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<h2> LITTLE CROW </h2>
<p>Chief Little Crow was the eldest son of Cetanwakuwa (Charging Hawk). It
was on account of his father's name, mistranslated Crow, that he was
called by the whites "Little Crow." His real name was Taoyateduta, His Red
People.</p>
<p>As far back as Minnesota history goes, a band of the Sioux called Kaposia
(Light Weight, because they were said to travel light) inhabited the Mille
Lacs region. Later they dwelt about St. Croix Falls, and still later near
St. Paul. In 1840, Cetanwakuwa was still living in what is now West St.
Paul, but he was soon after killed by the accidental discharge of his gun.</p>
<p>It was during a period of demoralization for the Kaposias that Little Crow
became the leader of his people. His father, a well-known chief, had three
wives, all from different bands of the Sioux. He was the only son of the
first wife, a Leaf Dweller. There were two sons of the second and two of
the third wife, and the second set of brothers conspired to kill their
half-brother in order to keep the chieftainship in the family.</p>
<p>Two kegs of whisky were bought, and all the men of the tribe invited to a
feast. It was planned to pick some sort of quarrel when all were drunk,
and in the confusion Little Crow was to be murdered. The plot went
smoothly until the last instant, when a young brave saved the intended
victim by knocking the gun aside with his hatchet, so that the shot went
wild. However, it broke his right arm, which remained crooked all his
life. The friends of the young chieftain hastily withdrew, avoiding a
general fight; and later the council of the Kaposias condemned the two
brothers, both of whom were executed, leaving him in undisputed
possession.</p>
<p>Such was the opening of a stormy career. Little Crow's mother had been a
chief's daughter, celebrated for her beauty and spirit, and it is said
that she used to plunge him into the lake through a hole in the ice,
rubbing him afterward with snow, to strengthen his nerves, and that she
would remain with him alone in the deep woods for days at a time, so that
he might know that solitude is good, and not fear to be alone with nature.</p>
<p>"My son," she would say, "if you are to be a leader of men, you must
listen in silence to the mystery, the spirit."</p>
<p>At a very early age she made a feast for her boy and announced that he
would fast two days. This is what might be called a formal presentation to
the spirit or God. She greatly desired him to become a worthy leader
according to the ideas of her people. It appears that she left her husband
when he took a second wife, and lived with her own band till her death.
She did not marry again.</p>
<p>Little Crow was an intensely ambitious man and without physical fear. He
was always in perfect training and early acquired the art of warfare of
the Indian type. It is told of him that when he was about ten years old,
he engaged with other boys in a sham battle on the shore of a lake near
St. Paul. Both sides were encamped at a little distance from one another,
and the rule was that the enemy must be surprised, otherwise the attack
would be considered a failure. One must come within so many paces
undiscovered in order to be counted successful. Our hero had a favorite
dog which, at his earnest request, was allowed to take part in the game,
and as a scout he entered the enemy camp unseen, by the help of his dog.</p>
<p>When he was twelve, he saved the life of a companion who had broken
through the ice by tying the end of a pack line to a log, then at great
risk to himself carrying it to the edge of the hole where his comrade went
down. It is said that he also broke in, but both boys saved themselves by
means of the line.</p>
<p>As a young man, Little Crow was always ready to serve his people as a
messenger to other tribes, a duty involving much danger and hardship. He
was also known as one of the best hunters in his band. Although still
young, he had already a war record when he became chief of the Kaposias,
at a time when the Sioux were facing the greatest and most far-reaching
changes that had ever come to them.</p>
<p>At this juncture in the history of the northwest and its native
inhabitants, the various fur companies had paramount influence. They did
not hesitate to impress the Indians with the idea that they were the
authorized representatives of the white races or peoples, and they were
quick to realize the desirability of controlling the natives through their
most influential chiefs. Little Crow became quite popular with post
traders and factors. He was an orator as well as a diplomat, and one of
the first of his nation to indulge in politics and promote unstable
schemes to the detriment of his people.</p>
<p>When the United States Government went into the business of acquiring
territory from the Indians so that the flood of western settlement might
not be checked, commissions were sent out to negotiate treaties, and in
case of failure it often happened that a delegation of leading men of the
tribe were invited to Washington. At that period, these visiting chiefs,
attired in all the splendor of their costumes of ceremony, were treated
like ambassadors from foreign countries.</p>
<p>One winter in the late eighteen-fifties, a major general of the army gave
a dinner to the Indian chiefs then in the city, and on this occasion
Little Crow was appointed toastmaster. There were present a number of
Senators and members of Congress, as well as judges of the Supreme Court,
cabinet officers, and other distinguished citizens. When all the guests
were seated, the Sioux arose and addressed them with much dignity as
follows:</p>
<p>"Warriors and friends: I am informed that the great white war chief who of
his generosity and comradeship has given us this feast, has expressed the
wish that we may follow to-night the usages and customs of my people. In
other words, this is a warriors' feast, a braves' meal. I call upon the
Ojibway chief, the Hole-in-the-Day, to give the lone wolf's hunger call,
after which we will join him in our usual manner."</p>
<p>The tall and handsome Ojibway now rose and straightened his superb form to
utter one of the clearest and longest wolf howls that was ever heard in
Washington, and at its close came a tremendous burst of war whoops that
fairly rent the air, and no doubt electrified the officials there present.</p>
<p>On one occasion Little Crow was invited by the commander of Fort Ridgeley,
Minnesota, to call at the fort. On his way back, in company with a
half-breed named Ross and the interpreter Mitchell, he was ambushed by a
party of Ojibways, and again wounded in the same arm that had been broken
in his attempted assassination. His companion Ross was killed, but he
managed to hold the war party at bay until help came and thus saved his
life.</p>
<p>More and more as time passed, this naturally brave and ambitious man
became a prey to the selfish interests of the traders and politicians. The
immediate causes of the Sioux outbreak of 1862 came in quick succession to
inflame to desperate action an outraged people. The two bands on the
so-called "lower reservations" in Minnesota were Indians for whom nature
had provided most abundantly in their free existence. After one hundred
and fifty years of friendly intercourse first with the French, then the
English, and finally the Americans, they found themselves cut off from
every natural resource, on a tract of land twenty miles by thirty, which
to them was virtual imprisonment. By treaty stipulation with the
government, they were to be fed and clothed, houses were to be built for
them, the men taught agriculture, and schools provided for the children.
