Saturday, May 31, 2014

2-24 Dance of Two Eagles

May 17 & 18, 2014
Retreat, WI




“As you fade into the night, who will tell the story of your life?”

Lyrics from: In the End, by the Black Veil Brides



As a child I was involved in the Girl Scouts, specifically the Blackhawk Council of Girl Scouts, where I enjoyed many outings and camping trips. The name of the council never held meaning for me until a year ago.  On more than one occasion we journeyed to the Kickapoo River, widely known for its beautiful, winding waterway through high hills, low fields, and remote pastureland.  As an adult, I took my daughter there to enjoy its cool waters in the heat of a summer afternoon.  
Today, when I crossed this river, so full of memories for myself, I added the memories of others.

Black Hawk had been traveling for days through the Ocooch mountains, and here, after crossing the Kickapoo, he was finally able to allow his horses to graze, for in the forest there had been no grass.  They camped here on the night of July 30th, and then journeyed on to the northwest, into what is now Vernon County.  On the night of July 31st, they had traveled to a new camp, located on a high plain about ten miles from the Mississippi River near the town of Retreat.  The next morning, August 1st, those who were able arose with the first hint of dawn and started towards the river, intent on crossing over into the new dangers of Sioux territory.  The soldiers who followed were scarcely more than ten miles behind. 

On August 1st, a day about which I will write two more posts, the soldiers of General Atkinson’s army awoke before dawn, camped a few miles south and east of Soldiers Grove.  They reached this haven by noon, and like Black Hawk, were relieved at both the change of landscape and the presence of feed for their horses.  They remained only an hour, long enough for their horses to fill their empty bellies, and then rode off again in pursuit of their enemy.

In the sixteen miles marched and ridden by the troops on August 1st, the soldiers encountered an uninterrupted trail of dead Indians, five in the first five miles, a total of eleven over the course of the day.  They were dressed, “… in every-day dress – lying by the trail in the open prairie; and where pack-horses had fallen exhausted, they had been slaughtered; and nothing but the hooves and the paunch were left.”

The soldiers, still roughly 1200 infantry, mounted militia and regular army, marched at a rapid pace until 8 pm and well into the gloom of approaching darkness, stopping when they reached the very camp abandoned that morning by Black Hawk’s band.

The soldiers have written many stories about their march that day.  These three are particularly interesting.



The first story is about the warrior Me-ne-kau.
“At sunset we arrived on the ground which they had that morning abandoned; the fires still smoked.  Here I [Lieutenant Philip St. George Cooke] saw a dead warrior, who had been placed in a sitting position, with his back to a tree; he had been painted red as if going to war; and – his arms folded – he seemed to bid us grim defiance even in death.  Few might look on unmoved – none could ever forget that dead warrior in his paint.”
Another soldier added, “He was placed on the ground, with his head resting against the root of a tree, logs were placed around him and covered with bark; and on top of which green bushes were laid; so intended, that we might pass by without discovering the grave.  He was examined, and found to have been shot.”  It is believed that this warrior was Mee-ne-cau, second only to Black Hawk in command of the warriors, and that he died of wounds sustained in the Battle at Wisconsin Heights.

The second story is about a starving old man and is mentioned in several accounts.  I will paraphrase and summarize it here, using the words from several sources to stitch together the tale.

‘It was now late in the evening, and we had proceeded but a short distance from the dead warrior’s grave, when we came across an old Indian who had been left behind for some reason or another.  It was an old man who could not rise, but who spoke English.  We interrogated him, and learned that the main body of the enemy had left the encampment that morning, and would already be at the Mississippi River, and would have succeeded in crossing by morning.   He was a friendly enough Indian; showed us where we could find water.  Then he begged to be taken prisoner, so as to get something to eat, but we had no time to be plagued with the charge of prisoners.  We discussed whether it would be better to leave him behind to starve, or kill him.  We decided it would be better to kill him, so we shot him.’

Twelve hundred men in evidence, and it was not possible to look into the eyes of a helpless, starving, enfeebled old man and find pity and humanity for a defeated enemy.  After giving the information the soldiers sought – even guiding them to water – the best solution they could come up with was an execution.  What would have been the outcome if they had come across a wounded old white settler, who had fallen from his horse and lay starving in the prairie?   Instead, they passed judgment, and carried out a lethal sentence.  This time I quote directly, “… But no doubt, he had been at the massacre of a number of our own citizens, and deserved to die for the crimes which he had perpetrated, in taking the lives of harmless and unoffending women and children.”


The third story is very brief…
“On the evening of the first of August, signs of the enemy were discovered, and some stragglers were killed.”

This disturbingly brief reference to “some stragglers were killed” brings into painful focus the degree to which human tragedy and killing had become an indifferent companion to the members of the pursuing army.  I hope for the sake of this soldier’s spirit that this calloused reference indicates only something he had heard about and not something he had witnessed.  I pray that there will never be a circumstance that could allow me to treat the loss of human life with such disregard.



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In Vernon County, there are a series of roadside markers made of poured concrete that were left in memoriam of Black Hawk and his people.  The first, as noted in my previous post, lies in Crawford County in the town of Rising Sun, and identifies a ridge where Black Hawk and his people crossed into Vernon County.  Nine miles up the road, on Hwy 82, are the next two markers in the series.  These markers were placed in 1930 as a result of the efforts of Dr. Charles V. Porter, a Vernon County historian.











One of the two markers states, “On the nights of August 1 & 2, 1832, Gen. Atkinson’s army of 1200 mounted men in pursuit of Black Hawk encamped in this area from 8 p.m. until 3 a.m.  The spring from which the men and horses drank is northeast.”



The second marker tells the story of the Indians who had camped there a day earlier, and makes reference to the ‘stragglers’ who had been killed there.  “At shallow pond 115 rods due south Black Hawk’s 700 Sac Indians encamped.  Soldiers found six decrepit Indians there and ‘left them behind’.  Lee Sterling in 1846 found a handful of silver brooches there, concluding those killed there were squaws.”





