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Information on
the Assiniboin Indians
Recorded by Members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
1804-1805
The following excerpts from the journals
of Lewis and Clark and their men present a picture of the Assiniboin
people as the Anglo-Americans saw them (or, in this case, heard
about them from other tribes and traders). The modern reader must
be careful to understand that what these white men saw and recorded
was not necessarily correct from the Indian perspective. Lewis and
Clark were particularly biased against this tribe from information
gathered from the Assiniboin enemies.
The following passages have been freely
adapted and excerpted from the original texts, and the spelling
has been corrected to make them easier to read. For students wishing
to quote these passages, the Journals of the Lewis and Clark
Expedition, edited by Gary Moulton and published by the University
of Nebraska Press, is the recommended source. For those who wish
more in-depth information about Lewis and Clark's relations with
various Indian tribes, including background from the Indian perspective,
the best book is James P. Ronda's Lewis and Clark among the Indians.
Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1984. The very best way to
obtain accurate information from the tribal perspective is to contact
tribal councils for individual tribes - in other words, to consult
the people themselves.
The Assiniboin speak a Siouan dialect, although
the name by which they are popularly known is Algonquian and means
"those who cook with stones." They once lived in what
is now northern Minnesota and were part of the Yanktonai Sioux,
but split off from that tribe and moved to Manitoba and Saskatchewan
sometime in the 1600s. They became semi-nomadic tipi dwellers who
followed the buffalo and obtained their subsistence from that animal.
The Assiniboins were great hunters who traded the pelts they obtained
for European trade goods. Today they are centered on reservations
in the United States and Canada. In the U.S. they live on the Fort
Belknap Reservation with the Gros Ventres (Atsina) and the Fort
Peck Reservation with the Sioux.
Contact Information:
www.mnisose.org/profiles/fortpeck.htm
www.mnisose.org/profiles/ftbelnp.htm
President, Fort Belknap Community Council
P.O. Box 249
Harlem, Montana 59526
Chairperson, Fort Peck Tribal Executive Board
P.O. Box 1027
Poplar, Montana 59255
*****
Journal Excerpts:
[Clark]
Nov. 13th 1804
We moved into our hut, visited by the Grand Chief of the Mandans,
and Che chark Lagru, a chief of the Assiniboins & 7 men of that
nation. I Smoked with them and gave the chief a cord & a carrot
of tobacco. This nation rove in the plains above this and trade
with the British Companies on the Assiniboin River. They are divided
into several bands, the descendants of the Sioux, & speak nearly
their language. A bad disposed set & can raise about 1000 men.
In the 3 bands near this place, they trade with the nations of this
neighborhood for horses, corn &c. Snow all Day. Capt. Lewis
at the village.
[Clark]
13th Nov. Tuesday 1804
At 10 o'clock A.M. the Black Cat the Mandan chief and Lagru Che
Chark (Assiniboin) chief & 7 men of note visited us at Fort
Mandan. I gave him a twist of tobacco to smoke with his people &
a gold cord with a view to know him again. The nation consists of
about 600 men, hunt in the plains & winter and trade on the
Assiniboin River. They are descendants of the Sioux and speak their
language. They come to the nations to this quarter to trade (or
take presents) for horses (& robes). The method of this kind
of traffic by adoption shall be explained hereafter. [This Assiniboine
chief's name was probably "The Crane." He owed his life,
in 1806, to Le Borgne (One Eye) of the Hidatsas, who protected him,
as a guest, from the Cheyennes. The adoption ceremony allowed enemies
to become temporary fictional relatives and trade in peace].
[Clark]
14th of April Sunday 1805.
I saw the remains of two Indian encampments with wide beaten tracks
leading to them. Those were no doubt the camps of the Assiniboin
Indians (a strong evidence is hoops of small kegs were found in
the encampments). No other nation on the river above the Sioux make
use of spirituous liquors. The Assiniboins is said to be passionately
fond of liquor, and it is the principal inducement to their putting
themselves to the trouble of catching the few wolves and foxes which
they furnish, and receive their [liquor] always in small kegs. The
Assiniboins make use of the same kind of lodges which the Sioux
and other Indians on this river make use of. Those lodges or tents
are made of a number of dressed buffalo skins (dressed, sewn together
with sinew & decorated with the tails & porcupine quills.
