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¢egiha
According to tribal traditions collected by
Dorsey, the ancestors of the Omaha, Ponka, Elwapa, Osage,
and Kansa were originally one people dwelling on Ohio and
Wabash rivers, but gradually working westward. The first
separation took place at the mouth of the Ohio, when those
who went down the Mississippi became the Kwapa or Downstream
People, while those who ascended the great river became the
Omaha or Up-stream People. This separation must have
occurred at least as early as 1500, since it preceded De
Soto's discovery of the Mississippi.
The Omaha group (from whom the Osage, Kansa, and Ponka were
not yet separated) ascended the Mississippi to the mouth of
the Missouri, where they remained for some time, though war
and hunting parties explored the country northwestward, and
the body of the tribe gradually followed these pioneers,
though the Osage and Kansa were successively left behind.
Some of the pioneer parties discovered the pipestone quarry,
and many traditions cling about this landmark. Subsequently
they were driven across the Big Sioux by the Yankton
Indians, who then lived toward the confluence of the
Minnesota and Mississippi. The group gradually
differentiated and finally divided through the separation of
the Ponka, probably about the middle of the seventeenth
century. The Omaha gathered south of the Missouri, between
the mouths of the Platte and Niobrara, while the Ponka
pushed into the Black Hills country.
The Omaha tribe remained within the great bend of the
Missouri, opposite the mouth of the Big Sioux, until white
men came. Their hunting ground extended westward and
southwestward, chiefly north of the Platte and along the
Elkhorn, to the territory of the Ponka and the Pawnee (Caddoan);
and in 1766 Carver met their hunting parties on Minnesota
river. Toward the end of the eighteenth century they were
nearly destroyed by smallpox, their number having been
reduced from about 3,500 to but little over 300 when they
were visited by Lewis and Clark, their famous chief
Blackbird being one of those carried off by the epidemic.
Subsequently they increased in numbers; in 1890 their
population was about 1,200. They are now on reservations,
mostly owning land in severalty, and are citizens of the
United States and of the state of Nebraska.
Although the name Ponka did not appear in history before
1700 it must have been used for many generations earlier,
since it is an archaic designation connected with the social
organization of several tribes and the secret societies of
the Osage and Kansa, as well as the Ponka. In 1700 the Ponka
were indicated on De l'Isle's map, though they were not then
segregated territorially from the Omaha. They, too, suffered
terribly from the smallpox epidemic, and when met by Lewis
and Clark in 1804 numbered only about 200. They increased
rapidly, reaching about 600 in 1829 and some 800 in 1842; in
1871, when they were first visited by Dorsey, they numbered
747. Up to this time the Ponka and Dakota were amicable; but
a dispute grew out of the cession of lands, and the Teton
made annual raids on the Ponka until the enforced removal of
the tribe to Indian Territory took place in 1877. Through
this warfare, more than a quarter of the Ponka lost their
lives. The displacement of this tribe from lands owned by
them in fee simple attracted attention, and a commission was
appointed by President Hayes in 1880 to inquire into the
matter; the commission, consisting of Generals Crook and
Miles and Messrs William Stickney and Walter Allen, visited
the Ponka settlements in Indian Territory and on the
Niobrara and effected a satisfactory arrangement of the
affairs of the tribe, through which the greater portion
(some 600) remained in Indian Territory, while some 225 kept
their reservation in Nebraska.
