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Trade, Presents
and Mixed Results:
Spanish Relations with the Quapaw and Osage Indians
at the Arkansas Post, 1762-1804
Carmen González López-Briones
Instituto Universitario de Estudios Norteamericanos
Universidad de Alcalá de Henares
Spain
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not quote or cite without permission
This paper deals with
the impact of the Spanish presence in the mid and lower middle Mississippi
on Native American peoples during the last four decades of the 18th
Century and the beginning of the 19th Century, the era of the Spanish
administration of the Mississippi Valley preceding the arrival of
American authorities in the territories. The Spanish documentation
provides valuable information on the Native American peoples, seen
through European and eyes. During the decades studied, Native American
lives were affected by the presence of Europeans, but their way
of life did not change as drastically as it did during the period
following the 1820s and 30s, when they were relocated under the
new American administration into territories other than their own.-1-
During the period studied, the French and
Spanish, British, and Americans competed for the control of Indian
territories. As a result of the French and Indian War, the western
bank of the Mississippi Valley was given to the Spanish Crown by
the French Monarch in compensation for losses suffered by Spain
in coming to the aid of France in the war. It then became Spanish
Louisiana. The eastern bank of the Mississippi Valley became British
territory until 1776, when these lands became part of the United
States of America.
Native American peoples, whose territories
were being fought over and subject to claims of ownership, were
affected by the changing circumstances in each phase of the European
and Euro-American balance of power. The European presence did not
involve enough population to exert control over the territories,
and therefore, the European relationship with the Indians was based
on trade and presents, and the Native Americans were able to play
one power against the other, and obtain advantages and maintain
a de facto condition of independence.
This process can be
analyzed through two Indian peoples: the numerous Osages, divided
between the Big and Little Osages, and the far less numerous Quapaws,
or Arkansas Indians. Both the Osages and the Quapaws were of Sioux
culture, and had migrated from the Ohio to the Mississippi.-2-
Both peoples dominated the mid to middle-lower Mississippi Valley
Both peoples were impacted by the French and then the Spanish administration
of Louisiana during the 18th century, and had almost daily dealings
with the French and Spanish. They reacted similarly in some aspects,
but quite differently in others. An analysis of this impact and
these reactions, as reflected in colonial sources, can contribute
to bettering the existing knowledge of this period in the history
of these two peoples.
The main basis for
their differing reactions lies in the differences in the numbers
and the territories between the two peoples. The larger Osage population
and the relative inaccessibility of their villages gave them a freedom
the Quapaws did not have. The Osages lived in the Missouri territory,
north of the Ozark plateau, but their hunting territories went beyond
this area to include lands north to the Arkansas River. The Osages
were important owing to their large number, aggressive behavior
and the volume of their hunting and trade activities. In 1754, French
Governor Kerlérec reported that the Big Osages had over six
hundred warriors, and the Little Osages two hundred and fifty.-3-
The Quapaws lived in
three villages near the mouth of the Arkansas River, near where
Jacque Marquette's 1673 expedition found them.-4-
Documents on a earlier European visit to the Arkansas territories
-De Soto´s 1541 expedition - indicate that the Indian population
in the area was very large, but they do not describe any people
similar to the Quapaws, who apparently migrated to Arkansas from
the Ohio sometime during the 17th century.-5-
The Quapaw population had been declining over the years. In 1687,
explorer Henry Joutel estimated that the Quapaws had one thousand
five hundred warriors. In 1700, Henry de Tonti estimated that disease
and wars had dramatically reduced the Quapaw population to three
hundred warriors.-6- According to Captain
Phillip Pitman, shortly before the arrival of the Spanish, Quapaw
there were six numbered people. In 1777, the Arkansas Post commandant
reported to Governor Bernardo de Gálvez that the Quapaw male
population consisted of one hundred seventy-six.-7-
Both peoples lived
mainly off hunting, part of which they used to trade with the French
and Spanish, other Indian tribes or the British on the other side
of the Mississippi. The Arkansas Valley was well known for its wealth
of beaver, raccoon, wolf, marten, otter, and other species whose
furs were sent down the Mississippi to New Orleans. Hunting in the
Arkansas Valley's was engaged in by the Quapaws, their Osage rivals,
other, smaller Indian tribes, and also by the British, who were
considered trespassers by the Spanish authorities.-8-
The Osages also hunted in what were considered their territories
between the White and the St. Francis Rivers.
