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==Analysis of the Speech==
==Analysis of the Speech==
Tecumseh uses very dramatic language to emphasize his anger and distress over the white settlers and the destruction he has caused to his people. To convey his message to his audience in a forceful and meaningful matter he made his speech very persuasive and powerful to draw the attention of the audience.
Tecumseh uses very dramatic language to emphasize his anger and distress over the white settlers and the destruction that they have caused to his people. To convey his message to his audience in a forceful and meaningful matter he made his speech very persuasive and powerful to draw the attention of the audience.

When talking about the Great Spirit, Tecumseh says, "We must love the Great Spirit; he is for us; he will destroy our enemies," he contradicts the rest of his speech. If the Great Spirit will destroy the white men, then there is nothing to worry about, and therefore no reason to unite. However, this small flaw helped his cause because religion is an important element in the Indian way of life, and by talking about the Great Spirit and his red children, Tecumseh found a common bond with the other tribes. By being relatable to the his audience it gave the audience a sense of reassurance that Tecumseh understands them and is really fighting for what is beneficial for natives.
When talking about the Great Spirit, Tecumseh says, "We must love the Great Spirit; he is for us; he will destroy our enemies," he contradicts the rest of his speech. If the Great Spirit will destroy the white men, then there is nothing to worry about, and therefore no reason to unite. However, this small flaw helped his cause because religion is an important element in the Indian way of life, and by talking about the Great Spirit and his red children, Tecumseh found a common bond with the other tribes. By being relatable to the his audience it gave the audience a sense of reassurance that Tecumseh understands them and is really fighting for what is beneficial for natives.


To make sure that the Osage tribe will unify with him and the other tribes, he elaborates on the facts and gives a brief outline of the relation between the Natives and the Europeans, he primarily focusses on the negative development of the whites attitude towards the natives.
To make sure that the Osage tribe will unify with him and the other tribes, he elaborates on the facts and gives a brief outline of the relation between the Natives and the Europeans, he primarily focusses on the negative development of the whites attitude towards the natives.


In order to reach his political intentions he artfully employs imagery language. During his speech he tries to create a unifying atmosphere between his tribe and the Osage. At the beginning of his speech he states that they “belong to one family.” He also addresses the Osages throughout the speech as “Brothers” By doing this it relies a sense of fusion and is a very persuasive tactic that orators use. Throughout his entire speech he uses analogies and metaphors. Tecumseh uses imagery in order to reach his listeners’ emotions. The passion and power with which the speaker brings his arguments forward is reflected in his vivid and emotional pictures. His feelings of revenge are reflected in cruel images of hatred and determination. Besides the persuasive use of imagery languages, Tecumseh employs rhetorical questions in order to address his audience directly.
In order to reach his political intentions he artfully employs imagery language. During his speech he tries to create a unifying atmosphere between his tribe and the Osage. At the beginning of his speech he states that they “belong to one family.” He also addresses the Osages throughout the speech as “Brothers”. By doing this it relies a sense of fusion and is a very persuasive tactic that orators use. Throughout his entire speech he uses analogies and metaphors. Tecumseh uses imagery in order to reach his listeners’ emotions. The passion and power with which the speaker brings his arguments forward is reflected in his vivid and emotional pictures. His feelings of revenge are reflected in cruel images of hatred and determination. Besides the persuasive use of imagery languages, Tecumseh employs rhetorical questions in order to address his audience directly.


==Sources==
==Sources==

Revision as of 23:59, 4 March 2012

Tecumseh
A depiction of Tecumseh from c. 1868
BornMarch, 1768
On the Scioto River, near Chillicothe, Ohio
(location uncertain, see Early life)
Died(1813-10-05)October 5, 1813 (aged 45)
Resting placeWalpole Island, Canada
NationalityShawnee
Other namesTecumtha, Tekamthi
Known forWar of 1812
Parent(s)Puckshinwa, Methoataske

Tecumseh (March 1768 – October 5, 1813) was a Native American leader of the Shawnee and a large tribal confederacy (known as Tecumseh's Confederacy) which opposed the United States during Tecumseh's War and the War of 1812. Tecumseh has become an icon and heroic figure in American Indian and Canadian history.

Tecumseh grew up in the Ohio Country during the American Revolutionary War and the Northwest Indian War, where he was constantly exposed to warfare.[1] With Americans continuing to encroach on Indian territory after the British ceded the Ohio Valley to the new United States in 1783, the Shawnee moved further northwest. In 1808, they settled Prophetstown in present-day Indiana. With a vision of establishing an independent American Indian nation east of the Mississippi, Tecumseh worked to recruit additional tribes to the confederacy from the southern United States.[1]

During the War of 1812, Tecumseh's confederacy allied with the British in The Canadas (the collective name for the colonies of Upper Canada and Lower Canada), and helped in the capture of Fort Detroit. Tecumseh was killed in the Battle of the Thames, in October 1813.

