CHAPTER XXI.
ORIGIN OF THE DISTINCTIVE NAME OF PILLAGERS APPLIED TO THE LEECH LAKE BAND
OF OJIBWAYS; AND ERA OF THE SMALLPOX.
General remarks on the character of the Leech Lake Ojibways--Their
gradual increase--Origin of their present distinctive name--Their camp is
visited by a trader from the Lower Mississippi, in the summer of 1781--His
inability, through sickness, to trade--Indians commence to take his goods on
credit--. A pillage ensues--Whisky found--The trader is forced to leave, and
dies at Sauk Rapids--The Pillagers send a delegation to Mackinaw to atone
for their conduct--They receive presents from the British--On distribution
of the presents at Fond du Lac they fall sick of the smallpox--Common saying
against the British--Account of the real manner in which the smallpox came
to be introduced among them--War party of Assineboines, Kenistenos, and
Ojibways to the Missouri--Attack on a village of dead enemies--They catch
the infection--The Kenisteno village is depopulated--Course of the
contagion--Loss of lives among the allied tribes.In
the year 1781, the large band of the Ojibways, who had taken possession of
Leech Lake (one of the principal sources of the Mississippi), became for the
first time known by the distinctive appellation of "Pillagers,"
Muk-im-dua-win-in-e-wug (men who take by force). (Henry found "Pillagers" in
1775 at Lake of the Woods.--E. D. N.) They had become noted at this time
(and it is a character which they have retained ever since), as being the
bravest band of the tribe. Being obliged, continually, to fight with the
Dakotas for the country over which they hunted, every man capable of bearing
arms became a warrior and had seen actual service. They were consequently
filled with a daring and independent spirit, and no act was so wild, but
that they were ready and disposed to achieve it.
This band was formed mostly of the noted clans of the
Bear, and A-waus-e or Catfish, and at the time, which we are now
considering, they probably numbered about one hundred warriors. In 1832, Mr.
Schoolcraft estimates their total number of souls at eight hundred. In 1836
Mr. Nicollet estimates them as numbering one thousand, and in 1851,
according to their payment census list, they number twelve hundred and fifty
souls, and their chief estimates the men who are capable of bearing arms at
about three hundred. These, it will be remembered, include only the band who
make Leech Lake their home, or summer residence; and it is only these that
are known by the distinctive name of Pillagers. The large bands residing at
the present day at Red, Cass, and Winnepeg lakes, and on Pembina River, are
known by the general term of Northern Ojibways.
Notwithstanding the never failing yearly drain which their
warfare with the Dakotas have made in their ranks, yet still, from a natural
increase, the healthfulness of the country they occupy, and gradual
accessions from other villages, this band have increased in numbers and
strength, till they now form a most respectable section of the Ojibway
tribe. The manner in which they obtained the significant name by which they
are now generally known, is told by their old men as follows:--
During the summer of the year which we have designated, the Leech Lake band
had moved down towards the well stocked hunting grounds of the Dakotas, and
encamped at the entry of a small creek which empties into the Crow Wing
River, about ten miles above its confluence with the Mississippi. While
making the usual preparations for the performance of their grand medawe
rite, a large canoe arrived from the Lower Mississippi, manned by white men,
and laden with merchandise. The trader who had, for the first time, come to
this far off point of the great river, had started from a great distance
below on its waters, for the purpose of trading with the Ojibways. He
arrived at their camp very sick, and was not able to enter immediately into
the barter for which the Indians were eager. Some of his goods having got
wet by rain, were untied by his men, and exposed to the sun to dry. The
temptation to the almost naked Indians, who had not seen a trader for a long
time, was too great to be easily overcome, and being on the eve of their
grand festival rite, when they are accustomed to display all the finery of
which they are possessed, caused them doubly to covet the merchandise of the
sick trader. They possessed plenty of furs, which they offered repeatedly to
exchange, but the trader's men refused to enter into a trade till their
master was sufficiently recovered to oversee it. There was no preconcerted
plan, or even intention of pillage, when the rifling of the trader's effects
actually commenced.
A number of young men, women, and children, were standing
around, admiring the goods which bad been exposed to dry, and longing for
possession, as much as an avaricious white man for a pile of yellow gold,
when a forward young warrior approached a roll ofcloth, and after feeling,
and remarking on its texture, his itching fingers at last tore off a piece
sufficient to make him a breech clout, at the same time he remarked, that he
had beaver skins in his lodge, and when the trader got well, he would pay
his demands. The trader's men stood dumb, and making no effort to prevent
the young pillager from carrying off the cloth, others becoming bold
followed his example, and tearing off pieces of calico for shirts, cloth for
blankets, the goods spread out to dry soon disappeared at a very uncertain
credit.
The young pillagers taking their trophies to the lodges,
the excitement in the village became general, as each person became
determined to possess a share of the trader's remaining bales. The crediting
of the goods was now changed to an actual pillage, and the only anxiety
evinced by the Indians, men, women, and children, was, who would secure the
greatest quantity. A keg of fire water being discovered in the course of the
ransacking the sick trader's outfit, added greatly to the excitement and
lawlessness of the scene, and the men soon becoming unmanageable and
dangerous, the rifled trader was obliged quickly to embark in his empty
canoe, and leave the inhospitable camp of the Ojibways to save his life. It
is said that he died of the sickness from which he was suffering, at Sank
Rapids, on his way down the Mississippi.
