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While we know our northern friends may not feel it, in the South, Spring is here. So we thought we'd share a few of our gardening sites appropriate for this time of the year. Along with gardening, there's grilling, and getting ready to diet so that you can fit back into that bathing suit this summer!

 

 

 

Piankashaw Indian Tribe History

Piankashaw (possibly connected with Päyangitchaki 'those who separate,' from pevangiani, ' I separate from,' according to Gatschet; the Miami form, according to J. P. Dunn, is Payŭnggǐsh'ah). Formerly a subtribe of the Miami, but later a separate people. In an account of the rivers and peoples of the west, La Salle, about 1682, mentions the Piankashaw as one of the tribes gathered about his Illinois fort; these were bands brought from their usual habitat. In the account by Cadillac (1695) they are spoken of as being west of the Miami village on St Joseph river, Mich., with the Mascoutens, Kickapoo, and other tribes. It is probable they were then on Vermillon river, in Indiana and Illinois. St Cosme (1699) says that the village of the Peanzichias Miamis was on Kankakee river, Ill., but that they, formerly lived on the Mississippi. They had possibly been driven west by the Iroquois. Their ancient village was on the Wabash at the junction of the Vermillion; at a later period they established another settlement, Chippekawkay, lower down the river, at the present site of Vincennes, Ind.
     About 1770 they gave permission to the Delawares to occupy the east part of their territory. Chauvignerie (1736) says that the Wea, the Piankashaw, and the Pepicokia were the same nation in different villages, and gives the deer as the Piankashaw totem. In the beginning of the present century they and the Wea began to cross over into Missouri, and in 1832 the two tribes sold all their claims in the east and agreed to remove to Kansas as one tribe.
     About 1854 the consolidated tribe united with the remnant of the Illinois, then known as Peoria and Kaskaskia, and in 1867 the entire body sold their lands in Kansas and removed to the present Oklahoma, where they are now known under the name of Peoria.
     The Piankashaw made or participated in treaties with the United States at:
Greenville, Ohio, Aug. 3, 1795;
Ft Wayne, Ind., June 7,1803;
Vincennes, Ind., Aug. 7, 1803, Aug. 27, 1804, and Dec. 30, 1805; Portage des Sioux, Mo., July 18, 1815;
Vincennes, Ind., Jan. 3, 1818 (not ratified);
Castor Hill, Mo., Oct. 29, 1832;
Washington, D. C., May 30, 1854, and Feb. 23, 1867.
     The Piankashaw probably never numbered many more than 1,000 souls. In 1736 Chauvignerie estimated the Piankashaw, Wea, and Pepicokia together at about 1,750. In 1759 the Piankashaw alone were estimated at 1,500, and five years later at 1,250. This was reduced to 950 in 1780 , and 800 in 1795. In 1825 there were only 234 remaining, and in 1906 all the tribes consolidated under the name of Peoria numbered but 192, none of whom was of pure blood.

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Handbook of American Indians, 1906

Index of Tribes or Nations

 


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