Family background

Tecumseh's father was Puckshinwa (in Shawnee, Puckeshinwau, meaning "Alights from Flying", "Something that drops" or "I light from flying", also known as Puckeshinwa, Pucksinwah, Pukshinwa, Pukeesheno, Pekishinoah, Pooksehnwe and other variations), a minor Shawnee war chief of the Kispoko ("Dancing Tail" or "Panther") band and the Panther Clan of the tribe. Puckshinwa's father was Muscogee (Creek) and his mother was Shawnee. Either because his father died when he was young or because among the Creeks a husband lives with his wife's family, Puckshinwa was considered a Shawnee.[2][3]

Tecumseh's mother was Methotaske (in Shawnee, Methoataaskee, meaning "[One who] Lays Eggs in the Sand" or "A turtle laying eggs in the sand", also known as Methoataske, Meetheetashe, Methotase and Methoatase), Puckshinwa's second wife. She is believed to have been Shawnee through her father and her mother, possibly of the Pekowi band and the Turtle Clan. Some traditions hold that she was Creek, because she had lived among that tribe prior to marriage; some hold that she was Cherokee, having died in old age living among that tribe; still others hold that she was a white captive, as family stories claim that Puckshinwa had been married to a white captive.[2][4]

Shawnee lineage was recorded paternally, which made Tecumseh a member of the Kispoko.

At the time Tecumseh's parents married, their tribe was living somewhere near modern Tuscaloosa, Alabama. The tribe had lived in that region alongside the Creek tribe since being driven from their homes in the Ohio River Valley by the Iroquois (based in New York and Pennsylvania) during the 17th-century Beaver Wars.[5]

About 1759, the Pekowi band decided to move west into the Ohio Country. Not wanting to force his wife to choose between him and her family, Puckshinwa decided to travel north with her. The Pekowi founded the settlement of Chillicothe where Tecumseh was likely born. During the 1760s, Puckshinwa took part in the French and Indian War.

Early life

Alternative Tecumseh portrait

Tecumseh (in Shawnee, Tekoomsē, meaning "Shooting Star" or "Panther Across The Sky", also known as Tecumtha or Tekamthi) was born about March 1768. His birthplace, according to popular tradition, was Old Chillicothe[6] (the present-day Oldtown area of Xenia Township, Greene County, Ohio, about 12 miles (19 km) east of Dayton). As Old Chillicothe was not settled by the Shawnee until 1774, it is believed that Tecumseh may have been born in a different "Chillicothe" (in Shawnee, Chalahgawtha), which was the tribe's name for its principal village, wherever it was located. Tecumseh is believed to have been born in a Chillicothe along the Scioto River, near the present-day city of Chillicothe, Ohio.

As Pucksinwah stared at the sky on this night, he saw a huge meteor streak across from the north, leaving a trail of greenish-white flame. It lasted for fully 20 seconds and was unlike anything he had ever seen before. This was the Panther spirit that the old men sometimes spoke of, and a good sign indeed. As the women around the fire talked excitedly and pointed to the heavens, a baby's cry came from the shelter. Usually a child was not named for several days while the parents waited for a sign to indicate what the great spirit Moneto wished the child to be called, but this child must surely be named Tecumseh, "The Panther Passing Across".

— - Tecumseh: Xenia Township's Most Famous Native, Alan King, 2000

Not long after Tecumseh's birth, the family moved to the village of Scioto.

When Tecumseh was a boy, his father Puckshinwa was "brutally murdered" by white frontiersmen who had crossed onto Indian land in violation of a recent treaty, at the Battle of Point Pleasant during Lord Dunmore’s War in 1774. Tecumseh resolved to become a warrior like his father and to be "a fire spreading over the hill and valley, consuming the race of dark souls."[7][8]

At age 15, after the American Revolutionary War, Tecumseh joined a band of Shawnee who were determined to stop the white invasion of their lands by attacking settlers' flatboats traveling down the Ohio River from Pennsylvania. In time, Tecumseh became the leader of his own band of warriors. For a while, these Indian raids were so effective that river traffic virtually ceased.[8]

Speech to the Osages

The famous speech, given by Tecumseh, to the people of the Osage tribe. Tecumseh allegedly delivered the speech to solicit support for an Indian Confederacy to fight against the white settlers and reclaim their land, during the War of 1812. The only account of the speech is from John Dunn Hunter, who was held captive and raised amongst the Osage tribe, who published the speech in "Memoirs of a Captivity among the Indians of North America" (1823).