French policy, which
was maintained and built upon by the Spanish when it became the
colonial power in Louisiana, was similar to that of the British
across the Mississippi River. It can be described as holding the
territory as its own in the face of any other colonial power. To
achieve this, they needed the friendship of the Native American
peoples, whom they courted with presents and dealt with through
trade. Trading relations between Native Americans and Europeans
had an important strategic component, in addition to an economic
one. The sparse population of Europeans and the rivalry among them
required them to seek friendly relations with the Indians in order
to maintain their claim and relative control over the territories
they occupied, and even to the point of garnering their military
assistance in case of skirmishes or wars.-9-
In Louisiana, the Spanish changed their traditional,
mission-based frontier colonial policy, and adopted the policies
of their French predecessors - trade and presents. Both the French
and the Spanish encountered the same problems, and had the same
objective: to stay friends with the native Americans for strategic
and security reasons; to establish and maintain strong trade relations;
to prevent their British rivals across the Mississippi from trading
and befriending their Indian allies; and to prevent disorder and
violence, as far as possible.
With this aim, both powers made it known
to the Indians that an authority existed (the King, and the King's
representative, the Governor at New Orleans), and that they should
be loyal to such authority. The political symbols of loyalty, such
as flags and medals were presented to the chiefs of the Native American
peoples, who generally accepted them. In fact, both the Osage and
the Quapaw would travel periodically to New Orleans, where they
would met with the Governor. For example, the chiefs of the Indians
that were friends and allies of the French were called to New Orleans
where they were told that the Spanish would take the place of the
French from then on, and they should give the same loyalty to the
Spanish as they had to the French.
They are many indications
in the Spanish documents that the Quapaws recognized certain Spanish
sovereignty over the territory. According to Spanish documents,
the Quapaws swore loyalty to the King, accepted political symbols
such as flags and, again, according to Spanish documents, called
both the King and the Governor " their father."-10-
Yet, both Indian peoples considered themselves independent and the
owners of their territory, which they, in fact, controlled. Moreover,
the Indians were aware that although they maintained a relationship
of friendship and alliance with the French and the Spanish, they
could have had a closer relationship with the British if they had
wanted to. Neither the French nor the Spanish were strong enough
to prevent contact by the Osages and the Quapaws with the English.-11-
To the French and Spanish it was vital to
keep the Indians from increasing their contacts with the British.
As noted above, French Indian policy consisted basically of efforts
to hold the territory by entering into alliances and having relations
with the Indians, in an attempt to keep the English as far away
as possible. Before the French and Indian War, a French officer
was stationed with the Big Osages. His mission consisted of facilitating
trade and keeping the Osages firm in their alliance with the French.
The Spanish period was marked by continuing and building on this
policy. Having sparse human resources and economic means, the Spaniards
gave the Indians some breadth, trying to maintain the general features
of the French policy and ignoring specific problems they could not
solve. The system worked quite well, considering the scarcity of
means available.
The main problem -security-, was not subject
to any major setbacks or changes. Neither the Quapaws nor the Osages
ever attacked any French or Spanish village or settlement, although
the commandants of both St. Louis and Arkansas feared Osage attacks
at certain times.
While the Spanish could claim success in terms of keeping the settlements
safe, they were not as successful in their second mission of keeping
the British from having contact with their Indian friends. The English
had courted the Quapaws and the Osages from French times, and continued
to do so during the Spanish years of Luisiana.
The Quapaws had frequent
trade relations with the English. English products were usually
of better quality and cheaper than Spanish products and therefore
Spanish attempts to keep the Quapaws and other Indian nations in
Spanish territories from dealing with the English did not succeed.-12-
English hunters and merchants crossed the river from English territory,
hunted and traded, and returned to their bases on the east bank
of the Mississippi. Successive Arkansas Post commandants reported
trading between the Quapaws and the English.-13-
The English even continued such relations during the American Revolution.
They entered Spanish territory via the Gulf of Mexico and the eastern
Texas. After the American Revolution, the Americans took advantage
of trade opportunities in the area. Despite Spanish prohibition,
threats and punishment, the temptation to trade with the English,
was too great for the Osages and the Quapaws to resist, and the
Spanish were not able to enforce their policy. Regarding trade with
the English, both tribes, the Quapaws and the Osages, reacted similarly.
The contact of the
Osages and Quapaws with the French and Spanish was not similar.
The Quapaws lived near the Arkansas Post and had almost daily contact
with the French-Spanish inhabitants. Quapaw chiefs and their entourages
visited the Post to exchange products, to discuss different issues,
or simply in the hope of being invited to drink alcohol. Arkansas
Post commandants complained about the frequency of visits, stating
that "there were Indians at the Post every day and on many
nights."-14- The Osage case was quite
different. There were more Osage villages and they were located
much farther from the Franco-Spanish establishments. They were more
independent and distant. Their thefts from and harassment of hunters,
both European and belonging to other tribes, made it unwise for
them to show up at St. Louis too often.