When the ¢egiha divided at the mouth of the Ohio, the
ancestors of the Osage and Kansa accompanied the main Omaha
body up the Mississippi to the mouth of Osage river. There
the Osage separated from the group, ascending the river
which bears their name. They were distinguished by Marquette
in 1673 as the "Ouchage" and "Autrechaha," and by Penicaut
in 1719 as the "Huzzau," "Ous," and "Wawha." According to
Croghan, they were, in 1759, on "White creek, a branch of
the Mississippi," with the "Grand Tuc;" but"White creek" (or
White water) was an old designation for Osage river, and
"Grand Tuc" is, according to Mooney, a corruption of "Grandes
Eaux," or Great Osage; and there is accordingly no
sufficient reason for supposing that they returned to the
Mississippi. Toward the close of the eighteenth century the
Osage and Kansa encountered the Comanche and perhaps other
Shoshonean peoples, and their course was turned southward;
and in 1817, according to Brown, the Great Osage and Little
Osage were chiefly on Osage and Arkansas rivers, in four
villages. In 1829 Porter described their country as
beginning 25 miles west of the Missouri line and running to
the Mexican line of that date, being 50 miles wide; and he
gave their number as 5,000. According to Schoolcraft, they
numbered 3,758 in April, 1853, but this was after the
removal of an important branch known as Black Dog's band to
a new locality farther down Verdigris river. In 1850 the
Osage occupied at least seven large villages, besides
numerous small ones, on Neosho and Verdigris rivers. In
1873, when visited by Dorsey, they were gathered on their
reservations in what is now Oklahoma. In 1890 they numbered
158.
The Kansa remained with the Up-stream People in their
gradual ascent of the Missouri to the mouth of the Kaw or
Kansas, when they diverged westward; but they soon came in
contact with inimical peoples, and, like the Osage, were
driven southward. The date of this divergence is not fixed,
but it must have been after 1723, when Bourgmont mentioned a
large village of "Quans" located on a small river flowing
northward thirty leagues above Kaw river, near the Missouri.
After the cession of Louisiana to the United States, a
treaty was made with the Kansa Indians, who were then on Kaw
river, at the mouth of the Saline, having been forced back
from the Missouri by the Dakota; they then numbered about
1,500 and occupied about thirty earth lodges. In 1825 they
ceded their lands on the Missouri to the Government,
retaining a reservation on the Kaw, where they were
constantly subjected to attacks from the Pawnee and other
tribes, through which large numbers of their warriors were
slain. In 1846 they again ceded their lands and received a
new reservation on Neosho river in Kansas. This was soon
overrun by settlers, when another reservation was assigned
to them in Indian Territory, near the Osage country. By 1890
their population was reduced to 214.
The Kwapa were found by De Soto in 1541 on the Mississippi
above the mouth of the St Francis, and, according to
Marquette's map, they were partly east of the Mississippi in
1673. In 1681 La Salle found them in three villages
distributed along the Mississippi, and soon afterward Tonty
mentioned four villages, one (Kappa = U?aqpaqti, "Real Kwapa")
on the Mississippi and three (Toyengan = Tanwan-ji?a, "Small
Village"; Toriman = Ti-uad¢iman, and Osotonoy = Uzutiuwe)
inland; this observation was verified by Dorsey in 1883 by
the discovery that these names are still in use. In early
days the Kwapa were known as "Akansa," or Arkansa, first
noted by La Metairie in 1682. It is probable that this name
was an Algonquian designation given because of confusion
with, or recognition of affinity to, the Kansa or Kanze, the
prefix "a" being a common one in Algouquian appellations. In
1687 Joutel located two of the villages of the tribe on the
Arkansas and two on the Mississippi, one of the latter being
on the eastern side. According to St Cosme, the greater part
of the tribe died of smallpox in October, 1699. In 1700 De
l'Isle placed the principal "Acansa" village on the southern
side of Arkansas river; and, according to Gravier, there
were in 1701 five villages, the largest, Imaha (Omaha),
being highest on the Arkansas. In 1805 Sibley placed the
"Arkensa" in three villages on the southern side of Arkansas
river, about 12 miles above Arkansas post. They claimed to
be the original proprietors of the country bordering the
Arkansas for 300 miles, or up to the confluence of the Cadwa,
above which lay the territory of the Osage. Subsequently the
Kwapa affiliated with the Caddo Indians, though of another
stock; according to Porter they were in the Caddo country in
1829. As reservations were established, the Kwapa were
re-segregated, and in 1877 were on their reservation in
northwestern Indian Territory; but most of them afterward
scattered, chiefly to the Osage country, where in 1890 they
were found to number 232.
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materials that may imply negative
stereotypes reflecting the culture or
language of a particular period or place.
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interpreted to mean that the WebMasters in
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The Siouan Indians, Fifteenth Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 1893 - 1894
Siouan IndiansFree
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