Taoyateduta
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Taoyateduta (1810?–July 3, 1863) was a chief of the Mdewakanton Sioux tribe. His name means "His Red Nation," but he became known as Little Crow because of his father's name Cetan Wakuwa Mani (literally: "Hawk that chases/hunts walking") which was mistranslated to visiting whites.
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[edit] Early life
Taoyateduta was born at the Indian settlement of Kaposia, near what is modern-day St. Paul, Minnesota. His father died in 1846 after accidentally discharging a gun. Tribal leadership was disputed between Taoyateduta and his brother, finally ending in a scuffle that saw Taoyateduta shot in the wrists, leaving permanent scars that he concealed with long sleeves for the rest of his life.
He took control of the tribe by 1849, the year Minnesota became a United States territory.
In 1851, the United States negotiated the first Treaty of Fort Laramie with the Sioux tribes and others. Taoyateduta agreed to move his people to land put aside along the Minnesota River to the west. However, the treaty ratified by the United States Senate had the paragraph setting aside this land removed. The tribe was forced to negotiate a new treaty, under threat of forcible removal to the Dakotas, this time only granting land on one side of the river.
Taoyateduta tried to get along with the customs of the United States[1]. He visited President James Buchanan in Washington, D.C.; replaced his native clothing with trousers and jackets with brass buttons ; joined the Episcopal Church; and took up farming. However, by 1862 stress built up in his community as cheating by traders came to light and Congress failed to pay the annuities mandated by treaty in exchange for the land. As the tribe grew hungry and impoverished as food languished in the warehouses of the traders, Taoyateduta's ability to restrain his people declined.
[edit] Little Crow's War (the Dakota War of 1862)
On August 4, 1862, about five hundred Sioux broke into the food warehouses at the Lower Agency; the agent in charge, Thomas Galbraith, ordered defending troops not to shoot and called a conference. At the conference, Little Crow pointed out that they were owed the money to buy the food and warned that "When men are hungry, they help themselves." The trader Andrew Myrick replied, "So far as I am concerned, if they are hungry let them eat grass or their own dung."
The tribe's need for food, more than insult, led to the Dakota War of 1862. Taoyateduta reluctantly agreed to lead the tribes through the conflict, even though he knew they were outnumbered and outgunned. He scored initial victories, including the burning of New Ulm,[2] but eventually was forced to flee to Canada as his forces weakened.
Deciding that the tribe must adopt a mobile existence, having been robbed of its territory, he returned to steal horses from his former land in Minnesota. On July 3rd, 1863 while he and his son Wowinapa were foraging for berries in a farmer's field, they we spotted by the landowner Nathan Lampson, a farmer, and his son. The four quickly engaged in a short firefight in which Little Crow shot twice, once wounding Mr. Lampson. Lampson and his son both shot and mortally wounded Taoyateduta. The chief then told his son to flee, with which he complied. Mr. Lampson's son then ran for nearly 12 miles to Hutchinson, Minnesota, to gather a search and recovery party. The townspeople quickly departed to find a wounded Lampson and a dead Native, who when they discovered was Little Crow, took the center and humiliating role of their 4th of July celebration.
Presently, a small stone tablet sits on the roadside in front of the very same field where the Sioux chief was killed, just 2 miles from a marker acknowledging the death of a white boy slain in the Uprising.
[edit] Legacy
The farmer, Nathan Lampson, received a standard bounty for the scalp of an Indian, plus an addition $500 bounty when it was discovered the remains were that of Taoyateduta.
Little Crow's body was transported back to Hutchinson where it was horribly mutilated by the citizens. His body was dragged in the hot summer sun down the town's Main Street while firecrackers were placed in his ears and dogs picked at his head. After their celebration, the town disposed of the body in the alley of Main Street, where ordinary garbage was regulary thrown. The Minnesota Historical Society received his scalp in 1868, and his skull in 1896. Other bones were collected at other times.
In 1971 his remains were returned to his grandson Jesse Wakeman (son of Wowinapa) for proper burial.
The City of Hutchinson in the 1930s erected a large bronze statue of Taoyateduta (calling him "Little Crow") which stands in a prominent spot overlooking the Little Crow River near the Main Street bridge access to the downtown business district.
[edit] References
- ^ Brown, Dee (1970) Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, ISBN 0-330-23219-3, chapter 2: "Little Crow's War"
- ^ Burnham, Frederick Russell (1926). Scouting on Two Continents. New York: Doubleday, Page and Co, p.2 (autobiographical account). ASIN B000F1UKOA.
- Anderson, Gary Clayton (1986) Little Crow, spokesman for the Sioux. Saint Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press.
- Carley, Kenneth (2001) The Dakota War of 1862. Saint Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press.
- Clodfelter, Micheal (1998) The Dakota War: The United States Army Versus the Sioux, 1862-1865. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland.
- Nix, Jacob (1994) The Sioux Uprising in Minnesota, 1862: Jacob Nix's Eyewitness History. Gretchen Steinhauser, Don Heinrich Tolzmann & Eberhard Reichmann, trans. Don Heinrich Tolzmann, ed. Indianapolis: Max Kade German-American Center, Indiana University-Purdue University at Indianapolis and Indiana German Heritage Society, Inc.
- Schultz, Duane (1992) Over the Earth I Come: The Great Sioux Uprising of 1862. New York: St. Martin's Press.
- Swain, Gwenyth (2004) Little Crow: Leader of the Dakota. Saint Paul, MN, Borealis Books.
- Tolzmann, Don Heinrich, ed. (2002) German pioneer accounts of the great Sioux Uprising of 1862. Milford, Ohio: Little Miami Pub. Co.
[edit] External links
- Little Crow. Encyclopedia of North American Indians. Retrieved on May 20, 2005.
- Little Crow Trail
- Minnesota Historical Society History Topics: Dakota War of 1862