POKEST CULTURE IN IOWA. 667 



Planted Timber-lands in Iowa, as reported by the State Census in 1863, ^c— Continued. 



Guthrie 



Hamilton 



Hancock 



Hardin 



Harrison 



Henry 



Howard 



Humboldt 



Ida 



Iowa 



Jackson 



Jasper 



Jefterson 



Johnson 



Jones 



Keokuk 



Kossuth 



Lee 



Linn 



Louisa 



Lucas 



L^on 



Madison 



Mahaska 



Marion 



Marshall 



Mills 



Mitchell 



Monona 



Monroe 



Montgomery . . . 



Muscatine 



O'Brien 



Osceola 



Page 



Palo Alto 



Plymouth 



Pocahontas 



Polk 



Pottawattamie. 



Poweshiek 



Ringgold 



Sac 



Scott 



Shelby 



Sioux 



Story 



Tama 



Taylor 



Union 



VanBnren 



Wapello 



"Warren 



"Washington . .. 



"U^ayne 



"Webster 



"Winnebago 



"Winneshiek. .. 



"Woodbury 



"Worth 



"Wright 



Total . 



Acrea of planted timber. 



42 



41 



li 



16-2 

 28 

 56 

 9f 



207 

 330 

 3 

 15 

 14 

 41 

 255 



7(i 

 13 

 132 

 30 



1 

 478 



34 

 97 

 51 

 9 

 350> 

 166' 

 81 

 252 

 40 



n 



377' 



3,360 



46 

 630' 

 413 

 270 

 536' 

 6i 



306 



121 



212 



466 



4. 574' 



144 



11 



98 



7 



4 



18 



77 

 185 



57 



10 

 6 



29 

 398' 

 185 



59 



14 

 OJ 



14 



9,58fii 14, 



104 

 109 



23 

 464 

 107 

 130 

 195 

 125 



10 

 166 

 3 

 237 

 2,846 

 200 

 316 

 121 



94 

 178 

 326 



47 

 127 



134 

 348 



74 



1,080 



235 



90 

 161 



42 



39 

 733 



153 

 27 

 9 

 19 



120 

 1, 200' 



223 

 56 

 10 



256 

 29 



245 

 14 



397 

 53 

 66 

 3 

 57 



Timber and forest products, 1875. 



14. 180 

 8,172 



10. 000 



18, 106 

 23,497 

 44, 178 

 10, 493 



1,878 

 703 

 22,973 

 95, 160 

 29, 223 

 55, 478 

 39, 971 

 52, 516 

 45,010 



2, 344 

 68,716 

 63, 383 

 37, 299 

 22, 884 

 691 

 34, 426 

 46, 132 



49. 181 

 15, 687 

 18,502 

 12, 188 



8, 728 

 36, 397 



7,445 



32,077 



207 



16, 756 



1, 324 

 578 

 651 



38, 623 

 20, 483 

 12, 197 

 18, 149 



2. 662 

 15, 464 



5, 632 

 218 

 14, 105 

 18, 282 

 13, 039 



9, 203 

 78, 324 

 57, 983 

 34,718 



38. 350 

 24, 214 

 11,330 



2,779 



39, 844 

 7,204 

 5, 428 

 3,232 



19, 683 2, 312, 659 



747 



876 

 114 

 961 

 5-J8 

 312 

 534 

 3U9 



56 

 506 



27 

 1, 212 



99 

 622 

 473 

 400 

 583 



80 

 815 

 178 

 160 

 145 

 910 

 544 

 221 

 5, 526 

 749 

 810 

 536 



38 



4,373 

 484 

 122 



1,502 

 364 

 917 

 420 

 705 

 COO 

 777 

 226 

 624 

 228 

 343 

 276 

 774 



1,589 

 500 

 C23 

 384 

 76 

 550 



1, 7.=;9 

 171 

 652 

 92 

 284 

 503 

 161 

 574 



65,549 2,378,208 3,467,020 



14, 927 

 9,048 



10,114 

 19 067 

 24, 025 



44, 490 

 11,027 



2,187 

 759 

 23,419 

 95, 187 

 30. 435 

 55, 577 

 40, 593 

 53, 019 



45, 400 

 2, 927 



68, 796 

 64, 198 

 37, 477 

 23,034 

 836 



35, 336 



46, 676 

 49, 402 

 21,213 

 19, 251 

 12. 998 



9,264 



36, 435 

 7,705 



36, 450 

 691 

 122 



17, 258 

 1,688 

 1,495 

 1,071 



39, 328 

 21. 083 

 12.974 



18, 375 

 3,286 



15, 692 

 5, 975 



494 

 17, 939 



19, ^71 

 19, .539 



9, 826 

 78, 708 

 58, 059 



40; 109 

 24. 385 

 11, 982 

 2,871 

 40, 128 

 7,707 

 5,589 

 3,806 



> Apparently ton high, but included in totals. 



'Iteturned as 5,662 acres for Lee County in 1805, but, from comparison with former and later years, 

 evidently through error. This remark also applies to Scott County. The totals for the whole' State 

 were manifestly in error from these entries, and in preparing this table we have allowed lor the two 

 counties a mean between the returns of 1863 and 1867, thus changing, we believe with .reason, from 

 printed totals of the census. 



3 Eeturned as 292, bat evidently through error. Allowed as 14 in the total. 



