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Important Treaties for Ojibwe Indians in Wisconsin

Important Treaties for Ojibwe Indians in Wisconsin. What is a treaty?. an agreement between two nations Who were the two nations? The United States government and Indians living in Wisconsin. Prairie du Chien Treaty of 1825. Prairie du Chien Treaty of 1825.

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Important Treaties for Ojibwe Indians in Wisconsin

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  1. Important Treaties for Ojibwe Indians in Wisconsin

  2. What is a treaty? • an agreement between two nations Who were the two nations? • The United States government and Indians living in Wisconsin

  3. Prairie du Chien Treaty of 1825

  4. Prairie du Chien Treaty of 1825 • Settlers might be afraid to come to Wisconsin if tribes in Wisconsin were always fighting each other. • This treaty set the boundaries for the tribes living in Wisconsin today to bring about peace. • The US hoped to gain Indian land in the future.

  5. Wisconsin Territory…on the way to becoming a state.

  6. The First Territorial Governor • Henry Dodge, the first territorial governor of Wisconsin

  7. What did Dodge do? • He saw the value in all of the white pine trees that could be used for lumber.

  8. The 1837 Pine Tree Treaty • The government wanted to start lumbering in the big pine forests. • The Chippewa or Ojibwe Indians ceded their land and we began lumbering. • The Ojibwe Indians could still hunt and fish in their traditional lifestyle.

  9. What does ceded mean? • Cede means to give up The Ojibwe gave up their land and the US government paid them money and supplies for it.

  10. A New Land Cession: The 1842 Copper Treaty • Copper deposits were reported along the shores of Lake Superior and northern boundary of Wisconsin. • Indians ceded the land and mining of copper boomed in this area.

  11. Problems with these treaties: • Indians thought they were just letting us use the land and what was in it; they didn’t think they were selling the actual land. • Indians thought that their children and grandchildren would have a home in the future. • The United States didn’t keep their promise – the Ojibwe Indians of Wisconsin were “removed” to Sandy Lake, Minnesota.

  12. In order to receive their payment for the land they had to travel to Sandy Lake. • When they got arrived, the money was not there. Of the 400 Ojibwe who traveled, 170 died from hunger, disease and the cold.

  13. A Voice for the Ojibwe • Chief Buffalo traveled to Washington, D.C. to persuade President Fillmore to stop the removal order. He explained to the president that the Ojibwe believed they were letting the US use the copper and trees on the land, they never ceded (or gave up) the land itself. President Fillmore stopped the “removal order.”

  14. Treaty of 1854 • Ojibwe leaders met with U.S. leaders to insist they have reservations (land set aside) in Wisconsin. • They also wanted to be able to hunt, fish, and gather on the land they had agreed to give up. • Four Ojibwe reservations were created in Wisconsin…

  15. How have the land holdings changed for the Ojibwe? Red Cliff Lac Court Oreilles Bad River Lac du Flambeau

  16. Two More Bands Get Reservations: St. Croix MoleLake

  17. Do Ojibwe Indians live in Wisconsin today? • Yes! Many bands try to continue hunting and gathering the traditional way… Gathering wild rice

  18. Fishing • Spearing walleye • Restocking lakes with sturgeon and walleye

  19. They are trying to preserve their culture and language for the future… • Cultural horizons CD-rom clips from each of the reservations. Shows wild ricing, language schools, tribal schools, bison reintroduction in southern Wisconsin, etc.

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