Senachwine

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Senachwine
Bornc. 1744
near the
Gomo
SuccessorKaltoo
ChildrenKaltoo, son
RelativesGomo, brother

Senachwine (

Gomo
as chieftain of their band and was one of the last major Potawatomi chieftains to live in the region.

A number of places in Illinois are named in his honor including Senachwine Township in Putnam County, Illinois, Senachwine Creek, Senachwine Lake and the Lake Senachwine Reservoir.

Biography

In April 1812, he and other Potawatomi chieftains met with Governor

Peoria War and commanded a sizable force during the conflict. He later accompanied the Potawatomi peace delegation who were escorted by Colonel George Davenport to St. Louis where a peace treaty was eventually signed.[2]

Around 1814, a mysterious

baptize him and later converted Senachwine to Christianity. However, despite Wigby's attempts to dissuade him, Senachwine refused to give up polygamy and retained his several wives. After Wigby's death, he was buried on a high bluff overlooking Senachwine's village.[3]

He succeeded his brother

Gomo as head chieftain of the Illinois River band and was a signatory of several treaties between the Potawatomi and the United States during the 1810s and 1820s. He and Black Partridge would remain the leading chieftains of the Potawatomi for over a decade before their positions of authority and influence were assumed by Shabbona.[4] A year before his death, Senachwine believed that the Potawatomi nation, and eventually all Native Americans, would eventually become extinct.[5] His son, Kaltoo (or Young Senachwine), succeeded him as chieftain after his death in the summer of 1831. He was buried on a high bluff overlooking the village, like the missionary Wigby years before, and a wooden monument was placed on his grave. A black flag was also flown from a high pole placed next to the monument and could be seen from the gravesite for several years afterwards. Two years later, his band were removed to the Indian Territory and eventually settled in western Kansas.[6]

In the summer of 1835, 23 Potawatomi warriors traveled over 500 miles to visit the gravesite of Senachwine. Their faces blackened and their heads wrapped in blankets, they performed a ritual invoking the

medals and other personal effects. The chieftains bones had also been scattered around the site. Members of his band returned to the site to rebury his remains and again placed a wooden monument over his grave. James R. Taliaferro, who had been present at the reburial, later built a cabin near the gravesite and claimed that "Indians from the west at different times made a pilgrimage to the grave".[7]

The

Black Hawk pleading for peace prior to the Black Hawk War, at the supposed burial spot of Senachwine north of present-day Putnam County, Illinois on June 13, 1937. During the ceremony, an address was given by author P.G. Rennick. Five tribal members of the Potawatomi from Kansas were also in attendance during the ceremony.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ Haines, Elijah M. The American Indian (Uh-nish-in-na-ba). Chicago: The Mas-Sin-Na-Gan Company, 1888. (pg. 781)
  2. ^ Matson, Nehemiah, Matson. French and Indians of Illinois River. Princeton, Illinois: Republican Job Printing Establishment, 1874. (pg. 241-242, 248)
  3. ^ Matson, Nehemiah, Matson. French and Indians of Illinois River. Princeton, Illinois: Republican Job Printing Establishment, 1874. (pg. 234-235)
  4. ^ Wood, Norman B. Lives of Famous Indian Chiefs, from Cofachiqui, the Indian Princess, and Powhatan; Down To and Including Chief Joseph and Geronimo. Aurora, Illinois: American Indian Historical Publishing Company, 1906. (pg. 416)
  5. ^ Matson, Nehemiah, Matson. French and Indians of Illinois River. Princeton, Illinois: Republican Job Printing Establishment, 1874. (pg. 262-264)
  6. ^ Watson, Nehemiah, Watson. French and Indians of Illinois River. Princeton, Illinois: Republican Job Printing Establishment, 1874. (pg. 262-264)
  7. ^ State Historical Society of Wisconsin. The Wisconisin Magazine of History. Vol. XXI. No. 1. (September 1937): 124.

Further reading

  • Brinkman, Edna Epperson. The Story of David Epperson & His Family, of Albemarle County, Virginia. Hinsdale, Illinois: Edna Epperson Brinkman, 1933.
  • Rennick, Percival Graham. "The Peoria and Galena Trail and Coach Road and the Peoria Neighborhood". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. Vol. XXVII. No. 4. (January 1935): 360, 402-403.