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Boone County History
Book
1880
The Henry Lott family
The
Indian chief was also known as Old Chief Three Finger.
The chief and 6 braves first visit to Lott were all
painted and armed for the war-path, he warned Lott he
was an intruder and had settled on Sioux hunting
grounds. When they had found on their second return Lott
still remained, they commenced to destroying his
property. They robbed the bee-hives, shot his horses,
cattle and hogs full of arrows, threatened and abused
his family and drove Lott and his step-son from the
house more scared than hurt. Two small girls, daughters
of Lott fled to the timber as Mrs. Lott covered a small
child the youngest of the family under feather bed, and
then after contending with the savages till her strength
was exhausted, was compelled to submit to all the
indignities which they choose to put upon her. Most
remarkably although the Indians were in and out of the
house the little boy under the feather bed never moved
or uttered a cry. When Lott and his step-son reached the
Boone River bluffs they looked back at the house, they
thought they saw the Indians tomahawking the family, and
heard screams of his wife and children two having no
arms, they headed for Pea’s Pont spreading this horrible
story. John Pea proposed an immediate expedition to take
vengeance but Lott was sent to Elk Rapids some 16 miles
south to procure more men. When he reached the Rapids he
found Chimisne Pottawattamie chief with who he was
acquainted. He was better known to settlers as Johnny
Greene where he was encamped with several hundred of his
tribe. Upon hearing of Lott’s story he called a council
of his braves, where it was determined the chief
accompany the white men with 26 of his warriors. After
several pow wows they painted themselves in a hideous
manner and mounted their horses and set off for Pea’s
Point to join the expedition. The settlers at Pea’s
Point had settled at the house of John M Crooks for
safety and defense and were on the lookout for Indians.
Lott with several white men and the Pottawattamies were
rapidly advancing across the prairie towards Crooks
house, the Indians in the front, yelling as was the
custom when starting on a war path and not in the
vicinity of danger. The settlers thinking them Sioux
prepared for action, each singling out an Indian and
were upon the point of firing when they recognized other
white men, and were happily disappointed to find them
all friends. John Pea and six other white men
accompanied Lott and the Pottawatamies to the mouth of
the Boone River and found that the family had not been
tomahawked as Lott had said, but one of his boys 12
years old, in order to escape, had undertaken to reach
the settlements by following down the river on the ice,
and across the bottoms a distance of some 20 miles. The
Sioux had robbed the family of everything except for a
barrel of whiskey, and the family was in pretty bad
condition. After making an unsuccessful scout the
Pottawattamies returned to camp with as much whiskey as
they could carry. Lott was overcome to see the condition
of his family. His wife died a short time after from the
affects of the attack on her from the Sioux. The boy who
started down the river, perished from the effects of the
cold and his body was found in a hollow log on the ice.
The two girls were found sometime afterward in a sorry
sight, exhausted, cold and hungry. After burying his
wife and boy, Lott secured homes for the other children
among the settlers of this county. Lott turned his
attention to, wreaking vengeance upon the Sioux who had
destroyed his home, and the saddest part of the story
remain to be told.
Lott,
having determined on his plan didn’t loose anytime in
carrying it out. He procured an ox team and drove to Des
Moines upon arriving he purchased two barrels, one he
filled with pork and the other whiskey. What other
ingredients he mixed with the pork and whiskey can be
imagined from the effects it had upon those who ate it.
With his stock of goods he set out from Des Moines to
the hunting grounds of the Sioux. After driving around
for sometime he learned that the old chief Sim-au-dotah
with a hunting party, was encamped near the stream in
the present bounds of Webster county. He proceeded into
the timber near by and erected a nearby shelter where he
stored his pork and whiskey. During the following night
he arranged things for a quick get away. He left the
area. The Sioux found it the next day. No one really
knows what happened to the provisions but the fact did
become public that during the following summer the
Indians in that vicinity were greatly terrified by the
ravages of a peculiar and unknown epidemic, with the
skill of the medicine men were to no avail. It is said
that over 75 of the most robust and bravest of warrior
perished in a short time and feeling of melancholy and
sadness took possession of the whole tribe of savages.
To Lott’s surprise Sim-au-e-dotah and his sons escaped
and continued to prosper. Upon hearing the chief with
his family still surviving, Lott determined a braver,
as wee as a more manly, plan of revenge. Having
disguised himself so the old chief could not recognize
him and armed with a trusty rifle. Lott mounted a horse
and rode into the Sioux country. He found and entered
the camp of Sim-au-e-dotah was encamped and sought an
interview with the chief. After fooling the chief by the
presentation of gifts and the utterance of the most
expressive words of friendship. Lott informed the chief
that on a certain prairie a game of elk. Having aroused
the chief and his three sons to accompany him on a
hunting excursion. When Lott and the Indians arrived at
the place where the game was reported to be, it was
decided that they surround the prairie. The three young
Indians sent off in different directions. Lott soon
dispatched the unsuspecting old chief, he then started
on the track of the three Indians , he killed all three
of them. It is further reported that after the killing
the old Indian and three sons Lott dragged their dead
bodies together, on an elevation near the Des Moines
river, built a log heap ontop of them, set it on fire
and returned to Boone County. In the course of time
reports of Lott’s doing began to be whispered abroad,
and this case came up for investigation before a grand
jury in Des Moines, among the members of the jury was a
gentleman residing at Boonesboro. Lott’s case was the
last one disposed of and in the evening just before the
jury was discharged a true bill was found against Lott.
