Territorial era of Minnesota
Date | 1803 | –1858
---|---|
Location | Midwestern United States |
The territorial era of Minnesota lasted from the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 to Minnesota's achieving statehood in 1858. The Minnesota Territory itself was formed only in 1849 but the area had a rich history well before this. Though there was a long history of European presence in the area before 19th century, it was during the 19th century that the United States began to establish a firm presence in what would become Minnesota.[1]
Many of the facets of Minnesota culture that are perceived as the area's early history in fact originated after this period. Notably, the heavy Scandinavian immigration for which the state is known, and the pioneering days chronicled by author Laura Ingalls Wilder occurred after statehood in the later 19th century. Unlike these later years, the first half of the 19th century was characterized by sparsely populated communities, harsh living conditions, and to some degree, lawlessness.
This era was a period of economic transition. The dominant enterprise in the area since the 17th century had been the fur trade. The Dakota Sioux, and later the Ojibwe, tribes hunted and gathered pelts trading with French, British, and later American traders at Grand Portage, Mendota, and other sites. This trade gradually declined during the early 19th century as demand for furs in Europe diminished. The lumber industry grew rapidly, replacing furs as the key economic resource. Grain production began to develop late during this time as an emerging economic basis as well. Saw mills, and later grain mills, around Fort Snelling and Saint Anthony Falls in east-central Minnesota became magnets for development. By the end of the era east-central Minnesota had replaced northern Minnesota as the economic center of the area.
This era was also as a period of cultural transition.[2] At the time the U.S. took possession of the region, Native Americans were by far the largest ethnic groups. Their role in the fur trade gave them a steady stream of income and significant political influence even as the French, British, and Americans asserted territorial claims on the area. French and British traders had mixed with native society in the area for many decades peacefully contributing to the society and creating new ethnic groups consisting of mixed-race peoples. As the Americans established outposts in the area and the fur trade declined, the dynamics changed dramatically. The economic influence of the Native Americans diminished and American territorial ideology increasingly sought to limit their influence. Large waves of immigration in the 1850s very suddenly changed the demographics so that within a few years the population shifted from predominantly native to predominantly people of European descent. The native and mixed-race populations continued to influence the territory's culture and politics, even at the end of the territorial era, though by the time statehood was achieved that influence was in steep decline. Heavy immigration from New England and New York led to Minnesota's being labeled the "New England of the West".
Background
During the 17th century a Native American tribe known as the
French exploration in Minnesota is known to have begun in the 17th century with explorers like
Explorers searching for the fabled
The British Hudson's Bay Company was formed in 1670 to capitalize on the Native American fur trade near Hudson Bay. The company came to dominate the North American trade in the 18th century. The North West Company of Montreal was formed in 1779 to compete with Hudson's Bay Company establishing their western headquarters and key exchange point at Grand Portage in what is now Minnesota.[8] Grand Portage, with its two wharves and numerous warehouses, became one of Britain's four main fur trading posts, along with Niagara, Detroit, and Michilimackinac.[12] British ships crossed Lake Superior regularly transporting supplies to the region and bringing back valuable furs.[13] Even after Grand Portage became property of the U.S. in 1783 the British operations, such as North West Company and the XY Company, continued to operate in the area for some time.[14]
Though the various parts of what is now Minnesota were claimed at different times by Spain, France, and Britain, none of these nations made significant efforts to establish major settlements in the area. Instead the French and the British established mostly trading posts and utilized the natives in the area as suppliers.[15]
All of the land east of the Mississippi River was granted to the United States by the Second Treaty of Paris at the end of the American Revolution in 1783. This included what would become modern day Saint Paul but only part of Minneapolis, including the northeast, north-central and east-central portions of the state. The wording of the treaty in the Minnesota area depended on landmarks reported by fur traders, who erroneously reported an "Isle Phelipeaux" in Lake Superior, a "Long Lake" west of the island, and the belief that the Mississippi River ran well into modern Canada. Much of this region was claimed by other states who subsequently ceded these to the federal government.[16]
Most of the remaining areas of what is now the state were purchased in 1803 from France as part of the Louisiana Purchase (the area west of the Mississippi having been recently acquired by France from Spain).
