fbpx
Wikipedia

Tecumseh

Tecumseh (/tɪˈkʌmsə, -si/ tih-KUM-sə, -⁠see; c. 1768 – October 5, 1813) was a Shawnee chief and warrior who promoted resistance to the expansion of the United States onto Native American lands. A persuasive orator, Tecumseh traveled widely, forming a Native American confederacy and promoting intertribal unity. Even though his efforts to unite Native Americans ended with his death in the War of 1812, he became an iconic folk hero in American, Indigenous, and Canadian popular history.

Tecumseh
Painting of Tecumseh based on an 1808 sketch[note 1]
Bornc. 1768
Likely near present-day Chillicothe, Ohio, U.S.
DiedOctober 5, 1813 (aged about 45)
Cause of deathKilled in the Battle of the Thames
NationalityShawnee
Known forOrganizing Native American resistance to U.S. expansion
Relatives

Tecumseh was born in what is now Ohio at a time when the far-flung Shawnees were reuniting in their Ohio Country homeland. During his childhood, the Shawnees lost territory to the expanding American colonies in a series of border conflicts. Tecumseh's father was killed in battle against American colonists in 1774. Tecumseh was thereafter mentored by his older brother Cheeseekau, a noted war chief who died fighting Americans in 1792. As a young war leader, Tecumseh joined Shawnee Chief Blue Jacket's armed struggle against further American encroachment, which ended in defeat at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794 and with the loss of most of Ohio in the 1795 Treaty of Greenville.

In 1805, Tecumseh's younger brother Tenskwatawa, who came to be known as the Shawnee Prophet, founded a religious movement that called upon Native Americans to reject European influences and return to a more traditional lifestyle. In 1808, Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa established Prophetstown, a village in present-day Indiana, that grew into a large, multi-tribal community. Tecumseh traveled constantly, spreading the Prophet's message and eclipsing his brother in prominence. Tecumseh proclaimed that Native Americans owned their lands in common and urged tribes not to cede more territory unless all agreed. His message alarmed American leaders as well as Native leaders who sought accommodation with the United States. In 1811, when Tecumseh was in the South recruiting allies, Americans under William Henry Harrison defeated Tenskwatawa at the Battle of Tippecanoe and destroyed Prophetstown.

In the War of 1812, Tecumseh joined his cause with the British, recruited warriors, and helped capture Detroit in August 1812. The following year he led an unsuccessful campaign against the United States in Ohio and Indiana. When U.S. naval forces took control of Lake Erie in 1813, Tecumseh reluctantly retreated with the British into Upper Canada, where American forces engaged them at the Battle of the Thames on October 5, 1813, in which Tecumseh was killed. His death caused his confederacy to collapse. The lands he had fought to defend were eventually ceded to the U.S. government. His legacy as one of the most celebrated Native Americans in history grew in the years after his death, although details of his life have often been obscured by mythology.

Early life edit

 
Map of Shawnee towns in the Ohio region from 1768 to 1808, indicating where Tecumseh lived

Tecumseh was born in Shawnee territory in what is now Ohio between 1764 and 1771. The best evidence suggests a birthdate of around March 1768.[2][note 2]

The Shawnee pronunciation of his name has traditionally been rendered by non-Shawnee sources as "Tecumthé".[6][note 3] He was born into the Panther clan of the Kispoko division of the Shawnee tribe. Like most Shawnees, his name indicated his clan: translations of his name from the Shawnee language include "I Cross the Way", and "Shooting Star", references to a meteor associated with the Panther clan.[6]

Later stories claimed that Tecumseh was named after a shooting star that appeared at his birth, although his father and most of his siblings, as members of the Panther clan, were named after the same meteor.[8][9][note 4]

Tecumseh was likely born in the Shawnee town of Chillicothe, in the Scioto River valley, near present-day Chillicothe, Ohio, or in a nearby Kispoko village.[11][note 5] Tecumseh's father, Puckeshinwau, was a Shawnee war chief of the Kispoko division.[13] Tecumseh's mother, Methoataaskee, probably belonged to the Pekowi division and the Turtle clan, although some traditions maintain that she was Muscogee. His mother may have been a blood relative of William Weatherford.[13] Tecumseh was the fifth of eight children.[14] His parents met and married in what is now Alabama, where many Shawnees had settled after being driven out of the Ohio Country by the Iroquois in the 17th-century Beaver Wars. Around 1759, Puckeshinwau and Methoataaskee moved to the Ohio Country as part of a Shawnee effort to reunite in their traditional homeland.[15]

In 1763, the British Empire laid claim to the Ohio Country following its victory in the French and Indian War. That year, Cheeseekau took part in Pontiac's War, a pan-tribal effort to counter British control of the region.[16][17] Tecumseh was born in the peaceful decade after Pontiac's War, a time when Puckeshinwau likely became the chief of the Kispoko town on the Scioto.[18] In a 1768 treaty, the Iroquois ceded land south of the Ohio River (including present-day Kentucky) to the British, a region the Shawnee and other tribes used for hunting. Shawnees attempted to organize further resistance against colonial occupation of the region, culminating in the 1774 Battle of Point Pleasant, in which Puckeshinwau was killed. After the battle, Shawnees ceded Kentucky to the colonists.[19][20]

When the American Revolutionary War between the British and their American colonies began in 1775, many Shawnees allied themselves with the British, raiding into Kentucky with the aim of driving out American settlers.[21] Tecumseh, too young to fight, was among those forced to relocate in the face of American counterraids. In 1777, his family moved from the Scioto River to a Kispoko town on the Mad River, near present-day Springfield, Ohio.[22] General George Rogers Clark, commander of the Kentucky militia, led a major expedition into Shawnee territory in 1780. Tecumseh may have witnessed the ensuing Battle of Piqua on August 8. After the Shawnees retreated, Clark burned their villages and crops. The Shawnees relocated to the northwest, along the Great Miami River, but Clark returned in 1782 and destroyed those villages as well, forcing the Shawnees to retreat further north, near present-day Bellefontaine, Ohio.[23]

From warrior to chief edit

 
Black Hoof (Catecahassa) emerged in the 1790s as the principal spokesman for the Ohio Shawnees. Most Shawnees followed his lead rather than Tecumseh's.

After the American Revolutionary War ended in 1783, the United States claimed the lands north of the Ohio River by right of conquest; Britain had renounced its claims to the area in the Treaty of Paris. In response, Indians convened a great intertribal conference at Lower Sandusky in the summer of 1783. Speakers, most notably Joseph Brant of the Mohawk, argued that Indians must unite to hold onto their lands. They put forth a doctrine that Indian lands were held in common by all tribes, and so no further land should be ceded to the United States without the consent of all the tribes. This idea made a strong impression on Tecumseh, just fifteen years old when he attended the conference. As an adult, he would become such a well-known advocate of this policy that some mistakenly thought it had originated with him.[24] The United States, however, insisted on dealing with the tribes individually, getting each to sign separate land treaties. In January 1786, Moluntha, civil chief of the Mekoche Shawnee division, signed the Treaty of Fort Finney, surrendering most of Ohio to the Americans.[25] Later that year, Moluntha was murdered by a Kentucky militiaman, initiating a new border war.[26]

Tecumseh, now about eighteen years old, became a warrior under the tutelage of his older brother Cheeseekau, who emerged as a noted war chief.[27][28] Tecumseh participated in attacks on flatboats traveling down the Ohio River, carrying waves of immigrants into lands the Shawnees had lost. He was disturbed by the sight of prisoners being cruelly treated by the Shawnees, an early indication of his lifelong aversion to torture and cruelty, for which he would later be celebrated.[29][30] In 1788, Tecumseh, Cheeseekau and their family moved westward, relocating near Cape Girardeau, Missouri. They hoped to be free of American settlers, only to find colonists moving there as well, so they did not stay long.[31]

In late 1789 or early 1790, Tecumseh traveled south with Cheeseekau to live with the Chickamauga Cherokees near Lookout Mountain in what is now Tennessee. Some Shawnees already lived among the Chickamaugas, who were fierce opponents of U.S. expansion. Cheeseekau led about forty Shawnees in raids against colonists; Tecumseh was presumably among them.[32] During his nearly two years among the Chickamaugas, Tecumseh probably had a daughter with a Cherokee woman; the relationship was brief, and the child remained with her mother.[33]

In 1791, Tecumseh returned to the Ohio Country to take part in the Northwest Indian War as a minor leader. The Native confederacy that had been formed to fight the war was led by the Shawnee Blue Jacket, and would provide a model for the confederacy Tecumseh created years later.[34] He led a band of eight followers, including his younger brother Lalawéthika, later known as Tenskwatawa. Tecumseh missed fighting in a major Indian victory (St. Clair's defeat) on November 4 because he was hunting or scouting at the time.[35][36] The following year he participated in other skirmishes before rejoining Cheeseekau in Tennessee.[37] Tecumseh was with Cheeseekau when he was killed in an unsuccessful attack on Buchanan's Station near Nashville in 1792.[38] Tecumseh probably sought revenge for his brother's death, but the details are unknown.[39] During this time, he was somewhat known as "an eloquent speaker" among Native Americans, and this reputation would follow him for the rest of his life as he grew in prominence.[40]

Tecumseh returned to the Ohio Country at the end of 1792 and fought in several more skirmishes.[41] In 1794, he fought in the Battle of Fallen Timbers, a bitter defeat for the Indians.[42][43] The Native confederacy fell apart, especially after Blue Jacket agreed to make peace with the Americans.[44] Tecumseh did not attend the signing of the Treaty of Greenville (1795), in which about two-thirds of Ohio and portions of present-day Indiana were ceded to the United States.[45]

By 1796, Tecumseh was both the civil and war chief of a Kispoko band of about 50 warriors and 250 people.[46] His sister Tecumapease was the band's principal female chief. Tecumseh took a wife, Mamate, and had a son, Paukeesaa, born about 1796. Their marriage did not last, and Tecumapease raised Paukeesaa from the age of seven or eight.[47] Tecumseh's band moved to various locations before settling in 1798 close to Delaware Indians, along the White River near present-day Anderson, Indiana, where he lived for the next eight years.[48] He married twice more during this time. His third marriage, to White Wing, lasted until 1807.[49]

Rise of the Prophet edit

 
Tenskwatawa, Tecumseh's younger brother, founded a religious movement in 1805. (George Catlin, 1832)[50]

While Tecumseh lived along the White River, Native Americans in the region were troubled by sickness, alcoholism, poverty, the loss of land, depopulation, and the decline of their traditional way of life.[51] Several religious prophets emerged, each offering explanations and remedies for the crisis. Among these was Tecumseh's younger brother Lalawéthika, a healer in Tecumseh's village.[52] Until this time, Lalawéthika had been regarded as a misfit with little promise.[52][53] In 1805, he began preaching, drawing upon ideas espoused by earlier prophets, particularly the Delaware prophet Neolin.[54] Lalawéthika urged listeners to reject European influences, stop drinking alcohol, and discard their traditional medicine bags.[55][56] Tecumseh followed his brother's teachings by eating only Native food, wearing traditional Shawnee clothing, and not drinking alcohol.[57]

