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The U.S. - Ojibwe Conflict of 1862 

Colin Mustful
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While war raged in southern Minnesota a faction of Dakota and U.S. armed forces, another conflict nearly erupted in central Minnesota. Learn more at www.colinmustful.com.
Colin Mustful is a Minnesota author and historian with a unique story-telling style that tells History Through Fiction. His work focuses on Minnesota and surrounding regions during the complex transitional period as land was transferred from Native peoples to American hands. Mustful strives to create compelling stories about the real-life people and events of a tumultuous and misunderstood past. You can learn more about Colin and his work at www.colinmustful.com
Check out these other resources by historian/author Colin Mustful.
Novels
Fate of the Dakota: A Novel and Resource on the U.S.- Dakota War of 1862 - www.amazon.com/Fate-Dakota-No...
Grace at Spirit Lake - www.amazon.com/Grace-Spirit-L...
Ceding Contempt: Minnesota’s Most Significant Historical Event - www.amazon.com/gp/product/148...
Resisting Removal: The Sandy Lake Tragedy of 1850 - www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08...
Online Textbook
Confronting Minnesota’s Past: A Resource to Test Your Understanding on the U.S. - Dakota War of 1862 - www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01...
Online Educational Course
The U.S. - Dakota War of 1862 - www.udemy.com/course/the-us-d...
Twitter - / colinmustful
Facebook - / colinmustful
Amazon - www.amazon.com/Colin-Mustful/...
Goodreads - / 7367036.colin_mustful
Sources include: Anton Treuer, The Assassination of Hole in the Day, (St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 2011); George W. Sweet, “Incidents of the Threatened Outbreak of Hole-in-the-Day and Other Ojibways at Time of Sioux Massacre of 1862,” in Collections of the Minnesota Historical Society, Vol. 6, p. 401-408, (St. Paul: The Pioneer Press Company, 1894); Report of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for the Year 1862, (Washington: Government Printing Office, 1863); Mark Diedrich, “Chief Hole-in-the-Day and the 1862 Chippewa Disturbance: A Reappraisal,” Minnesota History, 50:5, (Spring, 1987); 193-203. Images from the Minnesota Historical Society Collections. Map of treaty land cessions from, www.kaxe.org/post/why-treatie.... Music by: Earnest by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (creativecommons.org/licenses/...)
Source: incompetech.com/music/royalty-...
Artist: incompetech.com/
Music also by Apple Loops.

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6 апр 2019

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Комментарии : 79   
@tommybenson4420
@tommybenson4420 2 года назад
I'm Ojibwe from Manitoba Canada and proud of it
@denewofle3768
@denewofle3768 Год назад
I'm half Ojibwe and half cree
@williamdon3442
@williamdon3442 Год назад
Where from??? I’m out by kamsack Cote, Key and Keesekoose Registered to key
@Coffewithsteve
@Coffewithsteve Год назад
Do you know the name okimakwe was Ojibwa lady born around 1770 she's in my family tree
@williamdon3442
@williamdon3442 2 месяца назад
Sask dude. Key First Nation , keesekoose First Nation, cote First Nation. All anishnabae bands.
@XsosotaX
@XsosotaX 2 года назад
I am still so honored to have you do this video explaining what really happened to my people and our motherland my the great sound with you Colin !
@urbanlumberjack
@urbanlumberjack 3 года назад
Who can blame the tribe? If you read the court cases, tribes tried many times to sue when their goods were not delivered or corrupt tribal agents stood their goods, but the courts usually said the tribes have no standing to sue because they were not US citizens.
@carollido8742
@carollido8742 Год назад
I'm right here in a little town called Watkins Minnesota and not far is the little crow memorial. Not far from me at the other end is the memorial to hole-in-the-day. I am looking for more and more land to be given back to the tribes everywhere here.iIt's time for it that and healing
@randygunn9499
@randygunn9499 2 года назад
My lady is Ojibwe,and now it seems the tribe has turned its back on all off reservation members. A change is needed in leadership,a change is coming to that leadership.
@brookbergsma5089
@brookbergsma5089 2 года назад
This is true for the Chippewa county Ojibwe tribe in Sault Ste. Marie. They learned to be racist to their own people by the best: the us gov
@vortex1Mango
@vortex1Mango Год назад
I would like to know more about this. I traced my lineage to a forefather named jos givins there is apparently a street in Toronto named after him. He was a translator apparently and was involved in corporations protecting it. The earth spoke to me and gave me this information.