Until 1818 the entire
Pioneers and exploration
At the beginning of the 19th century many parts of the Minnesota area were already well traveled by British and French explorers. Though the region's population was mostly Native American, there were important British trading posts in the area with many European and mixed-race settlers, particularly in the north.[21] Grand Portage, in particular, had long been established as the major trading center for the North West Company of Montreal.[8]
David Thompson, a British fur trader for the North West Company, completed numerous surveys and maps of the North American frontier. In 1797 he completed the first known map of the Minnesota area, in what was then the Northwest Territory.[22] The Jay Treaty, however, obliged most of the British settlers to withdraw their settlements in 1796, though mixed-race peoples remained.[17]
In 1805 U.S. Lieutenant Zebulon Pike was sent by General Wilkinson, governor of the Louisiana Territory, to enforce U.S. sovereignty against British traders in the area and establish diplomatic and trading relationships with the native tribes.[23][24] He met with the Sioux leadership in central Minnesota to secure rights for the U.S. to an area near Saint Anthony Falls, which would later become the city of Saint Paul.[24] Though a treaty was signed by some leaders from the Sioux tribes, its legitimacy (including whether the Sioux understood it) was dubious and ultimately his efforts did little to establish the authority of the U.S. in the area.[25][26]
In 1817 Major
In 1818 the 49th parallel was established as the boundary between the United States and British North America. However, the point where the Red River crossed this line was not marked until 1823, when Stephen Long conducted a survey expedition.[28] The expedition determined, among other things, that the fur trading post of Pembina lay just inside the U.S. border.[29]
Several efforts were made to determine the source of the
In 1835 George William Featherstonhaugh conducted a geological survey of the Minnesota River valley and wrote an account entitled A Canoe Voyage up the Minnay Sotor.[33] Joseph Nicollet scouted the area in the late 1830s accompanied by John C. Frémont, exploring and mapping the Upper Mississippi River basin, the Saint Croix River, and the land between the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers.[34]
Forts
An important facet of the British and American frontier was a system of
In 1814 the U.S. government built
Fort Ripley was built in 1848–1849 in central Minnesota near modern Little Falls. It was built to provide a military presence on the frontier near the new Winnebago reservation created as the tribe was moved from Iowa. In addition it helped to serve as a buffer between the Dakota Sioux and the Ojibwe.[42]
Fort Abercrombie was built in 1858 on the Red River at what is now the border between Minnesota and North Dakota near modern McCauleyville. The fort had to be moved soon afterward because of flooding problems. It was created to spur settlement of the Red River Valley, protect steamboat traffic on the river, and protect wagon trains travelling to Montana.[46]
In addition to these military bases, private companies operated numerous trading posts in the region that were often referred to as "forts", though they typically had little in the way of defensive fortifications.[47]
Native Americans
Native American populations
(1849–1853)[48]Group Sub-group Population (year) Ojibwe Lake Superior 500 (1850) Saint Croix 800 (1850) Mississippi 1,100 (1850) Pillagers 1,050 (1850) Northern/Red Lake 1,200 (1850) Bois Forts 800 (1850) Dakota Sioux Mdewakanton 2,200 (1849) Wahpekute 800 (1849) Wahpetonwan 1,500 (1849) Sisseton 3,800 (1849) Yankton 3,200 (1849) Yanktonai 4,000 (1849) Teton 6,000 (1849) Others Winnebago (Ho-Chunk) 2,500 (1849) Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara 2,253 (1853)
The two main Native American tribal groups that dominated Minnesota at the time the lands were acquired by the United States were the more established Dakota Sioux, and the Ojibwe who had migrated into the area more recently.[49] The two groups fought bitter territorial wars during the 18th century. In the mid-18th century the Battle of Kathio, in which the Ojibwe defeated the Sioux, permanently established northeastern Minnesota, particularly Mille Lacs Lake, as Ojibwe territory relegating the Sioux to southern and western Minnesota.[22][50] Skirmishes between the groups continued in the 19th century including a battle near Lac Traverse in 1818, a battle near Stillwater in 1839 (the site became known as "Battle Hollow"), and another on the Yellow Medicine River in 1854.[51]
During the
From 1815 to 1821 employees of the
By the 1820s, animal resources were in decline in the area leading to increased competition among the tribes for game and for furs to sell.[55] Collusion among the fur trading companies led to a dramatic drop in fur prices during the late 1820s causing impoverishment for many Sioux hunters.[56] The U.S. government strongly encouraged the tribes to turn from hunting to farming, trading the woodlands for the plains.[57]
Increasing territorial conflict between the Sioux and the Ojibwe on the western frontier, particularly along the Mississippi river, led the U.S. government to attempt to mediate the conflicts. President Andrew Jackson's policy toward the tribes ultimately was to either pacify them sufficiently to allow westward expansion of American settlers, or else remove the tribes from the areas in which they prevented settlement.[57] The First Treaty of Prairie du Chien (1825), among its provisions established southern Minnesota as well as much of modern North and South Dakota as the homeland of the Dakota Sioux. The Ojibwe were given northern Minnesota and much of Wisconsin. The U.S. government, though, failed to enforce the treaty agreements leading to Little Crow's pronouncement to Indian agent Taliaferro in 1829: "We made peace to please you, but if we are badly off we must blame you for causing us to give up so much of our lands to our enemies."[58]
Following an 1846 treaty, the Winnebago tribes of Iowa were relocated to the Long Prairie reservation in central Minnesota in the late 1840s establishing an important presence in the territory.[59] Because of the poor land in the new reservation the tribe subsequently negotiated a treaty in 1856 allowing them to relocate further south to Blue Earth but ceding substantial land in the process.
