and the Black Hawk Conflict of 1832
1-1 Ma-Ka-Tai-Me-She-Kia-Kiak - Black Hawk
1-2 Black Hawk - The Early Years
1-3 The Theft - Treaty of 1804
1-4 The War of 1812 - Black Hawk's British Band
1-5 Return to Saukenuk - April 1832
1-6 The Winnebago Prophet
1-7 The Battle of Stillman's Run
1-8 Flight to Wisconsin - Lake Koshkonong
1-9 The Battle of Wisconsin Heights
1-10 The Mississippi Runs Red - Bad Axe Massacre
1-11 Black Hawk's Capture
1-12 In Loving Memory of: MakataimeshekiakiakSection 2: Following Black Hawk's Trail
Sect. 2: Following Black Hawk's Trail - Introduction
2-1 Saukenuk 2014 - The Journey Begins
2-2 Honoring Black Hawk - A Walking Meditation
2-3 Hauberg Museum - Black Hawk Historic Site
2-4 Prophetstown - White Cloud - Friend & Advisor
2-5 Lowden Park - A Prayer for All People
2-6 The Point of No Return - Stillman's Run
2-7 Black Hawk's Grove - Brief Rest
2-8 Lake Koshkonong - Black Hawk's Island
2-9 A Blind Old Man - Named Cau-kee-ca-mac
2-10 Effigy Mounds - Lake Koshkonong
2-11 Little Thunder and the Waushara Village Ho-Chunk
2-12 Crawfish River- Leaving the Sinnissippi
2-13 Fly!
2-14 The Story of Deer Heart and Yellow Flower
2-15 A Prayer for Mother Earth
2-16 Pheasant Branch - Refuge Among Sacred Mounds
2-17 Run for the River - Run for Your Lives
2-18 Wisconsin Heights - The Great Escape
2-19 Oh, Great Wisconsin Waters!
2-20 Four Horses
2-21 Honey Creek
2-22 Camp of Six Horses
2-23 Ocooch Mountains
2-24 Dance of Two Eagles
2-25 Bad Axe Massacre - Battle Isle
2-26 Bad Axe Massacre - Sacrifice of the Chosen
2-27 Bad Axe Massacre - The Brutal End
Section 3: The Journey Home
Sect. 3: The Journey Home - Introduction
3-1 A Sign from the Past
3-2 Floating on Rose Petals
3-3 A Little Girl's Prayer
3-4 Going Home! - The Great Mississippi River
3-5 Sacred Ground - Closing the Circle
Victims & Casualties of the Black Hawk Conflict of 1832:
Alphabetic List of Known Victims & CasualtiesThe Warriors of Peace:
Warriors of Peace - Introduction
1. The Story of John McMurtry
2. The Story of Chief Shabbona
3. The Story of Quashquame
4. The Story of J. Hall & T.L. McKenney
5. The Story of Chief Black Wolf
How Can We Help:
Ways to Help Native American PeopleSources:
References & Images
(Key Terms: Ma-Ka-Tai-Me-She-Kia-Kiak, Black Sparrow Hawk, Black
Hawk, 1767, Saukenuk, Pyesa, Rock Island, Black Hawk’s Watch Tower, Black Hawk
State Historic Site, Hauberg Museum, Sauk, Sac, Meskwaki, Fox, Rock River,
Sinnissippi River, Mississippi River, War of 1812, British Band, Great Britain,
Treaty of 1804, Treaties, Ceded Land, William Henry Harrison, Quashquame,
Keokuk, Fort Armstrong, Samuel Whiteside, Black Hawk War of 1832, Black Hawk
Conflict, Scalp, Great Sauk Trail, Black Hawk Trail, Prophetstown, Wabokieshiek,
White Cloud, The Winnebago Prophet, Ne-o-po-pe, Dixon’s Ferry, Isaiah Stillman,
The Battle of Stillman’s Run, Old Man’s Creek, Sycamore Creek, Abraham Lincoln,
Chief Shabbona, Felix St. Vrain, Lake Koshkonong, Fort Koshkonong, Fort
Atkinson, Henry Atkinson, Andrew Jackson, Lewis Cass, Winfield Scott, Chief Black
Wolf, Henry Dodge, James Henry, White Crow, Rock River Rapids, The Four Lakes,
Battle of Wisconsin Heights, Benjamin Franklin Smith, Wisconsin River, Kickapoo
River, Soldier’s Grove, Steamboat Warrior, Steamship Warrior, Fort Crawford,
Battle of Bad Axe, Bad Axe Massacre, Joseph M. Street, Antoine LeClaire, Native
American, Indian, Michigan Territory, Indiana Territory, Louisiana Territory,
Osage, Souix, Potawatomi, Ojibwe, Ottawa, Ho-Chunk)
Thank you for keeping this blog! As a former Wisconsinite now in CT. I was always intrigued by this seemingly little known piece of WI history. I think my first exposure was coming across a very old monument in a town, which escapes me, in Northern Illinois. Can't wait to read through all of your entries!
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