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Description
Winamac or Winnemac may refer to any of the three different Potawatomi chiefs with this name. Coming from Winmég, the name means "Catfish" in the Potawatomi language. Winamac was a signer of the 1795 Treaty of Greenville, in which Great Lakes tribes surrendered the site of Chicago to the U.S. government. Winamac and his people fought with the British in the War of 1812, and the warrior died during the fighting. Winamac is the name of at least two chiefs during the American period. One was hostile to the United States and the other friendly during the War of 1812. There was a third Chief Winamac during the French period.[1]
Namesakes
* Winnemac (fictional state), a fictional state in the United States, invented by writer Sinclair Lewis. * Winnemac Avenue and Winnemac Park on the north side of Chicago, Illinois * Win-E-Mac School District in northwestern Minnesota * Winamac, Indiana
War of 1812
Winamac began the organization for the 1812 Siege of Fort Wayne. Late in August, Winamac called together a war party from northern Indiana and Michigan. First attempting to convince Captain Rhea of their friendly intent, they sought entry to the post. Rebuffed, on August 28, 1812 the warriors killed a clerk who left the post for the Ohio. What followed were occasional firing of outbuildings and shots aimed at any and all movement seen from the outside. On September 4, Winamac approached under a flag of truce. Making no offer, Winamac found the fort susceptible to attack. The next day, two soldiers were killed outside the fort. Late in the afternoon, Winamac approached the fort with a small delegation and sought admittance to see the commander. Inside, they were heavily guarded, ending their ploy to kill the commander and attack from inside. The following day, September 6, saw the greatest action in the siege, but without help, the fort could not be taken. On September 11, a relief column under Governor Harrison arrived from Piqua and the siege ended. Winamac disappears from the history books.[1]
Winamac (American period, I)
Winamac was a chief from the Tippecanoe Potawatomi on the Wabash. Beginning in 1807 he and Five Medals and Topinabee continued to ask the American Government for agricultural help. The equipment that was sent was never used, as only these chiefs were interested in agriculture, not their people! In 1807, President Monroe wanted to acquire more Indian land. A council was called at Fort Wayne in September. Winamac lead the Potawatomi delegation. When the other chiefs and the Miami refused to negotiate land cessions, it was Winamac who persuaded first the Miami and then the Potawatomi to agree to the cession. When 3 million acres (12,000 km2) were agreed to, none were lands of the Potawatomi. Winamac and the Potawatomi received a generous share of the payment for these lands. The months following the treaty found Winamac at Detroit settling disputes for the lands in northwest Ohio. Because of the Fort Wayne Treaty, discontent was growing and the number of warriors at Prophetstown was increasing. Winamac provide information to Governor Harrison on the plans and activities at Prophetstown. Harrison invited the Prophet to Washington and in June, Tecumseh led a delegation to Vincennes to meet with Harrison. Here, Tecumseh denounced Winamac as a ‘black dog’ for supporting the American interests.[1]
Winamac (French period)
In the Spring of 1701 Augustin le Gardeur de Repentigny de Courtemarch was sent to Lake Michigan to negotiate a meeting between the Western tribes and the Iroquois. The western delegation arrived in Montreal the 21st of July 1701. The Potawatomi delegation was lead by Onanghisse and Winamac from the St. Joseph villages. Onanghisse served as the spokesman for the Potawatomi, who returned their Iroquois prisoners for their own people held in New York. This gathering of one thousand Indians concluded a treaty of peace, which ended the Iroquois menace around the Great Lakes. When hostilities erupted in 1706 between the Miami and the Odawa (Ottawa), the Potawatomi warned the Odawa of a pending Miami attack and were left with the blame when the Odawa attacked the Miami in a preemptive strike. Then in 1710 the Fox nation increased their perennial raiding, turning their attention to Detroit. Fearing a disruption of the trade, the Illinois confederacy and the Potawatomi nation ion 1712, joined by the Odawa planned to attack the Fox villages in Wisconsin before they could move east. In retaliation, the Fox, Mascouten warriors at Detroit laid siege against the French. The Potawatomi lead by Mickisabe relieved the garrison at Detroit, letting the besiegers slip through their lines one rainy night. Over half the warriors were captured and put to death. The remainder escaped to Iroquois country. Fearing raids by Fox warriors remaining in Wisconsin, Winamac moved his entire St. Joseph village to Detroit. From their protected villages, the Potawatomi joined in all the expeditions against the Fox in Wisconsin. By 1718, the Potawatomi outnumbered all other tribes at Detroit. By 1718, French policy was changing and Fort St. Joseph was established and Winamac’s people returned to the St. Joseph valley. In 1719, Winamac traveled to Montreal to assure the French that the Potawatomi were allies of the French in the west. In 1720, Fox warriors were again raiding the Illinois Confederacy when a returning war party captured and killed two Potawatomi warriors, one the son of Winamac. The French would not support a Potawatomi attack and in 1722, the French continue in their hope for the Fox to refrain from attacking the Potawatomi. By 1725, the other Indian nations refused to wait for the French to stop the Fox and began a series of attacks meant to destroy the Fox as a people. During July 1730, the Illinois surround a Fox migration, holding them long enough for the Potawatomi, Miami, and then the to arrive. The massacre that September marked a change in the Potawatomi. In 1736, Winamac and the St. Joseph Potawatomi were hosting councils of peace and providing protection to Sac villages. In 1737, the Fox were no longer a threat to the frontier and the French accepted a peace, as counseled by Winamac.[1]