Hunkpapa

This article is about the Hunkpapa branch of the Lakota Native American tribe. For the 1989 album by Throwing Muses, see Hunkpapa (album).
Walking Shooter (Wah-Koo-Ta-Mon-Ih), 1872 Tribal Delegations to the Federal Government


The Hunkpapa Division

The Hunkpapa (Lakota: Húŋkpapȟa) are a Native American group, one of the seven council fires of the Lakota tribe. The name Húŋkpapȟa is a Lakota word meaning "Head of the Circle". (At one time, the tribe's name was represented in European-American records as Honkpapa.) By tradition, the Húŋkpapȟa set up their lodges at the entryway to the circle of the Great Council when the Sioux met in convocation.[1] They speak Lakȟóta, one of the three dialects of the Sioux language.

History in the 19th century

Seven hundred and fifty mounted Yanktons, Yanktonais and Lakota joined six companies of the Sixth Infantry and 80 fur trappers in an attack on an Arikara Indian Village at Grand River (now SD) in August 1823. Thus members of the Lakota tribe, a part of them "Ankpapat", were the first Native Americans to fight in the American Indian Wars alongside US forces west of the Missouri.[2]

They may have formed as a tribe within the Lakota relatively recently, as the first mention of the Hunkpapa in European-American historical records was from a treaty of 1825.

By signing the 1825 treaty, the Hunkpapa and the United States committed themselves to keep up the "friendship which has heretofore existed". With their x-mark, the chiefs also recognized the supremacy of the United States.[3] It is a question if they really understood the text in the document. A medal was given to Little White Bear who was the principal Hunkpapa chief according to the whites.[4]

With the Vaccination Act of 1832, the United States assumed responsibility for the inoculation of the Indians against smallpox. Some visiting Hunkpapa may have benefitted from Dr. M. Martin's vaccination of about 900 southern Lakota (no divisions named) at the head of Medicine Creek that autumn.[5] When smallpox struck in 1837, it hit the Hunkpapa as the northernmost Lakota division. The loss, however, may have been less than one hundred people.[6] Overall, the Hunkpapa seem to have suffered less from new diseases than many other tribes did.[7]

The boundaries for the Lakota Indian territory were set down in the general peace treaty negotiated near Fort Laramie in the summer of 1851. Leaders of eight different tribes, often at odds with each other and each claiming large territories, signed the treaty. The United States was a ninth party in it. The Crow Indian territory included a tract of land north of the Yellowstone, while Little Bighorn River ran through the heartland of the Crow country (now MT). The treaty gives the land of the Arikaras, the Hidatsas and the Mandans as a mutual area north of Heart River, partly encircled by the Missouri (now ND).[8]

Soon enough the Hunkpapa and other Sioux attacked the Arikaras and the two other village tribes just as they had done in the past. By 1854, these three smallpox-devastated tribes called for protection from the U.S. Army and they would repeatedly do so almost to the end of intertribal warfare.[9] Eventually the Hunkpapa and other Lakota took hold of the three tribes' area north of Heart River, forcing the village people to live in Like a Fishhook Village outside their treaty land. The Lakota were largely in control of the occupied area to 1876-1877.[10] As far as the records show the conquerors did not offer any economic compensation for the Indian land and hunting grounds taken from the village Indians.

The United States Army General Warren estimated their population at about 2920 in 1855. He described their territory as ranging "from the Big Cheyenne up to the Yellowstone, and west to the Black Hills. He states that they formerly intermarried extensively with the Cheyenne." He noted that they raided settlers along the Platte River.[1] In addition to warfare, they suffered considerable losses due to contact with Europeans and contracting of Eurasian infectious diseases to which they had no immunity.

The Hunkpapa gave some of their remote relatives among the Santee Sioux armed support during a large-scale battle near Killdeer Mountain in 1864 with U.S. troops led by General A. Sully.[11]

The Great Sioux Reservation was established with a new treaty in 1868.[12] The Lakota agreed to the construction of "any railroad" outside their reservation. The United States recognized that "the country north of the North Platte River and east of the summits of the Big Horn Mountains" was unsold or unceded Indian territory.[13] These hunting grounds in the south and in the west of the new Lakota domain were mainly used by the Sicangu (Brule-Sioux) and the Oglala, living nearby.