All of the native tribes experienced gradual disillusionment with the U.S. government because of its inability or unwillingness to honor its treaty commitments. The major leaders among the tribes were Wabasha and Little Crow among the Dakota Sioux, Flat Mouth and Hole-in-the-Day among the Ojibwe, and Winneshiek among the Winnebago.[60] The success of treaty negotiations between the U.S. and the tribes was in great part facilitated by the mixed race families such as the Faribaults and the Renvilles.[60]
The Treaty of Traverse des Sioux in 1851 gave all of the Wahpeton and Sisseton Sioux (upper Sioux) lands west of the Mississippi River to the U.S. government.[61] The Treaty of Mendota that same year ceded the Mdewakanton and Wahpekute Sioux (lower Sioux) lands in southern Minnesota, requiring relocation to an area near modern Morton.[61] Both treaties, however, were amended to during the ratification process to eliminate the explicit guarantees of lands retained by the tribes. Additionally much of the promised payments was never delivered, in part because of alleged debts owed by the Sioux to the fur traders.[61]
Native American Population by Year Year Dakota Sioux Ojibwe 1805 10,165[62] 1834 8080[62] 1836 5639[62] 1839 5389[62] 1843 4812[63] 1866 7566[63]
Despite American hunger for land, the leadership in the Minnesota Territory did not actually want to remove the Sioux from the territory. Federal subsidies to the tribes were heavily siphoned by the U.S. settlements and removal of the tribes from the territory would have meant loss of this income.[64]
Increasing impoverishment among the Sioux and continued treaty violations on the part of the United States would soon lead to bloodshed. In 1857 a renegade band of Sioux led by war chief Inkpaduta attacked the community of Spirit Lake, Iowa near the Minnesota border killing between 35 and 40 "white" settlers (the event would be referred to as the Spirit Lake Massacre). They went on to attack Springfield, Minnesota (modern Jackson) killing seven before being turned back.[65] In 1862, bands of Sioux launched the Dakota War in which they were defeated. Apart from those killed in the war, 38 Dakota Sioux were killed in a mass execution in Mankato, the largest mass execution in the U.S. history. Hundreds more Sioux and settlers were killed in the State of Minnesota's subsequent eradication of the Sioux nation in Minnesota and the new Dakota Territory.[66]
Commercial enterprises
The most important commercial enterprise in the early part of the territorial era was the lucrative fur trade. At the beginning of the 19th century two British companies competed for dominance in the North American trade: Hudson's Bay Company and the North West Company. The North West company had used Grand Portage as its western headquarters along with other smaller companies that operated in the area. Grand Portage was one of the four principal British trading and shipping points furs in North America. Following the Treaty of Paris, in 1783, British operations at Grand Portage were technically illegal though the trade continued.[67] However, beginning in 1801 the North West Company began re-establishing its headquarters north of the border at the newly constructed Fort William in what is now Ontario. After 1804 Grand Portage had been reduced to a minor trading center and most traders eventually abandoned the area. In 1842, the Hudson Bay Company, which had by then absorbed the North West Company, shipped out a final band of Ojibwe who were employed by the company.[67]
Before 1816 the majority of the fur trading posts in the Minnesota area were owned by the North West Company, but by 1821 the American Fur Company, founded in 1808 by John Jacob Astor in New York, had taken over most of these.[68] As well as Grand Portage, another significant fur shipping point in Minnesota was
Beginning in the 1820s, a fur trading route developed between the
The fur trade was in decline by the late 1830s.
The first flour mill in Minnesota was built in 1823 at Fort Snelling as a retrofitting of a lumber mill.[79] The first private grain mill was built in Washington County by Lemuel Bolles. Minneapolis gained its first grain mill in 1847.[80] During the 1850s grain production began to develop rapidly but Minnesota did not become a significant grain exporter until 1858.[80]
In 1823 the first steamboat, known as the Virginia, arrived at Fort Snelling carrying Indian agent Lawrence Taliaferro.