In 1806, Tecumseh and Lalawéthika, now known as the Shawnee Prophet, established a new town near the ruins of Fort Greenville (present-day Greenville, Ohio), where the 1795 Treaty of Greenville had been signed.[58][59] The Prophet's message spread widely, attracting visitors and converts from multiple tribes.[60][61] The brothers hoped to reunite the scattered Shawnees at Greenville, but they were opposed by Black Hoof, a Mekoche chief regarded by Americans as the "principal chief" of the Shawnees.[62][note 6] Black Hoof and other leaders around the Shawnee town of Wapakoneta urged Shawnees to accommodate the United States by adopting some American customs, with the goal of creating a Shawnee homeland with secure borders in northern Ohio.[64][65] The Prophet's movement represented a challenge to the Shawnee chiefs who sat on the tribal council at Wapakoneta. Most Ohio Shawnees followed Black Hoof's path and rejected the Prophet's movement.[66] Important converts who joined the movement at Greenville were Blue Jacket, the famed Shawnee war leader, and Roundhead, who became Tecumseh's close friend and ally.[67]

American settlers grew uneasy as Indians flocked to Greenville. In 1806 and 1807, Tecumseh and Blue Jacket traveled to Chillicothe, the capital of the new U.S. state of Ohio, to reassure the governor that Greenville posed no threat.[68] Rumors of war between the United States and Great Britain followed the Chesapeake incident of June 1807. To escape the rising tensions, Tecumseh and the Prophet decided to move west to a more secure location, farther from American forts and closer to potential western Indian allies.[69][70]

In 1808, Tecumseh and the Prophet established a village Americans would call Prophetstown, north of present-day Lafayette, Indiana. The Prophet adopted a new name, Tenskwatawa ("The Open Door"), meaning he was the door through which followers could reach salvation.[71][72] Like Greenville, Prophetstown attracted numerous followers, comprising Shawnees, Potawatomis, Kickapoos, Winnebagos, Sauks, Ottawas, Wyandots, and Iowas, an unprecedented variety of Natives living together.[73] Perhaps 6,000 people settled in the area, making it larger than any American city in the region.[74] Jortner (2011) argues that Prophetstown was effectively an independent city-state.[75]

At Prophetstown, Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa initially worked to maintain a peaceful coexistence with the United States.[76][77] A major turning point came in September 1809, when William Henry Harrison, governor of the Indiana Territory, negotiated the Treaty of Fort Wayne, purchasing 2.5 to 3 million acres (10,000 to 12,000 km2) of land in what is present-day Indiana and Illinois. Although many Indian leaders signed the treaty, others who used the land were deliberately excluded from the negotiations.[78][79] The treaty created widespread outrage among Indians, and, according to historian John Sugden, "put Tecumseh on the road to war" with the United States.[80]

Forming a confederacy edit

 
In a famous 1810 meeting, Tecumseh accosts William Henry Harrison when he refuses to rescind the Treaty of Fort Wayne.

Before the Treaty of Fort Wayne, Tecumseh was relatively unknown to outsiders, who usually referred to him as "the Prophet's brother."[80] Afterwards he emerged as a prominent figure as he built an intertribal confederacy to counter U.S. expansion.[81] In August 1810, Tecumseh met with William Henry Harrison at Vincennes, capital of the Indiana Territory, a standoff that became legendary.[82][83] Tecumseh demanded that Harrison rescind the Fort Wayne cession, and said he would oppose American settlement on the disputed lands. He said the chiefs who had signed the treaty would be punished, and that he was uniting the tribes to prevent further cessions.[83][84] Harrison insisted the land had been purchased fairly and that Tecumseh had no right to object because Native Americans did not own land in common. Harrison said he would send Tecumseh's demands to President James Madison, but did not expect the president to accept them. As the meeting concluded, Tecumseh said that if Madison did not rescind the Fort Wayne treaty, "you and I will have to fight it out."[85][86]

After the confrontation with Harrison, Tecumseh traveled widely to build his confederacy.[87] He went westward to recruit allies among the Potawatomis, Winnebagos, Sauks, Foxes, Kickapoos, and Missouri Shawnees.[88] In November 1810, he visited Fort Malden in Upper Canada to ask British officials for assistance in the coming war, but the British were noncommittal, urging restraint.[89][90] In May 1811, Tecumseh visited Ohio to recruit warriors among the Shawnees, Wyandots, and Senecas.[91] After returning to Prophetstown, he sent a delegation to the Iroquois in New York.[92]

In July 1811, Tecumseh again met Harrison at Vincennes. He told the governor he had amassed a confederacy of northern tribes and was heading south to do the same. For the next six months, Tecumseh traveled some 3,000 miles (4,800 km) in the south and west to recruit allies. The documentary evidence of this journey is fragmentary, and was exaggerated in folklore, but he probably met with Chickasaws, Choctaws, Muscogee, Osages, western Shawnees and Delawares, Iowas, Sauks, Foxes, Sioux, Kickapoos, and Potawatomis.[93] He was aided in his efforts by two extraordinary events: the Great Comet of 1811 and the New Madrid earthquake, which he and other Native Americans interpreted as omens that his confederacy should be supported.[94] Many rejected his overtures, especially in the south, most notably the Choctaws and Chickasaws; his most receptive southern listeners were among the Muscogee. A faction among the Muscogee, who became known as the Red Sticks, responded to Tecumseh's call to arms, contributing to the coming of the Creek War.[95][96][97]

According to Sugden (1997), Tecumseh had made a "serious mistake" by informing Harrison he would be absent from Prophetstown for an extended time.[98] Harrison wrote that Tecumseh's absence "affords a most favorable opportunity for breaking up his Confederacy."[99] In September 1811, Harrison marched toward Prophetstown with about 1,000 men.[100] In the pre-dawn hours on November 7, warriors from Prophetstown launched a surprise attack on Harrison's camp, initiating the Battle of Tippecanoe. Harrison's men held their ground, after which the Prophet's warriors withdrew and evacuated Prophetstown. The Americans burned the village the following day and returned to Vincennes.[101]

Historians have traditionally viewed the Battle of Tippecanoe as a devastating blow to Tecumseh's confederacy. According to a story recorded by Benjamin Drake ten years after the battle, Tecumseh was furious with Tenskwatawa after the battle and threatened to kill him.[102] Afterwards, it was said, the Prophet played little part in the confederacy's leadership. Modern scholarship has cast doubt on this interpretation. Dowd (1992), Cave (2002), and Jortner (2011) argued that stories of Tenskwatawa's disgrace originated with Harrison's allies and are not supported by other sources.[103][104][105] According to this view, the battle was a setback for Tenskwatawa, but he continued to serve as the confederacy's spiritual leader, with Tecumseh as its diplomat and military leader.[106][107][108]

Harrison hoped his preemptive strike would subdue Tecumseh's confederacy, but a wave of frontier violence erupted after the battle. Native Americans, many who had fought at Tippecanoe, sought revenge, killing as many as 46 Americans.[109] Tecumseh sought to restrain warriors from premature action while preparing the confederacy for future hostilities.[110] By the time the United States declared war on Great Britain in June 1812, as many as 800 warriors had gathered around the rebuilt Prophetstown. Tecumseh's Native American allies throughout the Northwest Territory numbered around 3,500 warriors.[111]

War of 1812 edit

 
Forts and battles in the Detroit region
 
Tecumseh's brief partnership with Isaac Brock is celebrated in Canadian history. (Meeting of Brock and Tecumseh, Charles William Jefferys, 1915).

In June 1812, Tecumseh arrived at Fort Malden in Amherstburg to join his cause with the British in the War of 1812. The British had few troops and scant resources in the west, so Native allies were essential to the defense of Upper Canada.[112] The British quickly recognized Tecumseh as the most influential of their Indian allies and relied upon him to direct the Native forces.[113][114] He and his warriors scouted and probed enemy positions as American General William Hull crossed into Canada and threatened to take Fort Malden. On July 25, Tecumseh's warriors skirmished with Americans north of Amherstburg, inflicting the first American fatalities of the war.[115]

Tecumseh turned his attention to cutting off Hull's supply and communication lines on the U.S. side of the border, south of Detroit. On August 5, he led 25 warriors in two successive ambushes, scattering a far superior force. Tecumseh captured Hull's outgoing mail, which revealed that the general was fearful of being cut off. On August 9, Tecumseh joined with British soldiers at the Battle of Maguaga, successfully thwarting Hull's attempt to reopen his line of communications. Two days later, Hull pulled the last of his men from Amherstburg, ending his attempt to invade Canada.[116][117]

Brock and the Siege of Detroit edit

On August 14, Major-General Isaac Brock, British commander of Upper Canada, arrived at Fort Malden and began preparations for attacking Hull at Fort Detroit. Tecumseh, upon hearing of Brock's plans, reportedly turned to his companions and said, "This is a man!"[118][119][note 7] Tecumseh and Brock "formed an immediate friendship that served to cement the alliance."[120] Brock's high esteem for Tecumseh likely contributed to a popular belief that Tecumseh was appointed a brigadier general in the British Army, though this is a myth.[121][122][123]

Tecumseh led about 530 warriors in the Siege of Detroit.[124] According to one account, Tecumseh had his men repeatedly pass through an opening in the woods to create the impression that thousands of Native Americans were outside the fort, a story that may be apocryphal.[125][note 8] To almost everyone's astonishment, Hull decided to surrender on August 16.[126][127]

Afterwards, Brock wrote of Tecumseh:

He who attracted most of my attention was a Shawnee chief, Tecumset [sic], brother to the Prophet, who for the last two years has carried on, contrary to our remonstrances, an active warfare against the United States. A more sagacious or a more gallant warrior does not I believe exist. He was the admiration of every one who conversed with him.[128][129]

Brock likely assured Tecumseh that the British would support Native American land claims. He wrote his superiors that restoration of land "fraudulently usurped" from the Native Americans should be considered in any peace treaty.[130][131] News of Detroit's capture revived British discussion of creating of an Indian barrier state to ensure the security of Upper Canada.[132][129] After his short stay in the area, Brock returned to the Niagara frontier, where he was killed in action several weeks later. Meanwhile, the British had negotiated a temporary armistice and called off further offensives.[133] Tecumseh was frustrated by the unexpected British-American armistice, which came at a time when his confederacy was attacking other American forts and needed British support. In September 1812, he and Roundhead led 600 warriors to assist in an attack on Fort Wayne, but the siege failed before they arrived.[130] Another siege against Fort Harrison also failed. Tecumseh stayed in the Prophetstown region for the remainder of 1812, coordinating Native American war efforts.[134]

Fort Meigs edit

I have with me eight hundred braves. You have an equal number in your hiding place. Come out with them and give me battle; you talked like a brave when we met at Vincennes, and I respected you; but now you hide behind logs and in the earth like a ground hog. Give me your answer.

