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Return to My Hunting Ground
I returned to my hunting
ground, after an absence of one moon, and
related what I had done. In a short time we
came up to our village, and found that the
whites had not left it, but that others had
come, and that the greater part of our
cornfields had been enclosed. When we landed
the whites appeared displeased because we
came back. We repaired the lodges that hid
been left standing and built others. Keokuk
came to the village, but his object was to
persuade others to follow him to the
Iowa. He had accomplished nothing
towards making arrangements for us to
remain, or to exchange other lands for our
village. There was no more friendship
existing between us. I looked upon him as a
coward and no brave, to abandon his village
to be occupied by strangers. What right had
these people to our village, and our fields,
which the Great Spirit had given us to live
upon?
My reason teaches me that land cannot be
sold. The Great Spirit gave it to his
children to live upon and cultivate as far
as necessary for their subsistence, and so
long as they occupy and cultivate it they
have the right to the soil, but if they
voluntarily leave it, then any other people
have a right to settle on it. Nothing can be
sold but such things as can be carried away.
In consequence of the improvements of the
intruders on our fields, we found
considerable difficulty to get ground to
plant a little corn. Some of the whites
permitted us to plant small patches in the
fields they had fenced, keeping all the best
ground for themselves. Our women had great
difficulty in climbing their fences, being
unaccustomed to the kind, and were ill
treated if they left a rail down.
One of my old friends thought he was safe.
His cornfield was on a small island in Rock
river. He planted his corn, it came up well,
but the white man saw it; he wanted it, and
took his teams over, ploughed up the crop
and replanted it for himself. The old man
shed tears, not for himself but on account
of the distress his family would be in if
they raised no corn. The white people
brought whisky to our village, made our
people drink, and cheated them out of their
homes, guns and traps. This fraudulent
system was carried to such an extent that I
apprehended serious difficulties might
occur, unless a stop was put to it.
Consequently I visited all the whites and
begged them not to sell my people whisky.
One of them continued the practice openly; I
took a party of my young men, went to his
house, took out his barrel, broke in the
head and poured out the whisky. I did this
for fear some of 'the whites might get
killed by my people when they were drunk.
Our people were treated very badly by the
whites on many occasions. At one time a
white man beat one of our women cruelly, for
pulling a few suckers of corn out of his
field to suck when she was hungry. At
another time one of our young men was beat
with clubs by two white men, for opening a
fence which crossed our road to take his
horse through. His shoulder blade was broken
and his body badly braised, from the effects
of which be soon after died.
Bad and cruel as our people were treated by
the whites, not one of them was hurt or
molested by our band. I hope this will prove
that we are a peaceable people--having
permitted ten men to take possession of our
corn fields, prevent us from planting corn,
burn our lodges, ill-treat our women, and
beat to death our men without offering
resistance to their barbarous cruelties.
This is a lesson worthy for the white man to
learn: to use forebearance when injured.
We acquainted our agent daily with our
situation, and through him the great chief
at St. Louis, and hoped that something would
be done for us. The whites were complaining
at the same time that we were intruding upon
their rights. They made it appear that they
were the injured party, and we the
intruders. They called loudly to the great
war chief to protect their property.
How smooth must be the language of the
whites, when they can make right look like
wrong, and wrong like right.
During this summer I happened at Rock
Island, when a great chief arrived, whom I
had known as the great chief of Illinois,
(Governor Cole) in company with another
chief who I have been told is a great writer
(judge James Hall.) I called upon them and
begged to explain the grievances to them,
under which my people and I were laboring,
hoping that they could do something for us.
The great chief however, did not seem
disposed to council with, me. He said he was
no longer the chief of Illinois; that his
children had selected another father in his
stead, and that he now only ranked as they
did. I was surprised at this talk, as I had
always heard that he was a good brave and
great chief. But the white people appear to
never be satisfied. When they get a good
father, they hold councils at the suggestion
of some bad, ambitious man, who wants the
place himself, and conclude among themselves
that this man, a, some other equally
ambitious, would make a better father than
they have, and nine times out of ten they
don't get as good a one again.
I insisted on explaining to these chiefs the
true situation of my people. They gave their
assent. I rose and made a speech, in which I
explained to them the treaty made by
Quashquame, and three of our braves,
according to the manner the trader and
others had explained it to me. I then told
them that Quashquame and his party
positively denied having ever sold my
village, and that as I had never known them
to lie, I was determined to keep it in
possession.
I told them that the white people had
already entered our village, burned our
lodges, destroyed on, fences, ploughed up
our corn and beat our people. They had
brought whisky into our country, made our
people drunk, and taken from them their
homes, guns and traps, and that I had borne
all this injury, without suffering any of my
braves to raise a hand against the whites.
My object in holding this council was to get
the opinion of these two chiefs as to the
best course for me to pursue. I had appealed
in vain, time after time to our agent, who
regularly represented our situation to the
chief at St. Louis, whose duty it was to
call upon the Great Father to have justice
done to us, but instead of this we are told
that the white people wanted our county and
we must leave it for them!
I did not think it possible that our Great
Father wished us to leave our village where
we had lived so long, and where the bones of
so many of our people had been laid. The
great chief said that as he no longer had
any authority he could do nothing for us,
and felt sorry that it was not in his power
to aid us, nor did he know how to advise us.
Neither of them could do anything for us,
but both evidently were very sorry. It would
give e great pleasure at ail times to take
these two chiefs by the hand.
Autobiography of Black Hawk
Notes About the Book:
Source: Autobiography of Black
Hawk or Ma-Ka-Tai-Me-She-Kia-Kiak,
Copyrighted By J. B. Patterson, 1882
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and
then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect
some errors in the textual output.
This site includes some historical materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or language of a particular period or place.
These items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
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