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How fair is Decorah,
Our city named so
For the Indians that roamed
O'er its hills years ago,
Whose well trodden pathways
The story could tell
How from all directions
They came here to dwell.
In fitting remembrance
These lines we inscribe
To Waukon Decorah,
A chief of their tribe.
Whose name is a landmark
And honored shall stand
For heeding the fiat
"Move on, yield your land."
And Indians that peopled
This beautiful site,
Reluctant but friendly
Relinquished their right.
They left us this valley
With beauties untold,
Gave way to the settlers,
Our pioneers bold.
Things have changed, to be sure,
In this valley, still
'Tis but sixty odd years
Since they camped on yon hill
Where now stands the courthouse
A pride of our town,
The heart of the county,
Of widespread renown.
Mrs. John C. Hexom |
Hopokoekau, or "Glory of the Morning,"
also known as the Queen of the Winnebagoes, was the mother of a celebrated
line of chiefs, all of whom, well known to border history, bore in some
form the name Decorah. Her Indian name is also given as Wa-ho-po-e-kau.
She was the daughter of one of the principal Winnebago chiefs. There is no
record of the date of her
birth or death.
She became the wife of Sabrevoir De Carrie, who
probably came to Wisconsin with the French army, in which he was an
officer, in 1728. He resigned his commission in 1729, and became a
fur-trader among the Winnebagoes, subsequently marrying "Glory of the
Morning." He was adopted into her clan and highly honored. After seven or
eight years, during which time two sons and a daughter were born to him,
he left her, taking with him the daughter. The (,queen refused to go with
her husband, and remained in her home with her two sons. "The result is
to-day that one-half or two-thirds of the Winnebago tribe have more or
less of the Decorah blood in their veins."13
Through the intervening generations there has been no other mixture of
Caucasian blood, so that the Decorahs of to-day are probably as nearly
full-bloods as any Indians in any part of the country.
De Carrie returned to Canada, re-entered the army, and
was killed at Ste Foye in the spring of 1760. The daughter whom he took
with him, became the wife of a trader, Constant Kerigoufili, whose son,
Sieur Laurent Fily (so-called), died about 1846.
Captain Jonathan Carver, who visited the Queen in 1766,
states that she received him graciously, and luxuriously entertained him
during the four days he remained in her village, which "contained fifty
houses." Her two sons, "Being the descendants of a chief on the mother's
side, when they arrived at manhood, assumed the dignity of their rank by
inheritance. They were generally good Indians and frequently urged their
claims to the friendship of the whites, by saying they were themselves
half white."
Choukeka Dekaury, or Spoon Decorah, sometimes called the Ladle, was the
eldest son of Sabrevoir De Carrie and Hopokoekau. The name is also
rendered Chau-ka-ka and Chou-ga-rah. After having been made chief he
became the leader of attacks on the Chippewas during a war between them
and the Winnebagoes, but he maintained friendly relations with the whites.
He was the ancestor of the Portage branch of the family. It was
principally through his influence that the treaty of June 3, 1816, at St.
Louis, Mo., was brought about.
His wife, Flight of Geese, was a daughter of Nawkaw
(known also as Carrymaunee and Walking Turtle), whose management of tribal
affairs was decidedly peaceful. According to La Ronde, Choukeka's death
occurred in 1816, when he was "quite aged." He left six sons and five
daughters.
The sons were:
(1) Konokah, or Old Gray-headed Decorah
(2) Augah, or the Black Decorah, named by La Ronde,
Ruch-ka-scha-ka, or White Pigeon
(3) Anaugah, or the Raisin Decorah, named by La Ronde, Chou-me-ne-ka-ka
4) Nah-ha-sauch-e-ka, or Rascal Decorah
(5) Wau-kon-ga-ka, or the Thunder Hearer
(6) Ong-skaka, or White Wolf, who died young. |
Three of the daughters married Indians. One
married a trapper named Dennis De Riviere and later married Perische
Grignon. The other married jean Lecuyer.
Cyrus Thomas14
makes the statement that, "From Choukeka's daughters who married white men
are descended several well known families of Wisconsin and Minnesota."
Chah-post-kaw-kaw, or the Buzzard Decorah, was the second son of De Carrie
and "Glory of the Morning." He settled at La Crosse in 1787, with a band
of Winnebagoes, and was soon
after killed there.
He had two sons:
(1) Big Canoe, or One-eyed Decorah
(2) Wakun-ha-ga, or Snake Skin, known as
Waukon Decorah. |
Old Gray-Headed Decorah, called by the
whites Konakah
(eldest) Decorah, often mentioned as Old Dekaury, was
the eldest son and successor of Choukeka Dekaury. His
common Indian name was Schachipkaka, or The War
Eagle. The signature "De-ca-ri" attached to the treaty of Prairie des
Chiens (as the word is frequently spelled in early documents), Michigan
Territory, August 19, 1825, is probably that of Old Dekaury. He signed the
treaty of Prairie du Chien, Michigan Territory, August 1, 1829, as "Hee-tsha-wau-sharp-skawkau,
or White War Eagle. "Among those representing the Fort Winnebago
deputation at the treaty of Fort Armstrong, Rock Island, Ill., September
15, 1832, he signed as "Hee-tshah-wau:aip-skaw-skaw, or White War Eagle,
De-kau-ray, sr."
Old Decorah was born in 1747, and died at Peten well,
the
high rock on the Wisconsin river, April 20, 1836, about ninety years old.
Old De-kau-ry's town contained over l00 lodges, and was the largest of the
Winnebago villages. Before he died he called a Catholic priest, who
baptized him the day of his death.
Before his father's death, in 1816, Old Gray-headed
Decorah had joined a band of Winnebagoes who took part, August 2, 1813, in
the attack led by General Proctor, with 500 regulars and 800 Indians, on
Fort Stephenson on lower Sandusky river, Ohio, which was so gallantly
defended by Major George Croghan with a force of 150 Americans and only
one cannon. He also fought with Proctor and Tecumseh, a celebrated Shawnee
chief, at the battle of the Thames, Canada, where a great part of the
British army was either slain or captured by the American forces under
General Wm. H. Harrison, October 5, 1813, and where Tecumseh was shot. Old Decorah was held as a hostage for the
delivery of Red Bird, a war chief, during the so called Winnebago War. Old
Decorah gave assurance to General Atkinson, during this war, of the
peaceable intentions of the Winnebagoes.

13 Statement by Geo. W. Kingsley.
14 Of the Bureau of American Ethnology.
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