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John Beach : ウィキペディア英語版
John Beach

Major John Beach (January 1, 1812 – August 31, 1874) was a United States Army officer during the Black Hawk and American Civil War as well as the last U.S. Indian Agent to the Sac and Fox tribes. A son-in-law to General Joseph Street, Beach succeeded him as agent to the Sac and Fox upon his death and eventually hosted the week-long council that resulted in the signing of the treaty for the purchase of much of Iowa from the Sac and Fox Indians in October 1842.
==Biography==

Born in Massachusetts to William Beach and Lucy Tucker,〔Street, Mary A. ''The Street Genealogy''. Exeter, New Hampshire: John Templeton, 1895. (pg. 279)〕 John Beach enlisted in the U.S. Army during his late teens and graduated from the West Point Military Academy on July 1, 1832. He was commissioned as a brevet 2nd lieutenant served on the frontier with the Infantry Regiment, assigned to Fort Armstrong and Fort Crawford during the 1830s. In 1836, he took command of the Fort Armstrong garrison after its commanding officer Lt. Col. William Davenport ordered an evacuation and led a march to Fort Snelling in Hennepin County, Minnesota. Beach would remain at Fort Armstrong until being assigned elsewhere in November.〔''Annual Reports of the Secretary of War''. Vol. III. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office, 1877. (pg. 48)〕 During his last year with the army, he was involved in recruitment efforts before his resignation on June 30, 1838. Beach later married Lucy Frances Street, the daughter of General Joseph Street.〔
Two years later, he succeeded his father-in-law General Joseph Street as U.S. Indian Agent to the Sac and Fox tribes following Street's death. He continued his predecessor's work in establishing farming and education to the Raccoon River Agency reservation, although he was ultimately unsuccessful in the former goal. He also opposed settlers sqatting on reservation land as, in 1841, a force of dragoons under Lieutenant C.F. Ruff removed James Jordan and other settlers illegally living on the reservation. They had previously ignored Beach's order to leave and, after allowing them to gather their possessions, Ruff ordered his men to burn their homes.〔Pelzer, Louis. ''Marches of the Dragoons in the Mississippi Valley''. Iowa City: State Historical Society of Iowa, 1917. (pg. 90)〕 On October 11, 1842, he presided over the signing of a treaty which allowed the federal government to purchase much of Iowa from the Sac and Fox. He remained at the agency until 1847 where he resided in the area as a local farmer and merchant. Beach reenlisted during the American Civil War, however he involved in the training and drilling of recruits as his hearing loss disqualified him from the field.
Returning to Agency City following the war, he became a writer and historian in his later years. He died on August 31, 1874, at age 62 and buried at Chief Wapello's Memorial Park.〔Cullum, George G. ''Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. from its Establishment in 1802 to 1890 with the Early History of the United States Military Academy''. Vol. 1. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin & Co., 1891. (pg. 526)〕 A series of articles he had written on the early history of the various tribes he lived with during his career were published posthumously in the ''Agency Independent'' in the months following his death.〔''The History of Lee County, Iowa''. Chicago: Western Historical Company, 1879. (pg. 349)〕 His writings on the history of the Fox and Sac, as well as the fur trade on the Des Moines River, were later included in the ''History of Wapello County'' (1878).〔Thwaites, Reuben Gold, ed. ''Collections of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin''. Vol. XV. Madison: Democrat Printing Co., 1900. (pg. 154)〕

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