— Tecumseh's message to William Henry Harrison at Fort Meigs[135]
 
Tecumseh (in white, arm upraised) stopping the killing of American prisoners near Fort Meigs (John Emmins, 1860)

Tecumseh returned to Amherstburg in April 1813. Meanwhile, the Americans, having suffered defeat at the Battle of Frenchtown in January 1813, were pushing back toward Detroit under the command of William Henry Harrison. Tecumseh and Roundhead led about 1,200 warriors to Fort Meigs, a recently constructed American fort along the Maumee River in Ohio. The Indians initially saw little action while British forces under General Henry Procter laid siege to the fort. Fighting outside the fort began on May 5 after the arrival of American reinforcements, who attacked the British gun batteries. Tecumseh led an attack on an American sortie from the fort, then crossed the river to help defeat a regiment of Kentucky militia.[136] The British and Native Americans had inflicted heavy casualties on the Americans outside the fort, but failed to capture it. Procter's Canadian militia and many of Tecumseh's warriors left after the battle, so Procter was compelled to lift the siege.[137][138][139]

One of the most famous incidents in Tecumseh's life occurred after the battle.[140] American prisoners had been taken to the nearby ruins of Fort Miami. When a group of Indians began killing prisoners, Tecumseh rushed in and stopped the slaughter. According to Sugden (1997), "Tecumseh's defense of the American prisoners became a cornerstone of his legend, the ultimate proof of his inherent nobility."[141] Some accounts said Tecumseh rebuked General Procter for failing to protect the prisoners, though this might not have happened.[142]

Tecumseh and Procter returned to Fort Meigs in July 1813, Tecumseh with 2,501 warriors, the largest contingent he would ever lead.[143] They had little hope of taking the strongly defended fort, but Tecumseh sought to draw the Americans into open battle. He staged a mock battle within earshot of the fort, hoping the Americans would ride out to assist. The ruse failed and the second siege of Fort Meigs was lifted.[144][145][146] Procter then led a detachment to attack Fort Stephenson on the Sandusky River, while Tecumseh went west to intercept potential American advances. Procter's attack failed and the expedition returned to Amherstburg.[147][148]

Death and aftermath edit

 
Nathaniel Currier's lithograph (c. 1846) is one of many images that portrayed Richard Mentor Johnson shooting Tecumseh.

Tecumseh hoped further offensives were forthcoming, but after the American naval victory in the Battle of Lake Erie on September 10, 1813, Procter decided to retreat from Amherstburg.[149][150] Tecumseh pleaded with Procter to stay and fight: "Our lives are in the hands of the Great Spirit. We are determined to defend our lands, and if it is his will, we wish to leave our bones upon them."[151] Procter insisted the defense of Amherstburg was untenable now that the Americans controlled Lake Erie, but he promised to make a stand at Chatham, along the Thames River.[152][153] Tecumseh reluctantly agreed. The British burned Fort Malden and public buildings in Amherstburg, then began the retreat, with William Henry Harrison's army in pursuit.[153][154]

Tecumseh arrived at Chatham to find that Procter had retreated even further upriver. Procter sent word that he had chosen to make a stand near Moraviantown. Tecumseh was angered by the change in plans, but he led a rearguard action at Chatham to slow the American advance, and was slightly wounded in the arm.[154] Many of Tecumseh's despairing allies deserted during the retreat, leaving him 500 warriors.[154] Procter and Tecumseh, outnumbered more than three-to-one, faced the Americans at the Battle of the Thames on October 5. Tecumseh positioned his men in a line of trees along the right, hoping to flank the Americans.[155] The left, commanded by Procter, collapsed almost immediately, and Procter fled the battlefield.[156][157] Colonel Richard Mentor Johnson led the American charge against the Indians. Tecumseh was killed in the fierce fighting, and the Indians dispersed. The Americans had won a decisive victory.[158][159][160]

 
The Dying Tecumseh, sculpture by Ferdinand Pettrich; marble, 1856. Description: "Grand Chief of the Western Indians. Fell in the Battle of the Thames 1813"

After the battle, American soldiers stripped and scalped Tecumseh's body. The next day, when Tecumseh's body had been positively identified, others peeled off some skin as souvenirs.[161] The location of his remains are unknown. The earliest account stated that his body had been taken by Canadians and buried at Sandwich.[162] Later stories said he was buried at the battlefield, or that his body was secretly removed and buried elsewhere.[163] According to another tradition, an Ojibwe named Oshahwahnoo, who had fought at Moraviantown, exhumed Tecumseh's body in the 1860s and buried him on St. Anne Island on the St. Clair River.[164] In 1931, these bones were examined. Tecumseh had broken a thighbone in a riding accident as a youth and thereafter walked with a limp, but neither thigh of this skeleton had been broken. Nevertheless, in 1941 the remains were buried on nearby Walpole Island in a ceremony honoring Tecumseh.[165] St-Denis (2005), in a book-length investigation of the topic, concluded that Tecumseh was likely buried on the battlefield and his remains have been lost.[166]

Initial published accounts identified Richard Mentor Johnson as having killed Tecumseh. In 1816, another account claimed a different soldier had fired the fatal shot.[167] The matter became controversial in the 1830s when Johnson was a candidate for Vice President of the United States to Martin Van Buren. Johnson's supporters promoted him as Tecumseh's killer, employing slogans such as "Rumpsey dumpsey, rumpsey dumpsey, Colonel Johnson killed Tecumseh." Johnson's opponents collected testimony contradicting this claim; numerous other possibilities were named. Sugden (1985) presented the evidence and argued that Johnson's claim was the strongest, though not conclusive.[168] Johnson became Vice President in 1837, his fame largely based on his claim to have killed Tecumseh.[169]

Tecumseh's death led to the collapse of his confederacy; except in the southern Creek War, most of his followers did little more fighting.[170][171] In the negotiations that ended the War of 1812, the British attempted to honor promises made to Tecumseh by insisting upon the creation of a Native American barrier state in the Old Northwest. The Americans refused and the matter was dropped.[172][173] The Treaty of Ghent (1814) called for Native American lands to be restored to their 1811 boundaries, something the United States had no intention of doing.[174] By the end of the 1830s, the U.S. government had compelled Shawnees still living in Ohio to sign removal treaties and move west of the Mississippi River.[175]

Legacy edit

 
Tecumseh by Hamilton MacCarthy (c. 1896), Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto

Tecumseh was widely admired in his lifetime, even by Americans who had fought against him.[176] His primary American foe, William Henry Harrison, described Tecumseh as "one of those uncommon geniuses, which spring up occasionally to produce revolutions and overturn the established order of things."[177] After his death, he became an iconic folk hero in American, Indigenous, and Canadian history.[178] For many Native Americans in the United States and First Nations people in Canada, he became a hero who transcends tribal identity.[179] Tecumseh's stature grew over the decades after his death, often at the expense of Tenskwatawa, whose religious views white writers found alien and unappealing. White writers tended to turn Tecumseh into a "secular" leader who only used his brother's religious movement for political reasons.[180][181] For many Europeans and white North Americans, he became the foremost example of the "noble savage" stereotype.[181][182]

Tecumseh is honored in Canada as a hero who played a major role in Canada's defense in the War of 1812, joining Sir Isaac Brock and Laura Secord as the best-remembered people of that war.[183] John Richardson, an important early Canadian novelist, had served with Tecumseh and idolized him. His 1828 epic poem "Tecumseh; or, The Warrior of the West" was intended to "preserve the memory of one of the noblest and most gallant spirits" in history.[184] Canadian writers such as Charles Mair (Tecumseh: A Drama, 1886) celebrated Tecumseh as a Canadian patriot, an idea reflected in numerous subsequent biographies written for Canadian school children.[184] The portrayal of Tecumseh as a Canadian patriot has been criticized for obscuring his true aim of protecting Native homelands outside of Canada.[183] Among the many things named for Tecumseh in Canada are the naval reserve unit HMCS Tecumseh and the towns of Tecumseh in Southwestern Ontario and New Tecumseth in Central Ontario.[185] In 1931, the Canadian government designated Tecumseh as a person of national historic significance.[186]

Tecumseh has long been admired in Germany, especially due to popular novels by Fritz Steuben, beginning with The Flying Arrow (1930).[187] Steuben used Tecumseh to promote Nazism, though later editions of his novels removed the Nazi elements.[188] An East German film, Tecumseh, was released in 1972.[188]

