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Post by mdenney on Feb 9, 2007 2:01:48 GMT -5
Louis Walker/Frenier
hyland: that is a very good question, that I can't answer, because I don't know when either of these Philbrick males died, if indeed they were separate persons. The 1917 McGlaughlin Role has Robert E. Philbrick on it, but nothing for John or Clinton Philbrick.
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Post by mdenney on Feb 9, 2007 2:02:30 GMT -5
Louis Walker/Frenier
Clinton Philbrick had a son names John Clinton Philbrick.
Clinton and Robert were brothers. Clinton's wife Elizabeth went by Lizzie sometimes and Roberts wife Rebecca also used the name Lizzie. The Robert that Married Rebecca (Ziziwon or Zitkanarolewin) Philbrick was Robert Tahcaduzahan "Swift Deer" Philbrick. They married around 1864. Rebecca married Adam Iron Elk in 1904 and died at Crow creek 6/5/1920.
Clinton born June 1854 Married Elizabeth "Lizzie" Anpetumazawin. He died 1924. Elizabeth was born in Minn in May 1857.died 1925.
Clinton and Elizabeths children were: Nancy 1874sp Robert Brown Emma 1876 sp Eli Whipple 1894, Henry weston 1900 and James Zimmerman1906 died 1937 Anna 1877 John C. 1878 Fredie 1884 sp Mary Goodteacher Milk and Angelique Oldman Eunice 1886 sp Archie Jones 1906 James not sure of date Rosa 1889 5th wife of George Henry
Robert Swift Deer Philbrick (Rebeca's Husband) was born 1847 He was the sone of Itoyohi "Brownwar Hair". Children: George 1866 - 1888 Dinah 1869 sp James C. Rencountre 1895 died 1926 Mary Wamidikiyahewin 1872 sp Joseph Nimrod in 1891, sp James Brown Head Like Him in 1905 and Robert N Brown no date. Johnson 1875 sp Maude Bliss 1897 died 1901 Charles 1878 - 1898 Gilbert 1882 sp Elizabeth May Swift 1904 died 1915. Robert Ernest Hoksinazi - 1892 sp Sophie Bear Ghost Fearless Hawk 1911, sp Annie Irving no date. Died 1934 there was another daughter but died as an infant in 1894. Dinah
Probably more then you wanted to know but wanted to pass the information on .
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Post by mdenney on Feb 9, 2007 2:03:14 GMT -5
Louis Walker/Frenier
Received just today(1-13-06) from the Sisseton Agency: regarding my request on my grandmother Margaret E. Cuny's probate.
Margaret E. Cuny received her land from John Tuttle and Mary Tuttle Henry Walker who received her land from Louis Walker who recieved his land from Samuel Lawrence Dowanku, who received his land from Benjamin Dowanku and Warpetonwin.
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Post by mdenney on Feb 9, 2007 2:03:52 GMT -5
Louis Walker/Frenier
For what it is worth:
The 1929 Santee Sioux Roll, prepared by James Mclaughlin has the following Philbricks listed:
1732 Beulah M. Philbrick (the "M" could be an "H") Daughter 10 5/6 Grosse, SD 129.30 Died July 30, 1917 Bessie M. Philbrick 129.50 Mother 53 1/2 Grosse, SD
1733 Elizabeth Philbrick 129.50 67 4/4 Santee, Nebraska
1734 Name lost to copy error 1735 Adah I. Philbrick Daughter 14 3/4 129.50 Pay to C.A. Zieddon, SBA, Fort Thompson, SD 1736 Robert O Philbrick, Brother 11 3/4 129.50 Pay to C.A. Zieddon, SBA, Fort Thompson, SD
1737 Frederick Philbrick Husband 59 4/4 Santee, NE 129.50 1738 Angelique l. Philbrick, Wife 43 4/4 Santee, NE 129.50 Daughter of John Lightning 1739 Hazel Philbrick, Daughter 9 4/4 Santee, NE 129.50 Pay to Fred Philbrick # 1737 1740 Lawrence C. Philbrick, Son 7 4/4 Santee, NE 129.50 Born 1/1/1917 "
1741 James Philbrick 28 4/4 Santee, NE 129.50
1742 Julia Philbrick, Grandmother 60 Sisseton, SD 129.50 1743 Wallace Philbrick, Grandson 9 Sisseton, SD 129.50 Son of Mary P. Reese
1744 Robert E. Philbrick Father 30 4/4 Grosse, SD 129.50 Son of Rebecca Bluestone and David Boy #235 1745 Rebecca F. Philbrick Daughter 10 4/4 " " 1746 Edith Philbrick Daughter 6 4/4 " "
I hope this helps.