@AzSureno
@AzSureno 10 месяцев назад
That’s sad I myself is ojibwe from a First Nation , that’s super sad
@LoganMccoy-xk5tn
@LoganMccoy-xk5tn 7 месяцев назад
​@@brookbergsma5089 you mean white people like you?
@charlessnortley4519
@charlessnortley4519 2 года назад
RedLake MN Ojibwe my medicine man told me we came from the Eastcoast because a medicine man had a dream of food that grows on water enough to sustain 100 army of ojibwe ogichidaag they were referring to Mahnomen aka wildrice
@donovanskinaway8057
@donovanskinaway8057 2 года назад
It is can sustain a lot more then that, the wild rice is plentiful, it’s a gift of gitchimanido, the whites call it one of the best super foods on the planet. There was a prophesy about our destruction if we didn’t migrate, but yes we did migrate here over generations, making seven stops and battling other tribes for the right to be there, there has always been war between us and other tribes, but Look up seven fires prophecies, these prophesy are very powerful, they say we are in the seventh fire now and must try to do better before the world burns.
@Coffewithsteve
@Coffewithsteve Год назад
In my family tree got great great great grama from Ojibwa she was name okimakwe or okesmaskwen she married a Joseph desjarlais from Canada from Manitoba to bad can't find more of her family line
@charlessnortley4519
@charlessnortley4519 Год назад
@@Coffewithsteve yeah that's a common name up north MN
@Nipinpeaches
@Nipinpeaches День назад
Great summary, and video.
@TheThirty6chambers
@TheThirty6chambers 4 года назад
Thanks for making this.
@KingRose22
@KingRose22 2 года назад
It will always be my home, I will protect it for as long as live.
@lbc787
@lbc787 2 года назад
Rip Chief hole in the day my blood line
@williyrayslater3299
@williyrayslater3299 Год назад
I'm Chippewa Indian from Belcourt North Dakota Devil's Lake
@oglala3832
@oglala3832 2 года назад
Almost makes one wonder if the entire history taught at school was a sugarcoat lie ??
@Davidg1t1
@Davidg1t1 Год назад
Bingo!
@williamdon3442
@williamdon3442 Год назад
Pretty much
@christophereichten9005
@christophereichten9005 Год назад
Unfortunately yes. But today more than ever you can access books, videos and lectures that tell a more accurate history.
@richardmonson8657
@richardmonson8657 10 месяцев назад
No wonder here
@zeldamag8381
@zeldamag8381 10 месяцев назад
Yes
@joshmcfarland23
@joshmcfarland23 2 года назад
massive ojibwe population here in manitoba
@janetjones5493
@janetjones5493 Год назад
Ojibway
@Redlurk3
@Redlurk3 Год назад
​@@janetjones5493 😑 Ojibwe is how it's written Ojibway is how it's pronounced
@AzSureno
@AzSureno 10 месяцев назад
@@janetjones5493ojibwe , Ojibwa , chippewa, those are the names they gave us lol
@sofa_king_kool
@sofa_king_kool Год назад
Also, the logging companies only had 'rights' to the dead-standing timber, so they just lit the forests on fire and took what was left. Destroyed much of the tribes land. And the constant dragging of tribal members all the way to Duluth to testify in court, then leaving them to find their own way home.
@paulkwiatkowski1059
@paulkwiatkowski1059 2 года назад
Hello everyone I'm looking for information on Joseph Maples one of the Cherokee War Chiefs anything you have
@williamdon3442
@williamdon3442 9 месяцев назад
I’m anishnabae from Saskatchewan
@reuterromain1054
@reuterromain1054 3 года назад
I knew about the Santee-Sioux uprising in western-Minnesota of 1862 but i did not know anything about a conflict with the Ojibwa of Minnesota that same year. What would have happened had the Ojibwa participated in Little Crow`s war against the whites?
@XsosotaX
@XsosotaX 2 года назад
Minnesota could have easily been defended by the natives used to be one of the most populated
@leedavid6543
@leedavid6543 2 года назад
As of the the wars between us and the white man ,we have to understand wars have been going on all over the world since the beginning of time, the fact and sadness of the crimes committed on my past family were bad is that most if not all treaties were not honored, that being said I consider myself a dual citizen, with my Tribe and American, and look at the many of my brothers and sister's who fought for the USA and our nations kept this country from being taken over by the Germans or Japanese, we still see many in the future that if we are ever divided here and lose the USA who knows if anything will be honored, thinking of that always calms me.
