Fort Dearborn Massacre
Fort Dearborn Massacre
Fort Dearborn Massacre
1803
In 1803, Captain John Whistler brought 40 men with him to
build Fort Dearborn. It was a stockade of logs that were
sharpened on top and placed into the ground. The outer
stockade was a wall with a gated entrance. There was a
secret underground opening that led beneath the north wall
into the river. In the fort there were officers quarters, troops
barracks, a parade ground, and an ammunition magazine.
John Kinzie
In 1804, a man named John Kinzie settled in the region and bought
the property of Jean Lalime. Over the next few years, Kinzie
became known as the civilian leader of the region, trading and
dealing with the local Native American population. He encouraged
close ties with the Potawatomi Indians and even sold them liquor,
which created tension with the other white settlers.
First Threat
The first threat that came to Fort Dearborn was with the war of
1812, a conflict that brought the attention of the local Indian tribes.
The main tribes were the Potawatomi and Wynadot. The war
brought many Indian tribes into alliance with the British because
they saw Americans as invaders to their land. After the British
captured the soldiers, Fort Dearborn was in great danger. General
William Hull ordered Heald to abandon the fort but he delayed in
carrying out the orders.
Captain Wells
On August 14, Captain William Wells brought with him 30 Miami
soldiers. They were able to slip past the horde outside and they
appeared at the front gates of the fort. Captain Wells was the uncle
of Captain Healds wife. After he heard of the evacuation at Fort
Dearborn, and having knowledge of the hostile intensity of the local
tribes, he headed towards the fort to assist in Healds escape. He
was too late.
Deception
The file of soldiers and settlers were escorted by around 500
Potawatomi Indians. As they were marching southward into a low
range of sand hills that separated the Lake Michigan beaches from
the prairie, the Potawatomi moved silently to the right, where there
was a hill of sand between the two groups. This was done in a way
where no one noticed as the file trudged along the shoreline.
Further down the beach the two groups would meet again.
The Battle
What followed was butchery, officers were slain with tomahawks,
the forts surgeon was killed by gunfire and then was literally
chopped up into pieces. Mrs. Heald was wounded by gunfire but
was spared when she was captured by a sympathetic chief. The
wife of one soldier fought so savagely she was hacked to pieces
before she fell. A settlers niece was spared but was narrowly
wounded by a tomahawk.
Surrender
In the end, cut down to less than half of their men, the soldiers
surrendered under the promise of safe conduct. In all 148 of the
column were killed, 86 were adults and 12 children. Captain Wells,
captured early in the fight, was so enraged because of the
slaughter that he managed to escape from his captors. He
borrowed a horse and rode furiously into camp where their own
women and children were hiding.
Kinzies Role
He came back to Chicago a year later, but found that a lot had changed by then.
He failed to get his business running and took a position with the American Fur
Company, who used been his largest competitor. In time, the Illinois fur trade
came to an end and Kinzie worked as a trader and Indian interpreter until he died
in 1828. At that point, thanks to history books written by his descendants, Kinzie
was almost enshrined as a founder of Chicago. Through the 1800s, history
overlooked his questionable business practices, like selling liquor to the Indians
and even the murder of a business rival. It would not be until much later that
Kinzies role in Chicago history would be questioned.
Bibliography
http://www.prairieghosts.com/dearborn.html
http://www.chicagomag.com/Chicago-Magazine/December-2009/The-True-Storyof-the-Deadly-Encounter-at-Fort-Dearborn/
http://www.wbez.org/blogs/john-r-schmidt/2012-08/200-years-ago-fort-dearbornmassacre-101503
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012-08-15/opinion/ct-perspec-0815dearborn-20120815_1_fort-dearborn-massacre-indian-country-indian-culture
http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2012-08-14/opinion/ct-oped-0814-byrne20120814_1_indian-country-fort-dearborn-massacre-potawatomis
Bibliography
http://genealogytrails.com/ill/cook/ftdearborn.html
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/19/battle-of-fort-dearborn-2_n_1608521.html
http://chicagotonight.wttw.com/2012/08/15/bicentennial-battle-fort-dearborn
http://lakefronthistorian.com/2012/10/19/revising-the-fort-dearborn-massacre-roundtable/
http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10000872396390444320704577567073527936712