Tecumseh has called "the most extraordinary Indian that has appeared in history" and "the Greatest Indian." His speech has given great use to both historical and literary figures. The historical context is that there is an ethnic cleansing going on, the white settlers’ invaded territories belonging to the Indians and took their lands. The white people wanted to settle east of Mississippi in the United States and in order to do that they had to get rid of the Indians, any way possible. The literary context is that Tecumseh was a very persuasive orator.

Conflict Between Settlers and The Native Americans

Natives faced a steady loss of land, tribal autonomy, independence and self rule. Some Indian tribes attempted to assimilate with the white culture by combining elements of American and Indian culture and law (Iroquois and Cherokee), most tribes (Shawnee, Miami and Creek) were not so accommodating to white expansion. Tecumseh’s speech represents the spirit of the native resistance, which he expressed. The resistance by Tecumseh and the confederacy of native tribes had experienced early success and they benefited by the outbreak of the War of 1812, and were aided by the British.

As Tecumseh Brothers, When the white men first set foot on our grounds, they were hungry; they had no place on which to spread their blankets, or to kindle their fires. They were feeble; they could do nothing for themselves. Our father commiserated their distress, and shared freely with them whatever the Great Spirit had given his red children. They gave them food when hungry, medicine when sick, spread skins for them to sleep on, and gave them grounds, that they might hunt and raise corn. Brothers, the white people are like posionous serpents: when chilled, they are feeble and harmless; but invigorate them with warmth, and they sting their benefactors to death.

Also during his speech, Tecumseh brings up many social issues in support of his central issue. He points out that there have been many attempts at peace, but that is not what the white men want. They instead treat the Indians without the respect that they deserve. "The white men despise and cheat the Indians; they abuse and insult them; they do no think the red men sufficiently good to live." Just because the Indians have a different color skin and different ways of life does not mean that they should not be able to keep the land that they have claimed as their own. Not only that, but the white men are not going to keep the land like it is, but instead they will clear it to bring it settlers and form towns and cities in what once was an Indian tribe camp or hunting ground. Tecumseh also brings up some contentious arguments when he confers about the Great Spirit. He expresses, "The Great Spirit made all things. He gave the white people a home beyond the great waters. He supplied these grounds with game, and gave them to his red children." This illustrates that the white men have been provided with a homeland in Europe, an area that was meant for them and should be capable of meeting their needs. By coming to this new territory, they are invading the land that belongs to someone else and is taking care of their needs. By taking this land away, the white men are doing a great deal to destruction to the native people which could, essentially become fatal. By taking the land away they are also taking away the Indians source of food, forcing them to begin a new way of life.

Tecumseh was very adamant but the unification of the native tribes to become one and relinquish the hold that the settlers had on them as a whole. He strongly believed that it was up to them to fight back and take back what was rightfully theirs.

Analysis of the Speech

Tecumseh uses very dramatic language to emphasize his anger and distress over the white settlers and the destruction that they have caused to his people. To convey his message to his audience in a forceful and meaningful matter he made his speech very persuasive and powerful to draw the attention of the audience.

When talking about the Great Spirit, Tecumseh says, "We must love the Great Spirit; he is for us; he will destroy our enemies," he contradicts the rest of his speech. If the Great Spirit will destroy the white men, then there is nothing to worry about, and therefore no reason to unite. However, this small flaw helped his cause because religion is an important element in the Indian way of life, and by talking about the Great Spirit and his red children, Tecumseh found a common bond with the other tribes. By being relatable to the his audience it gave the audience a sense of reassurance that Tecumseh understands them and is really fighting for what is beneficial for natives.

To make sure that the Osage tribe will unify with him and the other tribes, he elaborates on the facts and gives a brief outline of the relation between the Natives and the Europeans, he primarily focusses on the negative development of the whites attitude towards the natives.

In order to reach his political intentions he artfully employs imagery language. During his speech he tries to create a unifying atmosphere between his tribe and the Osage. At the beginning of his speech he states that they “belong to one family.” He also addresses the Osages throughout the speech as “Brothers”. By doing this it relies a sense of fusion and is a very persuasive tactic that orators use. Throughout his entire speech he uses analogies and metaphors. Tecumseh uses imagery in order to reach his listeners’ emotions. The passion and power with which the speaker brings his arguments forward is reflected in his vivid and emotional pictures. His feelings of revenge are reflected in cruel images of hatred and determination. Besides the persuasive use of imagery languages, Tecumseh employs rhetorical questions in order to address his audience directly.