@charlesbullghost5491
@charlesbullghost5491 3 дня назад
The forgotten tragedy at the Cheney rush Valley! The northern ranchers vs. the very hunkpati Dakota sioux people! The very terrible land dispute for the northern reservation homelands of the crow creek sioux Indian reservation of SD. The early 20th century of the early days of the great depression! Have a very impressive beautiful day.😀😊
@JustaGuy-pm9ub
@JustaGuy-pm9ub 2 года назад
Good job Hole in the Day. Shouldn't of had to come to that. We know who are to blame. I hope my Ancestors the Marquette had nothing to do with it. I wonder sometimes though since my grandfather and father both died at Mille Lacs of heart attack. One after a good day of fishing and the other after he was up at the casino.
@CopperHueCollectionsChippewa
@CopperHueCollectionsChippewa 4 года назад
Do you know how I can find out which Chippewa tribe I come from? There are so many tribes from different “states”. My great great grandmother was born in North Dakota.
@ColinMustful
@ColinMustful 4 года назад
I don't, but I would recommend contacting the genealogy department at the Minnesota Historical Society: www.mnhs.org/genealogy/
@budjohnston
@budjohnston 3 года назад
i do a lot of geneolgy maybe help? bud@alliancecom.net
@rajeshkumarsanghai
@rajeshkumarsanghai 2 года назад
Know Leonard Peltier ?
@lbc787
@lbc787 2 года назад
Rip Chief hole in day🙏
@rezmama4773
@rezmama4773 2 года назад
@@budjohnston hey 👋🏾
@charlesbullghost5491
@charlesbullghost5491 Год назад
This is a perfect bad situation American civilians shouldn't take over our reservation lands! From a very sad tragic event to a Dakota - Lakota sioux Indian victory song charge the very next day! This is our Dakota sioux Indian people's forgotten tragedy took place many decades after the wounded knee massacre. During the great depression area of the two days of August 1931. On the crow Creek sioux Indian reservation SD northwest of the town stephan. It actually started in spring time the same year the continued harassment by the local towns people and the ranchers in the northern part of the reservation. The Buffalo County war or the great war for the northern part of the reservation! A large encampment of sixty to eighty hunkpati Dakota sioux people were sill definitely living on Cheney rush, a narrow long valley just below the hilly prairie land country along the beautiful Missouri River. On the same day the men left for a hunting trip on the other side of the reservation. Leaving their entire families and young pregnant young ladies behind to watch over the Cheney rush encampment. When a large party of white civilians came with guns and rifles to the Dakota sioux Indian encampment seriously unannounced! They wanted to take away the Dakota sioux Indian people's traditional Buffalo hunting grounds and our rich fertile farm lands along the beautiful Missouri River. An altercation of violence really happened there! Only three American civilians were killed there. They brutal massacred the poor innocent Dakota sioux people's encampment at the Cheney rush tragedy! Then the guilty ones built a huge fire then burned the dead bodies to ashes remains! Then the intruders buried the dead ashes remains on top of the two small rolling hills to the north of the massacre site! The one hill on the left side! Some Dakota sioux elders were young children saw an witness the tragedy unfolded there. Many years later they told the story of the tragedy at the Cheney rush massacre. It's also the most huanted place on the reservation because of the forgotten tragedy at Cheney rush massacre, the second sand creek massacre! There's no memorial site there because of the forgotten Dakota sioux Indian massacre in the 20th century. The white civilians tried to cover up the evidence of the Cheney rush massacre that never happened. The children want an told everyone on the reservation what had happened of our brave Dakota sioux indian people were brutal hateful torture to death at the Cheney rush massacre site! Back from a hunting trip the Dakota sioux men also heard the very sad tragic story! The very next day over three hundred angered Dakota sioux Indian warriors were coming ready to fight against the American intruders! On the prairie land country site near the massacre site the American civilians had been surprised so many more warriors were arriving there! Iron Nation's kul wicasa oyate Lakota sioux Indian warriors may have assisted in the fighting to! After a running battle into a full retreat probably more Americans civilians were killed there! In sioux warriors favor the American civilians intruders escape or fled back across the reservation border lands to thier own ranches and towns never wanting to take back the hunkpati Dakota sioux people's traditional reservation Buffalo hunting grounds and our rich fertile farm lands along the beautiful Missouri River. The last true victory song of August 1931! The Cheney rush massacre victory site is still there today along the highway to the capital of Pierre SD north to the small rolling hill secret mass grave site of our people's burned remains as a memorial site to our Dakota and Lakota sioux people who all wrongfully inccently murdered by American civilians passed an present day! The same place just south old fort Thompson stockade during the early 1860s the poor Isanti Dakota sioux indian people and winnebago Indians were sent for three year imprison encampment they entirely served there! Many Dakota sioux Indian people died of hunger and sickness of unmarked grave sites the very sad historical events at crow creek res. SD. Our elders Dakota sioux people true oral stories to the young generations at the crow creek sioux Indian reservation of South Dakota. My historical information for today. Have a great fabulous wonderful day.
