place

Pecatonica River

Geographic coordinate listsLists of coordinatesRivers of IllinoisRivers of Iowa County, WisconsinRivers of Lafayette County, Wisconsin
Rivers of Stephenson County, IllinoisRivers of Winnebago County, IllinoisRivers of Wisconsin
Pecatonica River Iowa County Wisconsin
Pecatonica River Iowa County Wisconsin

The Pecatonica River is a tributary of the Rock River, 194 miles (312 km) long, in southern Wisconsin and northern Illinois in the United States. The word Pecatonica is an anglicization of two Algonquian language words: Bekaa (or Pekaa in some dialects), which means "slow", and niba, which means "water", forming the conjunction Bekaaniba or "Slow Water". It rises in the hills of southwest Wisconsin, in southwest Iowa County, 2 miles (3 km) west of Cobb. It flows south, then southeast, past Calamine and Darlington. In southeast Lafayette County it receives the East Branch Pecatonica River, approximately 8 miles (13 km) north of the state line. It flows south-southeast into Illinois, past Freeport, where it turns east, then east-northeast, receiving the Sugar River near Shirland in northern Winnebago County, 5 miles (8 km) south of the state line. It joins the Rock at Rockton, approximately 15 miles (24 km) north of Rockford.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Pecatonica River (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Pecatonica River
Hawick Street, Rockton Township

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Pecatonica RiverContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.45 ° E -89.075 °
placeShow on map

Address

Hawick Street

Hawick Street
61072 Rockton Township
Illinois, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Pecatonica River Iowa County Wisconsin
Pecatonica River Iowa County Wisconsin
Share experience

Nearby Places

Church of St. Thomas the Apostle (Beloit, Wisconsin)
Church of St. Thomas the Apostle (Beloit, Wisconsin)

Church of St. Thomas the Apostle is a historic church at 822 E. Grand Avenue in Beloit, Wisconsin, United States. It was built in 1885 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.St. Thomas is the oldest Catholic parish in Beloit, with roots going back to 1846, when the parishioners were largely Irish immigrants worshiping in the home of Captain Thomas and Lucy Power, where City Hall now stands. In 1854 the parish built a stone church, in which they worshiped for thirty years until it burned in 1884. Reverend J.W. Ward set right to work raising funds for a new building, partly by giving a series of temperance lectures.The new church was built from 1885 to 1886 on the site of the stone church. James J. Egan of Chicago designed a simply massed rectangular building with a gable roof and a square corner tower, with fine details. The walls are cream brick, with brick buttresses and stone trim. The porches are in Stick style, an unusual choice for a church like this. The windows are tall, with arches slightly pointed, a typical Gothic detail. A circle-within-the-arch motif repeats in many windows. Many buttresses lead up to little towers with gablets on top. The big corner tower has its own corner gablets, then a belfry with a rose window, then a spire reaching 150 feet, topped with a cross.Inside, the auditorium is 118 feet long and fifty-five feet wide, with an arcade of stained glass windows. Behind the altar is another large, elaborate stained glass window. The ceiling is supported by wooden trusses. The church was built by masons Marshall and Sweet, carpenters Cummingham Brothers, and stonecutter A.S. Jackson, all from Beloit.