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222
THE DIAMOND
ada by the ice, and in 1899, Professor W. H. Hobbs, after a careful study of the glacial stria? leading to the localities where the diamonds were found, surmised that they came from somewhere near James Bay on Hudson Bay. In 1876 a yellow diamond and some oth­ers were reported as found near Eagle in Waukesha county. In 1886 a pale yellow irregular rhombic dodec­ahedron weighing 2134 carats was found at Kohlsville in Washington county, and in 1896 a diamond of over 6 carats was reported as having been found at Saukville in Ozukee county in 1880. In 1893 one of 3-7/8 carats was found at Oregon, Dane county, in clay. Another, found in southern Wisconsin, which weighed over 16 carats, is now in the J. Pierpont Morgan collection.
Several diamonds have been found at various times in Morgan county, Indiana, for one of which $1,200 was offered according to report. The amount repre­sented local sentiment, however, as the stone was not worth nearly as much. Most of these stones were found while cleaning up gold-washings. The first diamond found in America was found in Indiana in 1837. It is a white stone and cut as a jewel, weighs about 2 carats. It is claimed that diamonds with other precious stones have been found in the hills of Brown county within 40 miles of Indianapolis.
Diamonds have been found occasionally in the gold placer and platinum mines of California since 1850, most of them in the neighborhood of Fiddletown and Volcano in Amador county. They have been found also in Butte, El Dorado, Nevada and Trinity counties. The first of which there is a good record, came from the