Galena River (Illinois)

(Redirected from Fever River)

The Galena River, also known as the Fevre or Fever River,[1] is a 52.4-mile-long (84.3 km)[2] river which flows through the Midwestern United States.

Galena River
Rivière aux Fèves
The Galena River flowing through downtown Galena, Illinois in April 2008. Note the city floodgates in center connecting to the river levee system on the right
Physical characteristics
Source 
 • locationLafayette County northwest of Belmont, Wisconsin
 • coordinates42°45′17″N 90°23′04″W / 42.7547222°N 90.3844444°W / 42.7547222; -90.3844444 (Galena River origin)
 • elevation1,153 ft (351 m)
Mouth 
 • location
Confluence with the Mississippi southwest of Galena, Illinois
 • coordinates
42°22′27″N 90°26′46″W / 42.3741667°N 90.4461111°W / 42.3741667; -90.4461111 (Galena River mouth)
 • elevation
591 ft (180 m)
Length52 mi (84 km)
Basin features
ProgressionGalena River → Mississippi → Gulf of Mexico
GNIS ID426934

Geography edit

The river rises in Lafayette County, Wisconsin, northwest of Belmont. It enters Illinois in Jo Daviess County to flow through the city of Galena before it joins the upper Mississippi River a few miles south and west. The river is part of the Driftless Area of Illinois and Wisconsin. This region was ice-free during the Wisconsin glaciation and underwent hundreds of thousands of years of glacial-free erosion. The river also occupies a substantial canyon.

History edit

The indigenous name for the river was "Maucaubee" which if translated means "fever" or "fever that blisters", the indigenous term for small pox.

The indigenous gave it this name because in the early days of this country, some of the warriors existing on the present site of Galena and the banks of a small creek a little south of town, went to the assistance of their eastern brothers. On their return, they brought with them a disease that they named "Maucaubee", the fever that blistered. Hundreds of natives died, and the Indians named both the river and the stream Small Pox River.[citation needed]

The smaller creek is still named Small Pox Creek while European settlers changed the river's name to "Fever River", and the frontier hamlet was known as the "Fever River Settlement" or LaPointe until 1826 or 1827 when it was given the name "Galena".[citation needed]

The name "Bean River" came about from the fact that the early French traders and adventurers, who undoubtedly were in the area long before the 1820s, changed the Indian name to "Riviere au Feve", which means "river of the bean". As early as 1822, the "City" of Galena was mentioned in newspapers while Chicago was referred to simply as "a village in Pike County containing 12 or 15 houses and about 60 or 70 inhabitants". Galena was more important commercially than Chicago at this time; it served as a trading point and provided work at its nearby lead mines.[citation needed]

The river is officially named the "Fever River" in Wisconsin since May 14, 1992 due to the enactment of Act 284.[3]

Winnebago War edit

The Winnebago War of 1827, also known as the "Fevre River War", is associated with this river.

See also edit

References edit

  • Jim Post's historical song "Oh, Galena" opens with the line "My papa is a slave on the Fever River" and depicts a boy yearning for life in the riverboat town of Galena.[4]

Notes edit

  1. ^ U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Galena River
  2. ^ U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map Archived 2012-03-29 at the Wayback Machine, accessed May 13, 2011
  3. ^ "1991 Wisconsin Act 284". Act of 29 April 1992. Wisconsin State Legislature.

External links edit