On my journey, I have attempted to learn the ‘truth’ about everything that happened during this four-month period of time, so that I could tell the story. 

Among the challenges I have faced telling this story has been reading conflicting, uncorroborated, or fragmented accounts, then trying to measure their weight, so I can walk a balanced path and tell the story as fairly and truthfully as I am able.  One such fragment of story is that of the six Indians and the silver brooches.



Charles Bracken
In all my research, beyond Porter’s markers, I could find only a single, brief reference to the six women killed at the pond in Retreat, that being the fleeting comment about the ‘stragglers’, a direct quote from Charles Bracken, a Lieutenant who fought in the conflict.  This in no way is an indication that the event never happened, or that any of the details are false.  To the contrary, the stories are true.

Dr. C. V. Porter lived in Vernon County in the 1880’s, and spent years interviewing people who lived in the area and who knew stories and lore that unless written down, would have been forever lost in time.  Porter collected tidbits of knowledge about exactly where the trail had been from the farmers, dairymen, and settlers who came to the land immediately afterwards and who knew what had happened, and where.  Perhaps it was knowledge passed on by the former soldiers and militiamen, or perhaps some parts of the trail were still physically visible when the settlers arrived.  Perhaps the story was passed on by the Native Indians who still lived in the area long beyond 1832.  Porter found and interviewed these people while they were still alive, and was able to determine exactly where some of these events had taken place.  Had he not chosen to write these things down, in stone, these parts of the story would have been lost for all time.

By gathering the loose fibers of historical accounts, I have formed threads of Black Hawk’s story, which I have woven into a tapestry recounting the events which took place over a period of two days in the summer of 1832, as told from the perspective of the fleeing band of Indians.  This is their story.

Black Hawk and his band woke at dawn and made hasty preparations to continue their flight to the west.  As their first grim task of the day, in a ritual that had become all too familiar, they collected the bodies of those who had died during the night, and performed hasty burials, hiding the bodies as best as they could to prevent them from being discovered by the advancing soldiers.  This day, the bodies of several were hidden in the brush.

Everyone then foraged for food, which was almost entirely absent on the barren, grassy highland plain. They scoured the ground for the early, bitter white oak and overcup oak acorns, roasting them in their small fires with ground elmbark.  Some found roots which could be eaten.  Some tried looking for fish in the streams and pond but few were caught.  Only the horses had adequate food, after suffering for days in the mountains.  Everyone drank as much water as they could and made ready to depart.
 When they checked on Mee-ne-cau, they found that he still lived, but was suffering gravely from his gunshot wounds.  He was able to take only a little water, and could not eat the meager food they had to give him.  They cleaned his wounds, gave prayers and offerings, and lifted him onto his horse, tying him in place so that he would not fall off.  Several others were helped to their horses, and those that were able to walk or ride began the slow, arduous march.

Not all were able to leave at once.  Black Hawk had given the order that they were to march in single-file, so as to leave as few tracks as possible.  He would not have had to give the order.  It was a natural way of traveling for the Indians, minimizing the effort given by those who followed, and hiding their numbers from their enemy.  The strongest, and the fastest, therefore, led the way.  They broke trail through the hilly ground, and the rest of the people would follow behind as best they could.
Some of the slowest – those who were always at the rear of the procession, had lagged so far behind the day before that they had scarcely gotten into camp and fallen asleep before dawn had broken and the rest of the band began their preparations to leave.  These few would sleep as long as they dared, allowing their broken bodies as much time as possible to rest before struggling to their aching feet and once more bringing up the rear.  On this day, some of those who struggled to get up and follow, fell for the last time and died where they lay.  They would manage to travel only nine miles that day.  Along the way, several would fall, never to rise again.

Those at the end walked past the bodies of the fallen, too weak themselves to do anything but march on in hopes that they would not fall and join their lost loved ones.

They marched all day in the July heat, and when they made camp near the small, shallow pond they had located atop this high meadow, they discovered that Mee-ne-cau, still tied to his horse, had passed on to the world of the spirits.

Despite their own desperate condition, they gave Mee-Ne-Cau the honorable burial of a great warrior, seated in an upright position and painted red for battle with sap from the bloodroot plant.  To hide his body from their enemies, they leaned him against a tree, and hid his body with logs, bark, and branches.  They built a fire and performed their burial rites, giving his body to Mother Earth, and sending his spirit to the Father Creator with the smoke from their fires.

Once again, the foraging for food began, and once again they could not find enough to eat.  Water was plentiful, but did not remove the weakness of their limbs nor the gnawing of their stomachs.  Only the hope of reaching the Mississippi gave them any joy.  Tomorrow, they would reach the river and escape, as they had done on the Ouisconsin.

The exhausted fugitives made beds in the grasses, and fell asleep where they lay, and once again the stragglers found their way in, after dark, unable to forage for food and only capable of collapsing in their great state of emptiness.

Morning broke, with a low fog in the distance in the direction of the river.  They rose and buried their dead, foraged for their breakfast, and made out for the river.  After they left, their fires still burning, six women arrived, who had been walking all night to try and catch up to the band.  They had been traveling together, helping each other through terrifying hardship and inconsolable grief at the loss of their families and loved ones.  Vowing not to lose each other, they remained behind, intent on following only when the weakest of them was able to continue.  They had fallen many hours behind, and now found themselves without strength and without hope, unable to leave the abandoned campsite.
On the trail, the first to fall was an old warrior.  He lay by the trail, unable to get up, and made his prayers in preparation for the end of his time on earth.  When the soldiers came, they found the old Indian warrior as he lay dying on the trail.  The old warrior gave them information, and told them where to find water.  Then he was shot.
At the pond, the soldiers found the women, huddled in fear, a collection of wretched skeletons.  They were unable to speak English, and there were no interpreters among Atkinson’s troops.  With nothing to be gained by questioning the women, they, too, were summarily shot.

