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| Birth: | 7 Aug 1821 in Green Bay, Brown, WI 1 2 |
| Death: | 23 Feb 1891 in Howe, Oconto, WI |
| Sex: | M |
| Father: | Richard Prickett I b. 1777 in , Greene, PA |
| Mother: | Wa-saw-mo-quaw b. in , , MN |
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| Property: Angelica, Shawano, WI |
| Education: the Mission School 25 Oct 1829-25 Sep 1830 , Brown, WI 3 |
| Census: 1840 , Brown, WI 4 |
| Menominee Roll: 1849 5 |
| Census: 1850 Berlin, Marquette County, WI 2 |
| Residence: 1850 Berlin, Marquette County, WI 2 |
| Other: Jul 1850 , , MN 6 7 |
| Occupation: Interpreter 11 Feb 1856 Stockbridge, , WI 8 |
| Census: 1860 Shawano County, WI 1 |
| Occupation: Farmer 1860 Shawano County, WI 1 |
| Property: 1860 , Shawano, WI 1 |
| Court: 1869 , Shawano, WI 9 |
| Census: 1870 Angelica, Shawano, WI 10 |
| Residence: 1870 Angelica, Shawano, WI 11 |
| Occupation: Farmer 1870 Angelica, Shawano, WI 10 |
| Property: 1870 Angelica, Shawano, WI 10 10 |
| Census: 1880 Angelica, Shawano, WI 12 |
| Occupation: Farmer 1880 Angelica, Shawano, WI 12 |
| Obituary: 26 Feb 1891 Howe, Oconto, WI 13 13 |
| Cemetery: |
| Changed: 25 Apr 2007 17:16 7 14 |
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| I-Oun-Tah "Rosalia" Shelton (Wife) b. 28 Jan 1823 in , , WI
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| 1 12 10 2 10 2 10 2 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 |
| Marriage: | Abt 1849 31 May 2006 18:22 |
| Children: | |
Louisa Prickett b. 24 Jul 1849 in Berlin, Marquette County, WI
Talbot George Prickett III b. About 1853 in Poygon, Winnebago, WI
Thomas Prickett IV b. Aug 1853 in , , WI
Elizabeth "Lizzie" Prickett VII b. 8 Mar 1856 in Keshena, Shawano, WI
James H Prickett VI b. Mar 1858 in Shawano County, WI
Richard M Prickett IV b. 1860 in Angelica, Shawano, Wisconsin
John B. Prickett b. 8 Jun 1865 in , Shawano, WI
Susan Prickett V b. 21 Oct 1867 in Angelica, Shawano, Wisconsin
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 | Notes |  | |
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Individual:
1 white male 5-10, 1 white male 15-20, 1 white female unde
r 5, 1 white female 20-30Listed as receiving $50 for Rosalie Priquette and $241 fo
r Joseph Priquette and his 3 childrenOwned real estate worth $800
Accompanied (at the request of the Menominee nation) Chie
f Oshkosh, Col Bruce and others to explore proposed new Menominee land in Minnesota.Interpreter for Menominee - US treaty of 1856
Real estate valued at $1000, personal property valued at $7
00Angelica was formed in the year 1870. That spring about for
ty families settled in and around Angelica--which was named after the first baby born to the new settlers. These families were drawn here primarily by the logging and lumbering business. The first town officers were P.W. Button, Chairman, and the two town supervisors were Talbert C. Prickett and William H. Upham (research this guy: he owned a sawmill in Angelica that he closed in 1878 to move to Marshfield, Wisconsin. There he built a sawmill in 1879. In 1887, Marshfield was leveled by fire, but Upham rebuilt the mill, insuring that Marshfield would survive. This is the same Upham that earlier was "killed" at the First Battle of Bull Run, spent time in a Confederate prison, was paroled, went to Washington D.C. where he befriended Lincoln--serving as one of his pallbearers. Later, in 1895, he became the governor of the state of Wisconsin).
