MINNEAPOLIS (WCCO) Lower Sioux Indian Community tribal leaders
say that land with historical significance will be returned to the
Community from the State of Minnesota and the Minnesota Historical
Society.
According to Community Council President Robert Larsen, plans are
being finalized for the land acquisition, with the closing date
of the transfer expected on Feb. 12. The land includes MHS parcels
at the site where the U.S. Dakota War of 1862 started, which eventually
led to the the largest single day, mass execution in U.S.
History.
This transfer is of great historical significance,
the tribe said in a release. The United States established
the Lower Sioux Agency site in 1853 in response to the Mendota Treaty
of 1851, between the Mdewankanton and Wahpekute bands of Dakota.
In 1862, after a decade of United States unfulfilled treaty
obligations, the Dakota raised arms fighting for enforcement of
the treaties. Many lost their lives on both sides. On December 26,
1862, the United States imposed the largest mass execution in the
history of the United States 38 Dakota men were hung in Mankato,
MN, for defending their people.
Larsen says the tribe takes back the land with mixed emotions
because the land was used by the federal government and traders
in a way that took advantage of his people.
But it is with a happy heart that we accept the return of
our ancestral homelands on behalf of our ancestors who marched to
Ft. Snelling, Davenport Iowa, Crow Creek, our relatives forced to
scatter to the four winds, and those who gave their lives so we
could live, said Larsen. The State did the right thing
by supporting this transaction, through legislation and multi-agency
support from MHS and the Department of Natural Resources
we accept this land back on behalf of all our Dakota relatives.
The Lower Sioux Indian Community has been co-managing the MHS property
since 2007 and Larsen says the Community has provided financial
support and advice to sustain it.
This land transfer is a milestone in our Nation, said
Cheyanne St. John, the Communitys Tribal Historic Preservation
Officer. The Lower Sioux Agency is the last place our Oceti
Sakowin were gathered before being expelled from the State. Here
we are generations later, reclaiming the land which holds the memory
of who we were and our experiences. Now, its time to heal.
A celebration will happen when it is safe to do so.
The Lower Sioux Indian Community is located in Redwood County,
Minnesota.
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