In 1849 James Goodhue began publication of the Minnesota Pioneer newspaper in Saint Paul (the paper would later be renamed the St. Paul Pioneer Press). By the time the area achieved statehood 89 newspapers had been established.[85] Information about Minnesota published in these periodicals spread throughout the United States and Europe. Advertising campaigns were launched in the northeastern U.S. and Europe to lure European settlers. These efforts met with limited success though they would become much more successful after statehood.[86]
Saint Anthony, with its scenic waterfalls, rapidly developed as a destination for tourists traveling the Mississippi on steamboats. The Winslow House, a luxury hotel overlooking the falls, was constructed in 1857. By the late 1860s Saint Anthony had become a popular summer resort for wealthy southerners.[87]
One of the major sources of income in the territory during the 1850s was U.S. government annuity payments to the Ojibwe and other tribes required by earlier treaties. These payments amounted to more than $380,000 per year on average ($13.9 million in present-day terms) compared to approximately $120,000 per year ($4.39 million in present-day terms) given to the territory itself for development. Because of corruption, and mishandling of the payments to the tribes, a great deal of the money was used directly by U.S. settlers for commercial and community development with questionable benefit to the tribes.[88] At the beginning of the Minnesota Territory, in fact, these payments were the territory's most important source of income since the fur trade was no longer as lucrative as it had once been and other exports were still negligible.[64]
Settlements
Population by Year Year U.S. citizens Natives 1848 4,500[84] 1849 4,535[89] 25,000[89] 1850 6,077[90] 1851 7,600[91] 30,400[91] 1853 40,000[92] 31,700[93] 1857 150,000[92] 1860 172,023[90]
During most of this era Native Americans outnumbered European/U.S. settlers in what is now Minnesota. Significant Dakota Sioux settlements in the Minnesota area included Kaposia, located in what is now Saint Paul before being moved by the 1837 treaty. Significant Ojibwe settlements included Misizaaga'igan (Mille Lacs) and Nagaajiwanaang (Fond du Lac), as well as the community that had developed around the Grand Portage commerce.
When the Minnesota Territory was established in 1848 the Native American settlements in the territory still rivaled the American settlements in size. According to some scholars, the Mandan/Hidatsa village of Like-a-Fishhook in what is now North Dakota, with a population of 700, was the largest settlement in the Minnesota Territory.[89] The numerous other settlements in the territory gave a total Native American population of over 25,000 in 1849 which easily outnumbered the 4535 "white" settlers.[89]
At the outset of the 19th century most of the European settlements were related to the fur trade. The largest of these settlements were trading posts established by the North West Company, particularly those at Sandy Lake, Leech Lake, and Fond du Lac.[17] Historian Grace Lee Nute has documented over 100 fur trading posts of varying sizes in the Minnesota area before statehood.[94] Most of these posts were eventually taken over by the American Fur Company. When several hundred settlers abandoned the Red River Colony in the 1820s, they entered the United States by way of the Red River Valley, instead of moving to eastern Canada or returning to Europe, adding to the Minnesota region's population.[95]
Construction on Fort Snelling began in 1820 and was finished in 1825. The Fort became a magnet for settlement in east-central Minnesota. Nearby Mendota was established during the same period and, as the regional headquarters for the American Fur Company, also drew settlement in the area soon becoming Minnesota's commercial center.[71] Many of the first stone buildings in the territory were constructed in Mendota by employees of the American Fur Company, which bought animal pelts at that location from 1825 to 1853.[96]
The logging industry spurred further development of settlements. Before railroads, lumbermen relied mostly on river transportation to bring logs to market, which made Minnesota's timber resources attractive. Towns like Marine on Saint Croix, founded as Marine Mills, and Stillwater became significant lumber centers fed by the Saint Croix River, while Winona was supplied lumber by areas in southern Minnesota and along the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers.[97][98]
In the 1830s a group of
The sutler (general store operator) at Fort Snelling, Franklin Steele, who had established lumbering interests in the area, staked a claim to lands adjacent to Saint Anthony Falls following the land cessions of the 1837 Ojibwe treaty. In 1848 he built a sawmill at the falls establishing the basis of the town of Saint Anthony which grew there. John H. Stevens, an employee of Franklin Steele, pointed out that land on the west side of the falls would make a good site for future mills. Since the land on the west side was still part of the military reservation, Stevens made a deal with Fort Snelling's commander. Stevens would provide free ferry service across the river in exchange for a tract of 160 acres (0.65 km2) at the head of the falls. Stevens received the claim and built a house, the first house in Minneapolis, in 1850. Later in 1854, Stevens platted the city of Minneapolis on the west bank.[101] In 1855 the first bridge across the main channel of the Mississippi (anywhere in the nation) was built between Minneapolis and Saint Anthony.[22]