In the United States, Tecumseh became a legendary figure, the historical details of his life shrouded in mythology. According to Edmunds (2007), "the real Tecumseh has been overshadowed by a folk hero whose exploits combine the best of fact and fiction."[189] Only in the late 20th century did academic historians begin to unravel fact from fiction.[190] The fictional Tecumseh has been featured in poems, plays, and novels, movies, and outdoor dramas. Examples include George Jones's Tecumseh; or, The Prophet of the West (1844 play),[191] Mary Catherine Crowley's Love Thrives in War (1903 novel),[192] Brave Warrior (1952 film),[193] and Allan W. Eckert's A Sorrow in Our Hearts: The Life of Tecumseh (1992 novel).[192] James Alexander Thom's 1989 novel Panther in the Sky was made into a TV movie, Tecumseh: The Last Warrior (1995).[194] The outdoor drama Tecumseh! has been performed near Chillicothe, Ohio, since 1973. Written by Allan Eckert, the story features a fictional, doomed romance between Tecumseh and a white settler woman, an example of the "vanishing Indian" scenario popular with white Americans.[195][196] William Tecumseh Sherman, a Union general during the American Civil War, was also named after Tecumseh.[197]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This 1915 painting is based on a black and white engraving published by Benson John Lossing in 1868. Before Lossing's was published, no authentic portrait of Tecumseh was known to exist. Lossing said his portrait was based on a sketch of Tecumseh made in 1808 by Pierre Le Dru, a French trader in Vincennes. Lossing altered the original by putting Tecumseh in a British Army uniform, based on the erroneous belief that Tecumseh had been appointed a brigadier general.[1]
  2. ^ Tecumseh was not mentioned in contemporary historical documents for about the first 40 years of his life, so historians have reconstructed his early experiences based on later testimony.[3] Interpretations vary in the dating of early events and the differentiation between legend and history. Tecumseh first appears in historical documents around 1808.[4][5]
  3. ^ No one knows how Tecumseh himself would have pronounced his name. There are no standard Roman-alphabet orthographies for rendering the Shawnee language, and among orthographies that have been used, none employ a "c" by itself or an "é". According to Sugden, Shawnees pronounce the s in Tecumseh as th, and noted that Tecumseh's Shawnee friend James Logan gave his full name as "We-the-cumpt-te".[7] Gatschet (1895) gives the name in Shawnee as Tekámthi or Tkámthi, which is derived from níla ni tkamáthka, meaning "I cross the path or way (of an animate being)."[8]
  4. ^ In Tecumseh's time the Shawnee were organized into five tribal divisions or septs: Kispoko, Chalahgawtha (Chillicothe), Mekoche, Pekowi, and Hathawekela. Each Shawnee person also belonged to a clan (m'shoma), such as Panther, Turtle, and Turkey. Each clan had a peace chief (hokima) and war chief (neenawtooma). Each division often had a principal town named after the division. Clan leaders sat on a town council, which made important decisions by consensus. The town council sometimes appointed a clan leader to be the ceremonial hokima to speak for the town. When a clan hokima died, the town leaders selected his successor from among his sons. War chiefs were selected from successful war leaders. Shawnee chiefs had no coercive powers; they led by persuasion and example.[10]
  5. ^ In 1777, many Shawnees moved away from the Scioto River to be less exposed to American attacks, establishing a new Chillicothe on the Little Miami River (present-day Oldtown, Ohio). In the early 20th century, people mistakenly identified this newer Chillicothe as Tecumseh's birthplace, unaware the town did not exist when Tecumseh was born.[2] As a result, the official Ohio historical marker designating Tecumseh's birthplace is 50 miles (80 km) from the actual location.[12]
  6. ^ In Tecumseh's era, Shawnees lived in autonomous villages with no central government, but in the 1760s they began appointing a ceremonial leader from the Mekoche division to speak for them in negotiations with Europeans and Americans, who often mistook this leader as the Shawnee "principal chief" or "king." The ceremonial leader in Tecumseh's youth was Kisinoutha (Hard Man), who was succeeded in the 1780s by Moluntha and then Black Hoof.[63]
  7. ^ This oft-quoted comment was reported by a member of Brock's regiment who was not present; Sugden writes, "perhaps it happened."[118]
  8. ^ This incident was reported by a Canadian militia officer who was not an eyewitness; American accounts of the battle do not mention it.[125]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. facing 210, 402–03.
  2. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 22.
  3. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 413 n1.
  4. ^ Dowd 1992, p. 328.
  5. ^ Antal 1997, p. 20.
  6. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 23.
  7. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 415 n19.
  8. ^ a b Gatschet 1895, p. 91.
  9. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 14, 23.
  10. ^ Lakomäki 2014, pp. 14–20, 36.
  11. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 18–19, 22.
  12. ^ Cozzens 2020, p. 445 n14.
  13. ^ a b Sugden 1997, pp. 13–14.
  14. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 17.
  15. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 16–19.
  16. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 19.
  17. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 18.
  18. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 20–22.
  19. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 25–29.
  20. ^ Edmunds 2007, pp. 16, 18.
  21. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 30.
  22. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 30–31.
  23. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 35–36.
  24. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 42–44.
  25. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 45–46.
  26. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 46–47.
  27. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 48–49, 75.
  28. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 21.
  29. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 51–52.
  30. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 23.
  31. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 54–55.
  32. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 57–59.
  33. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 61.
  34. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 81.
  35. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 63.
  36. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 30.
  37. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 64–66.
  38. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 73–75.
  39. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 76.
  40. ^ Lawson, Don (1966). The War of 1812: America's Second War for Independence. New York: Abelard-Schuman. p. 18.
  41. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 82–86.
  42. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 87–90.
  43. ^ Edmunds 2007, pp. 36–37.
  44. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 91.
  45. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 92.
  46. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 94.
  47. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 98–99.
  48. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 100.
  49. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 102–03.
  50. ^ Edmunds 1983, p. 186.
  51. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 103–10.
  52. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 113.
  53. ^ Edmunds 2007, pp. 69–71.
  54. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 119–20.
  55. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 117–19.
  56. ^ Cave 2002, pp. 642–43.
  57. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 127–28.
  58. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 137–38.
  59. ^ Jortner 2011, p. 100.
  60. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 143–48.
  61. ^ Edmunds 2007, pp. 85–86.
  62. ^ Lakomäki 2014, p. 139.
  63. ^ Lakomäki 2014, pp. 79–80, 115, 139.
  64. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 128–31.
  65. ^ Lakomäki 2014, p. 140.
  66. ^ Lakomäki 2014, p. 147.
  67. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 131–33.
  68. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 3–8, 136.
  69. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 156–57, 160, 167.
  70. ^ Willig 1997, p. 127.
  71. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 168.
  72. ^ Cave 2002, p. 643.
  73. ^ Willig 1997, p. 128.
  74. ^ Jortner 2011, p. 145.
  75. ^ Jortner 2011, pp. 145–47.
  76. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 168–74.
  77. ^ Cave 2002, p. 647.
  78. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 182–84.
  79. ^ Owens 2007, pp. 200–06.
  80. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 187.
  81. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 111.
  82. ^ Yagelski 1995, p. 64.
  83. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 198.
  84. ^ Edmunds 2007, pp. 118–19.
  85. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 202.
  86. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 121.
  87. ^ Sugden 2000, p. 167.
  88. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 205–11.
  89. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 212–14.
  90. ^ Edmunds 1983, p. 98.
  91. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 217.
  92. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 218.
  93. ^ Sugden 1986, p. 298.
  94. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 246–51.
  95. ^ Sugden 1986, p. 299.
  96. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 262–63.
  97. ^ Edmunds 2007, pp. 133–39.
  98. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 224.
  99. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 140.
  100. ^ Edmunds 1983, pp. 104–06.
  101. ^ Edmunds 1983, pp. 111–14.
  102. ^ Dowd 1992, pp. 324–25.
  103. ^ Dowd 1992, pp. 322–24.
  104. ^ Cave 2002, pp. 657–64.
  105. ^ Jortner 2011, p. 198.
  106. ^ Dowd 1992, p. 327.
  107. ^ Cave 2002, pp. 663–67.
  108. ^ Jortner 2011, p. 199.
  109. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 258–61.
  110. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 262–71.
  111. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 273.
  112. ^ Antal 1997, pp. 20–24.
  113. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 279–83.
  114. ^ Antal 1997, p. 72.
  115. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 288–89.
  116. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 295–97.
  117. ^ Gilpin 1958, pp. 96–98, 100–04.
  118. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 300.
  119. ^ Gilpin 1958, p. 105.
  120. ^ Antal 1997, p. 92.
  121. ^ Antal 1997, p. 106 n8.
  122. ^ St-Denis 2005, pp. 132, 247.
  123. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 204.
  124. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 301.
  125. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 303.
  126. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 303–05.
  127. ^ Antal 1997, pp. 96–102.
  128. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 310–11.
  129. ^ a b Antal 1997, p. 105.
  130. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 311.
  131. ^ Antal 1997, p. 123.
  132. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 311–12.
  133. ^ Antal 1997, p. 104.
  134. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 314–17.
  135. ^ Antal 1997, pp. 222–23.
  136. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 331–34.
  137. ^ Gilpin 1958, pp. 189–90.
  138. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 338–39.
  139. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 179.
  140. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 334–35.
  141. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 338.
  142. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 337.
  143. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 347.
  144. ^ Gilpin 1958, pp. 204–05.
  145. ^ Hickey 1989, p. 136.
  146. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 347–48.
  147. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 348.
  148. ^ Gilpin 1958, pp. 206–07.
  149. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 356–57.
  150. ^ Gilpin 1958, pp. 214–16.
  151. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 360.
  152. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 360–61.
  153. ^ a b Gilpin 1958, p. 217.
  154. ^ a b c Sugden 1997, p. 363.
  155. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 369.
  156. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 372–73.
  157. ^ Antal 1997, pp. 341–44.
  158. ^ Gilpin 1958, pp. 223–26.
  159. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 374.
  160. ^ Hickey 1989, p. 139.
  161. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 379.
  162. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 380.
  163. ^ Sugden 1985, pp. 215–18.
  164. ^ Sugden 1985, p. 218.
  165. ^ Sugden 1985, p. 220.
  166. ^ St-Denis 2005, pp. 141–42.
  167. ^ Sugden 1985, p. 138.
  168. ^ Sugden 1985, pp. 136–67.
  169. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 375.
  170. ^ Edmunds 2007, pp. 197–98.
  171. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 383–86.
  172. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 383.
  173. ^ Calloway 2007, p. 153.
  174. ^ Allen 1993, p. 169.
  175. ^ Calloway 2007, pp. 155–66.
  176. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 205.
  177. ^ Edmunds 2007, pp. 205–06.
  178. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. 389–90.
  179. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 390.
  180. ^ Dowd 1992, p. 309.
  181. ^ a b Edmunds 2007, p. 207.
  182. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 396.
  183. ^ a b Goltz 1983.
  184. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 392.
  185. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 391.
  186. ^ St-Denis 2005, p. 241 n71.
  187. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 393.
  188. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 394.
  189. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 200.
  190. ^ Sugden 1997, pp. ix–x.
  191. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 397.
  192. ^ a b Sugden 1997, p. 399.
  193. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 395.
  194. ^ Sugden 1997, p. 456.
  195. ^ Edmunds 2007, p. 201.
  196. ^ Barnes 2017, pp. 218–19.
  197. ^ Andrews, Evan (November 14, 2014). "9 Things You May Not Know About William Tecumseh Sherman". History.com. Retrieved April 23, 2023.

Sources edit

  • Allen, Robert S. (1993). His Majesty's Indian Allies: British Indian Policy in the Defence of Canada 1774–1815. Toronto: Dundurn. ISBN 978-1-55488-189-5.
  • Antal, Sandy (1997). A Wampum Denied: Procter's War of 1812. Ottawa: Carleton University Press. ISBN 0-87013-443-4.
  • Barnes, Benjamin J. (2017). "Becoming our Own Storytellers: Tribal Nations Engaging with Academia". In Warren, Stephen (ed.). The Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma: Resilience Through Adversity. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. 217–27. ISBN 978-0-8061-6100-6.
  • Calloway, Colin G. (2007). The Shawnees and the War for America. New York: Viking. ISBN 978-0-670-03862-6.
  • Cave, Alfred A. (2002). "The Shawnee Prophet, Tecumseh, and Tippecanoe: A Case Study of Historical Myth-Making". Journal of the Early Republic. 22 (4): 637–673. doi:10.2307/3124761. JSTOR 3124761. Retrieved January 24, 2021.
  • Cozzens, Peter (2020). Tecumseh and the Prophet: The Shawnee Brothers Who Defied a Nation. New York: Knopf. ISBN 978-1-5247-3325-4.
  • Dowd, Gregory E. (1992). "Thinking and Believing: Nativism and Unity in the Ages of Pontiac and Tecumseh". American Indian Quarterly. 16 (3): 309–35. doi:10.2307/1185795. JSTOR 1185795. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  • Edmunds, R. David (1983). The Shawnee Prophet. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-1850-8.
  • Edmunds, R. David (2007). Tecumseh and the Quest for Indian Leadership (2nd ed.). New York: Pearson Longman. ISBN 978-0-321-04371-9.
  • Gatschet, A. S. (1895). "Tecumseh's Name". American Anthropologist. 8 (1): 91–92. doi:10.1525/aa.1895.8.1.02a00120. JSTOR 658447.
  • Gilpin, Alec R. (1958). The War of 1812 in the Old Northwest. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press. ISBN 978-1-62896-127-0.
  • Goltz, Herbert C. W. (1983). "Tecumseh". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. V (1801–1820) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  • Hickey, Donald R. (1989). The War of 1812: A Forgotten Conflict. Urbana; Chicago: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0-252-01613-0.
  • Jortner, Adam (2011). The Gods of Prophetstown: The Battle of Tippecanoe and the Holy War for the American Frontier. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-976529-4.
  • Lakomäki, Sami (2014). Gathering Together: The Shawnee People Through Diaspora and Nationhood, 1600–1870. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-18061-9.
  • Owens, Robert M. (2007). Mr. Jefferson's Hammer: William Henry Harrison and the Origins of American Indian Policy. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3842-8.
  • St-Denis, Guy (2005). Tecumseh's Bones. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0-7735-2843-7.
  • Sugden, John (1985). Tecumseh's Last Stand (hardcover ed.). Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 0-8061-1944-6.
  • Sugden, John (1986). "Early Pan-Indianism: Tecumseh's Tour of the Indian Country, 1811-1812". American Indian Quarterly. 10 (4): 273–304. doi:10.2307/1183838. JSTOR 1183838.
  • Sugden, John (1997). Tecumseh: A Life. New York: Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0-8050-4138-9.
  • Sugden, John (2000). "Tecumseh's Travels Revisited". Indiana Magazine of History. 96 (2): 150–68. JSTOR 27792243. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
  • Willig, Timothy D. (1997). "Prophetstown on the Wabash: The Native Spiritual Defense of the Old Northwest". Michigan Historical Review. 23 (2): 115–58. doi:10.2307/20173677. JSTOR 20173677. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  • Yagelski, Robert (1995). "A Rhetoric of Contact: Tecumseh and the Native American Confederacy". Rhetoric Review. 14 (1): 64–77. doi:10.1080/07350199509389052. JSTOR 465661.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Tecumseh at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Tecumseh at Wikiquote

