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St. Vrain massacre

Coordinates:42°17′6″N89°52′29″W / 42.28500°N 89.87472°W /42.28500; -89.87472
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Incident in the Black Hawk War
St. Vrain massacre
Part of theBlack Hawk War

The graves ofFelix St. Vrain, at right; alongside victim, William Hale, at left, and his companions, John Fowler and Aaron Hawley, are buried in Kellogg's Grove Cemetery,Kellogg's Grove,Stephenson County, Illinois
DateMay 24, 1832
Location
ResultHo-Chunk and Sauk victory
Belligerents
United StatesHo-Chunk orSauk/Fox
Commanders and leaders
Henry Atkinson
Felix St. Vrain (Indian agent)
Strength
7approximately 30
Casualties and losses
40

TheSt. Vrain massacre was a tragic incident in theBlack Hawk War. It occurred near present-dayPearl City, Illinois, inKellogg's Grove, on May 24, 1832. Themassacre was most likely committed byHo-Chunk warriors who were unaffiliated withBlack Hawk's band of warriors. It is also unlikely that the group of Ho-Chunk had the sanction of their nation. Killed in the massacre were United StatesIndian AgentFelix St. Vrain and three of his companions. Some accounts reported that St. Vrain's body was mutilated.

St. Vrain and his party were attacked while en route fromDixon's Ferry, Illinois (nowDixon) toGalena, Illinois. St. Vrain had been ordered by GeneralHenry Atkinson to deliver dispatches to Fort Armstrong. ColonelHenry Dodge's men interred the remains of St. Vrain and his companions after the massacre.

Prelude

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United StatesIndian AgentFelix St. Vrain was traveling with several companions which included, John Fowler, William Hale, and Aaron Hawley. Those men, along with St. Vrain, were all reportedly killed in the attack; also traveling with St. Vrain was Thomas Kenney, Aquilla Floyd, and Alexander Higginbotham.

The Native Americans that attacked the group were not part ofBlack Hawk's band of warriors but they were en route to join that group when the massacre occurred.[1] Older histories described the group as a band ofSac warriors while modern sources indicate that the band were associated with theHo-Chunk nation.[1][2] Black Hawk asserted that the group was Ho-Chunk and unaffiliated with his band in his autobiography.[1]

In fact, most Ho-Chunk sided with the United States during theBlack Hawk War.[1] The warriors that attacked St. Vrain's party acted with no authority or oversight from the Ho-Chunk nation.[1] As the war began to be defined along racial terms most white settlers in the region did not notice the distinction.[1] This led to unwarranted fear of all Native Americans in the area, even those friendly to the settlers' cause.[1] One example of this appeared in an article published in theNew Galenian on May 30, 1832. While the article described the events of the massacre it also went on to associate the murders of St. Vrain and his companions with the Sauk andFox ofKeokuk's band.[1]

It is supposed by many, that these Indians belong to Ke-o-kucks band We know nothing about it. Although Ke-o-kuck's band is supposed to be friendly, and are supplied with corn at the public expense, we acknowledge we have but little confidence in them.[3]-New Galenian, May 30, 1832

Keokuk and his band were not near the scene when the murders occurred and had actually volunteered to assist white settlers against Black Hawk and his band of warriors.[1]

Massacre

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Map of Black Hawk War sites
Battle (with name)Fort / settlementNative village
Symbols are wikilinked to article

The St. Vrain massacre occurred near present-dayPearl City, Illinois, in an area known asKellogg's Grove. Felix St. Vrain, a U.S. Indian Agent to theSauk andFox tribes, was inDixon's Ferry, Illinois, under the command of GeneralHenry Atkinson prior to the massacre.

A group composed of Aaron Hawley, John Fowler, Thomas Kenney and Alexander Higginbotham had been purchasing cattle inSangamon County, Illinois when news of trouble with Black Hawk's band reached them. They immediately decided to return to northern Illinois to protect their homes. On May 22, 1832 the men left Dixon's Ferry forGalena, Illinois. At Buffalo Grove they discovered the body of William Durley, who had been killed in theBuffalo Grove massacre. The men immediately returned to Dixon's Ferry to report their find and remained in the town overnight.[2]

The following day General Atkinson returned to Dixon's Ferry on with dispatches destined forFort Armstrong. Atkinson ordered St. Vrain to travel with the Hawley party and deliver the dispatches to the fort.[2] The men traveled north fromDixon's Ferry and back to Buffalo Grove, where they interred the remains of Durley.[1][2] They then traveled another ten miles towardFort Hamilton before camping for the night.[2]

