Brief History of the Stockbridge Mohican tribe
ORIGIN AND EARLY HISTORY
According to tradition, Mohican history says
that a great people came from the north
and west. They crossed the waters where the land
almost touched. The people inhabited these lands for many years,
leaving settlements behind when they moved on. It is said that they
were looking for a place where the waters were never still, like the
land from which they originally came.
After a long journey, these people settled in the east. In
time, they divided into different groups and dialects. The oldest of
these, the Muh-he-con-ne-ok or Mahicans, lived along the
Muh-he-kun-ne-tuk, later called Hudson's River. The waters of this
river are never still because of the influence of the tides. There
they lived, forming a great Mahican Confederacy, for several hundreds
of years before the arrival of white men. The area they inhabited
included land south of what is now called Lake Champlain, west to
Scoharie Creek, east to Vermont and New Hampshire and south to
Manhattan Island.
The Stockbridge Indians were originally part of the Mahican
Confederacy. The Munsee, on the other hand, were a group of native
people in the Delaware Confederacy. The land where they lived was
west of the Hudson River, covering an area on either side of the
Delaware River and stretching south to what was later called the state
of New Jersey.
The lifestyles of the Mahican and Munsee were so similar that to
describe one is to describe the other also. Their lives were rooted
in the woodlands in which they lived. These were covered with red
spruce, elm, pine, oak, maple and birch trees. They were filled with
black bear, deer, moose, beaver, otter, bobcat and mink, as well as
turkey and other birds. The clean rivers were filled with fish.
Usually the native people built their homes near rivers so that
they could be close to food, water, and transportation. Their village
homes, called wigwams, were circular and made of bent saplings covered
with hides or bark. They also lived in long- houses, which were often
very large, sometimes as long as one hundred feet, with curved roofs
shingled with elm bark. Several families of the same clan lived in
each long-house. There were no windows, but every twenty feet or so
there was a fire pit with a smoke hole above it , the center of one
family's section.
While women planted gardens in the spring, the men fished for
herring and shad which swam up the river in large schools. From dugout
and bark canoes, the men speared or netted fish. During late summer
and fall they hunted the animals which were so plentiful in the
woods. After the harvest, dried meat and vegetables and smoked fish were
stored in pits dug deep in the ground and lined with grass or bark.
During the winter months, time was spent doing a variety of
things. Eating utensils and containers were made and repaired, as were
hunting gear and tools. Pottery was made for future use, clothing and
blankets were fashioned and often beautifully decorated with porcupine
quills, shells and other natural things. If the food supply began to
run low during the winter, men traveled by snowshoe to hunt game.
Early spring meant gathering sap from the maple trees to make
syrup and sugar. The round of planting and fishing began again. The
Mahican and Munsee people lived in harmony with the seasons and found
everything they needed to live the good life from the abundance that
Mother Earth provided.
THE COMING OF EUROPEANS
Fur Trade
In September of 1609, Henry
Hudson, a Dutch trader, sailed up the Muh-he-kun-ne-tuck into the lands of the Mahicans. This territory was full
of beaver and otter, which had the kinds of fur the Dutch wanted most.
It was not long (1614) before a trading post was set up along
Hudson's River on Castle Island.
As the fur trade expanded and furs became more difficult to find,
tensions developed between the Mahicans and the Mohawks, an Iroquois
people to the west. Each group wanted to maintain its share of the
fur trade business, as well as keep relations friendly with its European
allies. Not only did conflicts occur between the Mahicans and the
Mohawks, but the Native people got caught in wars among the Dutch,
English and French also. The Mahicans were eventually crowded out of
their territory along the Muh-he-kun-ne-tuck. They settled farther to
the east near rivers in what are now the states of Connecticut and
Massachusetts.
Efforts to Europeanize the Native People
Other changes were taking place in the Mahican way of life.
They stopped making many traditional items because of the availability of
new tools, pots and other things, for which they traded furs. The
English, who eventually replaced the Dutch in this area, also began
trying to change the Mahicans in other ways. They wanted to 'civilize'
them; that is, make them like themselves. The land, which the
Mahicans had once freely used for gardens, hunting and fishing, began
to have boundary lines and fences. The Native people, who had
traditionally depended only upon themselves and their use of what
Mother Earth supplied, began to depend on white people and what they
could provide.
Disease
The coming of white people into the lands of the Mahicans
affected them in another serious way. Europeans brought diseases with
them, such as smallpox and measles. The Native people of this land
had never had such diseases, and therefore had not built up any immunity
to them. Thus, hundreds of thousands of Native people sometimes
whole villages died, since they had no way to protect themselves.
It is not known how many Mahicans died as a result of new diseases
brought by Europeans.
