Within six months the city had a regular Methodist circuit rider who conducted services at the territorial capitol.
The building had its beginnings as the proposed territorial capitol for New Mexico.
Work to construct the grounds for a territorial capitol were under way but no capital building had yet been authorized.
Streets, houses, public buildings, and, most important, the territorial capitol had to be built.
Sweet was a territorial council member from Milwaukee who led the fight that made Madison the territorial capitol of Wisconsin.
However, by this time a new territorial capitol was already being constructed, so the old building was never officially used as the capitol.
In 1886, a new building replaced the antiquated Palace of the Governors as the territorial capitol.
The first issue dealt with by the session was a proposal for the relocation of the territorial capitol.
In 1813, he traveled to the territorial capitol, Vincennes.
In 1930, the state capitol (former territorial capitol) burned down.