MIKE
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Post by mdenney on Feb 9, 2007 2:06:27 GMT -5
Frank Stay 2nd husband of Cecila Margaret Campbell
FRANK STAY. Frank Stay, one of the oldest residents of Camp Release township, Lac-qui-parle county, has had a varied and eventful history, and the story of his life is interwoven with the narrative of facts as they have transpired in southwestern Minnesota. It is a most interesting past to which such lives as his link us, and never will be repeated on this western world.
Frank Stay was born in Canada, about fifty miles northwest of Montreal, July 10, 1837, and his father, Francis Jette, who was born in 1819, and came of old French stock, followed farming in Canada. He is still living in Acton Vale, Canada.
Frank Stay spent the first seventeen years of his life in Canada, and in the summer of 1854, after spending the fourth of July at either Galena or Chicago, came to St. Paul, where he worked out the season on a flat boat up and down the Minnesota river. He then went to Blue Earth and took a contract to split one hundred thousand rails. In June, 1855, he went to Yellow Medicine, where he was employed by the government until 1857. Yellow Medicine was then called the Upper Sioux agency. He worked on a farm for Major Brown, twelve miles out of Yellow Medicine. There he remained two years, after which he was made farmer himself and received a salary, and was furnished goods by Capt. Louis Roberts with which to trade with the Indians. On August 19, 1862, he was warned by Red Dog, a friendly Indian, of an outbreak impending, and at once sought out his friend, Jim Lindsay, but found him already killed by the Indians.
Frank Stay made his way through the woods and across the prairie to the village of Yellow Medicine; he went to old man La Belle's house, but found it deserted; passed the night on his knees under a tree on Hawk Creek fighting mosquitoes; the next day started out, and came across several dead bodies, which so frightened him that for two days he took to hiding. He arrived at Fort Ridgely, twelve miles below Lower Sioux agency at 9 o'clock in the morning of Friday, having had nothing to eat from Monday's supper. At one o'clock was the famous Fort Ridgely battle; he joined the Renville Rangers; he was in the Birch Cooley fight, lasting for forty-eight hours, and at Wood Lake. The same morning of the Wood Lake battle a few men (there may have been twenty) started for an Indian farm to get potatoes or other necessary eatables in the field, for all the stores were burned down. They had gone but a short distance when the Indians in ambush fired on the foraging party; they turned and made for the camp, where they had just sat down to breakfast when they had to leave that untasted and jump to arms. They saved their comrades but the battle was fierce and brisk. Moses Mireau was also in the same battle. Their company, the Renville Rangers, under Lieut. James Gorman, bore the brunt of Ridgely, Birch Cooley and Wood Lake battles. Frank Stay and Francis Giard were besieged three days once by Indians at Lake Benton in 1865. The lake is Lake Stay, where they so valiantly fought for their lives. Frank Stay still carries a ball in his right shoulder as a reminder of that fight.
In 1862 Mr. Stay served under Captain Gorman, for three months from August 20, and participated in several brisk skirmishes with the Indians. In December he was sent to St. Paul, where he remained until the following spring, when he began an adventurous career as a scout, in which he was engaged for three years. In 1865 he turned his attention to hunting and trapping, in which he was engaged for several years. In 1867 he took a pre-emption claim, built a shanty and a sod barn, and did his first breaking with oxen.
Mr. Stay was married in 1880 to Mrs. Celia Charron, who was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, October 10, 1848. Mrs. Stay moved to Nicollet county in 1851, where her people lived until the Sioux were removed to Lower Sioux agency, where they lived at the time of the outbreak, August 18, 1862, Her father was United States interpreter for the Sioux tribe. In 1855 her father's family moved to the Lower Sioux agency, where they lived until 1862, when on August 18, they were all taken prisoners by the Indians, and retained in captivity seven weeks. During the last few years Mrs. Stay has written several articles on the Indian outbreak that have proved extremely interesting as well as valuable. Mr. and Mrs. Stay have a family of ten children: Fred, Nettie, Lizzie, Phemie, John, Frank, Unazime, Phronie, Mary and Joseph. Fred was born at St. Peters, Minnesota, the next three at Fort Ridgley, and the rest on the farm in Lac-qui-parle county. Fred is a widower, having lost his wife (Rachel Tousley) June 1, 1897. They had two children: Cora and Harold. The oldest daughter, Nettie, married Joseph Barret November 26, 1898 and they have two children: Raymond and Mary. Phemie married John C. Wertz, a conductor on the C., M. & St. P. R. R., in May, 1896, and they have three children, John, May and Clinton Lloyd.
