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Canku Ota |
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(Many Paths) |
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An Online Newsletter Celebrating Native America |
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January 10 , 2004 - Issue 86 |
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ALEXANDER BESAW |
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From The Green Bay Gazette - June
16, 1928
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credits: submitted
by Timm Severud (Ondamitag)
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Indian, 102 Years Old, to Attend Reunion of Civil War Regiment Life
is just one round of social events for Alexander Besaw of Shawano. Having
just finished his 102nd birthday party, he now is going to Fond du Lac
for the annual reunion of the 14th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry, with
which he served during the Civil War. At this reunion, which opens Monday,
he will be the oldest member present, and one of the spryest. One would never guess that Besaw was 102 years old last month. He talks clearly, with a slight French accent, and makes his way without difficulty, depending only slightly upon the cane, which he carries. His sight is good, although his hearing is impaired. He says he is 102 years old and claims that his Civil War records bear out his assertion. Born
at West De Pere Besaw
was born in West De Pere on the banks of the Fox River, 102 years ago,
and lived in that location until 22 years ago, when he moved to Shawano.
He tells interestingly of early personages and incidents in this locality. The
first white man he ever saw, he declares, was Cornell Dixon, who operated
a sawmill on East River to turn out the timbers for the De Pere dam, but
when the dam was in place it was insufficiently weighted, and following
a northeast wind one night, the unfinished portion was carried upstream
nearly to Little Rapids, where it broke up. "And when the timbers
floated back down stream, we got our share," he confessed with a
grin. He
was about 12 at this time and had never owned a pair of trousers, he said,
only jeans. His mother, using a needle larger than a lead pencil and tread
made from vine fibers, finally turned him out a pair of trousers, but
neglected to tell him how to put them on. He finally solved the riddle
by typing their corners to an angle in the rail fence, climbing the fence,
and jumping into them. "I'm a man now," he thought, and announced his intentions of seeking work. He went to Mr. Reid, superintendent of the sawmill, and asked, "Do you need any more men for the drive?" referring to the drive of logs. The superintendent looked him over gravely, and announced he would try him out. Valley
was Haunted "You
stay here he told me, and when a log comes a past, give it a shove with
the peavey. I waited and then the log came, I dropped the peavey onto
it, the point held fast so I could not get it out, and away went the log,
peavey and all." "You
are no good for the drive, Mr. Reid told me, 'Go and help the cook.'" Soon
young Besaw had saved enough money to buy a white linen suit for 1.50,
and decided to go to a dance in Fort Howard. The trousers were too long
and the coat too big, but he turned the trouser cuffs up, and tucked his
coat in, and decided he was quiet a well-dressed young man. The
trip to Green Bay (Fort Howard) necessitated a walk through the Ashwaubenon
Creek and Valley, near where Hockers' Brickyard is now located, a locality
commonly credited with being haunted. Besaw decided not to go through
alone, but to wait for some other party. So he crawled into some bushes
and waited. Soon two Frenchmen came along singing. Then one called to the other, "If you see a ghost yell; and if I see one I will yell." Thinking to get bast under this protection. Besaw fell into step behind them. Then the nearest Frenchman turned around and saw the white-clad figure. Frenchman
See Ghost Four
times the young Indian accompanied Dixon to Chicago with the mail. At
Fond du Lac, there was a single settler; on the site of what is now Milwaukee,
Solomon Juneau had his shack of popple poles. On one trip, near where
Racine stands now, Dixon was trapped by a falling tree, and Besaw had
to ride to the nearest settlement help. He knew only his own tongue but
by a dint of energetic chopping motions, he convinced them that they should
bring axes and follow him. Dixon was free and unhurt. The
route led through Sheboygan, which, pronounced in Indian, sounds like
Chetaucon. At Sheboygan Falls, Besaw declares, he saw from 10,000 to 15,000
Indians housed in gathered there to spear the fish as their ascent of
the river was blocked by the falls. In those days, he said one could 'walk on money,' but he had no place to spend it, and nothing to spend it for. At one time, food was so scarce that tea was $8 a pound and a 50 pound sack of flour brought $29. The only thing cheap was whiskey. It sold for 15 cent a gallon, and any store, which did not provide a barrel of it with a dipper, for the refreshment of customers, was boycotted for its failure to show this courtesy to patrons. Hale
and Spry One of his prized possessions is a meerschaum pipe bearing the date 1814. He originally bought it for $7, he said, but later the shopkeeper sought to buy it back, claiming he had not known its real value. Besaw finally consented to relinquish the pipe upon return of his $7 and 36 pounds of tobacco 'to boot.' He later regained possession of it when the merchant retired from business at Antigo. |
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