Sources

Baym, Nina, Robert S. Levine, and Arnold Krupat. The Norton Anthology of American Literature. Vol. A. New York: W. W. Norton &, 2007. Print. Henretta, James A., and David Brody. America: A Concise History. Boston, MA: Bedford/St. Martins, 2009.Print


Frontier conflicts

At least five times between 1774 and 1782, Tecumseh's village was attacked by colonials and later American armies, as the Shawnee had allied with the British during the American Revolutionary War. Following his father's death, his family moved back to Chief Blackfish's nearby village of Chillicothe. The town was destroyed in 1779 by Kentucky militia in reprisal for Blackfish's attack on Boonesburough.[9] His family fled to another nearby Kispoko village, but this was destroyed in 1780 by forces under the command of George Rogers Clark. The family moved a third time to the village of Sanding Stone. That village was attacked by Clark in November 1782, and the family moved to a new Shawnee settlement near modern Bellefontaine, Ohio.[10]

Violence continued on the American frontier after the Revolution as the Northwest Indian War. A large tribal confederacy, known as the Wabash Confederacy, which included all the major tribes of Ohio and the Illinois Country, formed to repel the American settlers from the region.[11] As the war between the confederacy and the Americans grew, Tecumseh became a warrior and took an active part fighting along with his older brother Cheeseekau, an important war leader who essentially raised Tecumseh and Tenskwatawa after their parents' early deaths. Their older sister, Tecumapese, was also very important to their upbringing.

In early 1789, Tecumseh traveled south with Cheeseekau to live among, and fight alongside, the Chickamauga faction of the Cherokee. Accompanied by twelve Shawnee warriors, they stayed at Running Water (in Marion County, Tennessee), where Cheeseekau's wife and daughter lived. There Tecumseh met Dragging Canoe, a famous leader who was leading a resistance movement against U.S. expansion. Cheeseekau was killed while leading a raid, and Tecumseh assumed leadership of the small Shawnee band, and subsequent Chickamauga raiding parties.

Tecumseh returned to Ohio in late 1790, having fathered a Cherokee daughter before leaving (according to Cherokee oral tradition).[citation needed] Afterward, Tecumseh took part in several battles, including that of the 1794 Fallen Timbers. The Indians were defeated by the Americans, which ended the Northwestern Indian Wars in favor of the Americans.[12]


Tenskwatawa

Tenskwatawa, by George Catlin.

Tecumseh eventually settled in what is now Greenville, Ohio, the home of his younger brother, Lalawethika ("He Makes A Loud Noise") who would later take the new name of Tenskwatawa ("The Open Door"). After difficult years as a young man who suffered from alcoholism, Tenskwatawa became a religious leader. Known as "The Shawnee Prophet", he advocated a return of the Shawnee and other American Indians to their ancestral lifestyle and rejection of the colonists and Americans. He attracted a large following among Indians who had already suffered major epidemics and dispossession of their lands.

In 1805, Tenskwatawa led a religious revival following a series of witch-hunts following an outbreak of smallpox among the Shawnee. His beliefs were based on the earlier teachings of the Lenape prophets, Scattamek and Neolin, who predicted a coming apocalypse that would destroy the European-American settlers.[13]

Tenskwatawa urged natives to reject the ways of the Europeans: to give up firearms, liquor, European style clothing, to pay traders only half the value of their debts, and to refrain from ceding any more lands to the United States. The teachings led to rising tensions between the settlers and his followers. Opposing Tenskwatawa was the Shawnee leader Black Hoof, who was working to maintain a peaceful relationship with the United States.[13]

The earliest record of Tecumseh's interaction with the Americans was in 1807, when the US Indian agent William Wells met with Blue Jacket and other Shawnee leaders in Greenville to determine their intentions after the recent murder of a settler. Tecumseh was among those who spoke with Wells and assured him that his band of Shawnee intended to remain at peace and wanted only to follow the will of the Great Spirit and his prophet. According to Well's report, Tecumseh told him that the Prophet intended to move with his followers deeper into the frontier and away from American settlements.[14]

By 1808, due to increasing tensions with the encroaching settlers, Black Hoof demanded that Tenskwatawa and his followers leave the area. Tecumseh was among the leaders of the group, and helped decide to move further northwest and establish the village of Prophetstown near the confluence of the Wabash and Tippecanoe rivers (near present-day Battle Ground, Indiana). The site was in Miami tribe territory, and their Chief Little Turtle warned the group not to settle there. Despite the threat, the Shawnee moved into the region and the Miami left them alone. According to his brother's later account, Tecumseh was already contemplating a pan-tribal confederacy to counter American expansion into Indian-held lands. He was considered a natural and charismatic leader.[15]

Tenskwatawa's religious teachings became more widely known, as did his predictions on the coming doom of the Americans. His teachings attracted numerous members of other tribes to Prophetstown; they formed the basis of a sizeable confederacy of tribes in the southwestern Great Lakes region. Tecumseh emerged as the primary leader of this confederation, although it had started with warriors attracted by the religious appeal of his younger brother. Relatively few in confederacy were Shawnee; the confederacy was made up primarily of other tribes.[13][16]

