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St. Vrain massacre : ウィキペディア英語版
St. Vrain massacre

The St. Vrain massacre was an incident in the Black Hawk War. It occurred near present-day Pearl City, Illinois in Kellogg's Grove on May 24, 1832. The massacre was most likely committed by Ho-Chunk warriors who were unaffiliated with Black Hawk's band of warriors. It is also unlikely that the group of Ho-Chunk had the sanction of their nation. Killed in the massacre were United States Indian Agent Felix St. Vrain and three of his companions. Some accounts reported that St. Vrain's body was mutilated.
St. Vrain and his party were attacked while en route from Dixon's Ferry, Illinois (now Dixon) to Galena, Illinois. St. Vrain had been ordered by General Henry Atkinson to deliver dispatches to Fort Armstrong. Colonel Henry Dodge's men interred the remains of St. Vrain and his companions after the massacre.
==Prelude==
United States Indian Agent Felix St. Vrain was traveling with several companions which included, John Fowler, William Hale, and Aaron Hawley. Those men, along with St. Vrain, were all reportedly killed in the attack; also traveling with St. Vrain was Thomas Kenney, Aquilla Floyd, and Alexander Higginbotham.
The Native Americans that attacked the group were not part of Black Hawk's band of warriors but they were en route to join that group when the massacre occurred.〔 Older histories described the group as a band of Sac warriors while modern sources indicate that the band were associated with the Ho-Chunk nation.〔〔Stevens, Frank E. ''(The Black Hawk ) War'', Frank E. Stevens 1903, pp. 169–171. Available online at Northern Illinois University Libraries Digitization Project.〕 Black Hawk asserted that the group was Ho-Chunk and unaffiliated with his band in his autobiography.〔
In fact, most Ho-Chunk sided with the United States during the Black Hawk War.〔 The warriors that attacked St. Vrain's party acted with no authority or oversight from the Ho-Chunk nation.〔 As the war began to be defined along racial terms most white settlers in the region did not notice the distinction.〔 This led to unwarranted fear of all Native Americans in the area, even those friendly to the settlers' cause.〔 One example of this appeared in an article published in the ''New Galenian'' on May 30, 1832. While the article described the events of the massacre it also went on to associate the murders of St. Vrain and his companions with the Sauk and Fox of Keokuk's band.〔
Keokuk and his band were not near the scene when the murders occurred and had actually volunteered to assist white settlers against Black Hawk and his band of warriors.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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