I stood in quiet contemplation after reading the two markers on the side of the road.  I felt a tug in my chest urging me to go and visit the pond itself, rather than just driving by and reading the signs.  Water is life, and the pond was the heart of all the activity that took place in this high, lonely area.  Both Black Hawk and the following militia relied on the tiny water source for themselves and their horses.  The old Indian had directed Atkinson’s troops there.  It was there that the soldiers found and killed the six women.  It was there that I would find whatever was pulling at my soul.

The marker indicated that the pond was 115 rods due south, but the marker had been moved from its original position, so it was difficult to know where to start.  Another source I read indicated that the pond was about a mile northeast of Retreat, Wisconsin.  We knew from looking at maps that there were no roads through the middle of the block defined by those parameters, so we drove south on CTH N to Retreat to see if we could spot the pond from the road.  Just past the Cemetery, we stopped alongside the road to make a special prayer stick.  I wanted to remember and send prayers to the many people who had been lost along the trail, and who perished in their flight.  Not just those whose names we knew, or those who had been found lying dead or hastily buried, but also those who were never found.

I do not generally describe my prayer sticks.  My prayers are private, and are meant for those to which they are sent, but in this case I will share some of its meaning.  I chose the branch of an elm tree, so important to the travelers who were forced to ‘bark’ the trees to reach the life-sustaining inner cambium layer, which could be eaten for the starch and base sugars it contained.  To that, I added a branch from a wild grapevine growing along a fence, whose fruit and leaves can both be eaten.  Then I added a raspberry stalk, and the thorny branch from a gooseberry bush, both of which would still have provided some few berries to the band as they passed.  Then I walked through the cornfield to glean some of the corn still lying in the field after the long winter, and I wrapped and bound all of these together using twine and the strong, dried shucks of the corn plants.  I took these items into the woods where I sat among an abundance of jack-in-the-pulpit flowers and formed my prayers with each added symbol of food and sustenance.

Despite the peaceful surroundings, I felt this was not the right place to leave my prayers.  I wanted to place the prayer stick near the pond, if I could, so I took it with me and started walking along the edge of the field, but there was too much negative energy in that place, where recent activity had left behind too much garbage and disturbance.  Instead, we returned to the car and we drove back to Walnut Mound Cemetery to see if we could get a better view.  At the very back of the Cemetery we looked north and east, but could only see a wooded area, so we drove on.  We went back east again, and ended up driving in a full circle around the unbroken landscape, never able to see the elusive pond.  Finally, from Hwy 82 we drove south on a farmer’s gravel road leading into the fields, and drove as far into the region as we could safely travel.  Then, we got out and walked the area, looking for a place where our prayers could be carried on the wind.  Though we never found the pond, we chose a strip of alfalfa, lush and green in the early season, and left our prayer stick for the old man and the six women, and all the people who had been lost on the trail.

The story may have ended there.  I had followed my instincts and done the best I could to place my prayers where they could be carried by the great Wind Spirits.  We were back in the car, intending to drive to our next stop along the way, but just a little further down the road my husband suddenly slowed and stopped, pointing to a bald eagle in flight, avoiding a harassing blackbird.  It landed on a tree a ways from the road, just down another gravel farmer’s road.  The blackbird left, but within moments, the eagle was joined by a second bald eagle, flying in from the east, and together the two of them took wing and started a beautiful dance in the sky for us to watch.  Then, together, they flew off to the west in the direction of Battle Island, and I took it as a signal that our prayers had been heard and understood, and that we could now continue our journey.

Again, the story could have ended there, but after I returned home I felt that my job here was not complete.  I wanted to know if there was still a pond there somewhere, and exactly how close we had come as we searched for it.  Using Google Earth, we were able to determine that the pond was in the middle of the heavily wooded area in which we started, down the ravine from where we sat while making our prayer stick.  Geographically, it is due north of the Walnut Mound Cemetery, and is not visible or directly accessible from any road.

Looking at the maps as I prepared to write this post, I realized with the resonance of a well-struck chord that the two eagles, dancing in the sky above us, performed their ballet directly above the unseen pond just past the edge of the woods.  When I return to this area in the fall, I intend to complete my search for the pond.  The eagles showed me where to find it, and I believe the spirits still want me to visit.



My Dear Sisters – Six Sisters – Sister of the North, Sister of the East, Sister of the South, Sister of the West, Sister of the Earth, Sister of the Sky – Sacred are the waters of the pond where you took your last drink, and sacred is the ground on which you last lay down to rest, unable to rise for your weariness of body, mind and spirit.  I never learned the names you used in this life, but I know you.  I have learned your story.  To honor your deaths and your lives, I call you Six Sisters, so that I may remember you, and those that hear your story may have names to remember you by. 
I can feel your spirits resting at this place, and that it remains undisturbed, surrounded by forest exactly as it was when you left this world for the next.  I pray for you my spirit sisters.  If you choose to stay and protect this land, I thank you.  If you choose to go on to the next world and leave behind the troubles of this world, I wish you good journey.  If you choose to come with me and join the dance of celebration as we journey to your home, I welcome your company.

Me-ne-kau, and all of the fallen – listen for my prayers carried by Nôtenwi, the Wind.  They are calling you to gather, to walk with me, and in joyous reunion to journey home again.

Grandfather Eagle – always you have guided my path and watched over me on my travels.  Always you have listened to my prayers, and carried them to the Great Spirit.  You visited me at Sycamore Creek, where the first innocents were killed.  You visited me at Indian Lake, and waited for me in the cold rains.  Today, you give me two gifts.  I thank you for showing me the location of the pond, and I thank you for giving me a name for the brave, aging warrior who was killed even after helping to guide his enemy to the water they needed.

