A quote from Little Turtle at his memorial off Lawton Place. |
by Tom Castaldi
Chief Little
Turtle was one of the most feared and respected native leaders during the
frontier wars of the 1780s and 1790s when Fort
Wayne was born.
Known to his Miami
people as Meshekinnoquah, Little Turtle is thought to have been born in 1752 in
a village along the Eel
River, a few miles
northeast of Columbia
City.
He rose to
prominence as a warrior in 1780 when he destroyed the United States
irregulars of Colonel August LaBalme who had attacked the Miami town of Kekionga (present –day Fort Wayne, Ind.). When the U.S. Army under General Josiah
Harmar was sent by President Washington to destroy the Indian towns at the Three
Rivers, Little Turtle assembled warriors from the region and defeated General
Harmar’s troops at the Battle of Kekionga on October 22, 1790. In 1791, at the present-day site of Fort Recovery, Ohio,
the Indians under Little Turtle again defeated U.S. Army troops, this time
under territorial governor General Arthur St. Clair, in the Army’s worst defeat
ever at the hands of native peoples.
When Major General Anthony Wayne finally
defeated the Indians at the Battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794, Little Turtle was
not the leader; he had urged the Indians to avoid a “climactic” battle with
General Wayne because of information about the strength of Wayne’s forces he
was receiving from Wayne’s Chief of Spies and Little Turtle’s friend and son-in-law,
William Wells.
After his
military career, Little Turtle became a diplomat for his people. He was a principal negotiator for the Indians
at the Treaty of Greenville in 1795 and made four trips to the nation’s
capital, meeting with presidents George Washington, John Adams and Thomas
Jefferson (twice). He sought U.S. assistance
to end the destructive and illegal liquor trade and help from the Society of
Friends to bring new farming methods to his people. He also attempted to bring the new process of
vaccination against the dreaded smallpox to his people.
Little Turtle
died peacefully on July 14,
1812, and was laid to rest with military honors in the Miami’s ancient burial
grounds.
The Little Turtle Memorial is just off Lawton Place. Turn right from Spy Run and look for the sign in the median. |
Plaque you will see in the Little Turtle Memorial. |
You can learn more about Little Turtle in another blog post:
http://historycenterfw.blogspot.com/2012/07/remembering-little-turtle.html
and see photos of some of the Little Turtle artifacts owned by the History Center on our Facebook page at
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10151062389945935.487218.281783120934&type=3
http://historycenterfw.blogspot.com/2012/07/remembering-little-turtle.html
and see photos of some of the Little Turtle artifacts owned by the History Center on our Facebook page at
https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.10151062389945935.487218.281783120934&type=3
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