- Five Medals
Five Medals first appeared in eastern records after the battle of Fallen Timbers. He was a leader of the
Elkhart River Potawatomi . He disappears from the records shortly after the end of theWar of 1812 . Five Medals lead his people in defense of their homelands and then to lead his people into the new world of agriculture.Peace on the Frontier
In November 1794, long after the
Battle of Fallen Timbers (August 18, 1794), the Potawatomi turned to the Americans for an end to the War. Five Medals, a leader of the Elkhart River Potawatomi lead a delegation to Fort Wayne and arranged to discuss peace at Greenville the following January. The armistice was concluded in January and a June peace council was arranged, also at Greenville. In 1796, the Americans were concerned over the continued contact between the Potawatomi along the St. Joseph. To enhance their position, the American Indian Agents arranged to send a delegation of Potawatomi,Shawnee , Miami, Odawa (Ottawa) and Chippewa (Ojibwa), from Wabash toPhiladelphia , the nation’s capital. Five Medals was one of the two Potawatomi chiefs to go. Sailing fromDetroit , they arrived in Philadelphia, wherePresident Washington honored them with a banquet. Washington extolled the chiefs to honor the Greenville Treaty, which had been the result of a terrible war. He also called for all the tribes to take up agriculture. By 1800 Five Medals convincedTopinbee that the poor winter hunts since 1796 could only be corrected if the tribe adopted agricultural methods. Topinbee asked the Americans for assistance."The Potawatomis, Keepers of the Fire"; Edmunds, R. David, 1978]In December
1801 , another delegation went east, to Washington, the new Capital lead byLittle Turtle of the Miami. Stopping inBaltimore , Five Medals addressed a convention ofQuakers , asking for assistance in agriculture and in stopping the flow of whiskey. In Washington, Five Medals supported Little Turtles call for annuity distribution atFort Wayne instead of Detroit, which was more convenient to both nations. The villages further west than St. Joseph received little if any of the payment. Both leaders also joined Little Turtle’s call for the suppression of the liquor trade. Whiskey was reaching the Potawatomi from theWabash River trade. Governor Harrison moved to have the annuities paid at Fort Wayne, then called for a land cession council atVincennes .Land Cessions
Topinbee, Five Medals, Magaago, and
Keesass came for the Potawatomi. The land and question was well south of Keesass’ town, which was the furthest south of thePotawatomi villages. When the treaty was completed in June1803 , the Potawatomi agreed. In1807 ,William Kirk , a Quaker missionary, and Five Medals met to arrange for an agricultural mission to his village. It never materialized. That year and the next four years, he andWinamac and Topinbee continued to ask the American Government for agricultural help. The equipment that was sent was never used, as only these chiefs were interested in agriculture, not their people. In September of 1809, Governor Harrison met in council atFort Wayne with the Winamac, Five Medals, and Keesass of the Potawatomi and the Miami chiefs. When the Miami refused to negotiate land cessions, the Potawatomi held firm to the Miami as allies, even as Winamac worked to convince the Miami to sell their land. Because of the nearness of American forts to Five Medals village, he remained friendly with the Americans, as did Keesass. He was concerned withTecumseh because of the trouble that would follow. In spite of repeated entreaties, Five Medals refused to listen to Tecumseh.War of 1812
Through the winter of 1811-1812, Potawatomi raids were launched against settlements in southern
Indiana andIllinois . To end the destruction, councils were called by the Americans to take place atCahokia andVincennes . Winamac and Five Medals assured the agents that the few anti-American warriors were not representative of the Potawatomi. Because of the influence of the pro-British chiefs, Winamac and Five Medals refused a trip to Washington. Tecumseh the Shawnee spoke at the council blaming Winamac and Five Medals for not controlling their warriors. In May, Tecumseh called an all-Indian council at Mississinewa. Here Five Medals realized that he no longer had control of his warriors. He hurried to Fort Wayne to warn the commander there. Here he learned that a family from his village had been attacked on their return from a trade visit toKentucky . While the government obtains the family members taken prisoner and made presents for the two warriors killed, this only increased the hostility of the warriors against Five Medals. When Tecumseh and theProphet moved toProphetstown on theTippecanoe , many of the Potawatomi warriors moved with them.In August of 1812, the Potawatomi supported the British at the siege of Detroit, which succeeded in the surrender of the Post to the British. Immediately, the Potawatomi laid siege to
Fort Wayne . Five Medals was forced to support. Governor Harrison started troops up theWabash River to relieve the siege, which Harrison did on September 12. In retaliation, Harrison sent two detachments to raid the Potawatomi villages in northern Indiana while his troops continued to Detroit. MajorSamuel Wells lead one detachment to the Elkhart where Five Medals villages were located. Because they were vacant only the crops and buildings were destroyed. After the destruction of the village on the Elkhart River, Five Medals people moved nearer to Detroit on theHuron River .Many Potawatomi continued with Tecumseh in support of the British and were defeated at the
Battle of the Thames (October 5,1813 ). When the American Brigadier GeneralDuncan McArthur extended a truce to the nations of the lower lakes, Governor Harrison at first refused to let the Potawatomi join. He relented to insure peace on the frontier andTopinbee , Five Medals andMain Poc signed for the Potawatomi. It was Topinbee, Five Medals, andMetea , who attended theGreenville council in July 1814, which sought to end the hostilities. The other chiefs stayed away. On August 12, 1815 a treaty of peace was signed between the Americans and Topinbee, Chebass, Five Medals, Metea, and Mad Sturgeon. In1815 , with the treaty ending the war,Shabbona and Senachewine were supported by the Indian Agent atPeoria as the tribal leaders against the Fort Wayne Agents selection of Five Medals and Metea and theChicago Indian Agents support of Topinbee and Chebass. The confusion caused by these separate designations of tribal leaders began confusion among the Americans who sought to designate a single chief.In
1818 theTreaty of St. Mary's ceded 1,550 acres of Potawatomi land in western Indiana (Wabash River west) and in easternIllinois . Many individual bribes were given to the chiefs of all the participating nations. Topinbee, Five Medals, Chebass, Moran, and Mad Sturgeon all signed the treaty.References
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