Missionary Activity
Non-Indian missionaries also began to enter Native villages,
persuading the people to give up their traditional spiritual ways and
become Christians. They argued that this was the only way Indians
would survive. In 1734, a missionary named John Sergeant came to live
with the Mahicans. He began to preach the Christian religion to them,
baptize them, and give them new names.
In 1738, a meeting of the Mahicans was held and Sergeant was
given permission to start a mission village. Later this village was
named Stockbridge. It was located in an area of beautiful mountains that
were later called the Berkshires, in the state of Massachusetts. In
this mission village the first church and school were built and the
Mahican, as well as some other native people living there, became known
as the Stockbridge Indians.
Wars
All people living in America during the 1700s and 1800s were
affected by a number of wars. The French and Indian War was really
fought between the English and the French for control of the lands they
had taken from Native peoples. The Revolutionary War and the War of
1812 were fought between England and the American colonists who no
longer wanted to be governed by the "Mother Country." Mahicans from
various parts of the confederacy fought during these wars on the side of
the colonists. Because many of the battles were fought in what had
been Mahican territory, many of their villages were totally destroyed
and nearly half of the Mahican male population was killed.
Cultural Losses
The lives of Mahican people were drastically changed by the fur
trade, European missionaries, disease and war. For the Stockbridge
Indians, all of these worked together to cause a breakdown in their
traditional ways of Mahican life and beliefs. Their original ceremonies
were replaced by Christian customs. Fewer and fewer people among them
spoke the Mahican language, and traditional Mahican dress was seen less
and less frequently. The ancient art of basket-making continued, but
other seasonal occupations were abandoned. The Stockbridge looked and
behaved more and more like their non-Indian neighbors, engaging in
farming and lumbering, worshipping in church, and sending their children
to school. But as the eighteenth century neared its last twenty years,
their lives were to change even more drastically.
REMOVALS WESTWARD
It became apparent after the Revolutionary War, with their numbers greatly reduced and intruders
(called "settlers) using questionable means to gain
title to their land, that the Stockbridge people could not live
peaceably in their Christian village any longer. The Oneida Indians, who
had also fought for the colonists in the Revolution, offered them a
portion of their land and invited them to live there. The Stockbridge
accepted the invitation and moved to New Stockbridge near Oneida Lake by
the mid-1780's. Again they cleared forests and built farms. The women
spun wool and made baskets. A school, a church and a sawmill were built,
and the tribe flourished under the leadership of Joseph Quinney and his
counselors.
In 1802 a group of eastern Indians from Brothertown, New
Jersey also acquired land from the Oneida and called their new home
Brothertown. However, this area of New York was rich farm and timber
land. Several land companies wanted the state of New York to force the
Indians out so they could profit from the land sales. The pressure was
great and John Sergeant records in his journal of August, 1818, "About
one-third of my church and one-fourth of the tribe (70 souls) started
from this place for White River." Their leader, John Metoxin, led the
group to the White River area in what is now Indiana to settle among
their relatives, the Miami and Delaware. When they reached their
destination, the Delaware had already been coerced into selling their
land.
Meanwhile, missionaries, the state of New York and
commissioners from the War Department were negotiating with the
Menominee and Winnebago for a vast tract of land in what is now
Wisconsin, hoping to relocate Indians there. The Stockbridge were
included in the treaty, which was finally negotiated in 1822, and
thus another move began. The little band from Indiana were the first to
arrive, and they began to build a new village at Grand Cackalin
(Kaukauna) called Statesburg.
But the Menominee, after the New York Indian began to arrive,
had second thoughts about the amount of land granted, and
negotiations began again. The settlement which was finally made
resulted in the Oneidas moving to Duck Creek. The Stockbridge, and
another group from the east called the Munsee, were moved to two
townships on the east shore of Lake Winnebago in 1834.
Meanwhile the federal government was forcing Indian nations to
agree to land cession treaties, often physically moving them out of
their original homelands to live in areas far away. In 1830 Congress
passed President Andrew Jackson's Indian Removal Act which would
move all Indians east of the Mississippi to land west of that river.
A group of Stockbridge, fearing the inevitable, moved to Indian
Territory in 1839. Many died on this journey. Some arrived and
married into other tribes, but most simply gave up and returned to
Wisconsin.
The federal removal policy caused dissension and conflict
among the people who remained in Wisconsin, which in turn led to
political divisions in the tribe. The federal government, enforcing
its removal policy to benefit non-Indians hungry for land, was
pressuring the tribe to move again. Some Stockbridge relinquished
their Indian identity and became taxpaying citizens of the United
States, while others chose to retain their tribal membership and form
of government. New moves were considered and treaties were
negotiated, ratified, and renegotiated. Finally, in the Treaty of
1856, the Stockbridge and Munsee moved to the townships of Bartelme and
Red Springs in Shawano County.
