BG: Mni Sota Macoce: Land of the Dakota, Gwen Westerman & Bruce White

Wednesday, 14 December 2022

Chapter 1

  • Question of what it means to ‘possess’ or ‘own’ land; and, corrrespondingly, incursion or settlement. 
  • Land ownership described in terms of water — e.g., along rivers to lakes 
  • misunderstanding of nomadic
  • References and allusions to war, enemies, defense, captives, and human sacrifice

Chapter 2: The period of French contact

  • This chapter is concerned with establishing that Dakota inhabited Minnesota and portions of neighboring regions since the arrival of the French in the mid-17th century. 
  • It also argues based on place names, and great familiarity with the region, that Dakota have inhabited the area long before that. 
  • 1642-43. French Jesuites encounter Dakota; other missionaries follow
  • French establish trading posts and various French explorers claim everything they can for France. 
  • Dakota et al very interested in metal and munitions. 
  • Relations between Dakota and Ojibwa appear peaceful.
  • 1760. French lose war with the British and trading activity shifts to French and then Americans. 
  • 1760s — relations between Dakota and Ojibwe have deteriorated 

Chapter 3: The beginning of American contact

  • 1815 — first American treaty with the Dakota. 
  • 1820: Taliaferro at Ft Snelling: daily journals; relationship & daughter with Dakota woman. 
  • 1820’s-30s. Peace treaties between Dakota and Ojibwe mediated by Taliaferro — 1825 praeirie du churn. We
  • Makes point that Dakota moved about land strategically and seasonally. 
  • Some Dakota try European-style farming, e.g. at cloudman villiage. The village was abandoned due to Dakota-ogibwe conflict. 
  • Food: muskrat, maple sugar, blueberry, fish (bullhead), buffalo, wild rice, corn, goose, potatoes, cranberry, deer..
  • The Dakota ball games — among 
  • bands. Gambling. Hundreds of players. Half mile between goals. Ball BBC and racquet. 
  • Summer villages. 

Chapter 4: The Treaties

  • Doctrine of Discovery… dates back to papal justification for the crusades
  • Rules of sympathetic Construction of Indian Treaties— u s Supreme Court. 
  • 1805: Pike Treaty. Grant of land to US. 
  • 1825: Prairie du Chien treaty. Treaty establishing different tribal territories. But would also make it easier for future land acquisition. 
  • 1830: establishment of neutral zones to serve as hunting grounds and to be administered by the US. 
  • 1837: cessation of lands east of Mississippi. 
  • 1851: cessation of most lands and removal of Dakota to land along 140 miles on both sides of the Minnesota river. 
  • 1858: treaty altered to exclude north side of Minnesota river. 
  • 1862: delayed annuities lead to uprising, defeat, executions/imprisonment, and exile. 
  • 1863: abrogation act transforms all money due Dakota into funds to be paid to settlers. 

Chapter 5: The uprising, exile and present day…

  • August/Sept 1862: Dakota uprising in response to insufficient food and unfulfilled promises. 
  • 1862: 38 Dakota executed at Ft Snelling. 230+ had their sentences commuted. 
  • 1700+ put in concentration camp over winter if 1862; ~300-400 died. 
  • 1863: 1310+ exiled to Crow Creek, Dakota territory and then scattered across several states. 
  • 1863: a few hundred Dakota remain in Minnesota.  
  • Some Dakota became educated and wrote down stories and histories. 
  • Mounds were not protected until the 1970s. 
  • Controversy over cold water spring and pilot knob. Issue of ‘compromised cultural areas. Written vs oral knowledge. 

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