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Winnebago
Linguistically the Winnebago Indians are
closely related to the ŧΩiwe're
on the one side and to the Mandan on the other. They were
first mentioned in the Jesuit Relation of 1636, though the
earliest known use of the name Winnebago occurs in the
Relation of 1640; Nicollet found them on Green bay in 1639.
According to Shea, the Winnebago were almost annihilated by
the Illinois (Algonquian) tribe in early days, and the
historical group was made up of the survivors of the early
battles. Cbauvignerie placed the Winnebago on Lake Superior
in 1736, and Jefferys referred to them and the Sac as living
near the head of Green bay in 1761; Carver mentions a
Winnebago village on a small island near the eastern end of
Winnebago lake in 1778. Pike enumerated seven Winnebago
villages existing in 1811; and in 1822 the population of the
tribe was estimated at 5,800 (including 900 warriors) in the
country about Winnebago lake and extending thence
southwestward to the Mississippi. By treaties in 1825 and
1832 they ceded their lands south of Wisconsin and Fox
rivers for a reservation on the Mississippi above the Oneota;
one of their villages in 1832 was at Prairie la Grosse. They
suffered several visitations of smallpox; the third, which
occurred in 1836, carried off more than a quarter of the
tribe. A part of the people long remained widely distributed
over their old country east of the Mississippi and along
that river in Iowa and Minnesota; in 1840 most of the tribe
removed to the neutral ground in the then territory of Iowa;
in 1846 they surrendered their reservation for another above
the Minnesota, and in 1856 they were removed to Blue Earth,
Minnesota. Here they were mastering agriculture, when the
Sioux war broke out and the settlers demanded their removal.
Those who had taken up farms, thereby abandoning tribal
rights, were allowed to remain, but the others were
transferred to Crow creek, on Missouri river, whence they
soon escaped. Their privations and sufferings were terrible;
out of 2,000 taken to Crow creek only 1,200 reached the
Omaha reservation, whither most of them fled. They were
assigned a new reservation on the Omaha lands, where they
now remain, occupying lands allotted in severalty. In 1890
there were 1,215 Winnebago on the reservation, but nearly an
equal number were scattered over Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin,
and Michigan, where they now live chiefly by agriculture,
with a strong predilection for hunting.
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The Siouan Indians, Fifteenth Annual Report of Bureau of Ethnology, 1893 - 1894
Siouan IndiansFree
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