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Difficulties with the Iowa
My nation had now some
difficulty with the
Iowa. Our young men had repeatedly
killed some of them, and the breaches had
always been made up by giving presents to
the relations of those killed. But the last
council we had with them, we promised that
in case any more of their people were killed
ours, instead of presents, we would give up
the person or persons, who had done the
injury. We made this determination known to
our people, but notwithstanding this, one of
our young men killed an Iowa the following
winter.
A party of our people were about starting
for the Iowa village to give the young man
up, and I agreed to accompany them. When we
were ready to start, I called at the lodge
for the young man to go with us. He was
sick, but willing to go, but his brother,
however, prevented him and insisted on going
to die in his place, as he was unable to
travel. We started, and on the seventh day
arrived in sight of the Iowa village, and
within a short distance of it we halted ad
dismounted. We all bid farewell to our young
brave, who entered the village singing his
death song, and sat down on the square in
the middle of the village. One of the Iowa
chiefs came out to us. We told him that we
had fulfilled our promise, that we had
brought the brother of the young man who had
killed one of his people--that he had
volunteered to come in his place, in
consequence of his brother being unable to
travel from sickness. We had no further
conversation but mounted our horses and rode
off. As we started I cast my eye toward the
village, and observed the Iowa coming out of
their lodges with spears and war clubs. We
took the backward trail and traveled until
dark--then encamped and made a fire. We had
not been there long before we heard the
sound of homes coming toward us. We seized
our arms, but instead of an enemy it was our
young brave with two horses. He told me that
after we had left him, they menaced him with
death for some time--then gave him something
to eat--smoked the pipe with him and made
him a present of the two horses and some
goods, and started him after us. When we
arrived at on, village our people were much
pleased, and for their noble and generous
conduct on this occasion, not one of the
Iowa people has been killed since by our
nation.
That fall I visited Malden with several of
my band, and was well treated by the agent
of our British Father, who gave us a variety
of presents. He also gave me a medal, and
told me there never would be war between
England and America again; but for my
fidelity to the British, during the war that
had terminated some time before, requested
me to come with my band and get presents
every year, as Colonel Dixon had promised
me.
I returned and hunted that winter on the Two
Rivers. The whites were now settling the
country fast. I was out one day hunting in a
bottom, and met three white men. They
accused me of killing their hogs. I denied
it, but they would not listen to me. One of
them took my gun out of my hand and fired it
off--then took out the flint, gave it back
to me and commenced beating me with sticks,
ordering me at the same time to be off. I
was so much bruised that I could not sleep
for several nights.
Some time after this occurrence, one of my
camp cut a bee tree and carried the honey to
his lodge. A party of white men soon
followed him, and told him the bee tree was
theirs, and that he had no right to cut it.
He pointed to the honey and told them to
take it. They were not satisfied with this,
but took all the packs of skins that he had
collected during the winter, to pay his
trader and clothe his family with in the
spring, and carried them off.
How could we like a people who treated us so
unjustly? We determined to break up our camp
for fear they would do worse, and when we
joined our people in the spring a great many
of them complained of similar treatment.
This summer our agent came to live at Rock
Island. He treated us well and gave us good
advice. I visited him and the trader very
often during the summer, and for the first
time heard talk of our having to leave our
village. The trader, Colonel George
Davenport, who spoke our language, explained
to me the terms of the treaty that had been
made, and said we would be obliged to leave
the Illinois side of the Mississippi, and
advised us to select a good place for our
village and remove to it in the spring. He
pointed out the difficulties we would have
to encounter if we remained at our village
on Rock river. He had great influence with
the principal Fox chief, his adopted
brother,
Keokuk. He persuaded him to leave his
village, go to the west side of the
Mississippi and build another, which he did
the spring following. Nothing was talked of
but leaving our village. Keokuk had been
persuaded to consent to go, and was using
all his influence, backed by the war chief
at Fort Armstrong and our agent and trader
at Rock Island, to induce others to go with
him. He sent the crier through our village,
to inform our people that it was the wish of
our Great Father that we should remove to
the west side of the Mississippi, and
recommended the Iowa river as a good place
for the new village. He wished his party to
make such arrangements, before they started
on their winter's hunt, an to preclude the
necessity of their returning to the village
in the spring.
The party opposed to removing called on me
for my opinion. I gave it freely, and after
questioning Quashquame about the sale of our
lands, he assured me that he "never had
consented to the sale of our village." I now
promised this party to be the leader, and
raised the standard of opposition to Keokuk,
with a full determination not to leave our
village. I had an interview with Keokuk, to
see if this difficulty could not be settled
with our Great Father, and told him to
propose to give any other land that our
Great Father might choose, even our lead
mines, to be peaceably permitted to keep the
small point of land on which our village was
situated. I was of the opinion that the
white people had plenty of land and would
never take our village from us. Keokuk
promised to make an exchange if possible,
and applied to our agent, and the great
chief at St. Louis, who had charge of all
the agents, for permission to go to
Washington for that purpose.
This satisfied us for a time. We started to
our hunting grounds with good hopes that
something would be done for us. Doing the
winter I received information that three
families of whites had come to our village
and destroyed some of our lodges, were
making fences and dividing our cornfields
for their own use. They were quarreling
among themselves about their lines of
division. I started immediately for Rock
river, a distance of ten days' travel, and
on my arrival found the report true. I went
to my lodge and saw a family occupying it. I
wished to talk to them but they could not
understand me. I then went to Rock Island;
the agent being absent, I told the
interpreter what I wanted to say to these
people, viz: "Not to settle on our lands,
nor trouble our fences, that there was
plenty of land in the country for them to
settle upon, and that they must leave our
village, as we were coming back to it in the
spring." The interpreter wrote me a paper, I
went back to the village and showed it to
the intruders, but could not understand
their reply. I presumed, however, that they
would remove as I expected them to. I
returned to Rock Island, passed the night
there and had a long conversation with the
trader. He advised me to give up and make my
village with Keokuk on the Iowa river. I
told him that I would not. The next morning
I crossed the Mississippi on very bad ice,
but the Great Spirit had made it strong,
that I might pass over safe. I traveled
three days farther to see the Winnebago
sub-agent and converse with him about our
difficulties. He gave no better news than
the trader had done. I then started by way
of Rock river, to see the Prophet, believing
that he as a man of great knowledge. When we
met, I explained to him everything as it
was. He at once agreed that I was right, and
advised me never to give up our village, for
the whites to plow up the bones of our
people. He said, that if we remained at our
village, the whites would not trouble us,
and advised me to get Keokuk, and the party
that consented to go with him to the Iowa in
the spring, to return and remain at our
village.
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.
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These items are presented as part of the historical record and should not be
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