tecumseh, other, uses, disambiguation, 1768, october, 1813, shawnee, chief, warrior, promoted, resistance, expansion, united, states, onto, native, american, lands, persuasive, orator, traveled, widely, forming, native, american, confederacy, promoting, intert. For other uses see Tecumseh disambiguation Tecumseh t ɪ ˈ k ʌ m s e s i tih KUM se see c 1768 October 5 1813 was a Shawnee chief and warrior who promoted resistance to the expansion of the United States onto Native American lands A persuasive orator Tecumseh traveled widely forming a Native American confederacy and promoting intertribal unity Even though his efforts to unite Native Americans ended with his death in the War of 1812 he became an iconic folk hero in American Indigenous and Canadian popular history TecumsehPainting of Tecumseh based on an 1808 sketch note 1 Bornc 1768 Likely near present day Chillicothe Ohio U S DiedOctober 5 1813 aged about 45 Moraviantown Upper CanadaCause of deathKilled in the Battle of the ThamesNationalityShawneeKnown forOrganizing Native American resistance to U S expansionRelativesCheeseekau brother Tenskwatawa brother Tecumseh was born in what is now Ohio at a time when the far flung Shawnees were reuniting in their Ohio Country homeland During his childhood the Shawnees lost territory to the expanding American colonies in a series of border conflicts Tecumseh s father was killed in battle against American colonists in 1774 Tecumseh was thereafter mentored by his older brother Cheeseekau a noted war chief who died fighting Americans in 1792 As a young war leader Tecumseh joined Shawnee Chief Blue Jacket s armed struggle against further American encroachment which ended in defeat at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794 and with the loss of most of Ohio in the 1795 Treaty of Greenville In 1805 Tecumseh s younger brother Tenskwatawa who came to be known as the Shawnee Prophet founded a religious movement that called upon Native Americans to reject European influences and return to a more traditional lifestyle In 1808 Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa established Prophetstown a village in present day Indiana that grew into a large multi tribal community Tecumseh traveled constantly spreading the Prophet s message and eclipsing his brother in prominence Tecumseh proclaimed that Native Americans owned their lands in common and urged tribes not to cede more territory unless all agreed His message alarmed American leaders as well as Native leaders who sought accommodation with the United States In 1811 when Tecumseh was in the South recruiting allies Americans under William Henry Harrison defeated Tenskwatawa at the Battle of Tippecanoe and destroyed Prophetstown In the War of 1812 Tecumseh joined his cause with the British recruited warriors and helped capture Detroit in August 1812 The following year he led an unsuccessful campaign against the United States in Ohio and Indiana When U S naval forces took control of Lake Erie in 1813 Tecumseh reluctantly retreated with the British into Upper Canada where American forces engaged them at the Battle of the Thames on October 5 1813 in which Tecumseh was killed His death caused his confederacy to collapse The lands he had fought to defend were eventually ceded to the U S government His legacy as one of the most celebrated Native Americans in history grew in the years after his death although details of his life have often been obscured by mythology Contents 1 Early life 2 From warrior to chief 3 Rise of the Prophet 4 Forming a confederacy 5 War of 1812 5 1 Brock and the Siege of Detroit 5 2 Fort Meigs 5 3 Death and aftermath 6 Legacy 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Citations 8 3 Sources 9 External linksEarly life editFurther information Family of Tecumseh nbsp Map of Shawnee towns in the Ohio region from 1768 to 1808 indicating where Tecumseh livedTecumseh was born in Shawnee territory in what is now Ohio between 1764 and 1771 The best evidence suggests a birthdate of around March 1768 2 note 2 The Shawnee pronunciation of his name has traditionally been rendered by non Shawnee sources as Tecumthe 6 note 3 He was born into the Panther clan of the Kispoko division of the Shawnee tribe Like most Shawnees his name indicated his clan translations of his name from the Shawnee language include I Cross the Way and Shooting Star references to a meteor associated with the Panther clan 6 Later stories claimed that Tecumseh was named after a shooting star that appeared at his birth although his father and most of his siblings as members of the Panther clan were named after the same meteor 8 9 note 4 Tecumseh was likely born in the Shawnee town of Chillicothe in the Scioto River valley near present day Chillicothe Ohio or in a nearby Kispoko village 11 note 5 Tecumseh s father Puckeshinwau was a Shawnee war chief of the Kispoko division 13 Tecumseh s mother Methoataaskee probably belonged to the Pekowi division and the Turtle clan although some traditions maintain that she was Muscogee His mother may have been a blood relative of William Weatherford 13 Tecumseh was the fifth of eight children 14 His parents met and married in what is now Alabama where many Shawnees had settled after being driven out of the Ohio Country by the Iroquois in the 17th century Beaver Wars Around 1759 Puckeshinwau and Methoataaskee moved to the Ohio Country as part of a Shawnee effort to reunite in their traditional homeland 15 In 1763 the British Empire laid claim to the Ohio Country following its victory in the French and Indian War That year Cheeseekau took part in Pontiac s War a pan tribal effort to counter British control of the region 16 17 Tecumseh was born in the peaceful decade after Pontiac s War a time when Puckeshinwau likely became the chief of the Kispoko town on the Scioto 18 In a 1768 treaty the Iroquois ceded land south of the Ohio River including present day Kentucky to the British a region the Shawnee and other tribes used for hunting Shawnees attempted to organize further resistance against colonial occupation of the region culminating in the 1774 Battle of Point Pleasant in which Puckeshinwau was killed After the battle Shawnees ceded Kentucky to the colonists 19 20 When the American Revolutionary War between the British and their American colonies began in 1775 many Shawnees allied themselves with the British raiding into Kentucky with the aim of driving out American settlers 21 Tecumseh too young to fight was among those forced to relocate in the face of American counterraids In 1777 his family moved from the Scioto River to a Kispoko town on the Mad River near present day Springfield Ohio 22 General George Rogers Clark commander of the Kentucky militia led a major expedition into Shawnee territory in 1780 Tecumseh may have witnessed the ensuing Battle of Piqua on August 8 After the Shawnees retreated Clark burned their villages and crops The Shawnees relocated to the northwest along the Great Miami River but Clark returned in 1782 and destroyed those villages as well forcing the Shawnees to retreat further north near present day Bellefontaine Ohio 23 From warrior to chief edit nbsp Black Hoof Catecahassa emerged in the 1790s as the principal spokesman for the Ohio Shawnees Most Shawnees followed his lead rather than Tecumseh s After the American Revolutionary War ended in 1783 the United States claimed the lands north of the Ohio River by right of conquest Britain had renounced its claims to the area in the Treaty of Paris In response Indians convened a great intertribal conference at Lower Sandusky in the summer of 1783 Speakers most notably Joseph Brant of the Mohawk argued that Indians must unite to hold onto their lands They put forth a doctrine that Indian lands were held in common by all tribes and so no further land should be ceded to the United States without the consent of all the tribes This idea made a strong impression on Tecumseh just fifteen years old when he attended the conference As an adult he would become such a well known advocate of this policy that some mistakenly thought it had originated with him 24 The United States however insisted on dealing with the tribes individually getting each to sign separate land treaties In January 1786 Moluntha civil chief of the Mekoche Shawnee division signed the Treaty of Fort Finney surrendering most of Ohio to the Americans 25 Later that year Moluntha was murdered by a Kentucky militiaman initiating a new border war 26 Tecumseh now about eighteen years old became a warrior under the tutelage of his older brother Cheeseekau who emerged as a noted war chief 27 28 Tecumseh participated in attacks on flatboats traveling down the Ohio River carrying waves of immigrants into lands the Shawnees had lost He was disturbed by the sight of prisoners being cruelly treated by the Shawnees an early indication of his lifelong aversion to torture and cruelty for which he would later be celebrated 29 30 In 1788 Tecumseh Cheeseekau and their family moved westward relocating near Cape Girardeau Missouri They hoped to be free of American settlers only to find colonists moving there as well so they did not stay long 31 In late 1789 or early 1790 Tecumseh traveled south with Cheeseekau to live with the Chickamauga Cherokees near Lookout Mountain in what is now Tennessee Some Shawnees already lived among the Chickamaugas who were fierce opponents of U S expansion Cheeseekau led about forty Shawnees in raids against colonists Tecumseh was presumably among them 32 During his nearly two years among the Chickamaugas Tecumseh probably had a daughter with a Cherokee woman the relationship was brief and the child remained with her mother 33 In 1791 Tecumseh returned to the Ohio Country to take part in the Northwest Indian War as a minor leader The Native confederacy that had been formed to fight the war was led by the Shawnee Blue Jacket and would provide a model for the confederacy Tecumseh created years later 34 He led a band of eight followers including his younger brother Lalawethika later known as Tenskwatawa Tecumseh missed fighting in a major Indian victory St Clair s defeat on November 4 because he was hunting or scouting at the time 35 36 The following year he participated in other skirmishes before rejoining Cheeseekau in Tennessee 37 Tecumseh was with Cheeseekau when he was killed in an unsuccessful attack on Buchanan s Station near Nashville in 1792 38 Tecumseh probably sought revenge for his brother s death but the details are unknown 39 During this time he was somewhat known as an eloquent speaker among Native Americans and this reputation would follow him for the rest of his life as he grew in prominence 40 Tecumseh returned to the Ohio Country at the end of 1792 and fought in several more skirmishes 41 In 1794 he fought in the Battle of Fallen Timbers a bitter defeat for the Indians 42 43 The Native confederacy fell apart especially after Blue Jacket agreed to make peace with the Americans 44 Tecumseh did not attend the signing of the Treaty of Greenville 1795 in which about two thirds of Ohio and portions of present day Indiana were ceded to the United States 45 By 1796 Tecumseh was both the civil and war chief of a Kispoko band of about 50 warriors and 250 people 46 His sister Tecumapease was the band s principal female chief Tecumseh took a wife Mamate and had a son Paukeesaa born about 1796 Their marriage did not last and Tecumapease raised Paukeesaa from the age of seven or eight 47 Tecumseh s band