Mr. Stay is a Republican, while all his wife's people have been Democrats. He owns a good and well cultivated farm of some two hundred acres, in a good state of cultivation, and provided with fine farm buildings. He is one of the oldest settlers of the county, and is full of incidents and anecdotes of the early days.
In writing of her nationality and ancestry Mrs. Stay said: "I am an American, full blooded. My back-bone tingles with the essence of Americanism. Father (A. J. Campbell) was of Scotch descent on his father's side. He it was [sic] got one hundred and seven prisoners from Little Crow's warriors as a mark of friendship, love and esteem they had always felt for him only during the few weeks in which they applied tomahawk, fire and desolation to our fair border."
From: Compendium of History and Biography of Central and Northern Minnesota (Chicago, Geo. A. Ogle & Co., 1904), pages 334-35.
Frank Stay aka Francis Jette 2nd husband to Cecila Margaret Campbell who was the daughter of Antione Joseph Campbell & May Ann Dalton several narratives are in Through Dakota Eyes that were done by Cecila --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Post by mdenney on Feb 9, 2007 2:08:38 GMT -5
Stephan Blacksmith, Ellen Stone
1902 Register: Stephan Blacksmith aka Tatekahomni Age 40 full blood;Wapati-dead; Makadutawin-dead. Spouse: Isabella Blacksmith nee St. Clair. Marriage:aug. 17,1884 at Santee,Ne(Santee Mar. Reg). Isabella's parents: N/A on father; Nancy St. clair(#757 on 1902 Register). Children: Emma c. Age 15 full Blood,,,Ida Z. age 12 Full Blood(born Aug. 13,1889;died May 1,1903. Buried Hobu Crk. Cem. Knox,NE),gilbert age 7 full blood, Abel R., age 5 full blood, Joseph age 3 full blood, Gabriel age 1 full blood, and Stephen W. aka Mdewakantonwanhok'sidan Full Blood. 1887 Census:lists Stephan, wfe Isabella, children: Emma, Paul S. age 1/6(Deceased) and Sarah(Sully) Blacksmith Age1(born 1889). 1884 Census lists just Stephan and spouse Isabella. Stephan Blacksmith was born 1862, and died Apr. 19, 1924. buried at Hobucrk. Cem.,Knox,NE. Headstone has his photo. Catholic Cem. at Santee lists a Blacksmith Infant died 28 Apr. 1906. No mention re. parents names.
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Post by mdenney on Feb 9, 2007 2:31:18 GMT -5
Alexander Duncan Campbell
Alexander Duncan Campbell, Sr. married Josephine, full blood, born Wabasha 1794 and died 11-12 or 22 1875 and was buried in her garden. Duncan was granted land that included Pilot Knob but grant not honored after many years. Duncan was apparently first settler/trader at Mendota. 11 kids, it appears. 1838 census for Duncan: 5 white males, 6 white females. 1838 mixed-blood census recorded George 14. 1850 at Wabasha: George 23. George (1824-1863) marries Dakota woman Louise Deschamps(Itokan)of Wabasha
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Post by mdenney on Feb 9, 2007 14:14:47 GMT -5
Philander Prescott,Spirit of the Moon, and kid
the Early Presbyterian Church Records of Minnesota 1835-1871(Includes Church at Ft. Snelling) list the following entries: In the Marriages on page 17 : Philander Prescott wed to Miss Mary Reichi by Rev. S.W. Pond. Date: June 1837. In the Births,Baptisms and Deaths of Children is the entry on page 18: Louis-Adopted son of P. Prescott. Born 1828., baptized Dec. 1846.
Looks to me like Philander Prescott had more than one wife, a common law spouse and a legal spouse. The adopted son was actually the nephew of his legal wife,Louis duMarce, son of the late Francoise DuMarce. Francoise had married her sister.
