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The first episode drops March 4th.
Listen on the NPR app. This is America in pursuit. A limited run series from throughline and NPR. I'm Romteen Adablui. Each week, we bring new stories about life, liberty,
and the pursuit of happiness in the US that began 250 years ago. Up until this point in the series, we've been talking about the birth of the United States as a nation,
“and how different groups of people pushed for the expansion of what it meant to be American.”
But the reality is, native people inhabited the land that we now call the United States
long before Europeans set foot on North America, and as the US continued to grow and expand. Native peoples had different experiences and relationships with the strangers that arrived on their shores. Today on the show, NPR reporters Sequoia Cario, and throughline producer Ania Steinberg,
bring us the story of the Ojibwe people, and how in the face of US-Westward expansion, they created a nation to try to preserve their land and way of life. That story after a quick break. The story goes back over a thousand years
to how Ojibwe people first came to the Great Lakes region.
It feels different when your family's been buried in the same place longer than America has been a country. This is Anton Troyer. He's a professor of Ojibwe at Bemidji State University. For him, the story of how the Ojibwe people ended up calling these lakes home is a personal one. At one point in time, just a couple of thousand years ago, we lived on the East Coast, Atlantic Coast, which was a land abundant in small game, big game, well-suited for Indigenous agriculture,
lots of fish in the sea, lots of fish in the lakes. We can track the beginning of Ojibwe people to algonquian language tribes from the East Coast. We had profits who appeared and said, "Move west to the land where food grows on water was the reference to the wild rice, and there was a long migration, and it was a long slow process." For centuries, Ojibwe people kept moving.
And as a result, we ended up spanning a huge geography thousands of miles. Until they made it to the Great Lakes region. But even then, movement was still a part of life. Because of this persistent migration pattern over a long period of time, if someone got too bossy or even just got too much influence, someone else was usually moving down the river and saying they're not my chief.
So Ojibwe culture tended to be very tolerant of cultural variation, but very intolerant of being told what to do. There was no such thing as a national Ojibwe identity. So there was no such thing as a Ojibwe nation. For decades, Ojibwe people lived in small communities across the region.
They broke her deals with the neighboring Dakota people as well as the French, the British, and after the American Revolution, the US government. The United States do engage to guaranteed to the efforts that nation of Delaware and their airs, all their territorial rights in the fullest, and most Apple Manor 1778.
And that's when things began to change in a big way. Because the more US settlers and business leaders encroached on Ojibwe homeland, the more some leaders felt they had to act as a single entity.
“It's important to note that that was a new development,”
and it naturally met with a lot of resistance. But still, the idea of an Ojibwe nation was fast becoming an appealing tool for negotiating with the US government. And perhaps no one saw that more clearly than the chief of the Mississippi Band of Ojibwe but gonna geeshig. Or as he was known in English, Holland the Day.
He was distinguished for his eloquence, wisdom, and force of argument. The young men of his tribe acknowledged him as a leader, missionary Alfred Brunson. Holland the Day had big dreams to lead the Ojibwe people.
His ideas were starting to work.
One day after drinking a little too much whiskey with some fur traders,
“he fell off his wagon in a stupor and was crushed.”
It seemed like the end of his great vision for the Ojibwe people, but as he lay dying, he summoned his son and with his last breath, he said, "Take the tribe by the hand, show them how to walk." His 19-year-old son took his name and became Holland the Day the younger. He vowed to make his father's dream come true,
and promised to usher in a new era of one Ojibwe nation. Holland the Day was quite brash. He sometimes inflamed other Ojibwe leaders when he would claim to be chief of them all, or chief of an entire region that included multiple villages, many of which had their own chiefs.
“Holland the Day was young, he was cocky, and he was ready to make his mark.”
And he made that obvious at his first treating negotiation in 1847. His father had just passed away, and there might have been 200 other Ojibwe leaders from around the region there, and he said, "He came a day late," and then he said, "Stop what you're doing." Now, if I say sell, we sell, and if I say no, we don't. You have called together all the chiefs and headmen of the nation.
That was useless. For day, you not own the land, it belongs to me. My father, by his bravery, took it from the zoo. He died a few moons ago, and what belonged to him became mine. He, by his courage and perseverance, became head-cheek, and when he died, I took his place, and I'm consequently chief over all the nation.
“Which was ridiculous and probably offensive, but really impressed the Americans.”
Here were powerful chiefs, some of them, seven-year-old, who before his coming spoke
smearingly of him, as a boy you could have no voice in the council, saying there was no use saluting for him. But when he appeared, there became his most submissive and obedient subjects. And this inner treaty in which a million acres of land were seeded. The terms of the treaty were concluded between the commissioners, and young whole in the day, and well. The move was a big gamble, but it paid off. Holden the day the younger, quickly ascended to power.
He took the helm at a moment when native land across North America was being lost at an alarming rate. He was one of the most effective and knowledgeable Ojibwe leaders of his time. He had traveled the Washington D.C. many times. He was not a passive leader just waiting to see what would happen to the people. He refused to seed land without putting up a fight for what he thought was best for the Ojibwe people. Though it may cost me my liberty, it is my duty, and I will
continue to speak and act also till the wrongs of my people shall be righted. And he was not afraid
of the personal consequences. Certainly it is true that Holden the Day had very strong and powerful
friends and very strong and powerful enemies. People tended to either love him or hate him. The U.S. government, for its part, was more than happy to have just one single Ojibwe leader to negotiate with. Holden the day plays a heavy hand, and he was very, very effective. But the game was rigged. He had just come from Washington D.C. It was 1868. The previous year, Holden the Day had negotiated another very controversial treaty.