By 1851, treaties between Native American tribes and the U.S. government had opened much of Minnesota to U.S. settlement. Fort Snelling was no longer a frontier outpost. Efforts to establish Minnesota as a prominent future state in the Union were swift. In 1851 territorial legislature petitioned the U.S. Congress for land to build a railroad between
In 1848 when the Minnesota Territory was formed there were four major "white" settlements: Saint Paul, Saint Anthony (part of modern Minneapolis), Stillwater, and Pembina (now part of North Dakota).[84] New settlements began to appear more rapidly. Mankato was established in 1852 by entrepreneurs Jackson, Johnson, and Williams.[104] Saint Peter was established in 1853 by Captain William Bigelow Dodd. New Ulm was established in 1854 by German immigrants. Rochester was established by George Head in 1854. Not all of the new settlements were established by immigrants from the eastern U.S. and Europe, though. The town of Faribault, for example, was established in 1852 by Alexander Faribault, a Minnesota native of mixed French-Canadian/Dakota ancestry.[105]
The influx of settlers in the 1850s transformed Minnesota from a sparsely populated territory of less than 10,000 "white" settlers and a significantly larger native population, to a substantial population center of over 150,000 predominantly European settlers.[90] The city of Saint Paul expanded from less than 400 people in 1848 to over 2500 in 1852 and over 10,000 in 1860.[106]
As a result of heavy immigration from New England and New York—regions where most major towns had originated as trading centers rather than political or manufacturing centers—many new settlements in Minnesota were laid out so as to heavily favor the business districts rather than the city halls or courthouses.[107] This plan and the philosophy behind it spurred the growth of economic links between the communities and with other parts of the U.S.
In 1856 the Minnesota Territory established its first Commissioner of Emigration, Eugene Burnand. Through advertisements and speeches to new immigrants to the U.S. in New York, Burnand expanded the immigration trend which later created a large German community after statehood.[108]
Society
Until the 1850s the Native American population vastly outnumbered the population of European ancestry in the area. Nevertheless, the division between "Indian" and "white" during this era was always somewhat vague. In general persons of mixed descent were considered "white" if they dressed in European clothing and adopted European customs. "Indians" were those who lived in traditional native lifestyles.[89] (Such ethnic ambiguity mostly disappeared in North America in the latter 19th century but still exists today in Latin America).[109] Even as the U.S. began to establish its authority over the region and some settlers from the U.S. began to arrive, the Native American population continued to hold significant political and social influence as a result of the fur trade.[110] As experienced hunters they were important to one of North America's major business enterprises. The decline of this trade during the later part of the era marked the decline of Native American influence.[110]
Following the 1837 treaty the Saint Croix Triangle, between the Saint Croix and Mississippi Rivers, had been opened to U.S. settlement. Still until the later establishment of the Minnesota Territory this triangle remained an island of "white" culture and settlement. The vast majority of the Minnesota area, though, was "Indian country".[89] Contemporary accounts of larger towns such as Mendota, Saint Anthony, and Saint Paul in the 1840s indicate that the majority of the population was predominantly of French and Métis ancestry.[111] Even in these communities European culture, was not strictly dominant. Commenting on Minnesota's culture of the 1840s, Governor Alexander Ramsey described the streets of Saint Paul saying that it was common to see "the blankets and painted faces of Indians, and the red sashes and mocassins of French voyageurs and half-breeds, greatly predominating over the less picturesque costume of the Anglo-American race."[112]
It is in fact likely that a very large percentage of the "white" population reported in the 1850 census was of partially Native American ancestry.[112] Many men of mixed racial ancestry became respected members of "white" society. William W. Warren, for example, was the son of an American entrepreneur (who hailed from New York before he began working in John Jacob Astor's American Fur Company) and a mixed-blood Ojibwe mother (whose father had been in the old French and British fur trade). He was educated in the East and in the early 1850s lived on the Upper Mississippi, in part working as an independent translator and Indian Agency contractor. Warren was a good writer—his newspaper articles were eventually published as the only 19th century compendium of Ojibwe history and was elected to the territorial legislature before his death from consumption.[48]
With the establishment of the Minnesota Territory in 1848 and the treaty of 1851 waves of immigrants from the U.S. and Europe came to the territory rapidly changing the demographics. Even as these changes occurred in many areas the vagueness of the racial divisions between "Indians" and "whites" persisted. As late as 1857 it was common practice in some jurisdictions for men to be allowed to vote based on whether or not they were wearing European clothing.[113] According to some observers natives at a given polling location would share a single pair of trousers each wearing them only long enough to cast a ballot.[114]
