Káma-Kapúska! Making Marks in Indian Country, 1833–34

calumet note 3

Village populations had dramatically declined in the smallpox outbreak of 1781; the move northward had compressed ten villages into the remaining five. Warfare had also taken a toll, as westward and northward migrations of groups decidedly hostile to the Awatíkihu, namely Sahnish (Arikara), as well as roving bands of Dakota and Lakota peoples, had moved into the area. The village of Apple Creek had been burned to ash by a band of Lakota in 1771. The villagers felt so vulnerable during February 1834 that, when a large party of ha numák (“people of the grass,” or what we know as Siouan in English) warriors were spotted miles from the Awatíkihu, they immediately began leaving their seasonal winter location to move back to Mít uta hako'sh, several months before the spring thaw.

This page is referenced by: