Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Economic Beginnings of the Far West, How We Won the Land, Beyond the Mississippi, Vol. 2
The products of the rich lands along the lower Mississippi were sugar,2 molasses, cotton, and indigo those of Upper Louisiana, peltry, lumber, lead, horses, and cattle. The annual value of the cotton exported was estimated at that of sugar at molasses at peltry at lumber at The peltry procured in the Illinois is the best sent to the Atlantic market; and the quantity is very considerable. Lead is to be had with ease, and in such quantities as to supply all Europe, if the population were sufficient to work the numerous mines to be found within two or three feet from the surface in various parts of the country. 3 For a considerable distance back from the river, the land.
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