Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Tippecanoe County, Indiana. /  40.39°N 86.89°W  / 40.39; -86.89. Tippecanoe County is located in the west-central portion of the U.S. state of Indiana about 22 miles east of the Illinois state line and less than 50 miles from the Chicago and the Indianapolis metro areas. As of the 2020 census, the population was 186,251. [1]

  2. Find out how to access death records in Tippecanoe County, IN. This page offers links to search death records, request genealogy death records, and get certified death certificates. Get contact details for the death records office and access forms like the death certificate application and death record request form.

  3. People also ask

  4. May 1, 2024 · Guide to Tippecanoe County, Indiana ancestry, genealogy and family history, birth records, marriage records, death records, census records, and military records.

    • Lafayette
    • Parke, Unorganized territory [1]
    • March 1, 1826
  5. Tippecanoe County INGenWeb is a part of the USGenWeb Project and is an all-volunteer effort. In June, 1996, a group of genealogists organized the Indiana Comprehensive Genealogy Database. The idea was to provide a single entry point for all counties in Indiana, where collected databases would be stored.

    • tippecanoe county indiana wikipedia death1
    • tippecanoe county indiana wikipedia death2
    • tippecanoe county indiana wikipedia death3
    • tippecanoe county indiana wikipedia death4
  6. The battle was the culmination of rising tensions in a period sometimes called Tecumseh’s War, which continued until collapse of tribal resistance with Tecumseh’s death in 1813. Public opinion in the United States blamed the Native American uprising on British interference; it was later revealed that the British leaders in Canada had ...

  7. The Treaty of Tippecanoe (1832), a series of three treaties negotiated with the Potawatomi in October 1832, ceded Indian land in Indiana, Illinois, and part of Michigan to the federal government, except for small reservation lands for tribal use and scattered allotments to individuals. Under these treaties the federal government acquired more ...

  1. People also search for