From this circumstance, this band of the Ojibways became
known amongst their fellows (who generally very much deprecated this foolish
act), by the name of Pillagers, and the creek on which the scene we have
described was enacted, is known to this day as Pillage Creek.
At this time the Upper Mississippi bands had no regular
trader to winter among them, and they were obliged to make visits each
summer to La Pointe, Sault Ste. Marie, and Mackinaw, to procure the
necessaries which their intercourse with the whites had learned them to
stand in absolute need, such as clothing, arms, and ammunition, and to want,
such as fire water. The few traders, who had occasionally paid them visits,
during this period in their history, had come from the direction of Lake
Superior, and the trader who was pillaged, is the first they tell of having
come from the Lower Mississippi.
The conduct of the Pillagers in this affair was generally
censured by their more peaceful fellows as foolish and impolitic, as it
would tend to prevent traders from coming amongst them for fear of meeting
with thesame treatment. To make up, therefore, for their misconduct, as well
as to avert the evil consequences that might arise from it, the Pillagers on
the ensuing spring, gathered a number of packs of beaver skins and sent a
delegation headed by one of their principal men to the British fort at
Mackinaw, to appease the ill-will of the whites, by returning an ample
received the packs of beaver, and in return he assured the Pillagers of his
good will and friendship towards them, and strengthened his words by giving
their leader a medal, flag, coat, and bale of goods, at the same time
requesting that he would not unfurl his flag, nor distribute his goods,
until he arrived into his own country.
With this injunction, the Pillager chief complied, till he
landed at Fond du Lac, where, anxious to display the great consequence to
which the medal and presents of the British had raised him in his own
estimation, he formally called his followers to a council, and putting on
his chief's coat, and unfurling his flag, he untied his bale of goods, and
freely distributed to his fellows. Shortly after, he was taken suddenly
sick, and retiring to the woods, he expired by himself, as the discovery of
his remains afterwards indicated. All of those who had received a portion of
the goods also fell sick, one after another, and died. The sickness became
general, and spreading to different villages, its fearful ravages took off a
large number of the tribe. It proved to be the smallpox, and many of the
Ojibways believed, and it is a common swing to this day, that the white men
purposely inflicted it on them by secreting bad medicine in the bale of
goods, in punishment for the pillage which the Leech Lake band had committed
on one of their traders.
This was a serious charge, and in order to ascertain if it
was really entertained by the more enlightened and thinking portions of the
tribe, I have made particular inquiries, and flatter myself that I have
obtained from the intelligent old chief of the Pillagers, a truthful account
of the manner in which the smallpox was, on this occasion, actually
introduced among the Ojibways.
A war party of Kenistenos, Assineboines, and Ojibways, was
once formed at the great Kenisteno village, which was at this time located
on Dead River, near its outlet into the Red River of the North. They
proceeded westward to the waters of the Ke-che-pe-gan-o, or Missouri River,
till they came to a large village of the Gi-aucth-in-ne-wug (Gros Ventres),
which they surrounded and attacked. Through some cause, which they could not
at first account for, the resistance made to their attack was feeble. This
they soon overcame, and the warriors rushing forward to secure their scalps,
discovered the lodges filled with dead bodies, and they could not withstand
the stench arising there from. The party retreated, after securing the
scalps of those whom they had killed, among which was the scalp of an old
man who must have been a giant in size, as his scalp is said to have been as
large as a beaver skin. On their return home, for five successive nights,
this scalp, which had been attached to a short stick being planted erect in
the ground, was found in the morning to lean towards the west. This simple
occurrence aroused the superstitious fears of the party, and when, on the
fourth day, one of their numbers died, they threw away the fearful scalp,
and proceeded homeward with quickened speed. Every day, however, their
numbers decreased, as they fell sick and died. Out of the party, which must
have numbered a considerable body of warriors, but four survived to return
home to their village at Dead River. They brought with them the fatal
disease that soon depopulated this great village, which is said to have
covered a large extent of ground, and the circumstance of the great
mortality which ensued on this occasion at this spot, in the ranks of the
Kenisteno and Assineboine, has given the river the name which it now bears
Ne-bo, or Death River. In trying to run away from the fatal epidemic, the
Ojibways of this village spread the contagion to Rainy Lake, which village
also it almost depopulated. From thence by the route of Pigeon River it
reached Lake Superior at Grand Portage, and proceeded up the lake to Fond du
Lac, where its ravages were also severely felt, and where the Pillager party
on their return from Mackinaw caught the infection, and taking it to Sandy
Lake, but a few of their number lived to reach their homes at Leech Lake,
where it is said to have stopped, after having somewhat lessened the number
of the Pillagers. The large village of Sandy Lake suffered severely, and it
is said that its inhabitants became reduced to but seven wigwams.
The loss of lives occasioned by this disease in the tribes
of the allied Kenistenos and Assineboines, amounted to several thousands.
And the loss among the Ojibways, as near as can be computed from their
accounts at the present day, amounted to not less than fifteen hundred, or
two thousand. It did not, luckily, spread generally, over the country
occupied by the tribe, and its ravages were felt almost exclusively in the
section and villages, which have been designated.
go to chapter 22
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