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1834 Illinois state capitol referendum

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In the Illinois State Capitol Referendum of 1834, voters in the state of Illinois were asked on August 4, 1834, to choose the next state capitol. Six locations were placed on the ballot: Alton, Springfield, Peoria, Jacksonville, the Geographic center of the state, and the current capital, Vandalia.[1] The Geographic center was at the time assumed to be Illiopolis, but this is now known to be untrue.

Alton received the most votes,[1] but the General Assembly never acted on this, and it never was the capitol. Eventually, the capitol would be moved to Springfield.

Results

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Illinois State Capitol Referendum, 1834
City Votes Percentage
Alton 8,157 33.36%
Vandalia 7,730 31.62%
Springfield 7,075 28.94%
Geographic Center of the State 790 3.23%
Peoria 423 1.73%
Jacksonville 273 1.12%
Totals 24,448 100.00%

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Pospisek, Patrick A. (2006). "Springfield's Acquisition of the Illinois Seat of Government, 1833-1845". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1998-). 99 (1): 8–18. ISSN 1522-1067.