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THE
FAMOUS CHIEF HEADED TRIBE
DIED
AND BURIED IN MILLS COUNTY
The early history of the Pottawattamies is told in
another article on this page. Much of the story of the tribe in
southwestern Iowa is given here from information gathered by Seth Dean of
Glenwood and Earl R. Ferguson of Shenandoah, and appearing in the Annals of
Iowa, July 1927. To these men, and others, a deep debt of gratitude is due
for preserving some facts about Waubonsie, who has been brought into prominence
in many ways in recent years.
Waubonsie was born in or about 1765 in northwestern
Indiana, where the town of Terre Coupee on the northern branch of the Kankakee
river, in St. Joseph county, is now located. Of his father and mother
nothing is known, there being no mention of either of them by any writer so far
as can be learned. The family must have been of more than average ability,
and quite probably the office of chief was heredity in the family, as an elder
brother of Waubonsie, named Mu-ca-da-puck-ee-, or in English Black Partridge,
was quite active in tribe affairs. He took a very active part in the
stirring times of the Tecumseh War and the Fort Dearborn massacre, August 15,
1812.
Black Partridge was probably the -----chief of the nation
---tribe and inherited the office, but other facts are not known. There is
little question but that Waubonsie could did acquire his office only by actual
merit fully justified by events.
It is surprising to find that two brothers were
contemporary chiefs and held the offices for such a length of time and
administer the matters of the tribe as did Black Partridge and Waubonsie.
There is no information available that Black Partridge came to Iowa nor is it
known when and where he died.
Waubonsie was probably given a name in childhood according
to the Indian custom, his parents giving a feast in honor of the event, but this
name, whatever it was, seems to have been reproduced by the chief himself, who
states that he chose the name "Waubonsie".
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