Logging and trading communities in the territory, such as International Falls, were often known as centers of lawlessness and vice.[115] Saloons were commonly the social centers of the towns with brothels and "bath houses" adding to the character of the society. These gathering places attracted trappers, traders, smugglers, and numerous others traveling through the countryside.[115]
The late 1840s and 1850s witnessed large-scale immigration from the Eastern U.S. and Europe. By 1860 approximately 80% percent of Minnesota's U.S.-born population came from New York and New England.[107] The state was in fact for a time known as the "New England of the West".[116] Maine, in particular, contributed a large number of immigrants, probably because of the large number of lumbermen in Maine and the growing lumber industry in Minnesota.[107]
By the 1850s racist ideology in Minnesota began to match the rest of the U.S. gradually erasing some earlier social norms.[117] The ruling class was composed of primarily Anglo-American Protestants.[113] Settlers from the U.S. increasingly discussed "white" inhabitants as the key to Minnesota's future with an eye toward marginalizing the role that other "inferior" races would have in the future. Author James Wesley Bond in 1853 described Minnesota before the 1850s as "a waste of woodland and prairie, uninhabited save by the different hordes of savage tribes from time immemorial."[117] Prejudices in the territory, however, were complicated.[113] As late as 1840 mulattos in Saint Paul were commonly treated as equals to others in the community with children of all races attending the same schools. By the late 1840s, however, all blacks had been completely disenfranchised. In addition they were prevented from running for office and their children were segregated in schools.[113] By contrast Irish Catholics and Native Americans who adopted European lifestyles were allowed to vote and their children were not segregated in the classrooms.[113] Paradoxically whereas Anglo-Americans generally accepted business development by African Americans, they largely opposed business development by Irish immigrants.[113]
Minnesota was a multi-lingual area throughout the era. During the earlier parts of the era French and English were widely used but Ojibwe, Sioux, and Michif (the language of the Métis) were more widespread. By the late 1850s English had grown to be the most spoken language. New immigrants, though, brought additional languages to the territory. Newspapers were published in German (Die Minnesota Deutsche Zeitung), Swedish (Minnesota Posten), and Norwegian (Folkets Rost).[118] Irish Gaelic, Czech and other languages were used in various communities as well.[119][120]
Most of the population of the region in earlier decades followed traditional tribal religious practices. However, Roman Catholicism had been known in the area long before its acquisition by the U.S. because of the many French traders who lived and intermarried there. Catholic missionary activity among the Métis expanded greatly in the early 19th century with the Catholic Church becoming particularly established in Saint Paul.[121] Protestantism was rather a much newer phenomenon though some Protestant missionaries had entered the region in the early 19th century as well.[122] The first Protestant church appeared in 1848 (Market Street Church, Saint Paul).[123][124] The waves of immigration in the 1850s, however, would rapidly make Protestants the largest religious group. Indeed, as in much of the rest of the U.S., community leaders made a deliberate effort to recruit immigrants from Protestant areas of Northern Europe in order to ensure Protestant control of the region.[125]
African Americans and slavery
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 in theory outlawed slavery in the Northwest Territory including the Minnesota area.[126] The ordinance specifically stated
There shall be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude in the said territory, otherwise than in the punishment of crime, whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.
— Northwest Ordinance, United States Congress of the Confederation
The ordinance was nevertheless seen as ambiguous in that it did not specifically address the
The number of African Americans in the territory during this period was quite small but not insignificant. Newcomers continued to bring slaves with them, but there were many free blacks as well, some working as servants and some as completely independent pioneers. Information about the black immigrants during the earlier periods is sparse, but records do show that most of those at Fort Snelling were slaves.[128] Records from 1850 indicate a population of 39 free blacks out of a total population of 6,077 citizens in the territory (which excluded Native American tribes).[90][128] Before the 1840s these free persons could often expect to be treated equal to other racial groups. By the time Minnesota had achieved statehood, however, blacks had been disenfranchised and schools were segregated.[113] Despite this, from the start of the Minnesota Territory in 1848 the leadership was predominantly antislavery thus ending the practice in this era.[113]
