Tecumseh and the Shawnee Prophet
Tenskwatawa "The prophet" and Tecumseh
Tenskwatawa was born in 1778 at Old Piqua near present day Springfield, Ohio. His father was an important Shawnee chief. Lauliwasikau was one of eight children, and he protected his younger brother Tecumseh and acted as his protector. Lauliwaskiau would eventually be known as Tenskwatawa.
In 1783, at the treaty of Paris, promises of the British were broken and they made no effort to protect Indian lands in Ohio. Tribesmen had fought in this war but had no part in the treaty making. White frontiersmen started flocking to southern Ohio, only to be refused by the tribal leaders refusing to acknowledge the government's claims and oppose new settlements north of the river.
From 1784-1789 a few chiefs met with government officials and signed a series of questionable treaties taking away Indian control of lands in Southern and Eastern Ohio, but most of the tribesmen denounced the agreements and continued their raids on the farms and villages. The government then sent in armed expeditions but the tribesmen were too much for them and sent them back.
In August of 1794 Major General "Madman Anthony" Wayne's legion defeated the mutitribal forces in the Battle of the Fallen Timbers, which resulted in the Treaty of Greensville and the Indians gave up their claims to most of Ohio. The Indians then expanded into northern Indiana and northwestern Ohio but the red hunters were forced to compete with the growing number of whites who would cross over into Indian lands for wildlife. This denied the tribesmen of fresh meat and limited their ability to purchase needed commodities. The Indians relied on fur trading and after 1797 many warriors were hard pressed to provide for their families.
The American system was a hardship for the Indians, any tribesmen trespassing on white property were considered fair game. Fur trading peaceful Indians were robbed and murdered by American citizens and the frontier court systems would acquit the culprits of such crimes. When...
" (Atkinson, 1) This is an important divergence of approaches, not simply because it dispenses with the ordinary telling of this story but also because it recasts the way we might understand the death of the Shawnee tribes. Where the caricature of the heroic and generally lionized Tecumseh is concerned, there is a tendency to vest too much stock in the role played by a single charismatic leader in defining the
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