Brave warrior – Two Eagles – I never learned the name you used in this life, but I know who you are, because I have read of your final acts of bravery and kindness.  As you guided your enemies, who were in need to the life-giving waters, so, too, I was led by the Master of wind and sky.
To honor your death, and your life, I will call you Two Eagles, so that I may remember you, and those that hear your story may have a name to remember you by.  I know it is the custom of your people that when warriors have fallen in battle, there is to be no dancing at the campfires that night.  I know, too, that when the mourning time is done and the time comes to dance, in celebration of life and in defiance of hardship, that the dances tell the stories of the past.  Your life was long, and good, Two Eagles, and it is time to celebrate that life.  I have watched your spirit rise and dance on the wind, clothed in the living feathers of the ketiwa.  Thank you for guiding me this day.  My period of mourning is nearly over, and then I will follow you, Two Eagles, to the campfires of your home, and I will dance in celebration of your life.
Ah-ho.









(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)




Saturday, May 24, 2014

2-23 Ocooch Mountains

May 17, 2014
Ocooch Mountains
Richland & Crawford Counties, WI


We drove across the Pine River on Twin Bluff Drive, headed toward the town of Twin Bluffs, presumably named because it nestles between a sizable and imposing bluff to the west, and another somewhat smaller bluff to the East.  Turning right on County Road TB, we traveled in a generally northwest direction, passing fields and forest along the floodplain of the Pine River.  The road upon which we drove was generally level, though all around us the very earth itself rose in great crested swells, densely forested with oak, hickory and elm.

We chose a route which attempted to shadow that taken by Black Hawk and his band, though it is difficult to pinpoint in this land of unceasing undulation the exact location of any given ravine, creek, mountain or marsh.  Hwy 14 passes effortlessly north and west along the broad valley and flood plain of the Pine River, in the only logical path through this maze of mountains.  No doubt, engineers studied the path of this highway carefully, laying and winding it between the mountains, cresting only three times on its path to the Kickapoo River, somewhat north of Soldier’s Grove.  We know, from reading the diaries, letters, and reports of the soldiers involved in the chase, that Black Hawk most certainly did not choose this easiest of all possible paths.

Instead, it is clear that Black Hawk chose a path through these mountains which he believed would be impossible for the soldiers to follow, with their wagons and baggage.  His trail led through hopeless, desperate muddy marshes, up towering hillsides, and across the deepest and most treacherous of ravines.  Perhaps no reasonable commander would pursue an enemy through these hills, but Atkinson and his troops had passed beyond reason, and in any case did not know what they faced.  Here is a sample of how some of those who followed described the experience.  Each of these are quotes from original documents, compiled and presented in the book, Massacre at Bad Axe in the Black Hawk War, by Crawford B. Thayer


“ …now followed a march over a country which we found to present almost insuperable difficulties to the passage of an army … certainly remarkable for a combination or juxtaposition of the primitive, alluvious, and other formations, almost unheard of in geology.”

“Marched all day through morasses & swamps, thick woods & over mountains & streams”

“Marched 15 miles to day over the Alps or Pyranies mountains decidedly the most hilly country I have seen heavy timber, rich land, and some of the loftiest trees I ever saw”

“We now saw ourselves enveloped in a mass of the tallest and steepest mountains we had ever seen, and no one could tell us how long it would be before we would get through them.”

“… one continued series of mountains.  No sooner had they reached the summit of one high and almost perpendicular hill, than they had to descend on the other side, equally steep to the base of another.”

“This was truly a lonely and disheartening place.”

“It appears that this country was formed by the great I-AM, for some purpose that the children of men have not yet found out.”

Not only was the terrain imposing, it was filled with unimaginable obstacles.


“…taking, as it were, a temporary farewell of the sun and his cheerful lights, we forced our way into the bramble and thicket of this gloomy forest.  We followed the narrow trails made by the Indians through undergrowth which could only be passed through patient and painful effort. ”

“…wound about [through] the hills which … had at some former time experienced a considerable [tornado], the effects of which was a considerable detriment to our march, and must have been much greater to the Indians who had broke their way [through] before us.  We still pursued the trail and crossed an other most desperate place of mud and water… and then we entered one of the most dreadful pieces of land that I saw in all that north country.”

“… we continued without deviation to follow the trail of the enemy … and led, doubtless with the with a view of baffling the army – over such a country as, I venture to say, has seldom been marched over – at one moment ascending hills, which appeared almost perpendicular, through the thickest forests; then plunging through morasses; fording to our necks in creeks and rivers; passing defiles … next clambering up and down mountains perfectly bald, without so much as a bush to sustain a man.”

“… still penetrating deeper and deeper into the Recesses of a savage wild of High Hills and low swamps overgrown with heavy timber and with so much small under wood that in many places it would have been impossible to have [been] seen at thirty feet distance…”

“The wood, both upon the top of the highest mountains, & at the bottom of the deepest hollows, was of the heaviest growth.  The under bushes were chiefly thorn and prickly ash.”

“ …for several days we toiled over a seemingly endless succession of lofty hills, so precipitous, that it was frequently necessary to use the hands to assist the feet.  After ascending such a hill, perhaps three hundred feet in height, we would find ourselves on the verge of an equally abrupt descent; then a valley from a quarter to a half mile wide, to the foot of the next hill; but in the valley we invariably found a bog and a miry creek.”

It is possible that, had they known what they were up against, Atkinson would indeed have refused to pursue Black Hawk through those mountains.  John Allen Wakefield later wrote in his book, History of the War Between the United States and the Sac and Fox Nations of Indians (written in 1834, and thus one of the earliest full accounts), “We had just entered those mountains; and as an all-wise Providence [God] had so directed it, no one knew how bad they were; for if they had known the difficulty of crossing them, and the distance across them … neither officers or men, would have undertaken to go through them.”

In the midst of all the heartbreak I have felt while traveling this path and reading of all that occurred, I find subtle humor in reading Black Hawk’s impression and description of these mountains.  In his autobiography, the entire passage through this remarkable landscape is described as follows:  “Myself and band having no means to descend the Ouisconsin, I started, over a rugged country, to go to the Mississippi…” A rugged country, indeed.




