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The Plymouth Democrat Archive

  • Plymouth, Indiana
  • 18551870

About

The Marshall County Democrat debuted on November 15, 1855, in Plymouth, an agricultural community in north-central Indiana.  The paper originated not long after the Kansas-Nebraska Act divided the Democratic Party.  While the Marshall County Democrat declared, “Slavery is wrong, either North or South of the Missouri Compromise line,” it also endorsed popular sovereignty stating, “All territory is free until it becomes a State, and then the people alone can control the institutions.”  Thomas McDonald co-founded the paper, and he and his sons, Platt and Daniel, and grandsons, John and Louis, would intermittently own the Democrat over the next 47 years.

Archive Info

  • 2,886
  • Plymouth, Indiana
  • 18551870

Paper History

  • The Plymouth weekly Democrat
  • Marshall County Democrat

Source Information

The Plymouth Democrat, 1855–1870 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: January 15, 2023

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Suicide

Suicide

The Plymouth Democrat
Plymouth, Indiana
 • Page 2
Clipped 
newspaper clipping

newspaper clipping

The Plymouth Democrat
Plymouth, Indiana
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Companies to Camp Morton

Companies to Camp Morton

The Plymouth Democrat
Plymouth, Indiana
 • Page 1
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Jacob Heckaman registered voter 1867

Jacob Heckaman registered voter 1867

The Plymouth Democrat
Plymouth, Indiana
 • Page 2
Clipped 
1

1

The Plymouth Democrat
Plymouth, Indiana
 • Page 3
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Archive Info

  • 2,886
  • Plymouth, Indiana
  • 18551870

Paper History

  • The Plymouth weekly Democrat
  • Marshall County Democrat

Source Information

The Plymouth Democrat, 1855–1870 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: January 15, 2023