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WISCONSIN INDIANS. Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) Menominee Oneida Stockbridge-Munsee (Mohicans) Potawatomi Chippewa (Lake Superior) Bad River Band Lac Courte Oreilles Band Lac du Flambeau Band Red Cliff Band Sokaogon (Mole Lake) Band St. Croix Band. Review: Band/ Tribe/ Nation.
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WISCONSIN INDIANS • Ho-Chunk (Winnebago) • Menominee • Oneida • Stockbridge-Munsee (Mohicans) • Potawatomi • Chippewa (Lake Superior) • Bad River Band • Lac Courte Oreilles Band • Lac du Flambeau Band • Red Cliff Band • Sokaogon (Mole Lake) Band • St. Croix Band
Review: Band/ Tribe/ Nation • Tribe is a Nation • Band (basic unit, average 5-6 clans) • Confederacy is also a Nation (groups of tribes that come together)
Recap Culture • Family • Political • Religion • Language
Family • Clan Structure • Maternal or Paternal • Economy organized around the clan • If a clan member needs help and you can…you must. • Exogamous (have to marry outside of clan)
Political • Chiefs • War (Red), only Chief on War parties • Peace (White), diplomats and bringing people together • You become chief if people follow you, convince them you have better ideas…etc) • Calumet • Peace Pipe: Fictive Kinship, when smoked with someone else, you treat each other as clan members • Lex Talionis (Eye for an Eye) • Clans enforce this principle • Justice is clan based
Religion • Purity and Balance • Fire and Water • Green Corn Ceremony • Ethics, Morality, and Religion are tied together, and can not be separated.
Language • The Indians of Wisconsin, due to coming from various places, spoke many different dialects • Algonquian • Iroquoian • Siouan • Ojibwe/Chippewa
Ho-Chunk History • People called them Winnebago (Stinky people), they for obvious reasons prefer Ho-Chunk (big voice or people of the sacred language) • In 1634, Jean Nicolet encounters the Ho-Chunk people in Green Bay • 1837, Ho-Chunk people ceded their land to the whites, although Tribal leaders argued that the treaty was no valid due to misinterpretation and were forced to move off their lands.
Ho-Chunk Today • In 1963, The Wisconsin Winnebago Nation became federally recognized due to the Reorganization Act of 1934. • Today approximately 6,100 people are enrolled as tribal members • The Ho-Chunk people also fear the loss of their language
Menominee History • In 1634 Jean Nicolet visited the Menominee Nation (the first European to do so) • 1848, Treaty of Poygan was signed • Ceded 4.5 million acres to the US and forced them to go to Minnesota, although Chief Oshkosh refused. • 1892, Dam was built on the Wolf River, which prohibited the Sturgeon to go to their spawning grounds, which left the people without their main food source.
Menominee Today • On June 17, 1954 The Menominee Termination Act was signed into law which provided the Menominee the right to control their own Reservation. • Then in 1973, The Menominee Restoration Act was signed. • Provided the Menominee with full tribal status as a sovereign nation.
Oneida History • “People of the Standing Stone” • Played a major role in the American Revolution (Patriot Side). • Part of the Iroquois Confederacy • Due to a falling out with the Six Nations and a treaty with the US and Menominee, the Oneidas came to Wisconsin
Oneida Today • Turtle School • 15,000 members and growing • Cool Fact: Oneida Tribal Member Tom Skenandore was the first professional football player employed by the team today known as the Green Bay Packers
Stockbridge- Munsee HistoryBand of Mohicans • In 1609, The Stockbridge were the first tribe that Henry Hudson came in contact with. • Like the Oneida, they played an important role in the winning of the American Revolution. • Left New York in the 1700’s and came to Wisconsin.
Stockbridge- Munsee TodayBand of Mohicans • 1,500+ members today • Cool Fact: The first public school teacher in Wisconsin was Electa Quinney (Stockbridge Indian)
Potawatomi History • 43 Treaties were made with them, more than any other tribe or band. • Closely related to Chippewa and Ottawa • Moved around the least • Separate Language
Potawatomi Today • Today they are located in the UP Michigan, Wisconsin, Kansas, and Oklahoma • 1,200 + Tribal Members Today
Chippewa • “Keeper of the Faith” • Settlements began in the 1700’s • Origin of the Dream Catcher • Also known as Ojibwa
Bad RiverChippewa • 1854, Treaty with US created Bad River Reservation • Main Staple- Wild Rice • Preservation of land and air is a major concern of these people.
Lac Courte OreillesChippewa • 1854- The Treaty of LaPointe established specific territorial rights of the LCO • The LCO, ousted the Sioux and took their lands as the LCO pushed westward • “Lac Courte Oreilles” means “short ears” because the Ojibwe in that area did not wear earrings. • Harvest Cranberries (1,500-3,000 barrels each year.)
Lac du FlambeauChippewa • Location of the sacred “Strawberry Island” (the place of the little people) • At this island, the last battle with the Sioux occurred in 1745. • In 1966, the island through archaeological survey was determined to have artifacts dating back to 200 B.C. • Fact: The world’s largest Sturgeon was speared on the Reservation (7ft 1 in, 195 ibs, 40 inches around)
Red CliffChippewa • 1854, As stated before, The Treaty of LaPointe, established the Red Cliff Reservation • 1866, President Andrew Jackson by executive order expanded the Reservation • Red Cliff is known as the “hub of the Chippewa Nation” • Approximatley 5,000 people are members of the Red Cliff Band
Sokaogon (Mole Lake)Chippewa • 1806 Battle of Mole Lake (Sioux v. Chippewa in battle over Wild Rice) • Sokaogon means “Post in the Lake” people • “The Lost Tribe” • Treaty of 1855 promised money and 12 square miles of reservation for them • Treaty lost in a shipwreck on Lake Superior on its way to Washington DC
St. CroixChippewa • 2,000 Tribal Members • Reservation is scattered in a checkerboard of 11 separate communities over a four-country area.
Discussion Questions • How have treaties impacted the movement of American Indians both in and out of Wisconsin? • Why do you think the Menominee were chosen for Termination? • Why would the Stockbridge Munsee and Oneida join the Patriot side of the American Revolution?