The Winnebago are right down the road,
the Omaha a stretch farther. The Santee across the river. The Dakota up river
in South Dakota. But was it always that way?
Again, for the record, the
year the two of them came down the Wisconsin River to its confluence with the
Mississippi was 1673, which makes Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, a little river
town that sits right there today, the second oldest white colony in the Badger
state. “Well,” you ask, “who was number one among the Cheeseheads?” The
Packers, of course, or at least Green Bay, just a couple of decades after the
Puritans stepped off the Mayflower and on Plymouth Rock.
Okay, you say, but what has that to do
with us? Well, anyone who wants to know anything about the region's most
awful 19th century horror, the Spirit Lake Massacre, which took place in 1857, way
over here, hundreds of miles west of Jolliet and Marquette. And now you're
wondering what the heck Inkpaduta, a Santee Wahpakutee, a Dakota Sioux and his
warriors were doing at Lake Okoboji, a century before the roller coaster. How'd
that murderer get here to the neighborhood anyway? He and his warriors just arise
from the ground like poison sumac.
The answer has to do with
that little Wisconsin town, Prairie du Chien. In 1825, almost 200 years after
Jolliet and Marquette, a slew of Native people pitched their tents for talk
with the white men in blue coats. “Who?” you ask. Easy: Sioux, Chippewa,
Menominee, Winnebago, Sac & Fox, and Ioway, in other words, oodles of
teepees.
And why right there?
Because, like Sioux City, Prairie du Chien sits close to the confluence of two
wonderful hi-ways: the Wisconsin and Mississippi Rivers.
And what was discussed?
The future. Specifically, from a white man's point of view--how to stop the Injuns
from killing each other? The answer won't surprise you: We'll keep them out of
each other's hair. We'll give them each a homeland--not a reservation (that
would come later), but give them each their own place to hunt buffalo and fish
and trap beaver, or so the white men promised.
So once upon a time in
1825, at a place that would someday be called Prairie du Chien, the whole upper
Midwest--from eastern Wisconsin to western Iowa got segmented, not into states,
but into regions where each tribe ran its own affairs.
Fair enough--right? Keep all those wild Indians racing horses, chasing buffalo, and out of each other’s hair. For the record, here's the segments drawn up by the gang at the signing of the 1825 Prairie du Chien Treaty: most of what is Minnesota goes to the Sioux (think Inkpaduta); most of Wisconsin to the Chippewa or (today) Ojibwe; most of Iowa to the Sac and Fox (think Black Hawk) and (wait for it) the Ioway.
The land where I'm sitting today, and the land where it's likely you are, was, at the time of the Spirit Lake Massacre, meant to be in possession of the Sac and Fox and Ioway, not the Sioux.
So then where were the Ioway when
Inkpaduta and his band were way down south and west on the Little Sioux River?
My goodness, "reservations"? you ask. Who on earth came up with that idea?
Need a little hint? Wasn't them.








