In 1832 the warrior Black Hawk led
the combined Sac and Fox peoples eastward, from their reservation in
Iowa toward their tribal lands in northern Illinois. In the War of 1812
Black Hawk had led Sac and Fox fighters to join the British forces in
hopes of checking Americans' westward expansion. This activity earned
Black Hawk and his followers the moniker "the British band," and perhaps
Black Hawk believed that the British would come from Canada to his aid
when he returned to Illinois' Rock River valley. Black Hawk's march
violated an 1804 treaty that he, like most Indians, considered patently
invalid. But it did quickly spur Illinois and federal officials to assemble
troops to put down what they perceived to be a serious uprising. Quickly
realizing that the British were not coming and that the Americans aimed
to crush his small band, Black Hawk sought to return to Iowa. But American
forces pursued him and his group across central and western Wisconsin,
finally dealing them a punishing defeat in the Battle of Bad Axe, on
the banks of the Mississippi in western Wisconsin. A federal gunboat
shelled many of Black Hawk's band as they sought to cross the Mississippi
to Iowa. Black Hawk himself was taken prisoner. His captors brought
him to Washington for inspection by federal officials and public audiences,
and Black Hawk told his story through an English translator. It provides
one of the only first-person narratives of American Indian removal told
from the Native American point of view.