One of the most famous of the early African Americans in the territory was George Bonga.[128] He was born in Minnesota in 1802, his father Pierre Bonga the son of a freed slave and his mother a member of the Ojibwe tribe. Bonga was schooled in Montreal and eventually became a fur trader in the Northwest territories. He went on to serve as an interpreter in negotiations with the Ojibwe (particularly as a representative of Michigan Governor Lewis Cass).[128] His brother Stephen served as the Ojibwe interpreter at Fort Snelling for the 1837 treaty.[129]
In the 1850s, Fort Snelling played a key role in the infamous
Government and politics
In the earlier part of the 19th century the area which is today Minnesota was not recognized as a single entity. The Mississippi River had divided the eastern British/French lands of North America from the western Spanish lands and even after the Louisiana Purchase this was for a time seen as a separation between territories. The division between the U.S. territories in the region and the British territories remained ambiguous until the Anglo-American Convention of 1818, which set the border with British North America at the
Throughout the first half of the 19th century, the northeastern portion of the state was a part of the Northwest Territory, formed in 1787. After Ohio's statehood the area became part of the new Illinois Territory in 1809. After Illinois' statehood the area was incorporated into the Michigan Territory in 1818 and later became part of the Wisconsin Territory in 1836. The western and southern areas of the state were not formally organized until 1838, when they became part of the Iowa Territory.[132]
Following the admission of Wisconsin as a state in 1848, the Minnesota area was temporarily without a government, though John Catlin, the former secretary of the Wisconsin Territory, claimed governorship of what remained of the territory as a short-term measure.[133] By this time Minnesota's residents were largely Democrats and, as the U.S. Congress was at that time controlled by Democrats, they hoped Congress might be sympathetic to their concerns.[134] In that same year a meeting was held in Stillwater, nominally led by Caitlin and later known as the "Stillwater Convention", to discuss establishing a new territory. The participants elected Henry Sibley as a representative to Congress.[135]
Organization and statehood
Before 1856 there was minimal discussion of statehood within Minnesota. However, as discussion of a potential transcontinental railroad in the U.S. became serious, leaders in Minnesota recognized that a territory was in a weak position to lobby for this economic opportunity.[139]
In December 1856, Rice brought forward two bills in Congress: an
A
The state constitution was sent to the United States Congress for ratification in December 1857. The approval process was drawn out for several months while Congress debated over issues that had stemmed from the Kansas–Nebraska Act. Once questions surrounding Kansas were settled the bill for Minnesota's admittance was passed.[145] The eastern half of the Minnesota Territory, under the boundaries defined by Henry Mower Rice, became the country's 32nd state on May 11, 1858.[146] The western part remained unorganized until its incorporation into the Dakota Territory on March 2, 1861.[84]
In popular culture
In 1855 Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, who had never explored Minnesota himself, published The Song of Hiawatha containing many references to regions in Minnesota. The story was based on Ojibwe legends carried back east by other explorers and traders (particularly those collected by Henry Rowe Schoolcraft).[147]
The "Gopher State" moniker, by which the state today is widely known, was selected in the mid-19th century as a means to create an identity for the state. Though some believed that "Beaver State" should be selected instead as more dignified, a political cartoon featuring a gopher soon solidified "Gopher State" as the more well-known identity.[149]
See also
- American Fur Company
- History of Manitoba
- History of Winnipeg
- Hudson's Bay Company
- North West Company
- Red River Colony
- Rupert's Land
Notes
- ^ Mary Lethert Wingerd, North Country: The Making of Minnesota (University of Minnesota Press; 2010)
- ^ Aby (2002), p. 83.
- ^ "TimePieces: Ojibwe Arrive". Minnesota Historical Society. Archived from the original on February 22, 2012. Retrieved February 17, 2007.
- ^ "TimePieces: Dakota & Ojibwe Treaty". Minnesota Historical Society. Archived from the original on February 22, 2012. Retrieved February 17, 2007.
- ^ Atwater (1893), p. 13.
- ^ Meyer (1993), pp. 15–17.
- ^ Meyer (1993), pp. 17–18.
- ^ a b c "TimePieces: North West Fur Co". Minnesota Historical Society. Archived from the original on February 22, 2012. Retrieved February 17, 2007.
- ^ Harris (2004), p. 298.
- ^ Holmquist (1981), p. 36.
- ^ Anderson (1997), p. 67–68.
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- ^ Aby (2002), p. 9.
- ^ Aby (2002), p. 10.
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- ^ Meyer (1993), p. 26–28.
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- ^ Neill (1881), p. 82–85.
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- ^ Risjord (2005), p. 47–48.
- ^ Neill (1881), p. 94.
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- ^ Lass (1998), p. 91–92.
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- ^ Meyer (1993), p. 12.
- ^ Association of Ontario Land Surveyors (1902), p. 108.
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- ^ a b c Kaplan (1999), p. 30.
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- ^ Anderson (1997), p. 133.
- ^ Wood, Alley, & Co. (1878), p. 79.
- ^ a b Kaplan (1999), p. 8.
- ^ a b c Blegen (1975), p. 166.
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- ^ a b Lass (1998), p. 113.
