city, seat (1833) of Rock Island county, northwestern Illinois, U.S., on the Mississippi River near the mouth of the Rock River and opposite the island for which it was named. With Moline, East Moline, and Davenport (qq.v.), Iowa, it forms the Quad Cities complex. Founded in 1835 as Stephenson, it was renamed and incorporated as a town in 1841. Settlers were attracted to Ft. Armstrong (built on the island in 1816) and the cornfields of the Indians. The fort (reconstructed) was headquarters of operations in the Black Hawk War (1832). In 1854 the site was reached by the Rock Island Railroad, and it was there the Mississippi was first bridged (1855). The island was a Civil War ordnance depot and served as a prisoner-of-war camp, where many Confederates died; national and Confederate cemeteries are on the island. It is now occupied by military installations, including the huge Rock Island Arsenal, the U.S. Army's Armament Material Readiness Command headquarters, and the John M. Browning Memorial (military arms) Museum. Black Hawk State Park, at the city's southern edge, was once the site of the Sauk and Fox Indian capitals. Diversified industry (with emphasis on the manufacture of farm equipment) grew with the arsenal. Augustana College was founded (1860) in Rock Island by Swedish immigrants. Inc. city, 1849. Pop. (1990) city, 40,552; DavenportRock IslandMoline MSA, 350,861.
ROCK ISLAND
Meaning of ROCK ISLAND in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012