In addition to this, a trust fund of a million and a half was to be set
aside for them, at five per cent interest, the interest to be paid
annually per capita. They had signed the treaty under pressure, believing
in these promises on the faith of a great nation.</p>
<p>However, on entering the new life, the resources so rosily described to
them failed to materialize. Many families faced starvation every winter,
their only support the store of the Indian trader, who was baiting his
trap for their destruction. Very gradually they awoke to the facts. At
last it was planned to secure from them the north half of their
reservation for ninety-eight thousand dollars, but it was not explained to
the Indians that the traders were to receive all the money. Little Crow
made the greatest mistake of his life when he signed this agreement.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, to make matters worse, the cash annuities were not paid for
nearly two years. Civil War had begun. When it was learned that the
traders had taken all of the ninety-eight thousand dollars "on account",
there was very bitter feeling. In fact, the heads of the leading stores
were afraid to go about as usual, and most of them stayed in St. Paul.
Little Crow was justly held in part responsible for the deceit, and his
life was not safe.</p>
<p>The murder of a white family near Acton, Minnesota, by a party of Indian
duck hunters in August, 1862, precipitated the break. Messengers were sent
to every village with the news, and at the villages of Little Crow and
Little Six the war council was red-hot. It was proposed to take advantage
of the fact that north and south were at war to wipe out the white
settlers and to regain their freedom. A few men stood out against such a
desperate step, but the conflagration had gone beyond their control.</p>
<p>There were many mixed bloods among these Sioux, and some of the Indians
held that these were accomplices of the white people in robbing them of
their possessions, therefore their lives should not be spared. My father,
Many Lightnings, who was practically the leader of the Mankato band (for
Mankato, the chief, was a weak man), fought desperately for the lives of
the half-breeds and the missionaries. The chiefs had great confidence in
my father, yet they would not commit themselves, since their braves were
clamoring for blood. Little Crow had been accused of all the misfortunes
of his tribe, and he now hoped by leading them against the whites to
regain his prestige with his people, and a part at least of their lost
domain.</p>
<p>There were moments when the pacifists were in grave peril. It was almost
daybreak when my father saw that the approaching calamity could not be
prevented. He and two others said to Little Crow: "If you want war, you
must personally lead your men to-morrow. We will not murder women and
children, but we will fight the soldiers when they come." They then left
the council and hastened to warn my brother-in-law, Faribault, and others
who were in danger.</p>
<p>Little Crow declared he would be seen in the front of every battle, and it
is true that he was foremost in all the succeeding bloodshed, urging his
warriors to spare none. He ordered his war leader, Many Hail, to fire the
first shot, killing the trader James Lynd, in the door of his store.</p>
<p>After a year of fighting in which he had met with defeat, the discredited
chief retreated to Fort Garry, now Winnipeg, Manitoba, where, together
with Standing Buffalo, he undertook secret negotiations with his old
friends the Indian traders. There was now a price upon his head, but he
planned to reach St. Paul undetected and there surrender himself to his
friends, who he hoped would protect him in return for past favors. It is
true that he had helped them to secure perhaps the finest country held by
any Indian nation for a mere song.</p>
<p>He left Canada with a few trusted friends, including his youngest and
favorite son. When within two or three days' journey of St. Paul, he told
the others to return, keeping with him only his son, Wowinape, who was but
fifteen years of age. He meant to steal into the city by night and go
straight to Governor Ramsey, who was his personal friend. He was very
hungry and was obliged to keep to the shelter of the deep woods. The next
morning, as he was picking and eating wild raspberries, he was seen by a
wood-chopper named Lamson. The man did not know who he was. He only knew
that he was an Indian, and that was enough for him, so he lifted his rifle
to his shoulder and fired, then ran at his best pace. The brilliant but
misguided chief, who had made that part of the country unsafe for any
white man to live in, sank to the ground and died without a struggle. The
boy took his father's gun and made some effort to find the assassin, but
as he did not even know in which direction to look for him, he soon gave
up the attempt and went back to his friends.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Lamson reached home breathless and made his report. The body of
the chief was found and identified, in part by the twice broken arm, and
this arm and his scalp may be seen to-day in the collection of the
Minnesota Historical Society.</p>
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