...Another cemetery, Rest Haven, is one of the earliest bur iel plots in this township...to a plot of land set aside jointly by the Prickett and Magee families, where their land joined and adjacent to the old Military Road from Shawano to Fort Howard (in Green Bay) to be used as a buriel ground. The Prickett side was Catholic and mainly people of Indian heritage while the Magee side was Protestant...As the years went by, the cemetery was carefully attended. The Prickett family and relatives moved away and their side began to fall into neglect.Real estate valued at $2000, real property valued at $600
One of two town supervisors with William Upshaw (who was later Governor of WI in 1895)
Talbot C. was possibly named after Col Talbot Chambers, of the U.S. Regiment of Riflemen, who was one of the first American army officers to arrive at Green Bay. Of note is that Col Chambers arrived at about the same time as Richard permanently relocated to Green Bay from Michimilimac with Col Boyd, the Indian Agent. Col Chambers was the first U.S. Commandant of the fort at Green Bay.
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- Title: 1860 Census
Author: US Government
Page: Series M653, Roll 1429, p. 942
Quality: 3
- Title: 1850 Census
Author: U.S. Government
Page: Series M432, Roll 1002, p. 123
Quality: 3
- Title: Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin
Publication: (Madison, WI, State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1888-1
931)Page: Vol. 14, pp. 488-490
Quality: 3
- Title: 1840 US Census
Author: US Government
Page: Series M704, Roll 580, p. 117
Quality: 4
- Title: 1849 Mixed Menominee Roll
- Title: Records of the Wisconsin superintendency of Indian affairs
, 1836-1848, and the Green Bay subagency, 1850Author: Bureau of Indian Affairs
Publication: (Washington, DC, National Archives and Records Service, 197
4)Page: Roll 4
Quality: 3
- Title: The Menominee Indians
Author: Patricia K. Ourada
Publication: (Norman, OK, University of Oklahoma Press, 1979)
Page: p. 115
Quality: 3
- Title: Indian Affairs: Laws and Treaties
Author: Charles J. Kappler, ed.
Publication: (Washington, DC, Government Printing Office, 1904)
Page: pp. 755-756
Quality: 3
- Title: Shawano County Circuit Court Files
Page: Shawano Series 54, Box 004, Folder 01
Quality: 3
- Title: 1870 Census
Author: US Government
Page: Series M593, Roll 1739, p. 324
Quality: 3
- Title: Memories of Old Angelica
Author: Angelica United Methodist Church
Publication: 1976; Angelica, WI
Text: Angelica was formed in the year 1870. That spring about for
ty families settled in and around Angelica--which was named after the first baby born to the new settlers. These families were drawn here primarily by the logging and lumbering business. The first town officers were P.W. Button, Chairman, and the two town supervisors were Talbert C. Prickett and William H. Upham (research this guy: he owned a sawmill in Angelica that he closed in 1878 to move to Marshfield, Wisconsin. There he built a sawmill in 1879. In 1887, Marshfield was leveled by fire, but Upham rebuilt the mill, insuring that Marshfield would survive. This is the same Upham that earlier was "killed" at the First Battle of Bull Run, spent time in a Confederate prison, was paroled, went to Washington D.C. where he befriended Lincoln--serving as one of his pallbearers. Later, in 1895, he became the governor of the state of Wisconsin).
...Another cemetery, Rest Haven, is one of the earliest bur
iel plots in this township...to a plot of land set aside jointly by the Prickett and Magee families, where their land joined and adjacent to the old Military Road from Shawano to Fort Howard (in Green Bay) to be used as a buriel ground. The Prickett side was Catholic and mainly people of Indian heritage while the Magee side was Protestant...As the years went by, the cemetery was carefully attended. The Prickett family and relatives moved away and their side began to fall into neglect.
- Title: 1880 US Census
Author: US Government
Page: Series T9, Roll 1446, p. 323
Quality: 3
- Title: Shawano County Journal
Publication: Shawano County, WI; Shawano County Journal, 1891
Page: 26 Feb 1891
Quality: 3
- Title: History of Brown County, Wisconsin: Past and Present
Author: Deborah B. Martin
Publication: (Chicago, IL, S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1913)
Page: Vol. I, pp. 81-82
Quality: 3
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