The path chosen by Black Hawk nearly succeeded in stopping his pursuers, but it came at a terrible price.  By the second day’s march through these hills, his people began to drop dead from the exertion.  Wounded, starving, elderly and exhausted alike were falling behind, and then falling down, never to rise again.  Many times during my journey, I have held a mental picture of 700 -1000 Indians, travelling side-by-side with their loved ones, in a steady stream of silent humanity as they marched and rode through the forests and meadows.  It is only now, as I entered this forbidding land that the full realization hit me of just how wrong this perception was.

One of my other great journeys in life is to walk the Ice Age Trail.  It is a 1200+ mile trail that winds through Wisconsin following the edges of the various lobes of the glaciers, and traveling through the hilly, rocky, marshy country that is the hallmark of the glaciers.  I travel this path, as well as all others, with my husband, and we carefully plan and organize our hikes into 3-5 mile segments.  Even on this journey, with its marked paths, cut staircases and bridges, simple in comparison with what Black Hawk’s band endured, and with only two people involved, we have at times become separated.  Sometimes one or another of us is slightly more fatigued, or less hydrated than the other, and may slow down during an ascent or through a particularly difficult area.  Perhaps one or the other of us stops for a moment and the other continues onward without knowing it.  Eventually, the one in the lead will stop and rest, while the one behind catches up.  That, multiplied 1000 times, is what Black Hawk’s band encountered.

I have read the stories of the Indians that were encountered on the trail, lying dead where they fell in I a state of total exhaustion and deprivation.  Always I pictured, somehow, that these fallen people were somehow left behind by their companions, having seen that they fell but could not bow to help them for fear that they, too, would die or be killed.   The truth is much, much worse.  They did not travel in one, large group.  They spread out, naturally, along the trail, with the swiftest and strongest leading the way, choosing the route, breaking trail where necessary.  Ever forward they would go, finding the path for the others to follow, and they would follow as they were able.  Some would travel a little more slowly than the others, and would fall a little behind.  Some would stop to answer the call of nature, and fall a little behind.  Some would stop to rest, unable to keep up the swift pace through the arduous landscape, and would fall a little behind.  Some would falter and fall, and need to lie still until they could summon the strength to get up again.  Some never did.  They did not fall surrounded by the strong.  They fell alone, and without their loved ones beside them.

I have read that sometimes the stragglers would find their way into camp late at night, or even the next morning, only to be forced to go on without sleep or to collapse in exhaustion, having made it far enough to let their loved ones know they still live but unable to go on without rest.  For the families of those who fell behind, the nights would become a living torment, wondering if their ailing spouse, or parent, or adolescent child would ever show up again.  For some of those families, the torment of unknowing would never end.

From Koshkonong all the way to the Wisconsin River, the soldiers occasionally mentioned finding the bodies of those who had perished along the way.  Early on, it was the elderly and the sick.  Soon thereafter, it was the infants who started to die.  Then it was the women, and the wounded who perished.  Now, in the Ocooch Mountains, Death pursued the fleeing Indians more closely than the army, and claimed its victims one at a time like rolling fog swallows ships in a harbor.

On August 30th, a mere one and a half days behind the Indians, the soldiers started noting an increasing and unusual number of bodies along the trail.

“On this day, we began to find the trail strewed with the dead bodies of Indians.”

“On the route, a number of dead bodies of Indians were found, many in a state of putrefaction; these had doubtless died of wounds received at the Battle of Wisconsin Heights. … The march was therefore rendered distressingly offensive, both to the senses of smelling and of seeing.”

“… the Indian trail … was down the valley, and was rendered quite offensive by the stench of numerous dead bodies of the enemy…”

“Dead, wounded, and [dying] men & children were left on the road.”

“…numbers of dead warriors, women and children were found along the trail.”

“On our march across the country, and during and after the action, I [Lieutenant Robert Anderson] witnessed scenes of distress and misery exceeding any I ever expected to see in our happy land.  Dead bodies males & females strewed along the road – left unburied exposed – poor – emaciated beings – some dead from the wounds [received] in the engagement on the Ouisconsin – others by disease.  The elms – the linns along their routes were barked to give them food.  Scattered along the route lay vestiges of [horses] tired out by travel – and killed to give life & sustenance to their master.”

My road through these hills, should any wish to follow in my footsteps on this journey, was this:

1) Starting at the town of Gotham, travel North on Hwy 14 to Twin Bluff Drive (4.3 miles)
2) Left (west) On Twin Bluff Drive to CTH TB (0.6 miles)
3) Right (north) on CTH TB to CTH O/OO (2.4 miles)
4) Right (north) On CTH O/OO to CTH OO (1.2 miles)
5) Left (west) on CTH OO to Bohmann Drive/CTH OO (1.8 miles)
6) Left (west) on CTH OO to HWY 80 (0.6.miles)
7) Left (southwest) on Hwy 80 to Pauls Hill Drive (1.3 miles)

When we left Highway 80, we finally left the relative comfort of the valleys, and headed into the hills.

8) Right (west) on Pauls Hill Drive to Hill View Drive (0.6 miles)

On this road we attempted to capture photos of how steep and severe the hills were.  It is difficult to photograph a forested hill, because there is little to use for perspective.  Here are two of those photos, one of a stair-step ravine and another of a tree clinging to the precipice of a rapidly dropping hillside.





Our road trip continued:

9) Right (west) on Hill View Drive to Crow Hill School Rd (1.4 miles)

On Hill View Drive, we climbed to the top of one of the hills, and stopped to capture some of the breathtaking views.  It was finally, at this moment, after getting out of the car and seeing the crowns of countless hilltops in all directions, that I was finally able to feel the heartbeats of the people.  When I closed my eyes the wind in my hair carried the long-ago sound of hoof beats and the smell of fear.  It was here that I heard tears falling like gentle raindrops upon this untamed wilderness.  It was here that I felt the spirits of the fallen.

