark and Portage des Sioux treaties Justice Sullivan proposed investigating to what degree the federal government had respected the Sullivan Line 17 He noted that the federal government had signed more than 15 treaties with various Indian tribes all of which recognized the Sullivan Line as the northern border of Missouri 18 Second he proposed to discover how federal agencies had respected the Sullivan Line 19 Catron noted that territorial governments and federal land agencies had all used the Sullivan Line as the Missouri boundary and that land sales agents in Missouri and the various territories had been equally respectful of the line as the state s border 20 Third Catron noted that the United States had respected the Sullivan Line in establishing the borders of the various territories north of Missouri 21 Justice Catron next attempted to construct the phrase rapids of the Des Moines River in an attempt to locate these rapids as called for in federal legislation granting Missouri statehood and in the Missouri State Constitution of 1820 Iowa had claimed that the Des Moines rapids on the Mississippi River were the rapids referred to But Justice Catron expressed deep scepticism of this claim 22 The name given in the act of Congress taken in connection with its context would assuredly apply to a rapid in the Des Moines River if a notorious one existed as the Mississippi River is not mentioned in the call and the Des Moines is nor was the Mississippi River to be reached by that line Then again the rapid is fourteen miles long and no part of it is called for as an opposite point to found the line upon It therefore follows that the claim of Iowa to come south to the middle of the rapid throws us on a doubtful and forced construction of the instrument under consideration and such a construction we are not willing to adopt even if Iowa could at this day set up a claim to its adoption which for the reasons above stated we think she cannot be allowed to do Catron next reviewed Missouri s attempt to locate a rapids on the Des Moines River In reviewing Brown s attempts to locate such a rapids Justice Catron noted that Brown encountered ripples falls and shoals but no rapids 23 None of these constituted a notorious rapid by public reputation and thus Missouri s claim could not be supported either 24 Catron then turned the Court s attention to the Missouri constitution which also mentioned the Sullivan Line The problem as both Missouri and Iowa had pointed out was that the Sullivan Line did not extend far enough west to meet with the western border of Missouri Catron dismissed this issue With almost no discussion he concluded This Court is then driven to that call in the Constitution of Missouri which declares that her western boundary shall correspond with the Indian boundary line and treating the western line of a hundred miles long as a unit and then running east from its northern terminus it will supply the deficiency of a call for an object that never existed 25 Catron held that the proper border was the 1816 Sullivan Line 25 In an extensive decree the Court described the Sullivan Line ordered a commission composed of a surveyor from Iowa and a surveyor from Missouri to survey and mark the line and empowered Chief Justice Taney to enforce the decree or appoint commissioners in the event of death disability or refusal to act 26 Outcomes EditThe boundary commission surveyed and marked the border and the Supreme Court issued orders and decrees in State of Missouri v State of Iowa 51 U S 1 1850 acknowledging their work and establishing the boundary thereby However by 1895 a 20 mile 32 km portion of the boundary had been disturbed by natural or man made causes was unclear and the boundary markers removed To resolve the new dispute Iowa and Missouri jointly filed suit and asked the Supreme Court to once more intervene In State of Missouri v State of Iowa 160 U S 688 1896 the Court again established a commission this time adding a surveyor from the state of Illinois as well to resurvey and remark the missing boundary line The Court received the report of the second boundary commission reviewed it at length and accepted it as the true boundary in State of Missouri v State of Iowa 165 U S 118 1897 See also EditHoney War Sullivan LineReferences Edit Monette History of the Discovery and Settlement of the Valley of the Mississippi 1846 p 547 Burns A History of the Osage People 1989 p 295 Rodriguez The Louisiana Purchase A Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia 2002 p 285 a b Goodspeed The Province and the States 1904 p 442 443 Conard Encyclopedia of the History of Missouri A Compendium of History and Biography for Ready Reference 1901 p 339 a b Shoemaker Missouri s Struggle for Statehood 1804 1821 1916 p 66 68 Shoemaker Missouri s Struggle for Statehood 1804 1821 1916 p 300 301 a b c d e The Chain of Title to Iowa Annals of Iowa July 1893 p 137 Santer Michigan Heart of the Great Lakes 1977 p 47 Gue History of Iowa From the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century 1903 p 185 186 a b Stock Amazing Iowa 2003 p 24 McCandless and Parrish A History of Missouri 1820 to 1860 2000 p 112 a b Erickson and Stuhr Iowa 2007 p 92 Stock Amazing Iowa 2003 p 24 25 McCandless and Parrish A History of Missouri 1820 to 1860 2000 p 114 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 666 a b State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 662 663 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 667 670 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 670 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 670 672 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 672 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 672 673 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 673 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 674 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 674 676 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 676 a b State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 677 State of Missouri v State of Iowa 48 U S 660 677 681 Bibliography EditBurns Louis F A History of the Osage People Tuscaloosa Ala University of Alabama Press 1989 The Chain of Title to Iowa Annals of Iowa July 1893 Conard Howard Louis Encyclopedia of the History of Missouri A Compendium of History and Biography for Ready Reference New York Southern History Co 1901 Erickson Lori and Stuhr Tracy Iowa Guilford Conn Globe Pequot 2007 Goodspeed Weston Arthur The Province and the States A History of the Province of Louisiana Under France and Spain and of the Territories and States of the United States Madison Wisc Western Historical Association 1904 Gue Benjamin F History of Iowa From the Earliest Times to the Beginning of the Twentieth Century New York Century History Co 1903 McCandless Perry and Parrish William Earl A History of Missouri 1820 to 1860 Columbia Mo University of Missouri Press 2000 Monette John W History of the Discovery and Settlement of the Valley of the Mississippi by the three great European powers Spain France and Great Britain and the Subsequent Occupation Settlement and Extension of Civil Government by the United States Until the Year 1846 New York Harper amp Bros 1846 Rodriguez Junius P The Louisiana Purchase A Historical and Geographical Encyclopedia Santa Barbara Calif ABC CLIO 2002 Santer Richard Arthur Michigan Heart of the Great Lakes Dubuque Ia Kendall Hunt Publishing Co 1977 Shoemaker F C Missouri s Struggle for Statehood 1804 1821 Jefferson City Mo The Hugh Stephens Printing Co 1916 Stock Janice Beck Amazing Iowa Nashville Tenn Rutledge Hill Press 2003 External links EditText of Missouri v Iowa 48 U S 7 How 660 1849 is available from Google Scholar Justia Library of Congress OpenJurist Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Missouri v Iowa amp oldid 1145176171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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