Tecumseh's War


Portraits of Pushmataha (left) and Tecumseh.
"These white Americans ... give us fair exchange, their cloth, their guns, their tools, implements, and other things which the Choctaws need but do not make ... So in marked contrast with the experience of the Shawnee, it will be seen that the whites and Indians in this section are living on friendly and mutually beneficial terms."
Pushmataha, 1811[17]
---------------------
"Where today are the Pequot? Where are the Narragansett, the Mochican, the Pocanet, and other powerful tribes of our people? They have vanished before the avarice and oppression of the white man ... Sleep not longer, O Choctaws and Chickasaws ... Will not the bones of our dead be plowed up, and their graves turned into plowed fields?"
Tecumseh, 1811[18]

The two principal adversaries in the conflict, Tecumseh and William Henry Harrison, had both been junior participants in the Battle of Fallen Timbers at the close of the Northwest Indian War in 1794. Tecumseh was not among the signers of the Treaty of Greenville that had ended the war and ceded much of present-day Ohio, long inhabited by the Shawnee and other Native Americans, to the United States. However, many Indian leaders in the region accepted the Greenville terms, and for the next ten years pan-tribal resistance to American hegemony faded.

After the Treaty of Greenville, most of the Ohio Shawnee settled at the Shawnee village of Wapakoneta on the Auglaize River, where they were led by Black Hoof, a senior chief who had signed the treaty. Little Turtle, a War Chief of the Miamis, who had also participated in the earlier war and signed the Greenville Treaty, lived in his village on the Eel River. Both Black Hoof and Little Turtle urged cultural adaptation and accommodation with the United States.

The tribes of the region participated in several treaties including the Treaty of Grouseland and the Treaty of Vincennes that gave and recognized American possession of most of southern Indiana. The treaties resulted in an easing of tensions by allowing settlers into Indiana and appeasing the Indians with reimbursement for the lands the settlers were squatting on.

Rising tensions

In September 1809, William Henry Harrison, governor of the newly formed Indiana Territory, negotiated the Treaty of Fort Wayne in which a delegation of Indians ceded 3 million acres (12,000 km2) of Native American lands to the United States. The treaty negotiations were questionable as they were unauthorized by the President and thus the United States government, and involved what some historians compared to bribery, offering large subsidies to the tribes and their chiefs, and the liberal distribution of liquor before the negotiations.[19]

Tecumseh's opposition to the treaty marked his emergence as a prominent leader. Although Tecumseh and the Shawnee had no claim on the land sold, he was alarmed by the massive sale as many of the followers in Prophetstown were Piankeshaw, Kickapoo, and Wea, who were the primary inhabitants of the land. Tecumseh revived an idea advocated in previous years by the Shawnee leader Blue Jacket and the Mohawk leader Joseph Brant, which stated that Indian land was owned in common by all.[20]

Not ready to confront the United States directly, Tecumseh's primary adversaries were initially the Indian leaders who had signed the treaty. An impressive orator, Tecumseh began to travel widely, urging warriors to abandon accommodationist chiefs and to join him in resistance of the treaty.[21] Tecumseh insisted that the Fort Wayne treaty was illegal; he asked Harrison to nullify it, and warned that Americans should not attempt to settle on the lands sold in the treaty. Tecumseh is quoted as saying, "No tribe has the right to sell [land], even to each other, much less to strangers.... Sell a country!? Why not sell the air, the great sea, as well as the earth? Didn't the Great Spirit make them all for the use of his children?" And, "....the only way to stop this evil [loss of land] is for the red man to unite in claiming a common and equal right in the land, as it was first, and should be now, for it was never divided."[22]:

Confrontation

At Vincennes in 1810, Tecumseh loses his temper when William Henry Harrison refuses to rescind the Treaty of Fort Wayne.

Tecumseh met with Indiana Governor William Henry Harrison to demand the rescission of land purchase treaties the US had forced on the Shawnee and other tribes. Harrison refused.

In August 1810, Tecumseh led four hundred armed warriors from Prophetstown to confront Harrison at his Vincennes home, Grouseland. Their appearance startled the townspeople, and the situation quickly became dangerous when Harrison rejected Tecumseh's demand and argued that individual tribes could have relations with the United States, and that Tecumseh's interference was unwelcome by the tribes of the area. Tecumseh launched an impassioned rebuttal against Harrison.[23]

(Governor William Harrison), you have the liberty to return to your own country ... you wish to prevent the Indians from doing as we wish them, to unite and let them consider their lands as common property of the whole ... You never see an Indian endeavor to make the white people do this ... Sell a country! Why not sell the air, the great sea, as well as the earth? Did not the Great Spirit make them all for the use of his children? How can we have confidence in the white people?[24]

Tecumseh began inciting the warriors to kill Harrison, who responded by pulling his sword. The small garrison defending the town quickly moved to protect Harrison. Pottowatomie Chief Winnemac arose and countered Tecumseh's arguments to the group, and urged the warriors to leave in peace. As they left, Tecumseh informed Harrison that unless he rescinded the treaty, he would seek an alliance with the British.[25]

The Great Comet of 1811, as drawn by William Henry Smyth

A comet appeared in March 1811. The Shawnee leader Tecumseh, whose name meant "shooting star", told the Creeks that the comet signaled his coming. Tecumseh's confederacy and allies took it as an omen of good luck. McKenney reported that Tecumseh claimed he would prove that the Great Spirit had sent him to the Creeks by giving the tribes a "sign."