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Post by mdenney on Feb 10, 2007 14:47:15 GMT -5
Zitkala-sa, "Red Bird," Zitkala-sa, "Red Bird,"a Yankton Sioux reformer and writer was one of a number of White-educated Indians who fought to obtain fairer treatment for her people by the federal government. She was born on February 22, 1875, the daughter of John Haysting Simmons and Ellen Tate'Iyohiwin, "Reaches for the Wind." Educated on the reservation until the age of 8, she was sent to White's Institute, a Quaker school in Wabash, Indiana. At the age of 19, against her family's wishes, she enrolled at Earlham College, in Richmond, where she won an oratorical contest, then graduated to become a teacher at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania. link below- www.spiritpath.aaanativearts.com/cat23.html
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Post by mdenney on Feb 10, 2007 14:48:47 GMT -5
Anpetu Wastewin Anpetu Wastewin, from anpetu "day," waste "good," win "woman," was a Yankton Sioux scholar, interpreter, and lecturer who became a nationally famous linguist and ethnologist. She was born January 3, 1888 at Wakpala, South Dakota, the daughter of Reverend and Mrs. Philip Deloria (Tipi Sapa). link below- www.spiritpath.aaanativearts.com/cat23.html
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Post by mdenney on Feb 10, 2007 17:01:16 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Feb 10, 2007 23:35:35 GMT -5
INKPADUTA This portrait of Inkpaduta is the artist's conception of the man. There are no known authenticated photographs of Inkpaduta link below- www.montana.edu/wwwfpcc/tribes/santee.jpg1815-1882 Wahpekute Santee The renegade band of Wahpekute Santee led by Inkpaduta saw its beginning when Wamdesapa, Inkpaduta's father, killed his old rival, Chief Tasagi. Wamdesapa died in 1848 leaving his son to direct the freely roaming band of renegades. They roamed the prairies of South Dakota, Iowa and Minnesota. Other members of the Wahpekutes wanted no part of the fierce, cruel leader whose band became a refuge for cast-outs and undesirables from many Santee tribes. Inkpaduta's extreme hatred for whites seemed to be derived from the senseless murdering in 1854 of his brother and family by Henry Lott. Henry Lott, a white whiskey trader and horse thief, reputedly had killed without cause. For this reason, probably, Inkpaduta fiercely opposed white encroachment on the Minnesota frontier. He did not sign one of the 1851 treaties, but often appeared at the agencies demanding a share of the annuity payments. During the severe winter of 1856-57, even the agency Santee suffered. Inkpaduta's band, with no annuities to fall back on, survived only by begging and preying on white settlements. A white posse, angered over the shooting of a dog which had bitten a member, forcibly took their weapons leaving them unable to even hunt. The weapons were recovered in some manner. The Inkpaduta band then proceeded to retaliate against the whites by a general slaughter of settlers in the area. On March 8 and 9, 1856, Inkpaduta led his band on a murdering spree that ended with 35 deaths and the capture of 4 women in the Okoboji and Spirit Lakes area in Iowa. These deaths have been recorded in history as the Spirit Lake Massacre. Inkpaduta showed no mercy to the captive white women. Two of the women died after the band fled into what is now South Dakota. Mrs. Margaret Ann Marble and Abbie Gardner were rescued by other Santee for the promise of individual rewards and the return of the entire tribe's annuities. The Santee hotly resented being deprived of their annuities for the actions of the 14 or 15 members of Inkpaduta's band of Wahpekute Santee. A little more than 5 years later during the Minnesota Uprising, Inkpaduta was one of the ingenious leaders at the battles of Big Mound and White Stone Hill, 1863. It was a young member of Inkpaduta's band who shot Dr. Joseph S. Weiser that started the Big Mound Battle. Inkpaduta led his small band up and down the frontier killing settlers and leaving a trail of terror. The whites blamed all of the Santee for his actions. At the Battle of the Little Big Horn, Inkpaduta was one of the few Santee present. Afterwards, fled into Canada never making peace with the whites. He died in 1882. link below- www.montana.edu/wwwfpcc/tribes/santee.htmlRoute of the Shetak Captives link below- www.montana.edu/wwwfpcc/tribes/Shetak.jpg
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Post by mdenney on Feb 11, 2007 0:09:11 GMT -5
Young Man Afraid of His Horses. A chief of the Oglala Sioux, contemporaneous with Red Cloud and one of the leading lieutenants of the latter in the war of 1866 to defeat the building of the Montana road through the buffalo pastures of Powder r. His Sioux name, Tasunkakokipapi, is not properly interpreted; it really means that the bearer was so potent in battle that the mere sight of his horses inspired fear. After the peace of 1868 he lived at the Oglala agency and died at Pine Ridge, South Dakota. www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/siouan/oglalachiefs.htm#Crazy_Horse
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Post by mdenney on Feb 11, 2007 17:44:07 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Feb 11, 2007 17:45:11 GMT -5
AFRAID-OF-HAWK SDGENWEB File -- Jackson Co. SD -- Federal Land Records -- Names ... ... N 033 W 033 320 253400 PA 114397 01/17/1910 AFRAID-OF-HAWK BERT 06 043 N ... N 034 W 005 40.25 253400 PA 408615 05/26/1914 ARROYO ERNEST J SR 06 044 N ... ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/sd/jackson/land/jack... link below- ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/sd/jackson/land/jack-a.txt
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