INDIAN AFFAIRS: LAWS AND TREATIES

Vol. II, Treaties    

Compiled and edited by Charles J. Kappler. Washington : Government Printing Office, 1904.


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TREATY WITH THE SIOUX OF THE LAKES, 1815.

July 19, 1815. | 7 Stat., 126. | Ratified Dec. 26, 1815.

Page Images: 113


Margin Notes
Injuries, etc., forgiven.
Perpetual peace and friendship.
Protection of United States acknowledged.

Page 113

A treaty of peace and friendship, made and concluded at Portage des Sioux between William Clark, Ninian Edwards, and Auguste Chouteau, Commissioners Plenipotentiary of the United States of America, on the part and behalf of the said States, of the one part; and the undersigned Chiefs and Warriors of the Sioux of the Lakes, on the part and behalf of their Tribe, of the other part.

THE parties being desirous of re-establishing peace and friendship between the United States and the said tribe, and of being placed in all things, and in every respect, on the same footing upon which they stood before the late war between the United States and Great Britain, have agreed to the following articles:

ARTICLE 1.

Every injury, or act of hostility, committed by one or either of the contracting parties against the other, shall be mutually forgiven and forgot.

ARTICLE 2.

There shall be perpetual peace and friendship between all the citizens of the United States of America and all the individuals composing the said tribe of the Lakes, and all the friendly relations that existed between them before the war, shall be, and the same are hereby, renewed.

ARTICLE 3.

The undersigned chiefs and warriors, for themselves and their said tribe, do hereby acknowledge themselves and their aforesaid tribe to be under the protection of the United States, and of no other nation, power, or sovereign, whatsoever.

In witness whereof, the said William Clark, Ninian Edwards, and Auguste Chouteau, commissioners aforesaid, and the chiefs and warriors of the aforesaid tribe, have hereunto subscribed their names and affixed their seals this nineteenth day of July, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and fifteen, and of the independence of the United States the fortieth.

William Clark, [L. S.]

Ninian Edwards, [L. S.]

Auguste Chouteau, [L. S.]

Tatangamania, the Walking Buffaloe, his x mark, [L. S.]

Haisanwee, the Horn, his x mark, [L. S.]

Aampahaa, the Speaker, his x mark, [L. S.]

Narcesagata, the Hard Stone, his x mark, [L. S.]

Haibohaa, the Branching Horn, his x mark, [L. S.]

Done at Portage des Sioux, in the presence of—

R. Wash, secretary to the commission,

John Miller, colonel Third Infantry,

T. Paul, C. T. of the C.,

Edmund Hall, lieutenant late Twenty-eighth Infantry,

J. B. Clark, adjutant Third Infantry,

Manuel Lisa, agent,

Thomas Forsyth, Indian agent,

Jno. W. Johnson, United States factor and Indian agent,

Maurice Blondeaux,

Lewis Decouagne,

Louis Dorion,

John A. Cameron,

Jacques Mette,

John Hay.


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