When open it forms a half circle with a part about 4 inches wide
projecting about 8 or 9 inches from the center of the straight side
for the purpose of attaching it to a pole to the height they wish
to raise the tent. When the[y] erect this tent four poles of equal
length are tied near one end. Those poles are elevated and 8, 10
or 12 other poles are annexed, forming a circle at the ground and
lodging in the forks of the four attached poles. The tents are then
raised, by attaching the projecting part to a pole and encompassing
the poles with the tent by bringing the two ends together and attached
with a cord, or laced as high as is necessary, leaving the lower
part open for about 4 feet for to pass in & out. The top is
generally left open to admit the smoke to pass. The (country) borders
of the river has been so much hunted by those Indians who must have
left it about 8 or 10 days past and I presume are now in the neighborhood
of British establishments on the Assiniboin; the game is scarce
and very wild.
[Lewis]
Monday April 15th 1805
After breakfast Capt. Clark walked on the starboard shore, and on
his return on the evening gave me the following account of his ramble.
"I ascended to the high country, about 9 miles distant from
the Missouri. The country consists of beautiful, level and fertile
plains, destitute of timber. I saw many little drains, which took
their rise in the river hills, from whence as far as I could see
they run to the N.E." These streams we suppose to be the waters
of Mouse River, a branch of the Assiniboin which the Indians informed
us approaches the Missouri very nearly, about this point. "I
passed," continued he, "a Creek about 20 yards wide which
falls into the Missouri; the bottoms of this creek are wide, level
and extremely fertile, but almost entirely destitute of timber.
The water of this creek as well as all those creeks and rivulets
which we have passed since we left Fort Mandan was so strongly impregnated
with salts and other mineral substances that I was incapable of
drinking it. I saw the remains of several camps of the Assiniboins;
near one of which, in a small ravine, there was a park which they
had formed of timber and brush, for the purpose of taking the cabre
or antelope. It was constructed in the following manner. A strong
pound was first made of timbers, on one side of which there was
a small aperture, sufficiently large to admit an Antelope; from
each side of this aperture, a curtain was extended to a considerable
distance, widening as they receded from the pound."
[Lewis]
Saturday April 20th 1805.
Saw the remains of some Indian hunting camps near which stood a
small scaffold of about 7 feet high on which were deposited two
dog sleighs with their harness. Underneath this scaffold a human
body was lying, well rolled in several dressed buffalo skins and
near it a bag of the same materials containing sundry articles belonging
to the deceased; consisting of a pair of moccasins, some red and
blue earth, beaver's nails, instruments for dressing the buffalo
skin, some dried roots, several plats of the sweet grass, and a
small quantity of Mandan tobacco. I presume that the body, as well
as the bag containing these articles, had formerly been placed on
the scaffold as is the custom of these people, but had fallen down
by accident. Near the scaffold I saw the carcass of a large dog
not yet decayed, which I supposed had been killed at the time the
human body was left on the scaffold. This was no doubt the reward
which the poor dog had met with for performing the [blank] friendly
office to his mistress of transporting her corpse to the place of
deposit. It is customary with the Assiniboins, Mandans, Hidatsas,
&c. who scaffold their dead to sacrifice the favorite horses
and dogs of their deceased relations, with a view of their being
serviceable to them in the land of spirits. I have never heard of
any instances of human sacrifices on those occasions among them.
[Lewis]
Thursday May 2nd 1805
Joseph Field, one of the hunters who was out today, found several
yards of scarlet cloth which had been suspended on the bough of
a tree near an old Indian hunting cam[p], where it had been left
as a sacrifice to the deity by the Indians, probably of the Assiniboin
nation, it being a custom with them as well as all the nations inhabiting
the waters of the Missouri so far as they are known to us to offer
or sacrifice in this manner to the deity whatever they may be possessed
of which they think most acceptable to him, and very honestly making
their own feelings the test of those of the deity. [They] offer
him the article which they most prize themselves. This being the
most usual method of worshiping the Great Spirit as they term the
deity, is practiced on interesting occasions, or to produce the
happy eventuation of the important occurrence, incident to human
nature, such as relief from hunger or malady, protection from their
enemies or the delivering them into their hands, and with such as
cultivate, to prevent the river's overflowing and destroying their
crops &c. Sacrifices of a similar kind are also made to the
deceased by their friends and relatives. Everything which is incomprehensible
to the Indians they call big medicine, and is the operation of the
presents and power of the Great Spirit.
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