Originally separate and independent Tribes of the Algonquin linguistic family, the Sac (or Sauk) and Fox Tribes have long been affiliated and allied.
The name Sac is from their own name Osakiwug, which means "people of the outlet" or "people of the yellow earth," and differentiates them from the foxes, whose own name is Meshkwakihug, "red earth people."
The name Fox was applied to the entire Tribe by the French, from the name of one clan, the Wagosh or "Red Fox" group.
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HISTORY
The original homeland of
the Sacs and Fox was in the Great Lakes region, where the Sacs
inhabited the upper Michigan peninsula and the Foxes, the south
shore of Lake Superior. Their indigenous culture, later
influenced by contact with Plains Tribes and the acquisition of
horses in the nineteenth century, was that of the eastern
woodlands. Although they established fixed villages and practiced
extensive cultivation of maize, beans, squash and tobacco, they
devoted much time to fishing, hunting of small game and buffalo,
and harvesting wild rice. Travel was by dugout and birch-bark
canoe. The two Tribes lived in bark houses in the warm weather
and in oval flag-reed lodges during the winter. Their social and
religious organization was a complex one in which the Grand
Medicine Society played an important part.
By 1667, when Father
Allovez made the first recorded white contact with the two
Tribes, Iroquois and French pressure on the Sacs, and Chippewa
pressure on the Foxes, had pushed both groups to the vicinity of
the present Green Bay, Wisconsin. French attacks on the Sacs and
Foxes in the eighteenth century, attributed to Indians,
contributed to a strengthened alliance amounting to confederation
of the two Tribes. Forced to migrate south, they attacked the
Illinois Tribe and forced them from their lands along the
Mississippi in the present states of Illinois, Wisconsin and
Iowa. Those groups that stayed near the Mississippi river became
known as the "Sac and Fox of the Mississippi" to
distinguish them from the "Sac and Fox of the
Missouri," a large band that settled further south along the
Missouri River.
The Missouri band became
the source of much trouble for the other Sacs and Foxes, for in
1804, at St. Louis, Missouri band chiefs were persuaded to sign a
treaty ceding to the U.S. Government all Sac and Fox lands east
of the Mississippi River, as well as some hunting grounds to the
west of the river. Government efforts several years to enforce
the land surrender embittered the Sacs and Foxes, most of whom
knew nothing about the 1804 Treaty. A brave and warlike people,
they had aided the British in the war of 1812, and had fought
constantly with the Sioux, Omahas, Menominees and other Tribes.
Government attempts to
remove the Sacs and Foxes caused a split in the confederation.
The majority of the Tribes followed the conciliatory Sac chief
Kaokuk, and intelligent and able (though somewhat pompous and
ambitious orator and politician) who agreed to removal. The
remainder of the federation, however, supported his rival, Black
Hawk, a brave Sac warrior who was bitterly opposed to the 1804
treaty and led his "British Band" into revolt and
bolder skirmishes which became known as "Black Hawk’s
War." Despite broken promises of help from other Tribes, and
pursuit by superior U.S. Forces, Black Hawk skillfully led his
followers north as far as Prairie du Cien, Wisconsin, where they
were defeated and their leader was captured. With the 1832 treaty
of Ft. Armstrong, Sac and Fox power on the frontier came to an
end. In 1833 the Tribe was removed to Iowa.
They lived there for
only thirteen years, then were moved to the Osage River
Reservation in Kansas for a 23-year stay. Although Sac and Fox
warriors had been able to drive the Sioux from their Iowa lands
during their stay there, and to win fights in Kansas with
Comanches, Cheyennes, Iotas, Osages and other Tribes, the
inexorable westward movement of white settlers resulted in still
another removal of the Sacs and Foxes in 1869, this time to
Indian Territory (Oklahoma). Cakewalk, and later his son Moses,
continued to lead the conciliatory faction of the Tribes, but
most of the Foxes opposed the many cessions of land to the
Government and, under the leadership of Chief Poweshiek, returned
to Iowa in 1850 to join a small number who had steadfastly
refused to leave.
Today, the Sac & Fox
Tribe of Missouri has 420 members of whom 55 live in the area.
Their reservation borders the Iowa Reservation on the west. All
that remains of the allotted land on this reservation is 44.60
acres. There are 453 acres of tribal land.
| Location: |
Brown
County, Kansas and Richardson County, Nebraska |
| Total
membership: |
362 |
| On
or near former res: |
55 |
| Constitution
and Bylaws Adopted: |
September
15, 1980 |
| Charter
Adopted: |
Ratified
June 13, 1937 (IRA) |
| Governing
Body: |
Tribal
Council |
| Annual
Tribal Meeting: |
Second
Saturday in August |
| Elections
Held: |
Second
Saturday in August/Every two (2) years |
| Quorum: |
Three
(3) |
TRIBAL LAND
| Acres
in Trust: |
453.84/Six
Tracts |
| Acres
in Fee: |
Blocks
4, 5, 11, 19 & 20 |
| Individual
Allotments: |
One
Tract/25 Acres |
| Individual
Mineral Allotments: |
Two
Tracts/62.17 Acres |
COMMUNITY BUILDING
Reserve, Kansas
In 1996, Tribal
environmental staff were unaware of any environmental problems
which may be hazardous to the health of reservation residents.
|