The "free bands" of Hunkpapa favored campsites outside the unsold areas. They took a leading part in the westward enlargement of the range used by the Lakota in the late 1860s and the early 1870s at the expense of other tribes. In search for even lesser buffalos, camps of Lakota regularly occupied the eastern part of the Crow Indian Reservation as far west as the Bighorn River, sometimes even raiding the Crow Agency just as it happened in 1873.[14] The Lakota pressed the Crow Indians to the point, that they reacted like other small tribes stressed by the Great Power of the Lakota: They called for the U.S. Army to interfere and take actions against the intruders.[15]

In the late summer of 1873, the Hunkpapa boldly attacked the Seventh Cavalry right in United States territory north of the Yellowstone. Custer's troops escorted a railroad surveying party here, due to similar attacks the year before.[16] Battlefields like Honsinger Bluff and Pease Bottom were located in land purchased by the United States from the Crow tribe on May 7, 1868.[17] These continually attacks, and complains from American Natives, prompted the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to ponder the full situation on the northern plains. He advocated, that the unfriendly Lakota roaming the land of other people should "be forced by the military to come in to the Great Sioux Reservation".[18] That was in 1873, notably one year before the discovery of gold in the Black Hills, but nothing came of it until three years later.

The Hunkpapa were among the victors in the Battle of Little Bighorn in the Crow Indian Reservation in July 1876.[19]

Since the 1880s, most Hunkpapa have lived in the Standing Rock Indian Reservation (SD and ND). It comprises land along the Grand River used by the Arikara Indians in 1823: The Hunkpapa "won the west" just half a century before the whites.[20]

During the 1870s, when the Native Americans of the Great Plains were fighting the United States, the Hunkpapa were led by Sitting Bull in the fighting, together with the Oglala Lakota. They were among the last of the tribes to go to the reservations. By 1891, the majority of Hunkpapa Lakota, about 571 people, resided in the Standing Rock Indian Reservation of North and South Dakota. Since then they have not been counted separately from the rest of the Lakota.

Population in the 19th century

The Hunkpapa population was estimated to be around 1,600 men, women and children in 1805, corresponding to 160 tipis. Shihasapa and Sans Arc migration to Hunkpapa camps in the 1840s had doubled up their number of tipis in 1849. From a height in 1855 with 360 lodges, the next decades were marked by a small decline. The decline was higher in percentage of the total Lakota population. In 1855, the total number of lodges were nearly 2,000. Fifteen years later only 315 tipis out of 2,400 were set up in Hunkpapa camps.[21]