moved to various locations before settling in 1798 close to Delaware Indians along the White River near present day Anderson Indiana where he lived for the next eight years 48 He married twice more during this time His third marriage to White Wing lasted until 1807 49 Rise of the Prophet edit nbsp Tenskwatawa Tecumseh s younger brother founded a religious movement in 1805 George Catlin 1832 50 While Tecumseh lived along the White River Native Americans in the region were troubled by sickness alcoholism poverty the loss of land depopulation and the decline of their traditional way of life 51 Several religious prophets emerged each offering explanations and remedies for the crisis Among these was Tecumseh s younger brother Lalawethika a healer in Tecumseh s village 52 Until this time Lalawethika had been regarded as a misfit with little promise 52 53 In 1805 he began preaching drawing upon ideas espoused by earlier prophets particularly the Delaware prophet Neolin 54 Lalawethika urged listeners to reject European influences stop drinking alcohol and discard their traditional medicine bags 55 56 Tecumseh followed his brother s teachings by eating only Native food wearing traditional Shawnee clothing and not drinking alcohol 57 In 1806 Tecumseh and Lalawethika now known as the Shawnee Prophet established a new town near the ruins of Fort Greenville present day Greenville Ohio where the 1795 Treaty of Greenville had been signed 58 59 The Prophet s message spread widely attracting visitors and converts from multiple tribes 60 61 The brothers hoped to reunite the scattered Shawnees at Greenville but they were opposed by Black Hoof a Mekoche chief regarded by Americans as the principal chief of the Shawnees 62 note 6 Black Hoof and other leaders around the Shawnee town of Wapakoneta urged Shawnees to accommodate the United States by adopting some American customs with the goal of creating a Shawnee homeland with secure borders in northern Ohio 64 65 The Prophet s movement represented a challenge to the Shawnee chiefs who sat on the tribal council at Wapakoneta Most Ohio Shawnees followed Black Hoof s path and rejected the Prophet s movement 66 Important converts who joined the movement at Greenville were Blue Jacket the famed Shawnee war leader and Roundhead who became Tecumseh s close friend and ally 67 American settlers grew uneasy as Indians flocked to Greenville In 1806 and 1807 Tecumseh and Blue Jacket traveled to Chillicothe the capital of the new U S state of Ohio to reassure the governor that Greenville posed no threat 68 Rumors of war between the United States and Great Britain followed the Chesapeake incident of June 1807 To escape the rising tensions Tecumseh and the Prophet decided to move west to a more secure location farther from American forts and closer to potential western Indian allies 69 70 In 1808 Tecumseh and the Prophet established a village Americans would call Prophetstown north of present day Lafayette Indiana The Prophet adopted a new name Tenskwatawa The Open Door meaning he was the door through which followers could reach salvation 71 72 Like Greenville Prophetstown attracted numerous followers comprising Shawnees Potawatomis Kickapoos Winnebagos Sauks Ottawas Wyandots and Iowas an unprecedented variety of Natives living together 73 Perhaps 6 000 people settled in the area making it larger than any American city in the region 74 Jortner 2011 argues that Prophetstown was effectively an independent city state 75 At Prophetstown Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa initially worked to maintain a peaceful coexistence with the United States 76 77 A major turning point came in September 1809 when William Henry Harrison governor of the Indiana Territory negotiated the Treaty of Fort Wayne purchasing 2 5 to 3 million acres 10 000 to 12 000 km2 of land in what is present day Indiana and Illinois Although many Indian leaders signed the treaty others who used the land were deliberately excluded from the negotiations 78 79 The treaty created widespread outrage among Indians and according to historian John Sugden put Tecumseh on the road to war with the United States 80 Forming a confederacy editMain article Tecumseh s confederacy nbsp In a famous 1810 meeting Tecumseh accosts William Henry Harrison when he refuses to rescind the Treaty of Fort Wayne Before the Treaty of Fort Wayne Tecumseh was relatively unknown to outsiders who usually referred to him as the Prophet s brother 80 Afterwards he emerged as a prominent figure as he built an intertribal confederacy to counter U S expansion 81 In August 1810 Tecumseh met with William Henry Harrison at Vincennes capital of the Indiana Territory a standoff that became legendary 82 83 Tecumseh demanded that Harrison rescind the Fort Wayne cession and said he would oppose American settlement on the disputed lands He said the chiefs who had signed the treaty would be punished and that he was uniting the tribes to prevent further cessions 83 84 Harrison insisted the land had been purchased fairly and that Tecumseh had no right to object because Native Americans did not own land in common Harrison said he would send Tecumseh s demands to President James Madison but did not expect the president to accept them As the meeting concluded Tecumseh said that if Madison did not rescind the Fort Wayne treaty you and I will have to fight it out 85 86 After the confrontation with Harrison Tecumseh traveled widely to build his confederacy 87 He went westward to recruit allies among the Potawatomis Winnebagos Sauks Foxes Kickapoos and Missouri Shawnees 88 In November 1810 he visited Fort Malden in Upper Canada to ask British officials for assistance in the coming war but the British were noncommittal urging restraint 89 90 In May 1811 Tecumseh visited Ohio to recruit warriors among the Shawnees Wyandots and Senecas 91 After returning to Prophetstown he sent a delegation to the Iroquois in New York 92 In July 1811 Tecumseh again met Harrison at Vincennes He told the governor he had amassed a confederacy of northern tribes and was heading south to do the same For the next six months Tecumseh traveled some 3 000 miles 4 800 km in the south and west to recruit allies The documentary evidence of this journey is fragmentary and was exaggerated in folklore but he probably met with Chickasaws Choctaws Muscogee Osages western Shawnees and Delawares Iowas Sauks Foxes Sioux Kickapoos and Potawatomis 93 He was aided in his efforts by two extraordinary events the Great Comet of 1811 and the New Madrid earthquake which he and other Native Americans interpreted as omens that his confederacy should be supported 94 Many rejected his overtures especially in the south most notably the Choctaws and Chickasaws his most receptive southern listeners were among the Muscogee A faction among the Muscogee who became known as the Red Sticks responded to Tecumseh s call to arms contributing to the coming of the Creek War 95 96 97 According to Sugden 1997 Tecumseh had made a serious mistake by informing Harrison he would be absent from Prophetstown for an extended time 98 Harrison wrote that Tecumseh s absence affords a most favorable opportunity for breaking up his Confederacy 99 In September 1811 Harrison marched toward Prophetstown with about 1 000 men 100 In the pre dawn hours on November 7 warriors from Prophetstown launched a surprise attack on Harrison s camp initiating the Battle of Tippecanoe Harrison s men held their ground after which the Prophet s warriors withdrew and evacuated Prophetstown The Americans burned the village the following day and returned to Vincennes 101 Historians have traditionally viewed the Battle of Tippecanoe as a devastating blow to Tecumseh s confederacy According to a story recorded by Benjamin Drake ten years after the battle Tecumseh was furious with Tenskwatawa after the battle and threatened to kill him 102 Afterwards it was said the Prophet played little part in the confederacy s leadership Modern scholarship has cast doubt on this interpretation Dowd 1992 Cave 2002 and Jortner 2011 argued that stories of Tenskwatawa s disgrace originated with Harrison s allies and are not supported by other sources 103 104 105 According to this view the battle was a setback for Tenskwatawa but he continued to serve as the confederacy s spiritual leader with Tecumseh as its diplomat and military leader 106 107 108 Harrison hoped his preemptive strike would subdue Tecumseh s confederacy but a wave of frontier violence erupted after the battle Native Americans many who had fought at Tippecanoe sought revenge killing as many as 46 Americans 109 Tecumseh sought to restrain warriors from premature action while preparing the confederacy for future hostilities 110 By the time the United States declared war on Great Britain in June 1812 as many as 800 warriors had gathered around the rebuilt Prophetstown Tecumseh s Native American allies throughout the Northwest Territory numbered around 3 500 warriors 111 War of 1812 edit nbsp Forts and battles in the Detroit region nbsp Tecumseh s brief partnership with Isaac Brock is celebrated in Canadian history Meeting of Brock and Tecumseh Charles William Jefferys 1915 In June 1812 Tecumseh arrived at Fort Malden in Amherstburg to join his cause with the British in the War of 1812 The British had few troops and scant resources in the west so Native allies were essential to the defense of Upper Canada 112 The British quickly recognized Tecumseh as the most influential of their Indian allies and relied upon him to direct the Native forces 113 114 He and his warriors scouted and probed enemy positions as American General William Hull crossed into Canada and threatened to take Fort Malden On July 25 Tecumseh s warriors skirmished with Americans north of Amherstburg inflicting the first American fatalities of the war 115 Tecumseh turned his attention to cutting off Hull s supply and communication lines on the U S side of the border south of Detroit On August 5 he led 25 warriors in two successive ambushes scattering a far superior force Tecumseh captured Hull s outgoing mail which revealed that the general was fearful of being cut off On August 9 Tecumseh joined with British soldiers at the Battle of Maguaga successfully thwarting Hull s attempt to reopen his line of communications Two days later Hull pulled the last of his men from Amherstburg ending his attempt to invade Canada 116 117 Brock and the Siege of Detroit edit On August 14 Major General Isaac Brock British commander of Upper Canada arrived at Fort Malden and began preparations for attacking Hull at Fort Detroit Tecumseh upon hearing of Brock s plans reportedly turned to his companions and said This is a man 118 119 note 7 Tecumseh and Brock formed an immediate friendship that served to cement the alliance 120 Brock s high esteem for Tecumseh likely contributed to a popular belief that Tecumseh was appointed a brigadier general in the British Army though this is a myth 121 122 123 Tecumseh led about 530 warriors in the Siege of Detroit 124 According to one account Tecumseh had his men repeatedly pass through an opening in the woods to create the impression that thousands of Native Americans were outside the fort a story that may be apocryphal 125 note 8 To almost everyone s astonishment Hull decided to surrender on August 16 126 127 Afterwards Brock wrote of Tecumseh He who attracted most of my attention was a Shawnee chief Tecumset sic brother to the Prophet who for the last two years has