That was trying to consolidate all Ojibwe people onto one single reservation. It was a hard deal to swallow. He had some really telling things that he told his people he said "Look, these are heartbreaking times for our people." At the time, Westward Migration was at a fever pitch. The government had just purchased Alaska, and the idea of manifest destiny, the God-given right of white Americans to expand across the entire continent, was being realized.
Holden the day saw all this and adapted his strategies. He told his people. I would love to say that there's a way to get all the white people to leave us alone and to leave
our lands and let us live as we always have. But I don't think there's a way to go back in time.
But there is a way forward. The way Holden the Day saw it. If the US government was hellbent
On putting his people onto a single reservation, then it needed to build the ...
would set them up for success. And so he said, "I want them to build a house for every single one of you.
“I want them to build a grist mill and a saw mill so that we can adopt these modern enterprises”
and have good homes." And to make sure they actually got these things, Holden the Day had a plan. They would all stay put until the reservation was built. Don't go anywhere. If you go, we will lose our leverage to get those things, which are promised to us in this treaty. But times were really tough, and some people left and search of a better life. It also became clear that the Americans were not living up to their side of the bargain.
And Holden the Day said, "Well, if they're not going to work with me, we might have to do this a
different way." And he said, "I'm going to go back to Washington, D.C." He said out on a late June day in 1868. But on his way. He was a cost of by assassins.
“Hold off of his carriage stabbed multiple times shot and killed him.”
The impact of this death was immediate. It was devastating for many of his people and it was devastating for generations. Holden the Day's death created a power vacuum that resulted in the loss of more and more Ojibwe land. You had lots of white settlement that immediately flowed after his death. And so it was devastating for his friends and it was devastating for his enemies
in the long run. The vision Holden the Day had for his people would never be. Instead,
his death opened up the floodgates and left the nation vulnerable to the violent tides of the time. From the building of dams that flooded Ojibwe homes to the growth of the timber industry, all the way to the process of elotment. Elotment was a federal policy that divided
“reservation land into privately owned parcels. These parcels were then allotted to tribal members.”
Before, most land had been owned in common. What this really means is tribes collectively owned all their land. Elotment was all about introducing private ownership, which was already becoming a cornerstone of the American dream. And it devtailed with another process. This is the big era of cultural assimilation. So tremendous pressure put on Indian people to assimilate. This is Brenda Child. She's an Ojibwe historian and professor at the University of Minnesota.
Elotment was one step enforcing this assimilation process. And in the United States, there was kind of consensus that Indian people needed to change. Kill the Indian save the man would soon be a common refrain. The idea was to get rid of all need of culture at any cost. There were people around the United States and in Washington and in kind of reform circles who believed at that time that Indian people were people of the past, right,
that they weren't really going to kind of continue into the future as tribal people. So if Indian people can't survive as tribal people, maybe they can just survive. And so they can become citizens of the United States eventually. They can speak English. They can become Christians. They can Americanize. And then they can move into the mainstream of American society. An Alotment was seen as a way to accelerate that process of Americanization.
They've got as far as they can go because they own their land and common. There isn't an enterprise to make your home any better than that of your neighbors. It's funny because a policy like the Alotment Act of 1887, when you look at it and you read it, it's very technical. And in some ways it sounds like it's going to protect the Indians. It was seen as so progressive and the most progressive of Indian reformers favor the Alotment of reservations.
The idea was that native families would own their own land. They could farm it and build generational wealth just like white Americans. They too could pull themselves up by their bootstraps. But from the beginning, the system was flawed. You know, sometimes there's a word that people don't like to use called conspiracy. Politicians and timber companies and banks in Minnesota conspired with one another to dispossess Indians up their land.
Individual families were left to the mercy of businessmen who did whatever it...
land, parcel by parcel. Not all native nations and tribes participated in Alotment the same way.
“Even among the Ojibwe people, the experience was different. But for many native people,”
the process of Alotment and US Westward expansion left them estranged from their own land.
By the end of the Alotment era, tribes had lost control of over 90 million acres of land.
“That's it for this week's episode of America in pursuit. If you want to hear more about”
the lasting impact, the Lotman had on different Ojibwe bands, make sure to check out the full length episode called a tale of two tribal nations. Enjoying this next week where we continue the story of US expansion beyond the continental US. It's the Teddy Roosevelt era. It's the era of machismo of doing things. Women were excluded, people of color excluded. But man like minor kids, the world belonged to them and it was theirs for the taking.
That's next week. Don't miss it. This episode was produced by Keana Murata, an edited by Christina Kim,
with help from the Sunline production team. Music as always by me,
Romten Adablui and my band drop electric. Special thanks to Julie Kane, Irina Gucci,
“Beth Donovan, Casey Miner and Lindsey McKenna. Where's your host, Romten Adablui?”
And run Dr. Fattach. Thank you for listening. [Music]