@youandicousins3738
@youandicousins3738 Год назад
I know
@charlesbullghost5491
@charlesbullghost5491 Год назад
@@youandicousins3738 I wrote a different story about true very sad tragic event and our last forgotten great victory on the crow creek sioux Indian reservation of SD. Have a great fabulous wonderful day.
@thomasfoss9963
@thomasfoss9963 3 дня назад
That is quite a bit to absorb-- It is a bitter travesty what was done by the ranchers, and settlers to the Ojibwe, and Sioux tribes in the upper Midwest--- They polluted the land and rivers, cut all the best timber, and mined the hills for all the minerals they could take---
@jlow4214
@jlow4214 11 месяцев назад
70 years Minnesotan, never knew of this. Thanks. ?- is Walker, Mn. named after this swindling Indian agent?
@thomasfoss9963
@thomasfoss9963 3 дня назад
Of course--- Just like many other liars, and swindlers--- After all-- Andrew Jackson is on the $20 dollar bill------
@thomasfoss9963
@thomasfoss9963 3 дня назад
Yes, Just as others hailed as "heroes" are --- After all, Andrew Jackson is on the $20 dollar bill-----
@supernova7489
@supernova7489 Год назад
I still like the us as a chippewa in the us.
@davidnewland2461
@davidnewland2461 Год назад
What would native Americans be like today if they had learned to work together?
@ColinMustful
@ColinMustful Год назад
Interesting question. My next novel actually centers upon that idea. It's an alternative history in which the Dakota and Ojibwe join forces and win the U.S. - Dakota War.
@martinjenkins8270
@martinjenkins8270 Год назад
Even if they wanted to they was never given a chance.The whites wanted everything, even there souls
@brit8802
@brit8802 24 дня назад
What the hell kind of question is this? They were here peaceably on the American continent for over a 1000 years before white men arrived. From there they’ve been murdered, imprisoned, and every other soul stealing thing. Learn more before you start talking
@MFourtySeven
@MFourtySeven 5 месяцев назад
I am related to a day
@davidnewland2461
@davidnewland2461 Год назад
If the natives had been treated honestly. History would have been much different.
@billhosko7723
@billhosko7723 Год назад
Good grief. Move 'back' then hypocrite. Also, HISTORY today would be Japanese to west bank of Mississippi and German to its east bank. THAT, is honesty.
@KingRose22
@KingRose22 2 года назад
I have stories my elders have told just ask me
@kadenlo8073
@kadenlo8073 Год назад
do you have information about walker mn and that area
@browngreen933
@browngreen933 Год назад
In Wisconsin settlers panicked that Ojibwe might attack, but peacemakers convinced them not to. It was for the best.
@davidnewland2461
@davidnewland2461 Год назад
Last time I checked the federal government owed billions to native American tribes.
@JwinBaby
@JwinBaby Год назад
They forget about us 🤦🏽‍♂️💀
@jackd6148
@jackd6148 Год назад
Ojibwe slaughtered a lot of other tribes and stole their land.
@thomasfoss9963
@thomasfoss9963 3 дня назад
Where did you get all your misinformation??
@thomasfoss9963
@thomasfoss9963 3 дня назад
Since most plains, and upper Midwest tribes were nomadic, Land ownership was viewed very differently--- In their minds, nobody "owned" the land--- They lived in their summer camps up north, but travelled South in the winter to their winter camps-- If you're referring to the Sioux, which were muscled out of NW Minnesota by the Ojibwe, so be it--- The tribes of the US were no different than the tribal members of Europe and Asia competing for food, and for their survival----
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