Yellow River (Indiana)

Yellow River
River
The Yellow River in Knox in 2006
Country United States
State Indiana
Source
 - location St. Joseph County
 - elevation 804 ft (245 m) [1]
 - coordinates  [2]
Mouth Kankakee River
 - location Starke County
 - elevation 656 ft (200 m) [1]
 - coordinates  [2]
Length 62 mi (100 km) approx.[3]
Basin 427 sq mi (1,106 km2) [4]
Discharge for Knox
 - average 374.4 cu ft/s (10.6 m3/s) (2005) [5]
Location of the mouth of the Yellow River in Starke County, Indiana

The Yellow River is a 62.3-mile-long (100.3 km)[6] tributary of the Kankakee River in northern Indiana in the United States. Via the Kankakee and Illinois rivers, it is part of the watershed of the Mississippi River, draining an area of 427 square miles (1,110 km2). The river's name possibly derives from a translation of the Shawnee name for the river, We-thau-ka-mik, meaning "yellow waters",[7] a description perhaps owing to the presence of sand in the riverbed.[8]

Contents

Course

Significant portions of the Yellow River's course have been straightened and channelized; the river's present-day course is considered to begin at a confluence of agricultural ditches in southeastern St. Joseph County, approximately 4 miles (6 km) north of the town of Bremen. The river initially flows southwardly into Marshall County, past Bremen; then generally southwestwardly, returning to its naturally winding riverbed and flowing through the city of Plymouth; and westwardly in a substantially straightened course through Starke County, past the city of Knox. It flows into the Kankakee River in southwestern Starke County, approximately 10 miles (16 km) west of Knox.[7][9]

Watershed

The Yellow River is bounded by the St. Joseph River of Lake Michigan on the north, flowing through Elkhart, Mishawaka, and South Bend. To the east is the Elkhart River, a branch of the St. Joseph, all flowing to Lake Michigan, through the lower lakes to the St. Lawrence River and reaching the North Atlantic.[10] On the south and the southeast, it is bounded by the drainage of the Tippecanoe River. The Tippecanoe River flows southward into the Wabash River, emptying into the Ohio, then into the Mississippi River, expelling its waters into the Gulf of Mexico.[11] To the southwest is the Iroquois River a tributary of the Kankakee River, as is the Yellow River. The Yellow River is the second-largest tributary of the Kankakee. The Iroquois River is larger and joins the Kankakee across the border in Illinois. The Kankakee River joins the Des Plaines River south of Joliet, Illinois, forming the Illinois River. Together they flow the length of the state of Illinois before joining the Mississippi River, north of St. Louis.[12]

History

Potawatomi

Main Poc was a warrior and chief among the Yellow River Potawatomi first coming to notice at the Treaty of Greenville (July 1795), which was to bring peace to the frontier. Within a year, Main Poc was leading raiding parties across the Mississippi into Spanish Territory.[13] By 1804, Main Poc and Turkey Foot were raiding throughout the Midwest and deep into Tennessee and Kentucky. When the reached across the Mississippi to attack the Osage in what had become the U.S.’s Louisiana Territory, the American military called for a council. Main Poc and Turkey Foot did not attend and kept traveling out of their Yellow River communities to raid other Indian villages.[13] Soon other Potawatomi villages were taking after Main Poc and raiding elsewhere. In 1807, Tecumseh and his brother, the prophet came to Indiana and Main Poc joined in his plans to hold back the white settlers. With Main Poc’s move to Prophetstown in 1809, the Yellow River was no longer the seat of war among the Potawatomis. After the defeat of Tecumseh at the Battle of Tippecanoe and then at the Battle of the Thames (October 5, 1813), peace returned to northern Indiana. Main Poc returned to the Yellow River after the 1814 Treaty of Greenville. His new village was between Plymouth and Knox. In 1816 he died, leaving the pro-American Chiefs firmly in place.[13]

By 1814, Menominee was a prominent leader of the Twin Lakes Potawatomi.[14] He had become known to the Indian Agents as early as 1791 as a leader among the Twin Lakes Potawatomi. In 1820 he got Isaac McCoy, a Protestant Missionary to come to the Yellow River. Menominee was a religious chief and he planned to combine the teaching of Tecumseh and the Prophet with Roman Catholicism. He was seeking a way for his people to cope with the growing number of settlers. The Carey Mission was established on the St. Joseph River, north of the Twin Lakes in the area where Niles, Michigan now stands. In the 1830s, Carey’s mission declined and was replace by a Roman Catholic Mission. In 1833, the fathers expanded their mission to the Yellow River Potawatomi. These two communities would be the heart of the resistance to removal.[13]

By 1830, there were three substantial Potawatomi villages on the Yellow River, each with its own chief.[15] Notawkah (Rattlesnake) was the leader of the village east of the Yellow River, south of Plymouth. He moved to Kansas when chief Menominee refused to leave Indiana in 1837. Mackahtahmoah (Black Wolf) was chief of the western village, near the Starke and Marshall county lines. Pepinawah was another chief among these villages.[13]

