Wisconsin Trail of Tears: Explaining Extremes in Old Northwest Indian Removal - 2

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Most Wisconsin and Upper Michigan Ojibwe bands which negotiated the 1837 and 1842 Treaties received their annuities by early autumn at La Pointe on Madeline Island–a cultural and spiritual center for Ojibwe people. Territorial Governor and Superintendent of Indian Affairs in Minnesota, Alexander Ramsey, worked with other officials to remove the Ojibwe from their homes in Wisconsin and Upper Michigan to Sandy Lake. The flow of annuity money and government aid to build Indian schools, agencies, and farms would create wealth for Ramsey and his supporters in Minnesota. President Zachary Taylor issued an executive order in February 1850 that sought to move Ojibwe Indians living east of the Mississippi River to their unceded lands. Initially stunned by the breach of the 1837 and 1842 Treaty terms, Ojibwe leaders recognized that the removal order clearly violated their agreement with the US. A broad coalition of supporters–missionary groups, newspapers, businessmen, and Wisconsin state legislators–rallied to oppose the removal effort, and band members refused to abandon their homes.

 

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Many soon leased or sold their “head rights” to the land they had acquired and promptly returned to Canada. In contrast were the responses of several major groups of Indians that evaded or avoided the plans of Americans by one device or another. Numerous Potawatomi, Ohio Ottawa, and smaller numbers from other tribes slipped across the international border, using Canada as a temporary or permanent refuge, while others moved into northeastern Michigan or northern Wisconsin. Then there were more who—like those master escape artists, the Winnebago—simply refused to stay put after being repeatedly transported west of the Mississippi.1Moving Indians into western lands selected by Americans for their supposedly exclusive and permanent occupation was one matter; keeping them there was an entirely different and often far more difficult one. As the exasperated Governor Alexander Ramsey complained from Minnesota Territory in the fall of 1851,

“No argus-eyed vigilance on the part of officers of the Indian department can erect Chinese wall between this tribe [the equestrian Winnebago] and the in habitants of Wisconsin.1

His annoyance stemmed not only from the reluctance of dislocated Indians to stay where they were replanted, but also from the willingness of many Americans near their former homes to tolerate or even ease their return. Obviously, the removal policy at this date was out of tune with the disposition of peregrinating Indians and with the sentiments of numerous citizens of Wisconsin and Michigan as well. Although his grievance was expressed a year after the scheme for displacing the Lake Superior Chippewa was conceived and set in motion, Ramsey had been one of the four actors most responsible for the design and through 1851 had actively promoted efforts to carry it out. If other Indians like the Winnebago could not—short of building and manning a “Chinese wall”—be separated from their old homes, then what sense was there in Ramsey’s conniving to transport west yet another large population of manifestly unwilling, notably ambulatory Indians? That the Chippewa were to be settled within the governor's jurisdiction, however temporarily, is but part of a necessarily complex answer to this query. There were, to be sure, considerable political and economic rewards to be gained simply from the business of transporting Indians westward, as Ramsey knew, even should they immediately counter march. Yet this fragment of an explanation still leaves a larger puzzle. How, in 1850, did a Secretary of the Interior, a Commissioner of Indians Affairs, a Territorial Governor, and a lowly Indian Sub-Agent come to concoct a scheme that, in the end, caused the loss of many Chippewa lives and yet left the Chippewa in Wisconsin? The scheme was designed a dozen years after Andrew Jackson and other leading advocates of removal had declared implementation of the policy a success, “as having been practically settled.

The United States of 1850 was no longer the geographically compact republic anticipated in 1803 when Jefferson first conceived of defusing federal-state tensions by displacing unwanted Indians into a vast, newly acquired western territory. Nor was it the developing nation of 1825, when a “permissive” policy of community-by-community resettlement was is sued by Executive Proclamation, or that of 1830, when the formal, comprehensive, nationwide provisions of the Indian Removal Act obtained congressional sanction.15  By 1850, the ideology of Manifest Destiny had been announced and affirmed, the Mexican war won, Continentalism achieved. No national leader could any longer confidently believe that conflicts involving culturally alien, not readily assimilable Indians might be avoided by relocating them “permanently” in a huge western Indian Territory on lands that would be forever theirs. By 1850, this was no more a realistic plan than was the abortive parallel policy of reducing sectional tensions over slavery by repatriating Afro-Americans to Liberia.’16

The political pressure for Indian Removal was effectively removed by events of the latter 1840s, which saw the emergence of a geographically larger, socially more complex United States. The new continental nation was far more diverse ethnically than it had been when the removal and repatriation schemes were conceived. Nevertheless, through the 1830s and 1840s the promise of permanency of tenure on tribal lands in an exclusively Indian Territory legislated in the 1830 Removal Act (essentially a segregated native homeland or apartheid policy) was confirmed in every proper removal treaty. No such stipulation was included in those negotiated with the Lake Superior Chippewa in 1837 and 1842 for the cession of their lands east of the Mississippi. The 1850 effort to dislodge them from Wisconsin and to resettle them near Sandy Lake—east of the Mississippi —involved a temporary location only, be cause of their specific history of dealings with the United States.  Occupying the farthest northwestern reaches of the Old Northwest, the Lake Superior Chippewa were the last Indians of that Territory to have their independence erased by formal treaty agreement with the United States. Although placed under nominal American sovereignty in the 1783 Treaty of Paris and again in the Treaty of Greenville in 1795, this was a status unknown to these Indians—who remained in a position of unqualified political autonomy. The degree of their continuing independence was marked by two developments. Unlike other foraging bands near them, they had sat out the War of 1812, declining British invitations to join in active military operations.