The next morning, May 24, they set out again, but stopped for breakfast after about three miles. As they finished eating, about 30 warriors approached. The men retreated, but four were shot and killed.[1] Slain with St. Vrain were John Fowler, William Hale, and Aaron Hawley. An account of the massacre from Gen.George Wallace Jones, who was St. Vrain's brother-in-law and the man who identified his body, said the warriors hadscalped the dead men, but also cut off the hands, head, and feet of St. Vrain and removed his heart.[2] They reportedly passed around pieces of the heart for the braves to eat.[2][4] At least one source indicated that the mutilation began before St. Vrain was dead.[4]

Three men, Thomas Kenney, Aquilla Floyd, and Alexander Higginbotham, managed to escape. They eluded the warriors and arrived safely inGalena, Illinois three days later.[1] It is said that Aaron Hawley was initially able to retreat from the scene, but apparently was later killed as he fled.[2]

'The Little Bear' incident

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Frank Stevens in his 1903 history of the war,The Black Hawk War stated the attackers were Sauk and led by Little Bear, a chief who had purportedly adopted Felix St. Vrain as a "blood brother," presumably relying upon an account published by former Illinois governorThomas Ford, who had fought in that war (though not that battle).[5] Noting Little Bear's presence, St. Vrain allegedly assured his companions that there was nothing to fear.[2] The same claims were included in an 1887 book by Nehemiah Matson,Memories of Shaubena. Matson's narrative described St. Vrain's allegedly pleading for his life with Little Bear.[4] Matson, Stevens andJohn H. Kinzie all identified St. Vrain's assailants as Sac.[1][2][4][6]

On the other hand,Perry A. Armstrong's 1887 history dismissed the idea that The Little Bear had adopted Felix St. Vrain. Armstrong denied that Little Bear had never existed as a Sauk or Fox chief, and thought it preposterous that a Sauk chief would have adopted St. Vrain as a brother.[6]

Aftermath

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According to theNew Galenian the three men who evaded the band that attacked the St. Vrain party, Floyd, Higgenbotham and Kenney, arrived in Galena at 7 a.m. on May 26, 1832. They provided their own description of events which the newspaper account detailed.[3] However, at least one source indicated that Floyd was a victim of the massacre and his remains are interred in the cemetery with the other victims of the massacre at a public park withinKellogg's Grove near present-dayKent, Illinois.[7] Public and military records, however, confirm that Aquilla Floyd was discharged from the militia on August 20, 1832, and returned to his home in Warren County, Kentucky, where he died of old age in next-door Edmonson County, Kentucky November 1879. His remains are not buried at the monument with the others, and his name on the monument is a mistake made in 1886 when the monument was erected. It is probable that it was assumed he was killed during the battles because no record could be found of him in Iowa, since he had returned to Kentucky after discharge.

Following the massacre a detachment led by ColonelHenry Dodge buried the bodies of St. Vrain and some of the other victims.[1] Though Dodge and his men recovered the remains of St. Vrain, Hale and Fowler, the body of Aaron Hawley was never recovered.[8]

See also

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Notes

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42°17′6″N89°52′29″W / 42.28500°N 89.87472°W /42.28500; -89.87472

  1. ^abcdefghijklmn"The Killing of Felix St. VrainArchived 2014-02-21 at theWayback Machine", Historic Diaries: Black Hawk War,Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved July 28, 2007.
  2. ^abcdefghijStevens, Frank E.The Black HawkArchived 2007-10-17 at theWayback Machine War, Frank E. Stevens 1903, pp. 169–171. Available online at Northern Illinois University Libraries Digitization Project.
  3. ^ab"War News From Galena", Historic Diaries: Black Hawk War,Wisconsin State Historical Society. Published in:New Galenian, May 30, 1832; and Whitney, Ellen M., ed. The Black Hawk War, 1831-1832. (Springfield: Illinois State Historical Society, 1970), p.488. Retrieved July 28, 2007.
  4. ^abcdMatson, Nehemiah.Memories of Shaubena: With Incidents Relating to the Early Settlement of the West, (Google Books), D.B. Cooke & Co., 1887, pp. 207–210. Retrieved July 31, 2007.
  5. ^Thomas Ford, A History of Illinois: from its commencement as a state in 1818 to 1847 (annotated and introduced by Rodney O Davis University of Illinois Press 1995) p. 84
  6. ^abArmstrong, Perry A.The Sauks and the Black Hawk War, (Google Books), H.W. Rokker, 1887, pp. 415-416. Retrieved July 31, 2007
  7. ^Dameier, Evelyn. "Kellogg's GroveArchived 2007-09-27 at theWayback Machine," (PDF), National Register of Historic Places Nomination Form, 18 January 1978, HAARGIS Database,Illinois Historic Preservation Agency. Retrieved 26 July 2007.
  8. ^Memoir of Thomas Pendleton Burnett "Wisconsin Historical Collections, Volume II," 1856,Wisconsin State Historical Society, pp. 340-341.
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