RESERVATION
By the late 1800s, almost every Native nation in the United States had been assigned
to a reservation. Having failed to bring Indian people into the
cultural mainstream by Christianizing and educating them, the
government's approach was to isolate them from non-Indian society.
Life on the reservation was totally controlled by the government through
the Indian agent. Incoming goods were usually of poor quality and
food was scarce. This was generally a bad time for Indian people.
The reservation land of the Stockbridge- Munsee was
sandy, swampy and covered with a pine forest. Farming was tried in
some areas but overall was not very successful. Forestry became the
base of the economy. By 1895, about 300 people remained on the
reservation, with about 200 living in other places around the country.
In 1887 the General Allotment Act was passed by
Congress. This law divided up the reservations and allotted the pieces
to individual Native people. This happened on the Stockbridge
reservation also. However, some individuals who needed cash sold their
allotments to business dealers who wanted the forest for lumbering.
The lumbering companies cut down the trees and moved out, leaving behind
land with little economic value. Other individuals lost their
allotments because of failure to meet tax or loan payments. Thus, the
tribe began to see its reservation land disappear. Hard times
continued and grew even worse during the Great Depression of the early
1930s.
In 1934, however, a new act was passed by Congress called
the Indian Reorganization Act. This law made it possible for the
Stockbridge-Munsee people to get funds from the federal government to
reorganize a tribal government and get back some of the land that had
been lost. About 15,000 acres of land in the township of Bartelme were
purchased for the tribe. Only about 2,500 acres were put in trust for
the tribe, now officially called the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohican
Indians. Not until 1972 was the remaining acreage finally put into
trust. By 1938, the tribe had a new constitution and bylaws based on a
Bureau of Indian Affairs model. It also had a land base on which to
rebuild. New programs were started to build homes and plant new
forests.
Local government was now in the hands of the
Stockbridge-Munsee people. They elected their own tribal council and
their first tribal president, Harry A. Chicks. Their second president
was Arvid E. Miller, a Quinney descendant, who was a leader of his
people for twenty-six years. He was active in many local, state, and
national organizations and is remembered for his struggles to obtain
justice for his people and protect their rights as Native Americans.
STOCKBRIDGE-MUNSEE TODAY
Today the Stockbridge-Munsee community is
still located on this reservation in east central
Wisconsin, although enrolled members of the tribe live
in many other parts of Wisconsin, the United States and the world. The
reservation boundaries encompass the two townships of Bartelme and Red
Springs.
Some tribal families live on trust land which is assigned to
tribal members for their use. Others live on privately owned land
within these boundaries, which they hold like any other individual
owners of land.
Many tribally owned facilities are located on the
reservation tribal offices, a comprehensive health center, a community
center and residences for the elderly, a family center, a historical
library museum, a bingo hall, casino and golf course. In addition,
several privately owned businesses operate within reservation boundaries.
Together with tribal programs, these offer many opportunities for
employment, but some community members also travel to nearby towns and
cities to work.
The children attend school in the Bowler or Gresham public
schools. Many of them now go on to college, technical school or the
university. Tribal members hold degrees in law, medicine, education, fine
arts and other disciplines.
The population on the reservation is increasing. Not only are
families often larger than average American families, but also more
tribal members are now staying in the community or returning to it.
Several federal projects have helped provide housing for the growing
population, new roads have been constructed, and plans have been made
to develop tribally-managed tourism on a limited scale on the
reservation.
At present the Arvid E. Miller Memorial Library Museum welcomes
visitors from near and far on a daily basis. The annual Honor Our
Veterans Powwow, held in early August, draws drummers, dancers, traders
and spectators from all over the country. Bingo and casino games
attract many residents of nearby Indian and non-Indian communities on a
daily basis, as does the Pine Hills Golf Course.

The Stockbridge-Munsee now call themselves the Mohican Nation,
Stockbridge-Munsee Band. Having survived centuries of struggle to
maintain their identity and pride as a people, they have truly earned
the Many Trails a symbol of their courage and perseverance as their
tribal symbol.
(This paper was originally developed for the Rhinelander, Wisconsin
School District in 1981, with Bernice Miller and Dorothy Davids serving
as Stockbridge-Munsee consultants.
This fourth revision was prepared by the Stockbridge-Munsee Historical
Committee, May, 1996)
Minor corrections were done by R. Shubinski, webmaster of this site:
pow-wow changed to powwow
Mahikan changed to Mahican
links and banner added
Back to BraveArrow's Mohican page

Please send comments to Robert Shubinski MD
Last updated on December 28, 1998