He was indicted for murder in the 1st degree. It is not
positively known when the Boonesboro juror left Des
Moines nor when he arrived at the former place, all that
is known is the fact that his horse was in the stable at
Des Moines at dark on the evening of the day that the
indictment was found and that the same horse was in the
stable at Boonesboro the following morning. It is also
known that Lott left the area the same night, and the
sheriff who came up from Des Moines to arrest him the
next day failed to find him. Lott was never seen in the
area again. It was rumored at one time that he made his
way to the Pacific slope and after having been engaged
in barter and mining for a number of years was finally
lynched for some alleged misdemeanor.
Whatever or not such was the tragic end of his eventful
life is not positively known, but the incidents as about
related bearing upon his career in Boone and Webster
Counties are voucher for by some of the earlier
settlers. The failure of the sheriff from Polk county to
find Lott ended the matter as legal proceedings were
concerned but not as far as the savages were concerned.
There were greatly exasperated when they found that
their chief and his sons had been slain. After Lott’s
escaped it finally became whispered about among the
savages that Lott was not only responsible for the death
of their chief and his sons but also the pork and
whiskey had something to do with the epidemic which
previously had killed some 75 of the braves. The nursed
their grievances and their desire of revenge until it
finally found them in the Spirit Lake Massacre, which
created so great a sensation at the time and which did
so much to stop emigration to this area. The details of
the massacre was intimately connected with the history
this county.
And another account of the story......
Winter of 1846-47, Henry Lott, had
taken a residence at the mouth of the Boone River, in
what is now Webster Co, and with in the range of Si-dom-I-na-do-tah’s
band (of the Sioux or Dacotah tribe called Sisiton
Sioux) Lott had provided himself with some goods and
barrel of whiskey, wanting to trade with the Indians and
obtain their furs and robes. Lott was warned by the
chief and 6 braves that he was an intruder and he needed
to leave within a certain time. With this time having
expired , and Lott still remaining, the Indians
destroyed his property, shooting his stock and robbing
his bee-hives. Lott and his step-son made their way to
the nearest settlement at Pea’s Point some 16 miles
south, and reported that his family had been murdered by
the Indians, as so he thought they would be after he
left. John Pea and half a dozen other white men, along
with some friendly Indians from another tribe, who were
in the area, set out with Lott for the mouth of the
Boone River. When they arrived they had found that the
family had not been tomahawked as reported. One little
boy, about 12 years of age had attempted to follow his
father by going down the river on the ice. This little
boy hearing the Indians close by and fearing for his
life hid in a hollow log on the river, thinly clad, this
little boy froze to death after traveling on the ice
about 20 miles and his body was subsequently found. The
sequel show that Lott was determined on revenge. In
November 1853, Lott ventured 30 miles north of Fort
Dodge where he pretended to make a claim, in what is now
Humbolt county. He took with him several barrels of
whiskey and some goods, he and his step-son built a
cabin near what is now known as Lott’s Creek in that
county. In January 1854, Lott and his step-son went to
the cabin of the old chief and told him they had seen a
drove of elk feeding on the bottom lands and convinced
the old man to ride his horse, gun in hand, to pursue
the elk. Lott and his step-son followed, some distance
to the elk with the old man, they shot and killed Si-dom-i-na-do-tah.
That same night they attacked and killed 6 of the
chief’s family a boy of 12, and a girl of 10 escaped by
hiding themselves. Some days later, the Indians reported
the murders at Fort Dodge, thinking at first that the
slaughter had been perpetrated by some of their Indian
enemies. It was soon revealed that Lott and his step-son
had committed the deed. Their cabin was found burned
down and a slight snow on the ground showed the track of
their wagon on a route headed southward, avoiding Fort
Dodge. They had been reported in several places were
they had been trying to sell furs and other articles,
with the murdered chief’s horse as one of their
possessions. Having several days head start, they made
their way across the Missouri and took the plains for
California, where it was learned Lott was killed in a
quarrel. It is believed by many of the old settlers of
Northern Iowa that this outrage of Henry Lott was the
cause of that other tragedy or rather series of
tragedies in the history of Northern Iowa, know as the
Spirit Lake Massacre.
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