In 1811, Tecumseh again met with Harrison at his home after being summoned following the murder of settlers on the frontier. Tecumseh told Harrison that the Shawnee and their Native American brothers wanted to remain at peace with the United States, but these differences had to be resolved. The meeting was likely a ploy to buy time while he built a stronger confederacy, and the meeting convinced Harrison that hostilities were imminent. Following the meeting Tecumseh traveled south, on a mission to recruit allies among the Five Civilized Tribes. Most of the southern nations rejected his appeals, but a faction among the Creeks, who came to be known as the Red Sticks, answered his call to arms, leading to the Creek War.[25]

Where today are the Pequot? Where are the Narragansett, the Mochican, the Pocanet, and other powerful tribes of our people? They have vanished before the avarice and oppression of the white man, as snow before the summer sun ... Sleep not longer, O Choctaws and Chickasaws ... Will not the bones of our dead be plowed up, and their graves turned into plowed fields?[18]

Tippecanoe

The New Madrid earthquake was interpreted by the Muscogee as a sign to support the Shawnee's resistance.

While Tecumseh was in the South, Governor Harrison marched up the Wabash River from Vincennes, with more than 1,000 men, on a preemptive expedition to intimidate the Prophet and his followers and to force them to make peace. On November 6, 1811, Harrison's army arrived outside Prophetstown. The Prophet sent a messenger to meet with Harrison and requested a meeting be held the next day to negotiate. Harrison encamped his army on a nearby hill, and during the early dawn hours of November 7, the confederacy launched a sneak attack on his camp. In the Battle of Tippecanoe, Harrison's men held their ground, and the Indians withdrew from the village after the battle. The victorious Americans burned the town and returned to Vincennes.[26]

The Battle of Tippecanoe was a severe blow for Tenskwatawa, who lost both prestige and the confidence of his brother. Although it was a significant setback, Tecumseh began to secretly rebuild his alliance upon his return. The Americans soon after went to war with the British in the War of 1812, and Tecumseh's War became a part of that struggle.[26]

On December 16, 1811, the New Madrid Earthquake shook the South and the Midwest. While the interpretation of this event varied from tribe to tribe, one consensus was universally accepted: the powerful earthquake had to have meant something. For many tribes it meant that Tecumseh and the Prophet must be supported.[27]

War of 1812

Detroit frontier

Tecumseh rallied his confederacy and allied his forces with the British army invading the Northwest Territory from Upper Canada. He joined British Major-General Sir Isaac Brock in the Siege of Detroit, helping to force the city's surrender in August 1812. At one point in the battle, as Brock advanced to a point just out of range of Detroit's guns, Tecumseh had his approximately four hundred warriors parade out from a nearby wood and circle back around to repeat the maneuver, making it appear that there were many more warriors under his command than was actually the case. The fort commander, Brigadier General William Hull, surrendered in fear of a massacre should he refuse (and was later court-martialed for his actions). The victory was of a great strategic value to the British allies.[28]

The next British commander in the region, Major-General Henry Procter, wanted to honor Tecumseh for his help at the Siege of Detroit. He gave Tecumseh a sash, while offering him the rank of brigadier general in the British army. Tecumseh refused the commission and gave the sash away.[29]

The victory at Detroit was reversed a little over a year later. Commodore Perry's victory on Lake Erie late in the summer of 1813 cut the British supply lines. Along with William Henry Harrison's successful defense of Fort Miegs (creating a staging area for the recapture of Fort Detroit), the British found themselves in an indefensible position and had to withdraw from the city. They burned all public buildings in Detroit and retreated into Upper Canada along the Thames Valley. Tecumseh sought British support for continuing to defend their lands against the Americans. However, Harrison led a much larger counter assault and invaded Canada.

Battle of the Thames

Death of Tecumseh

Procter did not have the same working relationship with Tecumseh as did his predecessor, and the two disagreed over war objectives. Following the fall of Detroit, Procter favored withdrawing into Canada and avoiding immediate battle while the Americans suffered through the winter. Tecumseh was more eager to launch a decisive action to defeat the American army and allow his men to retake their homes in the Ohio River area.[30] Meanwhile, Harrison pursued the retreating British and allied tribes. When Procter's forces failed to appear at Chatham, Ontario (although he had promised Tecumseh that he would make a stand against the Americans there), Tecumseh reluctantly moved his men to meet up with Procter near Moraviantown. He informed Procter that he would withdraw no farther. He told Procter that if the British wanted his continued help then an action needed to be fought, and that they should await Harrison's army there.

