Histories: Trempealeau Co. Historical Accounts:
"History of Trempealeau County Wisconsin, 1917":
Chapter 5:
Wabasha
-As transcribed from pages 43 - 45
Aside
from the wandering Indian bands which pitched their camp in Trempealeau
County from the days of Perrot, three bands seem to have made their
home in the locality at various times before the coming of the
settlers, the Winnebago bands of Red Bird and Decorah, and the
Medawakanton Dakota band of Wabasha. Since the coming of the settlers
there have been scattering encampments.
The chiefs of the Wabash a dynasty early became familiar with
Trempealeau Mountain and Trempealeau Prairie, and Wabasha II maintained
the home of the tribe here for several years. Wabasha I was probably
born about 1720.14 His name is
variously rendered - Ouabashas, Wapasha, Wapahasha and Wah-pah-hah-sha
- and means red leaf, red cap, or red war banner. He was of mixed Sioux
and Algonquian blood, his father having been a Dakota chief and his
mother a Chippewa princess.15 He was
head chief of all the Medawakanton Dakota, his own immediate band
probably embodying the ancient Mantanton. The band was known to the
Dakota themselves as the Ona-pe-ton or Falling Leaf Band. He appears to
have moved his village from the Mille Lacs region in Minnesota, first
to the lower valley of the Rum River and subsequently to the mouth of
the Minnesota, both in the same State. Later he established himself and
his band at the present site of Winona.16
At Winona (Ke-ox-ah) the headquarters of the band seem to have been
maintained until the treaty of 1851, though for many decades,
apparently until after the time of Pike in 1805, the band had a village
on the Upper Iowa River. Wabasha I was greatly honored by the British,
made a number of trips to Montreal, received the confirmation of the
authorities to his title as head chief of all the Medawakanton, was a
general in the British army in the Revolutionary War, and led his
troops in the British campaign against the Americans at St. Louis, St.
Genevieve, Missouri, and elsewhere. In his old age he was exiled by
jealous relatives from his chieftainship and from the Winona village,
and probably died in Houston County, Minnesota, about 1806. Wabasha II
succeeded him as chief, and reigned until his death in 1836. He is the
La Feuille, The Leaf, who came in contact with all the early American
explorers beginning with Pike in 1805. He sided with the British in the
War of 1812. When Long came up the river in 1817, Wabasha was firmly
established at Winona. But a short time before the Black Hawk War, the
village was moved to Trempealeau Prairie as a precaution against the
raids made by the Sauk of Iowa.17 The
band continued, however, to hold its celebrations and dances at
Ke-ox-ah (Winona). Wabasha II took part in the Black Hawk War of 1832,
and assisted in exterminating many of the Sauk and Foxes as they were
fleeing across the Mississippi River into Iowa after their defeat at
the mouth of Bad Axe River. He died of smallpox at the age of about 63,
in 1836. The scourge had swept his band, and the whole village was
reduced to a few teepes. Wabasha II was highly praised by all the
whites with whom he came in contact. In person he was of low stature,
and his face was disfigured by having lost one eye. In character he was
wise, prudent and brave, a friend of the whites, and what was unusual
in those days, absolutely abstemious in his habits, and an earnest
advocate of temperance.
He was succeeded by, Wabasha III, who after the treaty of 1837
maintained his home and his tribe in Winona until the settlers arrived
in 1851.18 Then he moved across the
river into Wisconsin, and spent some time in this vicinity before
locating in the western part of Minnesota. Wabasha III led his warriors
in the Dakota outbreak of 1862, although he was opposed to it, and was
one of the first to make proposals of peace to the whites, even while
his nation was still in arms. After the Massacre he was removed to
Missouri and finally to Santee, Nebraska, where he died April 23, 1876,
a solitary, broken man, who had inherited the chieftainship of an
empire, and had watched his people dwindle before the onrushing wave of
a race that had defrauded him of his possessions.
Resources
for the above information:
14
- For the story of the Wabasha dynasty, see: Winchell, Aborigines of
Minnesota, 540-558. Also: F. Curtiss-Wedge, History of Winona County
(Chicago, 1913), I, 18-31. Also; Bunnell, Winona and Its Environs,
151-154. Also: Hodge, Handbook of American Indians, II, 911.
15 - Henry R. Schoolcraft, The American Indian, History, Conditions and Prospects (Rochester, 1851), 137.
16 - For Indian myth concerning the removal of the band to this region, see: Bunnen, Winona and Its Environs, 111-117.
17 - Ibid., 209.
18 - Curtiss-Wedge, History of Winona County, 117, 123-124, 127-128.
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