Product Code Database
Example Keywords: robots -music $33
barcode-scavenger
   » » Wiki: Inkpaduta
Tag Wiki 'Inkpaduta'.
Tag

Inkpaduta
 (

Rank: 100%
Bluestar Bluestar Bluestar Bluestar Blackstar

Inkpaduta (: Iŋkpáduta, variously translated as "Red End," "Red Cap," or "Scarlet Point") (about 17971881) was a war chief of the Wahpekute band of the Dakota (Eastern or Santee ) during the 1857 Spirit Lake Massacre and later Western Sioux actions against the United States Army in the , Wyoming and Montana.

(2025). 9780806139500, University of Oklahoma Press.


Early life
Inkpaduta was born in what later became Rice County, Minnesota on the North East edge of Cannon Lake (Rice County, Minnesota) sometime between 1800 and 1815.Beck, Paul Norman. 2022. Inkpaduta: Dakota leader. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press He was the son of chief Wamdisapa (Black Eagle). As a child, he contracted , which killed several of his relatives and family members. The disease left him badly scarred. Sometime before the 1841 treaty between Tasagi and Wamdisapa, Wamdisapa moved his village (then known as the Red Top band) to the Vermillion River (South Dakota) after he was exiled from his original band.Ibid.


Career
Inkpaduta and his band were not signatories with the rest of the to the 1851 Treaty of Mendota, which transferred the land in northwestern Iowa to the United States. They refused to recognize the treaty restrictions. In 1852, Henry Lott, a drunken white whiskey trader, killed the new chief (Inkpaduta's older brother) and nine of his family; and Inkpaduta succeeded his brother as chief. He told the U.S. Army of the murders, but little was done to bring Lott to justice. The local prosecuting attorney nailed the dead chief's head to a pole over his house.

In the late winter of 1857, which was severe, Inkpaduta led his starving band into Iowa, where on March 8, he launched a series of raids on white settlers in the Spirit Lake area in which a total of 38 people were killed. White Americans called this the Spirit Lake Massacre. His warriors took four young women captive; three were married while the youngest captive, Abbie Gardner, 14, would be kept a few months before being ransomed in early summer. Although chased by troops from in Minnesota, Inkpaduta and his band evaded capture. "Spirit Lake Massacre", Encyclopædia Britannica, accessed 4 April 2016 They killed two of the women along the way, and released the third. The following summer in 1858, the US succeeded in negotiating the ransom of the girl Abbie Gardner, who was returned to Spirit Lake. She later became known for her memoir about the events and her captivity, published in 1888 to great success, with repeated editions and two reprintings by the early twentieth century.

By the time of the Dakota War of 1862, Inkpaduta had already been driven out of Minnesota with the help of other Dakota who did not wish to put their own annuity goods and money at risk. After many of the Dakota were driven out of the state following the 1862 war, the Army sent two major punitive expeditions into ; one in 1863 under Brigadier GeneralHenry Hastings Sibley, who defeated the Dakota in a series of battles, and another, larger expedition under Brigadier General in 1864 which concluded with the Dakota's defeat in the decisive Battle of Killdeer Mountain. Inkpaduta's band withdrew westward with their Lakota kinsfolk, and the chief migrated with survivors onto the . He eventually fell in with the (the Western or Teton Sioux) and became friends with . He fought alongside the Lakota against Custer at the Battle of Little Bighorn .

When Sitting Bull and his followers fled to Canada following the battle, Inkpaduta accompanied them. He died in in 1881.


Further reading


External links

Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs