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The factual accuracy of this article is disputed.
The Black Hawk War was a war fought in 1832 in the Midwestern section of the United States of America
between American settlers and Native Americans. The war was named for Black Hawk, the leader of a band of Sauk and Fox Indians, and was the result of government
annexation of lands in Illinois.
In 1804, General William Henry Harrison negotiated a
treaty in St. Louis with a group of Sauk and Fox leaders, in which they ceded the
land all lands east of the Mississippi in exchange for $1,000 per year and
the condition that the tribes could continue to reside on the land as long as the U.S. government possessed it.[1]
However, this treaty was subsequently disputed by Black Hawk and other members of the tribes, since the full tribal councils
had not been consulted. After the War of 1812, in which Black Hawk had fought
against the U.S., he signed a peace treaty in May of 1816 (following treaties signed by the
other tribes in the preceding year); these peace treaties re-affirmed the treaty of 1804, a
provision of which Black Hawk later protested ignorance.
Nevertheless, the non-native population of Illinois exploded after the War of 1812, exceeding 50,000 in 1820 and 150,000 in
1830. In 1825, thirteen Sauks and six Foxes signed another agreement re-affirming the 1804 treaty. In 1828, the U.S. government
liaison, Thomas Forsyth,
informed the tribes that they should begin vacating their settlements east of the Mississippi. On July 10, 1830, Keokuk, a Sauk
chief, sold 26,500,000 acres (107,000 kmē) of Sauk land east of the Mississippi to the government of the United States for three cents an acre ($7.41/kmē).
The land included the village of Saukenok, at the junction of the Mississippi and Rock Rivers, which had been home to Black Hawk and his band of Sauk and Fox Indians for more than 150 years. In
the fall of 1830, when Black Hawk and his followers returned from their hunt, they found white settlers occupying their village.
Black Hawk did not sanction the sale of this land and was determined to regain the village; after a year of tension, he returned
again in 1831, and Governor John Reynolds proclaimed it an "invasion of
the state".
Responding to Governor Reynolds' call General Edmund Pendleton Gaines brought his army troops from St. Louis, Missouri to Saukenuk to insist upon Black Hawk's
immediate departure. Black Hawk refused, and was driven across the Mississippi by Gaines' troops and an additional 1,400 militia
called up by Reynolds. At this point, Black Hawk signed a surrender agreement in which he promised to remain west of the
Mississippi. This did not last long, however.
On April 6, 1832, chafing under the rule of
Keokuk and stirred up by promises of British support by Sauk chief Napope and of welcome by the Winnebago prophet White Cloud in Illinois, Black Hawk and his
band of 1,000 returned to Illinois in an attempt to reclaim their homeland. The Governor, considering this an invasion, mobilized
the militia of 1,600 men and called for additional support from U.S. troops. Federal authorities, along with Sauk and Fox tribal
councils, ordered Black Hawk and his band west of the Mississippi, but they refused to leave.
The governor issued a proclamation on April 16, mustering five brigades of
volunteers to form at Beardstown and
to head north to force Black Hawk out of Illinois. (Although federal U.S. army
troops were also involved—including future U.S. President Abraham
Lincoln—the militia, which by the end of the war reached 9,000 men, were
the majority.) On May 9, the militia began an aggressive pursuit, finally coming into
contact with Black Hawk and his warriors on the Rock River near Dixon on May 14. When the militia fired upon them, the warriors returned fire and killed 11 militiamen in
the Battle
of Stillman's Run. Although the militia numbered 300, they fled after the initial volley and returned home with news that
2,000 "bloodthirsty warriors were sweeping all Northern Illinois with the bosom of destruction." After this initial skirmish,
Black Hawk sent the women and children of his band to the Michigan
Territory and then moved into into northern Illinois.
On May 19, the militia traveled up the Rock River in search of Black Hawk. Several
small skirmishes ensued when they encountered the Indians raiding the Illinois settlements of Ottawa and Galena. Following these skirmishes, the governor recruited
additional militia forces, raising the number to 4,000. With the one-month enlistment for militia already expired, the Governor
mustered them out of service on May 27 and May
28. The Federal Government then ordered General Winfield Scott with
1,000 regulars and 300 mounted volunteers to resume the chase.
From the end of June to the beginning of August, the federal troops pursued Black Hawk and his band throughout northern
Illinois. They remained hot on his trail, but always seemed to remain two to three days behind. On August 1, with his band
depleted and hungry, Black Hawk surrendered on the Mississippi River near the mouth of the Bad Axe River.
Black Hawk was ordered to board a U.S. ship positioned on the river, but many of his band had already crossed the river. When
the ship's crew fired upon the Indians on the shore, a battle ensued and 850 of Black Hawk's band and 17 soldiers were killed.
Black Hawk escaped with ten warriors and 35 women and children to Wisconsin, but on August 27 they were captured and delivered to Prairie du Chien. On September 21,
a peace treaty was signed with the Sauk and Fox Tribes and Black Hawk was placed in the custody of Keokuk, the same man who
betrayed him by selling his land two years earlier. Black Hawk never again attempted to regain his homeland.
The Black Hawk War of 1832 resulted in the deaths of 70 settlers and soldiers, and hundreds of Black Hawk's band. The War not
only affected the lives of the Indians, settlers, and militiamen involved, but also the settlement of Illinois and Wisconsin. The Black Hawk War was responsible for the end of conflict between settlers
and Indians in both states.
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