carried on contrary to our remonstrances an active warfare against the United States A more sagacious or a more gallant warrior does not I believe exist He was the admiration of every one who conversed with him 128 129 Brock likely assured Tecumseh that the British would support Native American land claims He wrote his superiors that restoration of land fraudulently usurped from the Native Americans should be considered in any peace treaty 130 131 News of Detroit s capture revived British discussion of creating of an Indian barrier state to ensure the security of Upper Canada 132 129 After his short stay in the area Brock returned to the Niagara frontier where he was killed in action several weeks later Meanwhile the British had negotiated a temporary armistice and called off further offensives 133 Tecumseh was frustrated by the unexpected British American armistice which came at a time when his confederacy was attacking other American forts and needed British support In September 1812 he and Roundhead led 600 warriors to assist in an attack on Fort Wayne but the siege failed before they arrived 130 Another siege against Fort Harrison also failed Tecumseh stayed in the Prophetstown region for the remainder of 1812 coordinating Native American war efforts 134 Fort Meigs edit I have with me eight hundred braves You have an equal number in your hiding place Come out with them and give me battle you talked like a brave when we met at Vincennes and I respected you but now you hide behind logs and in the earth like a ground hog Give me your answer Tecumseh s message to William Henry Harrison at Fort Meigs 135 nbsp Tecumseh in white arm upraised stopping the killing of American prisoners near Fort Meigs John Emmins 1860 Tecumseh returned to Amherstburg in April 1813 Meanwhile the Americans having suffered defeat at the Battle of Frenchtown in January 1813 were pushing back toward Detroit under the command of William Henry Harrison Tecumseh and Roundhead led about 1 200 warriors to Fort Meigs a recently constructed American fort along the Maumee River in Ohio The Indians initially saw little action while British forces under General Henry Procter laid siege to the fort Fighting outside the fort began on May 5 after the arrival of American reinforcements who attacked the British gun batteries Tecumseh led an attack on an American sortie from the fort then crossed the river to help defeat a regiment of Kentucky militia 136 The British and Native Americans had inflicted heavy casualties on the Americans outside the fort but failed to capture it Procter s Canadian militia and many of Tecumseh s warriors left after the battle so Procter was compelled to lift the siege 137 138 139 One of the most famous incidents in Tecumseh s life occurred after the battle 140 American prisoners had been taken to the nearby ruins of Fort Miami When a group of Indians began killing prisoners Tecumseh rushed in and stopped the slaughter According to Sugden 1997 Tecumseh s defense of the American prisoners became a cornerstone of his legend the ultimate proof of his inherent nobility 141 Some accounts said Tecumseh rebuked General Procter for failing to protect the prisoners though this might not have happened 142 Tecumseh and Procter returned to Fort Meigs in July 1813 Tecumseh with 2 501 warriors the largest contingent he would ever lead 143 They had little hope of taking the strongly defended fort but Tecumseh sought to draw the Americans into open battle He staged a mock battle within earshot of the fort hoping the Americans would ride out to assist The ruse failed and the second siege of Fort Meigs was lifted 144 145 146 Procter then led a detachment to attack Fort Stephenson on the Sandusky River while Tecumseh went west to intercept potential American advances Procter s attack failed and the expedition returned to Amherstburg 147 148 Death and aftermath edit nbsp Nathaniel Currier s lithograph c 1846 is one of many images that portrayed Richard Mentor Johnson shooting Tecumseh Tecumseh hoped further offensives were forthcoming but after the American naval victory in the Battle of Lake Erie on September 10 1813 Procter decided to retreat from Amherstburg 149 150 Tecumseh pleaded with Procter to stay and fight Our lives are in the hands of the Great Spirit We are determined to defend our lands and if it is his will we wish to leave our bones upon them 151 Procter insisted the defense of Amherstburg was untenable now that the Americans controlled Lake Erie but he promised to make a stand at Chatham along the Thames River 152 153 Tecumseh reluctantly agreed The British burned Fort Malden and public buildings in Amherstburg then began the retreat with William Henry Harrison s army in pursuit 153 154 Tecumseh arrived at Chatham to find that Procter had retreated even further upriver Procter sent word that he had chosen to make a stand near Moraviantown Tecumseh was angered by the change in plans but he led a rearguard action at Chatham to slow the American advance and was slightly wounded in the arm 154 Many of Tecumseh s despairing allies deserted during the retreat leaving him 500 warriors 154 Procter and Tecumseh outnumbered more than three to one faced the Americans at the Battle of the Thames on October 5 Tecumseh positioned his men in a line of trees along the right hoping to flank the Americans 155 The left commanded by Procter collapsed almost immediately and Procter fled the battlefield 156 157 Colonel Richard Mentor Johnson led the American charge against the Indians Tecumseh was killed in the fierce fighting and the Indians dispersed The Americans had won a decisive victory 158 159 160 nbsp The Dying Tecumseh sculpture by Ferdinand Pettrich marble 1856 Description Grand Chief of the Western Indians Fell in the Battle of the Thames 1813 After the battle American soldiers stripped and scalped Tecumseh s body The next day when Tecumseh s body had been positively identified others peeled off some skin as souvenirs 161 The location of his remains are unknown The earliest account stated that his body had been taken by Canadians and buried at Sandwich 162 Later stories said he was buried at the battlefield or that his body was secretly removed and buried elsewhere 163 According to another tradition an Ojibwe named Oshahwahnoo who had fought at Moraviantown exhumed Tecumseh s body in the 1860s and buried him on St Anne Island on the St Clair River 164 In 1931 these bones were examined Tecumseh had broken a thighbone in a riding accident as a youth and thereafter walked with a limp but neither thigh of this skeleton had been broken Nevertheless in 1941 the remains were buried on nearby Walpole Island in a ceremony honoring Tecumseh 165 St Denis 2005 in a book length investigation of the topic concluded that Tecumseh was likely buried on the battlefield and his remains have been lost 166 Initial published accounts identified Richard Mentor Johnson as having killed Tecumseh In 1816 another account claimed a different soldier had fired the fatal shot 167 The matter became controversial in the 1830s when Johnson was a candidate for Vice President of the United States to Martin Van Buren Johnson s supporters promoted him as Tecumseh s killer employing slogans such as Rumpsey dumpsey rumpsey dumpsey Colonel Johnson killed Tecumseh Johnson s opponents collected testimony contradicting this claim numerous other possibilities were named Sugden 1985 presented the evidence and argued that Johnson s claim was the strongest though not conclusive 168 Johnson became Vice President in 1837 his fame largely based on his claim to have killed Tecumseh 169 Tecumseh s death led to the collapse of his confederacy except in the southern Creek War most of his followers did little more fighting 170 171 In the negotiations that ended the War of 1812 the British attempted to honor promises made to Tecumseh by insisting upon the creation of a Native American barrier state in the Old Northwest The Americans refused and the matter was dropped 172 173 The Treaty of Ghent 1814 called for Native American lands to be restored to their 1811 boundaries something the United States had no intention of doing 174 By the end of the 1830s the U S government had compelled Shawnees still living in Ohio to sign removal treaties and move west of the Mississippi River 175 Legacy editSee also List of memorials to Tecumseh nbsp Tecumseh by Hamilton MacCarthy c 1896 Royal Ontario Museum TorontoTecumseh was widely admired in his lifetime even by Americans who had fought against him 176 His primary American foe William Henry Harrison described Tecumseh as one of those uncommon geniuses which spring up occasionally to produce revolutions and overturn the established order of things 177 After his death he became an iconic folk hero in American Indigenous and Canadian history 178 For many Native Americans in the United States and First Nations people in Canada he became a hero who transcends tribal identity 179 Tecumseh s stature grew over the decades after his death often at the expense of Tenskwatawa whose religious views white writers found alien and unappealing White writers tended to turn Tecumseh into a secular leader who only used his brother s religious movement for political reasons 180 181 For many Europeans and white North Americans he became the foremost example of the noble savage stereotype 181 182 Tecumseh is honored in Canada as a hero who played a major role in Canada s defense in the War of 1812 joining Sir Isaac Brock and Laura Secord as the best remembered people of that war 183 John Richardson an important early Canadian novelist had served with Tecumseh and idolized him His 1828 epic poem Tecumseh or The Warrior of the West was intended to preserve the memory of one of the noblest and most gallant spirits in history 184 Canadian writers such as Charles Mair Tecumseh A Drama 1886 celebrated Tecumseh as a Canadian patriot an idea reflected in numerous subsequent biographies written for Canadian school children 184 The portrayal of Tecumseh as a Canadian patriot has been criticized for obscuring his true aim of protecting Native homelands outside of Canada 183 Among the many things named for Tecumseh in Canada are the naval reserve unit HMCS Tecumseh and the towns of Tecumseh in Southwestern Ontario and New Tecumseth in Central Ontario 185 In 1931 the Canadian government designated Tecumseh as a person of national historic significance 186 Tecumseh has long been admired in Germany especially due to popular novels by Fritz Steuben beginning with The Flying Arrow 1930 187 Steuben used Tecumseh to promote Nazism though later editions of his novels removed the Nazi elements 188 An East German film Tecumseh was released in 1972 188 In the United States Tecumseh became a legendary figure the historical details of his life shrouded in mythology According to Edmunds 2007 the real Tecumseh has been overshadowed by a folk hero whose exploits combine the best of fact and fiction 189 Only in the late 20th century did academic historians begin to unravel fact from fiction 190 The fictional Tecumseh has been featured in poems plays and novels movies and outdoor dramas Examples include George Jones s Tecumseh or The Prophet of the West 1844 play 191 Mary Catherine Crowley s Love Thrives in War 1903 novel 192 Brave Warrior 1952 film 193 and Allan W Eckert s A Sorrow in Our Hearts The Life of Tecumseh 1992 novel 192 James Alexander Thom s 1989 novel Panther in the Sky was made into a TV movie Tecumseh The Last