In 1832, during the Indian removal period, a group of Potawatomi chiefs signed a treaty with the U.S. government setting aside for the Potawatomi in perpetuity an area of 14,000 acres (57 km²) in the vicinity of the Yellow River; this land was sold at the 1836 Treaty of Yellow River, signed by three Potawatomi chiefs, which stipulated that all Potawatomi move west of the Mississippi River within two years.[7]

Chief Menominee refused to sign any treaty, which gave away Indian lands. Still, the land was taken by the Treaty of Tippecanoe. When the Potawatomi of Indiana were being rounded up for transportation to the west, Menominee’s village became the gathering place of those who did not agree to go. When Menominee again refused to allow his village to be removed by August 6, 1838, the reservation was opened to squatters. When the Potawatomi destroyed the huts of squatters, the whites retaliated by burning the Indians cabins. In an attempt to prevent bloodshed, Governor David Wallace of Indiana authorized the enlistment of volunteers. Menominee was lured to a meeting to allow for the militia to surround his village and take the Potawatomi into custody. On September 4, 1838, the Potawatomi of Indiana began their march to Kansas, the Trail of Death.[13] Menominee's band of 859 people were forcibly removed to Kansas in 1838, in an event known as the Potawatomi Trail of Death.

River engineering

At the time of European settlement, the area of the confluence of the Yellow and Kankakee Rivers was a densely vegetated marsh, seven miles (11 km) long, known as English Lake. The lower Yellow River was confined to a straightened channel and the wetland was drained and converted to farmland by the 1910s. A spit of land between the straightened Yellow and Kankakee channels was established by the state of Indiana as the Kankakee State Fish and Wildlife Area in 1933 and converted back to marshland.[7]

The straightened section of the Yellow River in Starke County, which had historically been a swampy and winding stream with numerous oxbow lakes,[7] was the subject of a 2004 effort by the United States Army Corps of Engineers to address excess accumulation of sediment in the river's streambed as a result of channelization.[8]

Towns and cities

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Google Earth elevation for GNIS source coordinates. Retrieved on 2007-04-23.
  2. ^ a b Geographic Names Information System. "Geographic Names Information System entry for Yellow River (Feature ID #452845)". http://geonames.usgs.gov/pls/gnispublic/f?p=gnispq:3:::NO::P3_FID:452845. Retrieved 2007-04-23. 
  3. ^ "Yellow River". Columbia Gazetteer of North America. Columbia University Press. 2000. http://reference.allrefer.com/gazetteer/Y/Y00841-yellow-river.html. Retrieved 2007-04-23. 
  4. ^ Price, Jeremy; Bob Robertson (January 2005). "Fishery, Habitat, and Recreational Use Surveys For the Kankakee River, Indiana" (PDF). Fisheries Division. Indiana Department of Natural Resources, Division of Fish and Wildlife. http://www.in.gov/dnr/fishwild/publications/notes/kankakee.pdf. Retrieved 2007-04-23. 
  5. ^ United States Geological Survey. "USGS Surface-Water Annual Statistics for Indiana: USGS 05517000 Yellow River at Knox, Indiana". http://waterdata.usgs.gov/in/nwis/annual/?referred_module=sw&site_no=05517000&por_05517000_1=789734,00060,1,1944,2006&year_type=C&format=html_table&date_format=YYYY-MM-DD&rdb_compression=file&submitted_form=parameter_selection_list. Retrieved 2007-04-23. 
  6. ^ U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. The National Map, accessed May 13, 2011
  7. ^ a b c d e Simons, Richard S. (1985). The Rivers of Indiana. Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana University Press. pp. 198–202. ISBN 0-253-17476-7. 
  8. ^ a b United States Army Corps of Engineers (2004-08-27). "Yellow River". Archived from the original on 2007-06-13. http://web.archive.org/web/20070613010043/http://www.lrc.usace.army.mil/projects/Yellow+River+FY05.htm. Retrieved 2007-04-23. 
  9. ^ Indiana Atlas & Gazetteer. Yarmouth, Me.: DeLorme. 1998. pp. 19–21. ISBN 0-89933-211-0. 
  10. ^ Indiana Atlas & Gazetteer. Yarmouth, Me.: DeLorme. 1998. pp. 21. ISBN 0-89933-211-0. 
  11. ^ Indiana Atlas & Gazetteer. Yarmouth, Me.: DeLorme. 1998. pp. 25–27. ISBN 0-89933-211-0. 
  12. ^ Indiana Atlas & Gazetteer. Yarmouth, Me.: DeLorme. 1998. pp. 24–26, 20. ISBN 0-89933-211-0. 
  13. ^ a b c d e f Edmunds, R. David; The Potawatomis, Keepers of the Fire, 1978
  14. ^ Tanner, Helen Hornbeck, ’’Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History’’, University of Oklahoma Press; Norman, Oklahoma; 1987, Map 21
  15. ^ Tanner, Helen Hornbeck, ’’Atlas of Great Lakes Indian History’’, University of Oklahoma Press; Norman, Oklahoma; 1987, Map 25