10) Left (west) on Crow Hill School Rd to CTH Q (1 mile)







11) Left (west) on CTH Q to CTH ZZ (0.9 miles)
12) Right (north) on CTH ZZ to Dayton Ridge Rd (0.9 miles)
13) Left (west) on Dayton Ridge Rd to Jefferson Street (3.2 miles)
14) Right (north) on Jefferson Street to Hwy 171 (0.1 miles)

We now found ourselves in the town of Boaz, whose great claims to fame include a locally discovered mastodon skeleton and the fact that Black Hawk’s path crossed Mill Creek near this point.

At Boaz, we stopped for lunch and left behind a prayer stick.




15) Left (south) on Hwy 171 to CHT H (10.1 miles)
16) Right (northwest) on CTH H to HWY 61 (6.6 miles)






17) Right (north) on Hwy 61 to Hwy 131/Pine Street (1.7 miles)







18) Left (west) on HWY 131/Pine Street to CTH C/Main Street (0.4 miles) Historical Marker on Left

I now found myself in Soldier’s Grove, originally known as Pine Grove Village.  The soldiers camped in this location, having found grass for their horses for the first time in three days.  They were now about one day behind Black Hawk.






19) Forward (north) on CTH C/Main Street to CTH B (6.2 miles)
20) Left (south) on CTH B/C to CTH C (100 feet)
21) Right (west) on CTH C to Latham Rd (0.5 miles)
22) Right (west) on Latham Road to Hwy 27 (3.9 miles)
23) Right (northwest) on Hwy 27 to CTH B Town of Rising Sun (0.8 miles)
24) Left (west) on CTH B to Historical Marker on left (200 feet)






Here, at the border between Crawford and Vernon Counties, a traveler will find the first of seven concrete markers that were placed along roadsides in 1930, commemorating the passage of Black Hawk and his band nearly 100 years earlier.  The markers were the brainchild of Dr. Charles Porter, a Vernon County doctor, dairyman and local historian.  He studied the Black Hawk Conflict during the 1880s, during a time when the most pro-Indian accounts were being written, as compared to those written during the four decades before and the four decades since that time.







Here, on the last day of July, with the high temperatures only in the mid-70s, Black Hawk and his people mercifully left behind the Ocooch Mountains, but their efforts tragically failed to thwart the advancing troops, who were now only a day behind.  As with their approach to the Wisconsin River, a desperate and deadly race to the Mississippi River was nearing the finish line.





Spirits of the Wind – Manetôwaki Nôtenwi – It is time to gather your lost children and bring them home.  Fly from this place and seek out those who fell to the arms of our Great Mother Earth, alone, and far from their families and their homes.  Bring them my love, and my prayers.  Tell them that even now, they are not forgotten.  Gather the spirits of the nenîchânethaki, the children, and the apenôhêhaki, the infants, and take them by the hand.  Gather the spirits of the châkikya, the mothers, and bring them to their children.  Gather the spirits of the metemôhaki, the old women, and the pashitôhaki, the old men, and carry them in a circle around the women and children in your swirling arms.  Tell them to gather love from each other, and give them the strength of your spirit. Tell them their time of loneliness and mourning is over and that it is now time to dance again.
Tell them to walk with me as I finish our journey, and complete the circle.  Tell them they are wanted and needed.  Tell them that I am their friend, and I will tell their story.  Ah-ho.







(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)




Thursday, May 22, 2014

2-22 Camp of Six Horses

May 17, 2014
Willow Creek Flowage
Richland County, WI




“When I bestride him, I soar, I am a hawk.  He trots the air, the earth sings when he touches it.”  -  William Shakespeare

* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
“When we think of those companions who traveled by our side down life's road, let us not say with sadness that they left us behind, but rather say with gentle gratitude that they once were with us.”  -  Author Unknown




It is May 17th, and I have resumed my journey, following the path of the diminishing band of Sauk, Meskwaki, Potawatomi, and Ho-Chunk Indians as they mustered strength from depleted wells and fled westward from the threat of a renewed attack.  As I had promised the spirits, I returned to the encampment at Honey Creek to resume my quest.  I called to the horse spirits, asking for their help in gathering all those who had suffered in this place – to follow me – to continue and complete this journey with me.

The People rested here for a few days, hoping against hope that the Army and the militia had abandoned their pursuit and would now allow them to escape.  When their enemies resumed the chase, they picked up everything and ran west, hoping to reach and cross the Mississippi River before death could find them.





From Honey Creek, I traveled first southwest, along Hwy C, until it reached Hwy 60. The Indians fled in this general direction, for two main reasons.  First, as noted before, water meant life.  With daily temperatures in the 80s and 90s and their devastated physical condition, they would quickly perish without ready access to water.  Second, the river was their guide, leading them west.  Another possible consideration is that this is the direction that had been taken by the 200 or so members of their band too weak to travel overland, and they may have hoped for news of their escape.

On Hwy 60, in the lower flood plain near the river, there is a Historical Marker describing the ‘Western Escape’ of the Indians as they fled.   The sign is somewhat misleading. Certainly the band used the waterway as an escape, but only a limited number left on the 22nd.  The 700 or so members of the band still surviving and able to travel by land left the area days later, only a matter of a few miles ahead of the advancing troops.

Traveling due west along the flat, grassy floodplain of the Wisconsin River, Hwy 60 provides an excellent view of what Black Hawk’s people would have encountered.  The hills in this area are quite beautiful, and if one pauses to listen, the birdsong is simply jubilant.  It was peaceful and quiet.  Not so for the starving fugitives as they struggled westward.  Little did they know what lay between them and the Mississippi River.

As Hwy 60 approaches the town of Gotham, it turns sharply north, before cutting west again along the Wisconsin River.  This occurs at a place known as the Pine River Valley, and it was here that Black Hawk and his people left the Wisconsin River behind and followed this new river northward.  Unable or unwilling to cross the Pine River, they went north and made camp a mile or so up the valley, probably on the night of July 26th, after a hard day’s march with the temperature in the high 80s.  It was the previous day, July 25th that Brigadier General Alexander Posey had begun construction of rafts at the abandoned settlement of Helena, using logs from abandoned cabins for the task.  No doubt this was the action that spurred Black Hawk’s people to flight again, after resting only a few short days near Honey Creek.