Thus, not considered enemies by American authorities, they did not participate in any of the several subsequent peace treaties pressed on neighboring Indians— including related Chippewa bands—when hostilities ended. These postwar compacts restored the status quo antebellum and required a fresh acknowledgment of American authority in the region, which the Lake Superior Chippewa had yet to deliver. Moreover, throughout the removal era, the Lake Superior Chippewa continued a century-old pattern of war fare against their Dakota neighbors, as good a measure as any of their autarchy and a major concern of Americans at tempting to impose peace on this frontier. Such concerns were expressed between 1825 and 1827, when three treaties were required at last to bring all these small, scattered Chippewa bands under some measure of American authority.17  These agreements established the meets and bounds of Lake Superior Chippewa lands, declared a “peace” between the Chippewa and their Indian neighbors, defined a new subordinate political status for them, and included provisions for modest educational services and the payment of a minor annual annuity. So far as American authorities were concerned, these Chippewa thereby became dependent client societies. Yet for a decade these agreements had little consequence for the daily lives of these Indians. No lands were ceded, while the small annuity fund and scanty Indian Office services provided were delivered mainly to those Chippewa living near Sault Ste Marie. For another full decade, contacts between the Lake Superior Chippewa and Americans, other than traders and a few ineffective missionaries, remained occasional and minor. However, these three treaties expressed the legal foundation for the Chippewa’s political  and economic future. The “tribal” boundary agreements, for example, were in tended to ease, and were later used for, land sale negotiations, whereas at Fond du Lac (Duluth) in 1826, American negotiators had obtained a vaguely defined privilege from the Chippewa: “to search for, and carry away, any metals or minerals from any part of their country.”18

Sixteen years later, when at La Pointe the Chippewa were pressed hard to cede their last remaining lands east of the Mississippi River, this seemingly minor stipulation about exploration for mineral samples was used as a weapon to defeat their resistance. For nearly a decade following acknowledgment of their dependent status, few new settlers or entrepreneurs appeared among them, especially in the interior away from the watercourses. Then, in 1836, a variety of developments prompted both Chippewa leaders and American authorities to arrange the first of a series of land cession treaties. Among the Chippewa, the initiative came, significantly, from those along the upper Mississippi River, who with other bands were increasingly disturbed by declining income from the fur trade and were jealous of neighboring native peoples receiving annuities from the United States when they had none. Taking advantage of Joseph N. Nicollet’s exploration of the Mississippi's headwaters, these Chippewa sent a delegation with this French astronomer-mathematician on his return to Fort Snelling. There Flat Mouth of the Pillager band near Leech Lake, the most prominent leader among the Mississippi bands, declaimed a list of their miseries and wants. Other tribes, including the Chippewa of Michigan, he complained to Agent Lawrence Taliaferro,

“are doing better than us. They have treaties we hear, and they have goods and money. . . We hear of treaties every day with our Nation on the lakes and yet not a plug of tobacco reaches us on the Mississippi . . we wish to know when we might have our expectations realized.”

Unknown to the Chippewa, American authorities were already moving to arrange a cession of portions of their lands. That February the Senate had directed the Executive Branch to arrange a purchase of tracts north of the Wisconsin River. Seen from Washington, the aim was to obtain control of the shores of Lake Michigan and the Upper Mississippi, both to make the whole course of that stream the “barrier” between Indians and the organized states and territories and to gain legitimate access to the vast pine forests of the region.20

The latter represented a legislative response to the growing demand for pine lumber to build the proliferating new towns of the Mississippi Valley, a demand that had far out distanced the supply of reasonably priced lumber shipped from western New York and Pennsylvania. Moreover, on the edges of the Chippewa’s pine forests pro per, a coterie of  long-resident entrepreneurs, recognizing a profitable new market when they heard of it, were already maneuvering to obtain private control of these valuable Chippewa resources. These were the old-line principals in the fur trade, the heirs and assigns of the dismantled American Fur Company, as well as smaller independent traders, led by such notables as Hercules L. Dousman, Samuel C. Stambaugh, H. H. Sibley, William Aitken, and Alexis Bailey. For a number of years, these experienced local residents had been exploiting their personal ties among the Chippewa and other tribes, obtaining from them leases for sawmill sites and timber cutting rights in “Indian country.”21 Operating in the gray areas of Federal Indian law, their activities were scarcely slowed by an imperative directive from the Commissioner of Indian Affairs prohibiting such private contracts.

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