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- ^ "Chapter One: The Rainy Lake Region in the Fur Trade". U.S. National Park Service. Retrieved November 1, 2001.
- ^ Meinig (1995), p. 120.
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- ^ Waters (1999), p. 76.
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- ^ Powers (1893), p. 165.
- ^ a b Powers (1893), p. 166.
- ^ Neill (1881), p. 93.
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- ^ a b c d e f Kaplan (1999), p. 6.
- ^ a b c d "Resident Population and Apportionment of the U.S. House of Representatives: Minnesota" (PDF). U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved November 23, 2009.
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- ^ a b "Minnesota History: A Chronology". "Minnesota State University. Archived from the original on January 7, 2007. Retrieved November 29, 2009.
- ^ Kaplan (1999), p. 30.; this figure is specified for the early 1850s but no specific year is indicated.
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- ^ Lass (1998), p. 114–115.
- ^ "Sibley House Historic Site". Minnesota Historical Society. Archived from the original on August 27, 2012. Retrieved September 19, 2006.
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- ^ Lass (1998), p. 99
- ^ Pabis (2006), p. 106.
- ^ Risjord (2005), p. 70–71.
- ^ Orfield, Matthias Nordberg (March 1915). "Special Land Grants to the States with Special Reference to Minnesota". Studies in the Social Sciences (2). University of Minnesota: 151.
- ^ Johnson (1915), p. 18.
- ^ AufderHeide (1938), p. 401.
- ^ "Alexander Faribault". City of Faribault. Archived from the original on September 28, 2011. Retrieved November 11, 2011.
- ^ Sibley, Henry S. (November 10, 1852). "Description of Minnesota Territory". New York Times.
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- ^ "History of Minnesota: German Immigration". Minnesota State University – Mankato. Archived from the original on May 18, 2007. Retrieved November 29, 2009.
- ISBN 9781107375819.
- ^ a b Kaplan (1999) p. 32.
- ^ Holmquist (1981), p. 39.
- ^ a b Kaplan (1999), p. 31.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Green (2007), p. x.
- ^ Aby (2002), p. 100.
- ^ a b Reid (1989), p. 87–88.
- ^ Bidwell, W.H., ed. (September–December 1851). "The Line of the Lakes". The Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art. 24. New York: W.H. Bidwell: 202.
- ^ a b Kaplan (1999), p. 28.
- ^ Aufderheide (1938), p. 123.
- ^ Regan (2002), p. 30.
- ^ Jerabek, Esther (Winter 1972). "To Bohemia: A Czech Settler Writes from Owatonna, 1856–1858" (PDF). Minnesota History Magazine. 43: 136.
- ^ Blegen (1975), p. 151.
- ^ Blegen (1975), p. 144.
- ^ "Minnesota: A State Guide". The New Deal Network (Frank and Eleanor Roosevelt Institute). Archived from the original on June 14, 2008. Retrieved December 6, 2009.
- ^ Hobart (1887), p. 38.
- ^ Ziegler-McPherson (2017), p. 19
- ^ Green (2007), p. 5.
- ^ Green (2007), p. 5–8.
- ^ a b c d Spangler, Earl (1963). "The Negro in Minnesota, 1800–1865". Manitoba Historical Society.
- ^ Green (2007), p. 3.
- ^ Huston (1987), p. 12–13.
- ^ Lass (1998), p. 81.
- ^ "Geography: Minnesota Territory's Borders". Minnesota Territorial Pioneers. Retrieved December 9, 2009.
- ^ Wood, Alley, & Co (1878), p. 95.
- ^ Lass (1998), p. 105–106.
- ^ Lass (1998), p. 104–105.
- ^ a b Risjord (2005), p. 62.
- ^ Meinig (1993), p. 439
- ^ Risjord (2005), p. 75.
- ^ Risjord (2005), p. 76–77.
- ^ Lass (1998), p. 124.
- ^ Lass (1998), p. 122–124.
- ^ Buck (1922), p. 27.
- ^ Buck (1922), p. 29.
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- ^ Lass (1998), p. 125–126.
- ^ "Journal of the Senate of the United States of America, 35th Congress, 1st Session, Tuesday, May 11, 1858, p. 436".
- ^ "TimePieces: The Song of Hiawatha". Minnesota Historical Society. Archived from the original on February 22, 2012. Retrieved February 17, 2007.
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References
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A Popular History of Minnesota.
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{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Ziegler-McPherson, Christina A. (2017). Selling America: Immigration Promotion and the Settlement of the American Continent, 1607–1914. Praeger. ISBN 9781440842092.
External links
- Minnesota Territorial Pioneers
- Looking at the Territory: The Treaty Story
- First-hand accounts of life in the region