General Atkinson’s troops arrived at Helena, on the Wisconsin River, late in the day on August 26th.  The total force numbered roughly 1300 men (400 regular army and 900 volunteers), plus wagons, pack horses, beeves (cattle), and provisions.  Unable to start crossing the river immediately, they made camp while the construction of rafts continued. The first of the troops crossed the river on the 27th.  On the night of the 27th, while fishing, two soldiers discovered the bloated corpse of a Sauk Indian, presumed to have been killed upriver during the battle at Wisconsin Heights.

When the soldiers finished crossing the Wisconsin River on July 28th, they started riding east along the north shore of the river, intending to return to the shore opposite the battle site from a week earlier, with plans to relocate the trail and resume their pursuit.  The soldiers were in poor spirits, believing that Black Hawk had a week’s head start on them, and that they had little or no chance of finding him again.  That mood changed instantly when, after riding along the river for only three or four miles, they discovered the trail and saw it was fresh, heading west in the direction of the Ocooch Mountains.


Even in the band's ragged and diminished condition, the trail showed how carefully the Indians were traveling in their attempt to elude their enemy.

“Their trail gave evidence that their numbers must be considerable. Their order of march was in three parallel columns. Over the dry prairie, the route of each column was worn two to six inches in the earth; where the ground was marshy, their trail appeared like ordinary traveled roads, wanting only the tracks of the wheels.” - Diary of Henry Smith, soldier


The whole of the pursuing army struck a course west along the trail, and traveled at a fast march until they reached the Pine River Valley, where they, too, turned north.  They camped that night, on the 28th, at Rohn Hollow Creek just north of present-day Gotham.

Dawn broke the next day at 4:45 am, with reveille and fast rations from the supply wagons. The soldiers took up the march early, but within a couple of miles they were forced to construct a small bridge over a large creek, now known as Willow Creek.  Shortly thereafter they came upon the first of several camps left by Black Hawk’s band.  There they found, not for the first time, evidence of just how desperate the Indians had become for food.
"July 29th.  We started this morning very early, and had proceeded but a short distance, before we came upon one of their [Black Hawk's] encampments.  We found that they were still killing their horses to eat.  They here had killed the willing animals, that had carried them, no doubt for miles, and through many dangers.  We now discovered that the enemy was about four days ahead of us, and were still flying from us with all speed." - John Allen Wakefield, Esq.







I am not a vegetarian.  I understand that the meat I find in grocery stores under clear plastic wrap on styrofoam trays and blotter pads has its origin in the living creatures of the earth.  I was raised around livestock, and I have raised my own animals for food.  Still – I find this act of desperation numbing.  The ominous importance of this discovery cannot be ignored.  When the peril of moving slowly will result in certain death, at the hands of a relentless foe, it is hard to imagine the severity of hunger that would force you to eat the horse that has carried you for 1000 miles and know that you will now be faced with having to evade your enemy on foot.

As I drove past the Willow Creek Flowage, I said a silent prayer.


Makataimeshekiakiak  –  I offer a prayer for the spirits of your brothers, the horses, who gave their lives in the time of your desperate need.

Mighty Nêkatôshkashâhaki
  –  Quiet now are the winds of the prairie that bore your spirits to the next world.  Your power and your freedom are now a part of The People.  Your strength is now their strength.  May your spirits forever run free amidst endless waving fields of grasses.  Mighty Nêkatôshkashâhaki – come with me now.  Follow the spirits of your fallen brothers and sisters until they make their way home in celebration.  Ah-ho.







(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)




Tuesday, May 13, 2014

2-21 Honey Creek

April 13, 2014
Honey Creek
Town of Blackhawk, WI

It is no coincidence that the escape across the Wisconsin River took place just south of what is now Sauk City, with its favorable banks giving access to the river, broad valleys and shallow waters. This was a place settled by the Sauk tribe in the early 1700s, before moving a bit further south to Saukenuk. The land may well have been known to Black Hawk, but even if it was not, the natural flow of the landscape which made it so favorable a location for the tribe to live also led Black Hawk to the very same spot.

On the morning of July 22nd, the day after the Battle of Wisconsin Heights took place, the militia formed ranks and marched to the edge of the river, finding the encampment from the previous afternoon abandoned. What few belongings the Sauk had left to them were left behind in their haste to cross the river. Trees were stripped bare of bark for the making of canoes, and across to the river to the west, about a mile off, the soldiers could see where Black Hawk now made his camp. However, having no boats or any means of crossing the river, and because the soldiers had forsaken all provision in their haste to overtake Black Hawk before the river crossing, the decision was made not to cross the river that day in pursuit. The race was over, and Black Hawk had won.

It must have been a bitter pill for Dodge and Henry to swallow, knowing that Black Hawk had eluded them again, sweetened only by the number of the enemy counted as dead.  In letters, and around campfires, commanders applauded the bravery of their troops, and they were in turn admired for their leadership.  Spirits were high, but there was an undercurrent of dissatisfaction, and even a mood of black comedy.  Wrote one man of the event, “After all their [the soldiers’] boasting the simple fact was, that Black Hawk, although encumbered with the women, children, and baggage of his whole band, covering himself by a small party, had accomplished one of the most difficult of military operations, - to wit, the passage of a river, - in the presence of three regiments of American volunteers!  And now they were gone – the victors could not tell us whither.” – Phillip St George Cooke, Scenes and Adventures in the Army: Or Romance of Military Life.