Warrior 1995 194 The outdoor drama Tecumseh has been performed near Chillicothe Ohio since 1973 Written by Allan Eckert the story features a fictional doomed romance between Tecumseh and a white settler woman an example of the vanishing Indian scenario popular with white Americans 195 196 William Tecumseh Sherman a Union general during the American Civil War was also named after Tecumseh 197 See also editCurse of TippecanoeReferences editNotes edit This 1915 painting is based on a black and white engraving published by Benson John Lossing in 1868 Before Lossing s was published no authentic portrait of Tecumseh was known to exist Lossing said his portrait was based on a sketch of Tecumseh made in 1808 by Pierre Le Dru a French trader in Vincennes Lossing altered the original by putting Tecumseh in a British Army uniform based on the erroneous belief that Tecumseh had been appointed a brigadier general 1 Tecumseh was not mentioned in contemporary historical documents for about the first 40 years of his life so historians have reconstructed his early experiences based on later testimony 3 Interpretations vary in the dating of early events and the differentiation between legend and history Tecumseh first appears in historical documents around 1808 4 5 No one knows how Tecumseh himself would have pronounced his name There are no standard Roman alphabet orthographies for rendering the Shawnee language and among orthographies that have been used none employ a c by itself or an e According to Sugden Shawnees pronounce the s in Tecumseh as th and noted that Tecumseh s Shawnee friend James Logan gave his full name as We the cumpt te 7 Gatschet 1895 gives the name in Shawnee as Tekamthi or Tkamthi which is derived from nila ni tkamathka meaning I cross the path or way of an animate being 8 In Tecumseh s time the Shawnee were organized into five tribal divisions or septs Kispoko Chalahgawtha Chillicothe Mekoche Pekowi and Hathawekela Each Shawnee person also belonged to a clan m shoma such as Panther Turtle and Turkey Each clan had a peace chief hokima and war chief neenawtooma Each division often had a principal town named after the division Clan leaders sat on a town council which made important decisions by consensus The town council sometimes appointed a clan leader to be the ceremonial hokima to speak for the town When a clan hokima died the town leaders selected his successor from among his sons War chiefs were selected from successful war leaders Shawnee chiefs had no coercive powers they led by persuasion and example 10 In 1777 many Shawnees moved away from the Scioto River to be less exposed to American attacks establishing a new Chillicothe on the Little Miami River present day Oldtown Ohio In the early 20th century people mistakenly identified this newer Chillicothe as Tecumseh s birthplace unaware the town did not exist when Tecumseh was born 2 As a result the official Ohio historical marker designating Tecumseh s birthplace is 50 miles 80 km from the actual location 12 In Tecumseh s era Shawnees lived in autonomous villages with no central government but in the 1760s they began appointing a ceremonial leader from the Mekoche division to speak for them in negotiations with Europeans and Americans who often mistook this leader as the Shawnee principal chief or king The ceremonial leader in Tecumseh s youth was Kisinoutha Hard Man who was succeeded in the 1780s by Moluntha and then Black Hoof 63 This oft quoted comment was reported by a member of Brock s regiment who was not present Sugden writes perhaps it happened 118 This incident was reported by a Canadian militia officer who was not an eyewitness American accounts of the battle do not mention it 125 Citations edit Sugden 1997 pp facing 210 402 03 a b Sugden 1997 p 22 Sugden 1997 p 413 n1 Dowd 1992 p 328 Antal 1997 p 20 a b Sugden 1997 p 23 Sugden 1997 p 415 n19 a b Gatschet 1895 p 91 Sugden 1997 pp 14 23 Lakomaki 2014 pp 14 20 36 Sugden 1997 pp 18 19 22 Cozzens 2020 p 445 n14 a b Sugden 1997 pp 13 14 Edmunds 2007 p 17 Sugden 1997 pp 16 19 Sugden 1997 p 19 Edmunds 2007 p 18 Sugden 1997 pp 20 22 Sugden 1997 pp 25 29 Edmunds 2007 pp 16 18 Sugden 1997 p 30 Sugden 1997 pp 30 31 Sugden 1997 pp 35 36 Sugden 1997 pp 42 44 Sugden 1997 pp 45 46 Sugden 1997 pp 46 47 Sugden 1997 pp 48 49 75 Edmunds 2007 p 21 Sugden 1997 pp 51 52 Edmunds 2007 p 23 Sugden 1997 pp 54 55 Sugden 1997 pp 57 59 Sugden 1997 p 61 Sugden 1997 p 81 Sugden 1997 p 63 Edmunds 2007 p 30 Sugden 1997 pp 64 66 Sugden 1997 pp 73 75 Sugden 1997 p 76 Lawson Don 1966 The War of 1812 America s Second War for Independence New York Abelard Schuman p 18 Sugden 1997 pp 82 86 Sugden 1997 pp 87 90 Edmunds 2007 pp 36 37 Sugden 1997 p 91 Sugden 1997 p 92 Sugden 1997 p 94 Sugden 1997 pp 98 99 Sugden 1997 p 100 Sugden 1997 pp 102 03 Edmunds 1983 p 186 Sugden 1997 pp 103 10 a b Sugden 1997 p 113 Edmunds 2007 pp 69 71 Sugden 1997 pp 119 20 Sugden 1997 pp 117 19 Cave 2002 pp 642 43 Sugden 1997 pp 127 28 Sugden 1997 pp 137 38 Jortner 2011 p 100 Sugden 1997 pp 143 48 Edmunds 2007 pp 85 86 Lakomaki 2014 p 139 Lakomaki 2014 pp 79 80 115 139 Sugden 1997 pp 128 31 Lakomaki 2014 p 140 Lakomaki 2014 p 147 Sugden 1997 pp 131 33 Sugden 1997 pp 3 8 136 Sugden 1997 pp 156 57 160 167 Willig 1997 p 127 Sugden 1997 p 168 Cave 2002 p 643 Willig 1997 p 128 Jortner 2011 p 145 Jortner 2011 pp 145 47 Sugden 1997 pp 168 74 Cave 2002 p 647 Sugden 1997 pp 182 84 Owens 2007 pp 200 06 a b Sugden 1997 p 187 Edmunds 2007 p 111 Yagelski 1995 p 64 a b Sugden 1997 p 198 Edmunds 2007 pp 118 19 Sugden 1997 p 202 Edmunds 2007 p 121 Sugden 2000 p 167 Sugden 1997 pp 205 11 Sugden 1997 pp 212 14 Edmunds 1983 p 98 Sugden 1997 p 217 Sugden 1997 p 218 Sugden 1986 p 298 Sugden 1997 pp 246 51 Sugden 1986 p 299 Sugden 1997 pp 262 63 Edmunds 2007 pp 133 39 Sugden 1997 p 224 Edmunds 2007 p 140 Edmunds 1983 pp 104 06 Edmunds 1983 pp 111 14 Dowd 1992 pp 324 25 Dowd 1992 pp 322 24 Cave 2002 pp 657 64 Jortner 2011 p 198 Dowd 1992 p 327 Cave 2002 pp 663 67 Jortner 2011 p 199 Sugden 1997 pp 258 61 Sugden 1997 pp 262 71 Sugden 1997 p 273 Antal 1997 pp 20 24 Sugden 1997 pp 279 83 Antal 1997 p 72 Sugden 1997 pp 288 89 Sugden 1997 pp 295 97 Gilpin 1958 pp 96 98 100 04 a b Sugden 1997 p 300 Gilpin 1958 p 105 Antal 1997 p 92 Antal 1997 p 106 n8 St Denis 2005 pp 132 247 Edmunds 2007 p 204 Sugden 1997 p 301 a b Sugden 1997 p 303 Sugden 1997 pp 303 05 Antal 1997 pp 96 102 Sugden 1997 pp 310 11 a b Antal 1997 p 105 a b Sugden 1997 p 311 Antal 1997 p 123 Sugden 1997 pp 311 12 Antal 1997 p 104 Sugden 1997 pp 314 17 Antal 1997 pp 222 23 Sugden 1997 pp 331 34 Gilpin 1958 pp 189 90 Sugden 1997 pp 338 39 Edmunds 2007 p 179 Sugden 1997 pp 334 35 Sugden 1997 p 338 Sugden 1997 p 337 Sugden 1997 p 347 Gilpin 1958 pp 204 05 Hickey 1989 p 136 Sugden 1997 pp 347 48 Sugden 1997 p 348 Gilpin 1958 pp 206 07 Sugden 1997 pp 356 57 Gilpin 1958 pp 214 16 Sugden 1997 p 360 Sugden 1997 pp 360 61 a b Gilpin 1958 p 217 a b c Sugden 1997 p 363 Sugden 1997 p 369 Sugden 1997 pp 372 73 Antal 1997 pp 341 44 Gilpin 1958 pp 223 26 Sugden 1997 p 374 Hickey 1989 p 139 Sugden 1997 p 379 Sugden 1997 p 380 Sugden 1985 pp 215 18 Sugden 1985 p 218 Sugden 1985 p 220 St Denis 2005 pp 141 42 Sugden 1985 p 138 Sugden 1985 pp 136 67 Sugden 1997 p 375 Edmunds 2007 pp 197 98 Sugden 1997 pp 383 86 Sugden 1997 p 383 Calloway 2007 p 153 Allen 1993 p 169 Calloway 2007 pp 155 66 Edmunds 2007 p 205 Edmunds 2007 pp 205 06 Sugden 1997 pp 389 90 Sugden 1997 p 390 Dowd 1992 p 309 a b Edmunds 2007 p 207 Sugden 1997 p 396 a b Goltz 1983 a b Sugden 1997 p 392 Sugden 1997 p 391 St Denis 2005 p 241 n71 Sugden 1997 p 393 a b Sugden 1997 p 394 Edmunds 2007 p 200 Sugden 1997 pp ix x Sugden 1997 p 397 a b Sugden 1997 p 399 Sugden 1997 p 395 Sugden 1997 p 456 Edmunds 2007 p 201 Barnes 2017 pp 218 19 Andrews Evan November 14 2014 9 Things You May Not Know About William Tecumseh Sherman History com Retrieved April 23 2023 Sources edit Allen Robert S 1993 His Majesty s Indian Allies British Indian Policy in the Defence of Canada 1774 1815 Toronto Dundurn ISBN 978 1 55488 189 5 Antal Sandy 1997 A Wampum Denied Procter s War of 1812 Ottawa Carleton University Press ISBN 0 87013 443 4 Barnes Benjamin J 2017 Becoming our Own Storytellers Tribal Nations Engaging with Academia In Warren Stephen ed The Eastern Shawnee Tribe of Oklahoma Resilience Through Adversity Norman University of Oklahoma Press pp 217 27 ISBN 978 0 8061 6100 6 Calloway Colin G 2007 The Shawnees and the War for America New York Viking ISBN 978 0 670 03862 6 Cave Alfred A 2002 The Shawnee Prophet Tecumseh and Tippecanoe A Case Study of Historical Myth Making Journal of the Early Republic 22 4 637 673 doi 10 2307 3124761 JSTOR 3124761 Retrieved January 24 2021 Cozzens Peter 2020 Tecumseh and the Prophet The Shawnee Brothers Who Defied a Nation New York Knopf ISBN 978 1 5247 3325 4 Dowd Gregory E 1992 Thinking and Believing Nativism and Unity in the Ages of Pontiac and Tecumseh American Indian Quarterly 16 3 309 35 doi 10 2307 1185795 JSTOR 1185795 Retrieved January 25 2021 Edmunds R David 1983 The Shawnee Prophet Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 1850 8 Edmunds R David 2007 Tecumseh and the Quest for Indian Leadership 2nd ed New York Pearson Longman ISBN 978 0 321 04371 9 Gatschet A S 1895 Tecumseh s Name American Anthropologist 8 1 91 92 doi 10 1525 aa 1895 8 1 02a00120 JSTOR 658447 Gilpin Alec R 1958 The War of 1812 in the Old Northwest East Lansing Michigan State University Press ISBN 978 1 62896 127 0 Goltz Herbert C W 1983 Tecumseh In Halpenny Francess G ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol V 1801 1820 online ed University of Toronto Press Hickey Donald R 1989 The War of 1812 A Forgotten Conflict Urbana Chicago University of Illinois Press ISBN 0 252 01613 0 Jortner Adam 2011 The Gods of Prophetstown The Battle of Tippecanoe and the Holy War for the American Frontier Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 976529 4 Lakomaki Sami 2014 Gathering Together The Shawnee People Through Diaspora and Nationhood 1600 1870 New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18061 9 Owens Robert M 2007 Mr Jefferson s Hammer William Henry Harrison and the Origins of American Indian Policy Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3842 8 St Denis Guy 2005 Tecumseh s Bones Montreal McGill Queen s University Press ISBN 978 0 7735 2843 7 Sugden John 1985 Tecumseh s Last Stand hardcover ed Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0 8061 1944 6 Sugden John 1986 Early Pan Indianism Tecumseh s Tour of the Indian Country 1811 1812 American Indian Quarterly 10 4 273 304 doi 10 2307 1183838 JSTOR 1183838 Sugden John 1997 Tecumseh A Life New York Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0 8050 4138 9 Sugden John 2000 Tecumseh s Travels Revisited Indiana Magazine of History 96 2 150 68 JSTOR 27792243 Retrieved January 21 2021 Willig Timothy D 1997 Prophetstown on the Wabash The Native Spiritual Defense of the Old Northwest Michigan Historical Review 23 2 115 58 doi 10 2307 20173677 JSTOR 20173677 Retrieved January 25 2021 Yagelski Robert 1995 A Rhetoric of Contact Tecumseh and the Native American Confederacy Rhetoric Review 14 1 64 77 doi 10 1080 07350199509389052 JSTOR 465661 External links edit nbsp Media related to Tecumseh at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to Tecumseh at Wikiquote Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tecumseh amp oldid 1201505157, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.