Final battle

On October 5, 1813, the Americans attacked and won a victory over the British and Native Americans at the Battle of the Thames, near Moraviantown. During the battle, Tecumseh was killed, and shortly afterward, the tribes of his confederacy officially surrendered to Harrison at Detroit.[31] In 1837, in part because of reports that it was he who had killed Tecumseh, Richard Mentor Johnson was elected vice-president of the United States, to serve with Martin Van Buren.

Legacy

Plaque

The Ontario Heritage Foundation & Kent Military Renactment Society erected a plaque in Tecumseh Park, 50 William Street North Chatham, Ontario "On this site, Tecumseh, a Shawnee Chief, who was an ally of the British during the war of 1812, fought against American forces on October 4, 1813. Tecumseh was born in 1768 and became an important organizer of native resistance to the spread of white settlement in North America. The day after the fighting here, he was killed in the Battle of Thames near Moraviantown. Tecumseh park was named to commemorate strong will and determination." [32]

Memorials

Tecumseh Building, 34 W. High Street, Springfield, Ohio
HMCS Tecumseh, Canadian Forces Naval Reserve, Calgary, Alberta
File:Tecumseh Shawnee Dollar.JPG
Tecumseh commemorative Shawnee Nation dollar
"Tecumseh Stone", Fort Malden National Historic Site

The United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, has Tecumseh Court, which is located outside Bancroft Hall's front entrance, and features a bust of Tecumseh. The bust is often decorated to celebrate special days. The bust was actually originally meant to represent Tamanend, an Indian chief from the 17th century who was known as a lover of peace and friendship, but the Academy's midshipmen preferred the more warlike Tecumseh, and the new name persisted.[33]

Four ships of the United States Navy have borne the name USS Tecumseh.

  • The second USS Tecumseh (YT-24), was a tugboat, originally named Edward Luckenbach, purchased by the Navy in 1898 and renamed. She served off and on until she was struck from the Navy list ca. 1945.

The Canadian naval reserve unit HMCS Tecumseh is based in Calgary, Alberta. Tecumseh is honored in Canada as a hero and military commander who played a major role in Canada's successful repulsion of an American invasion in the War of 1812, which, among other things, eventually led to Canada's nationhood in 1867 with the British North America Act. Among the tributes, Tecumseh is ranked 37th in The Greatest Canadian list. An 1848 drawing of Tecumseh was based on a sketch done from life in 1808. Benson Lossing altered the original by putting Tecumseh in a British uniform, under the mistaken (but widespread) belief that Tecumseh had been a British general. This depiction is unusual in that it includes a nose ring, popular among the Shawnee at the time, but typically omitted in idealized depictions.

He is also honored by a massive portrait which hangs in the Royal Canadian Military Institute. The unveiling of the work, commissioned under the patronage of Kathryn Langley Hope and Trisha Langley, took place at the Toronto-based RCMI on October 29, 2008.[34]

Tecumseh in the Tippecanoe County Courthouse pediment

A number of towns have been named in honor of Tecumseh, including those in the states of Kansas, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and the province of Ontario, as well as the town and township of New Tecumseth, Ontario, and Mount Tecumseh in New Hampshire. Union Civil War general William Tecumseh Sherman, was given the name Tecumseh because "my father...had caught a fancy for the great chief of the Shawnees."[35] Another Civil War general, Napoleon Jackson Tecumseh Dana, also bore the name of the Shawnee leader. (Evolutionary biologist and cognitive scientist W. Tecumseh Fitch was named after the general, not after Tecumseh.)

Tecumseh, along with the Marquis de Lafayette and William Henry Harrison is depicted in a pediment on the Tippecanoe County Courthouse (1882) in Lafayette, Indiana.[36]