All the while, Black Hawk remained on the opposite side of the river expecting attack but getting none.  On the night following the battle, Black Hawk crossed the Wisconsin again, alone, in an attempt to surrender, or at least convince the solders that they intended no harm, and would return to the west of the Mississippi.  Approximately two hours before dawn, he rode to the top of the hill from which he had commanded his warriors, 36 hours earlier, and began shouting in the Ho-Chunk language to get the attention of the guides he believed were still camped among them.  Sadly, all the Ho-Chunk guides had left the soldiers’ camp only hours before, and none were in camp who could interpret what was being shouted.  One soldier at least, who spoke some Winnebago, remembers hearing the words, “Friends, we fight no more”, and told General Henry what he heard, but Henry rebuffed him, and told the men to form ranks.  Mistaking the shrill shouting as preparations for an Indian Raid, General Henry paced in front of his paraded troops and bolstered them with a motivational speech.  When dawn broke, the area was searched, but only a single fresh set of hoofprints were found, along with a buried hatchet.  It was learned only later, after capturing and interrogating a couple of Sauk prisoners, that the Sauk Leader had attempted for the second time to surrender.  Because the Ho-Chunk did not ride out to meet him and accept his surrender, Black Hawk assumed that his offer of surrender was unacceptable, and rode away just before dawn to re-cross the Wisconsin and rejoin his people.




When I left the banks of the Wisconsin River, I followed Hwy 60 to the west, then continued west on County Hwy. B, winding through the countryside in the steady rain until I passed a small sign saying “Black Hawk > 1”, at the intersection of Hwy B and Hwy C.  Black Hawk Wisconsin is a township, so small it doesn’t appear on Google Maps, yet it does exist.  A drive through town will bring you past many houses, a few businesses, and (oddly) the Town of Troy Town Hall.  

You will also pass the Black Hawk Elementary School, and well past the north end of town, the Black Hawk Methodist Church.  In between is a bridge crossing a small waterway known as Honey Creek.

When Black Hawk took his people west from the Wisconsin River on July 23rd, they set up camp in this exact area near the creek, resting for as long as their enemy would allow.  It was a time of fearful hope for the beleaguered and battle-weary Indians, for the soldiers had inexplicably given up the chase.  It was also a time of great hardship and mourning.  Of the estimated 1500 people who started this journey with Black Hawk, perhaps 500 remained with him at this time.  An estimated 68 warriors and braves were killed during the Battle at Wisconsin Heights.  Many more now lay dying, their putrefying battle wounds rapidly claiming their hunger-ravaged bodies.






After crossing the territory amidst torrential rainfalls and suffering through a miserable, cold night, crossing the Wisconsin River after a day of forced march with no food followed by a fight-to-the-death battle, the group of fugitives was now given a reprieve both from the pursuit and from the weather.  July 23rd saw a high of 84 degrees, with no rain.  The winds were warm and from the South, allowing them to dry and warm their bodies and clothes.  July 24th was again warm, with a high of 80 degrees and no rain, though the northwest wind was severe.  July 25th saw a high of 79, again with no rain and a gentler northwest wind.  July 26th was once again hot, with a high of 87 degrees and a south wind.

One aspect of the warmth and sunshine is that the displaced band suffered less from their lack of shelter.  On the other hand, it also virtually chained them to the rivers, since they had no means for transporting any significant quantity of water.  I have spent time hiking through the forests and prairies of Wisconsin when the temperatures are in the 80s and 90s.  There is little as humbling and debilitating as dehydration.  Even well-fed, lack of water can lead to heat stroke in a matter of hours.  A perfectly healthy adult can die from overexertion in less than a day.  With 500 bodies to feed and hydrate, the rivers were their only chance for survival.  As their horses died, they were as rapidly eaten, lean and tough though the meat must have been.  As people died from their wounds, fatigue, exposure or exhaustion, they were returned to mother earth.

As I stood on the bridge above Honey Creek, I looked around at the beautiful countryside, not quite ready to blossom into springtime.  Were it not for the power lines and the bridge itself, it would have been possible to stand in that spot, turn 360 degrees, and see what Black Hawk would have seen.  All around, the area is blanketed in forest-covered hills, and lush meadows, without a building in sight.  When settlers finally came to this area, they reported finding numerous artifacts from the brief stay of Black Hawk and his people.  I didn’t stay long in this place, though I will return when I begin the next leg of my journey.  I will return when the weather has turned hot, and I can feel the sun parching my body.  I am weary of the rain, and it is now raining with the cold fury of that long ago night in 1832.  Lightning has split the sky, and the pounding thunder that followed shook my body as I stood and listened for echoes of the past.

Black Hawk had spies watching the movements of the troops after the battle.  On July 26th, the enemy had made a march to the edge of the Wisconsin River and appeared ready to resume their pursuit.  The rest was over for Black Hawk’s band.  Gone was the hope that they would be allowed to regain their strength and return to their people in Iowa.  Gone was the hope that the military had understood Black Hawk’s message of peace.  On July 27th, the solders began crossing the Wisconsin.  Once again, the hunt for Black Hawk was on.



Makataimeshekiakiak – you have proven yourself to be a great warrior. You have fought in battle against a much larger foe, and come out the victor. Many times you have earned a counting coup and many times you have added another eagle feather to your headdress. Now you have proven yourself to be a great leader. You have buried the tomahawk with your enemy. You have offered yourself in surrender to protect your people. If only you could have understood better the ways of the whites.

How your weary people must have hoped that the whites would finally leave them in peace.  Even then, with that hope in their hearts, how they must have feared the coming winter, knowing that the season of gathering food had been lost to them.  How they must have prayed for the safe journey of those who fled south on the Wisconsin River.  How they must have grieved over the loss of their brave husbands and sons, fathers, and lovers, even as they lay dying.  How wretched must the news have been that the soldiers were once again on their way.
I give thanks to the waters that nourished you and cleaned your wounds while you stayed in this place.  I give thanks to the earth that gave your horses food, and gave you a place to lay your heads to rest.  I give thanks to the sun that warmed your bodies, and the stars that guided your way.  I honor the warriors who fought so bravely to give your families time to cross the river, and I honor the families who survived with equal bravery, struggling to find food enough to feed all the hungry mouths.  I honor the fallen, and touch this earth that is the earth from their bones.  I am strengthened by their bravery – the warriors, the women, the children, the fallen – I hold my head high as I look to the west where my journey will take me, as I follow in your footsteps to the banks of the Mississippi.  Ah-ho.







(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)