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Black Hawk Black Hawk was a Sauk Indian. He was born at the mouthe of Rock River in Illinois. He became cheif of his tribe in 1788. Black Hawk had two sons. In 1804 the Sauk and Fox tribes agreed to to give up their land and they signed a treaty. Black Hawk did not agree with this because he said that the chiefs were drunk with liquor before signing the treety. During the war of 1812 Black Hawk and 500 of his warriors helpaed the British for a while. The Black Hawk War started when the British asked the indians to give up theer land and move west of the Mississippi River. The Indians lost. By 1830 most of the Sauk Fox Indians had moved weste of the Mississippi River. Black Hawk ande his two sons were taken captive during the war. They were taken to Fortress Monroe until 1833. Then they were releised, and they jooned the rest of their tribe on the reservotion near Fort Des Moines. Black Hawk's surrender marked the end of of Indian held land in Illinois. Black Hawk died on the reservation near Des Moines on October 31, 1838. Black Hawk's body was moved to the Sociaty Building in Burlington, Iowa. His remains were lost when the building caught fire and burned to the ground. A fifty foot statue of Black Hawk now stands beside the Rock River near Oregon, Illinois. It was sculpted by Lorando Taft. PAN AMERICAN HIGHWAY The Pan American Highway is is made up of highways that start on the U.S.-Mexican border and run through Mexico, Central America, and end up in Southern Chile. The Pan American Highway, which consists of major higheways, alternate routes, and branch roads is 29,000 miles long. The main highways of the system connect the capitials of Latin America. The system is linked with U.S. highways at four major points on the border. MAJOR ROUTES The Northern Section of the Highway includes four main routes that extend Southward from the U.S.-Mexican border and meet at Mexico City. From there the highway continues southeastward until it reaches Panama City. The section that runs between Laredo, Texas and Panama City, Panama, is commonly known as the the Inter-American Highway. In the early 1970's the section of the highway between Panama City and Columbia was still incompleate. But shipping routes enabled travelors to pass the densely forested region of eastern Panama and northwestern Columbia. In South America, alternate routes from coastal cities in Columbia allowed motorists from Panama who have shipped their cars here to make connections with the main routes of the highway system. In Columbia, one of the main routes extends southwarde through the Andes Mountains roughly paralllel to the Pacific coast. Another main route extends southward from Caracas, Venezuela, through Bogota, Columbia, to join the first route at Murillo, Columbia. Then it continues south through the Andes Mountain range to Ecuador where it crosses the Equator and runs into Peru. In Peru the highway forks. One fork turns eastward towards La Paz, Bolivia. The other continues southward through the Atacama Desert to Santiago, Chile. At Santiago turns eastward and heads accross the Andes to Buenos Aires. Routes of the highway system turn gennerally north from Buenos Aires into Paraguay, Uruguay, Bolivia, and Brazil. In Brazil, a main section of the highway runs parallel to the the coast as far as Rio de Janeiro where it turns inland and heads for Brasilia, Brazil. Rio de Janeiro and southern Brazil are linked with Paraguay by a branch of the highway. Highway Conditions and Facilities Most of the roads and the highways of the Pan-American highway are surfaced with paving, gravel, or other materials that are passable at all times of the year. Still, some sections of the highway are difficult to travel on, especially in bad weather. Many tourist facillities have been built along the Mexican portion of the highway. This has been an important factor in the development of Mexico's tourist industry. Accommodation and service stations in Latin America are more widly spread and are often linked to big cities along the highway. History Construction of the highway was first proposed at the fifth International Conference of American States. In 1925 the Pan American Highway Congress was organized as a permmanent institution. At first, the highway was to be a single route. Then in 1929 a plan was adopted that made Latin American highways into an extensive integruted system. Construction of the Inter- American Highway was begun in the 1930's. The first compleated section was opened to the public in 1936. In WWII the highway was very important for the defense of the Western Hemisphere. Mostly because of more U.S. help the rate of construction was increased. Many sections were completed during and after the war. In the early 1970's, only the uncompleted sections in Panama and Columbia remained a major obstacle to direct overland travvel between the continents of the Western Hemisphere.