Notable people

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Hunkpapa Sioux Indian Tribe History", Handbook of American Indians, 1906, carried in Access Genealogy, accessed 9 Dec 2009
  2. Robinson, Doane: Official Correspondence Pertaining to the Leavenworth Expedition into South Dakota in 1823 for the Conquest of the Ree Indians. South Dakota Historical Collections, Vol. 1 (1902), pp.179-256. Meyer, Roy W.: The Village Indians of the Upper Missouri. The Mandans, Hidatsas and Arikaras. Lincoln and London, 1977, p.54.
  3. Kappler, Charles J.: Indian Affairs. Laws and Treaties. Washington, 1904, Vol.2, p.235. http://digital.library.okstate.edu./kappler/Vol2/treaties/hun0235.htm
  4. Jensen, Richard E. & James S. Hutchins: Wheel Boats on the Missouri. The Journals and Documents of the Atkinson-O'Fallon Expedition, 1824-26. Helena and Lincoln, 2001, p.128.
  5. Trimble, Michael K.: The 1832 Inoculation Program on the Missouri River. In Verano, John W. and D.H. Ubelaker (eds): Disease and Demography in the Americas. Washington and London, 1992, pp. 257-264.
  6. Bray, Kingsley M.: Teton Sioux Population History, 1655-1881. Nebraska History, Summer 1994, Vol. 75, No. 2, p. 178, column II.
  7. Bray, Kingsley M.: Teton Sioux Population History, 1655-1881. Nebraska History, Summer 1994, Vol. 75, No. 2, p. 184, column II.
  8. Kappler, Charles J.: Indian Affairs. Laws and Treaties. Washington, 1904. Vol. 2, p. 594. http://digital.library.okstate.edu/kappler/Vol2/treaties/sio0594.htm
  9. Meyer, Roy W.: The Village Indians of the Upper Missouri. The Mandans, Hidatsas and Arikaras. Lincoln and London, 1977, p. 106.
  10. Meyer, Roy W.: The Village Indians of the Upper Missouri. The Mandans, Hidatsas and Arikaras. Lincoln and London, 1977, pp. 110-133.
  11. Larson, Robert W.: Galls Last Stand. The Quarterly Journal of Military History, Autumn 2009, 22, 2, p. 46. Scott, Kim Allen and Ken Kempcke: A Journey to the Heart of Darkness. John W. Wright and the War against the Sioux, 1863-1865. Montana, The Magazine of the West, Vol. 50, No. 4 (Winter 2000), pp.2-17.
  12. Kappler, Charles J.: Indian Affairs. Laws and Treaties. Washington, 1904. Vol. 2, pp. 998-1003. http://digital.library.okstate.edu/kappler/Vol2/treaties/sio0998.htm
  13. Kappler, Charles J.: Indian Affairs. Laws and Treaties. Washington, 1904. Vol. 2, p. 1002.
  14. Linderman, Frank B.: Plenty Coups. Chief of the Crows. Lincoln/London, 1962, pp. 135-137. Algier, Keith: The Crow and the Eagle. A Tribal History from Lewis and Clark to Custer. Caldwell, 1993, pp. 320-326. McGinnis, Anthony: Counting Coup and Cutting Horses. Intertribal Warfare on the Northern Plains, 1738-1889. Evergreen, 1990, p. 137. Hoxie, Frederick E.: Parading Through History. The Making of the Crow Nation in America, 1805-1935. Cambridge, 1995, pp. 106-109. Serial set 1607. 43. Congress, 1st Session, House Executive Document, No. 89, pp.22-23.
  15. Hoxie, Frederick E.: Parading Through History. The Making of the Crow Nation in America, 1805-1935. Cambridge, 1995, p. 106. Ewers, John C.: Intertribal Warfare as a Precursor of Indian-White Warfare on the Northern Great Plains. Western Historical Quarterly, Vol. 6, No. 4 (Oct. 1975), pp. 397-410. Serial set 1607, 43. Congress, 1st Session, House Executive Document, no. 89, pp. 23, 49.
  16. Howe, George Frederick: Expedition to the Yellowstone River in 1873: Letters of a young Cavalry Officer. The Mississippi Valley Historical Review, Vol. 39, No. 3 (Dec. 1952), pp. 519-534.
  17. Hoxie, Frederick E.: Parading Through History. The Making of the Crow Nation in America, 1805-1935. Cambridge, 1995. See map p. 63. Kappler, Charles, J.: Indian Affairs. Laws and Treaties. Washington, 1904, Vol. 2. pp. 1008-1011 (treaty with the Crows 1868). American Memory. Indian Land Cessions in the United States, 1784 to 1894. Map: Montana 1. http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/map
  18. Kvasnicka, Robert M. and Herman J. Viola: The Commissioners of Indian Affairs, 1824-1977. Lincoln and London, 1979, p.145.
  19. Hoxie, Frederick E.: Parading Through History. The Making of the Crow Nation in America, 1805-1935. Cambridge, 1995, pp. 106-109. Dunlay, Thomas W.: Wolves for the Blue Soldiers. Indian Scouts and Auxiliaries with the Unites States Army, 1860-90. Lincoln and London, 1982, p. 113.
  20. White, Richard: The Winning of the West: The Expansion of the Western Sioux in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries. The Journal of American History, Vol. 65, No. 2 (Sep. 1978), pp. 319-343.
  21. Bray, Kingsley M.: Teton Sioux Population History, 1655-1881. Nebraska History, Summer 1994, Vol. 75, No. 2, pp. 165-188.

External links

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