Literature

Film and television

Art and other media

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ a b Allen, Robert S (2009). "Tecumseh". The Canadian Encyclopedia > Biography > Native Political Leaders. Historica-Dominion. Retrieved 2009-10-03.
  2. ^ a b "shawnee-traditions.com - The Family of Tecumseh & Tenskwatawa". Noel Schutz. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  3. ^ Sugden, pp. unknown
  4. ^ Sugden, John. Tecumseh: A Life. New York: Holt, 1997. ISBN 0-8050-4138-9 (hardcover); ISBN 0-8050-6121-5 (1999 paperback)
  5. ^ Sugden, p. 13–14
  6. ^ "Birthplace of Tecumseh Marker". The Historical Marker Database. Retrieved November 14, 2011.
  7. ^ Sugden, pp. 16–22
  8. ^ a b David Wallechinsky and Irving Wallace (1975–1981). "Famous Native Americans: Tecumseh Part 1". The People's Almanac series of books. Retrieved 2010-05-08. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  9. ^ Sugden, p. 33
  10. ^ Sugden, p. 36
  11. ^ Sugden, p. 37
  12. ^ Sugden, p. 38
  13. ^ a b c Owens, p. 210–211
  14. ^ Sugden, pp. 4–7
  15. ^ Sugden, p. 9
  16. ^ "Shawnee." Encyclopedia of North American Indians. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1996. History Study Center. ProQuest LLC. 26 November 2008.
  17. ^ Jones, Charile (1987). "Sharing Choctaw History". University of Minnesota. Retrieved 2008-02-05. {{cite web}}: More than one of |author= and |last= specified (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  18. ^ a b Turner III, Frederick (1978) [1973]. "Poetry and Oratory". The Portable North American Indian Reader. Penguin Book. pp. 246–247. ISBN 0-14-015077-3. Cite error: The named reference "portable_reader2" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  19. ^ Treaty with the Delawares, Etc., 1809. Indianapolis: Indiana Historical Bureau.
  20. ^ Owen, p. 203
  21. ^ Owen, p. 209
  22. ^ Steinberg, Theodore. Slide Mountain or The Folly of Owning Nature. Chapter 5, "Three-D Deeds: The Rise of Air Rights in New York" University of California Press, 1996.
  23. ^ Langutth, p. 165
  24. ^ Turner III, Frederick (1973). "Poetry and Oratory". The Portable North American Indian Reader. Penguin Books. pp. 245–246. ISBN 0-14-015077-3.
  25. ^ a b Langguth, p. 167
  26. ^ a b Langguth, p. 168
  27. ^ Ehle p. 102–104
  28. ^ Burton, Pierre (1980) The Invasion of Canada. Toronto: McClelland and Stewart, pp. 177-182.
  29. ^ Whicker, John Wesley (1922). "Tecumseh and Pushmataha". Indiana Magazine of History. 18 (4). Indiana University Department of History: 327. Retrieved 12/1/2011. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  30. ^ Langguth, p. 196
  31. ^ Langguth, p. 206
  32. ^ http://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/dhh-dhp/nic-inm/sm-rm/mdsr-rdr-eng.asp?PID=7770 Tecumseh plaque
  33. ^ "Tamanend, Chief of Delaware Indians (1628-1698), (sculpture).", Smithsonian Institution, SI.edu
  34. ^ Welland Tribune (Article ID# 2803886).
  35. ^ WTS Memoirs, 2d ed. 11 (Lib. of America 1990)
  36. ^ Architectural Inventories: Tippecanoe County Building, Lafayette, Indiana
  37. ^ Galloway, William Albert. Old Chillicothe. Xenia, OH: The Buckeye Press, 1934.
  38. ^ Ernest Thompson Seton, The Gospel of the Red Man: An Indian Bible, San Diego, The Book Tree, 2006, p. 60 (ISBN 978-1-58509-276-5).
  39. ^ Tecumseh at the Internet Movie Database
  40. ^ [1] BYLINE:Andrew McGinn Staff Writer DATE: February 22, 2007 PUBLICATION: Springfield News-Sun (OH)
  41. ^ [2] 'Tecumseh' to receive award this weekend
  42. ^ [3] Allan Eckert, playwright of ‘Tecumseh!’ outdoor drama in Ohio dies at 80 in California
  43. ^ Historical Overview, The Battle of Tippecanoe Outdoor Drama 1990 Souvenir Program, Summer 1990.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Dowd, Gregory Evans. A Spirited Resistance: The North American Indian Struggle for Unity, 1745-1815. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992.
  • Drake, Benjamin. Life of Tecumseh and of His Brother the Prophet; With a Historical Sketch of the Shawanoe Indians. (Mount Vernon: Rose Press, 2008).
  • Eckert, Allan. A Sorrow in Our Hearts: The Life of Tecumseh. New York: Bantam Books, 1992.
  • Edmunds, R. David. Tecumseh and the Quest for Indian Leadership. Boston: Little Brown, 1984.
  • Gilbert, Bil. God Gave us This Country: Tekamthi and the First American Civil War. New York: Atheneum, 1989.
  • Green, James A., "Tecumseh," in Charles F. Horne, ed., Great Men and Famous Women, vol. 2: Soldiers and Sailors, 308. New York: Selmar Hess, 1894.
  • Pirtle, Alfred. (1900). The Battle of Tippecanoe. Louisville: John P. Morton & Co./ Library Reprints. p. 158. ISBN 9780722265093. as read to the Filson Club.
  • Burr, Samuel Jones. The Life and Times of William Henry Harrison. New York: L. W. Ransom, 1840, pgs. 101 & 102.

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