While the Quapaws
had had a European settlement near their villages since 1686, the
Osages traded at several posts, but only in the later years of Spanish
rule was there a post near their villages. St. Louis was founded
at the beginning of the Spanish rule in order to keep an eye on
and trade with the Indian nations in the territory, and as a strategic
part in the series of settlements along the Mississippi River. The
Osages visited St. Louis periodically to meet with Spanish authorities
and trade their products with the French-Spanish population. Several
decades later, the Spanish founded Fort Carondelet of the Osages,
near Osage villages, in order to trade keep watch over on the Osages.
The powerful St. Louis trader, August Chouteau, who held a monopoly
on trade with the Osages, was key in the Spanish approval of the
governor's plans for the Fort and funded its construction. The fact
that a private individual, Chouteau, provided the funds to build
the fort is an indication of how important trading with the Osages
was for the French and Spanish in Missouri.-15-
Trade with the Osages
had always been lucrative. The Europeans considered them good hunters.
According to Etienne Veniard de Bourgmont, who visited the Osages
in 1714, they had the best furs in the Missouri region, and were
one of the most vital and sharpest nations.-16-
The Spanish authorities dictated that the
rich Osage trade was to be channeled through St. Louis. Since it
was so lucrative, it was coveted also by other Posts, namely the
Arkansas Post, causing jurisdictional disputes between the two commandants.
Arkansas Post authorities claimed that they should have the right
to trade with the Osages, as they hunted not only in the Missouri
region but also in the Arkansas territory. In fact, part of the
rivalry between the Quapaws and the Osages was due to Osage hunting
incursions on lands the Quapaws considered theirs.
The Osage custom of robbing and occasionally
killing hunters who entered their territory was a constant problem
for the French and later on for the Spanish. Documents from these
times very often show violent behavior on the part of the Osages.
These same documents also show the inability first of the French
and then of the Spanish authorities to effectively prevent these
activities or to punish the Indians. Threats of withdrawing from
trading activities were of little concern to the Osages, because
French and Spanish traders pressed authorities to lift all prohibitions
of Osage trade. In fact Osage trade accounted for half of total
St. Louis trade. In addition to the lobbying by the merchants, there
was the commercial and political rivalry with the British, who were
ready to jump at any opportunity to deal with the Indians in Spanish
territory, not only to obtain economic benefits but also to establish
strategic political alliances with them.
The Osage, for their part, quickly learned
to show their remorse and to beg for the pardon of the Spanish authorities,
so that bans on trade would be lifted. Trade was extremely important
to the Indians. They grew impatient and even threatened the Spanish
when they thought trade would be banned. Francisco Riu, the commandant
of Illinois, went so far as to report that he had avoided war by
reinstating licenses to trade with the Osage, and obtaining the
British flag that was flying over an Osage village and replacing
it with a Spanish flag.
The document in which
traders from Missouri, Illinois and Arkansas applied to the governor
for trading licenses lists the items they were carrying to trade
with the Indians. These items were wine; liquor; coffee; sugar;
soap; cloth; blankets; vermilion paint; iron; household items; muskets,
gunpowder and bullets.-17-
While it was not customary for Spanish authorities
to grant trade monopolies, Spanish authorities sometimes altered
their policy and granted such privileges to specific individuals
under specific circumstances. In the case of the Osages, this occurred
several times. One of them was right after the French and Indian
War, that had caused the displacement of Native American peoples
and French and English settlers. Because of the instability during
the war, trade in the Missouri territory was granted to Maxent,
Laclede and Company, a New Orleans-based firm, for an eight-year
period. The monopoly included the Big and the Little Osage peoples,
involving a large amount of trade. As would happen later during
the1790s, towards the end of Spanish rule, monopolies were allowed
in times of great instability. Other traders with interests in the
area protested the measure, and eventually the authorities cancelled
the monopoly license, as it went against official policy. Spanish
policy, even more against monopolistic trade than the French, changed
in 1794. The way of the frontier reigned. St. Louis trader August
Chouteau was granted a virtual trade monopoly with the Osages for
six years in exchange for keeping the Native Americans control and
paying the cost of building a fort in Osage territory. The remaining
St. Louis traders reluctantly accepted the new organization of trade
in the area, hoping that the fort would deter Osages depredations.
Documents from this period of time show that disorders diminished.
The importance of
Osage trade is clearly shown in the 1794 trade reorganization. The
merchants in the St. Louis district divided Missouri River trade
into thirty-nine parts, giving 12 to the Big Osages and four to
the Little Osages. The other eight tribes of the district (including
the Kansas, Oto, and Panis tribes) had only thirteen parts among
them. According to Din and Nasatir, trade with the Osages amounted
to some 96,000 pounds out of a total of 175,000 pounds. Osage trade
was, therefore, key to St. Louis trading.-18-
The volume of trade with the Quapaws was
far lower, although it was an important factor in the economy of
the Europeans in Arkansas. In contrast with the Osages, who sold
their products in the districts of Missouri and Arkansas, the Quapaws
seem to be "one-post Indians," that is, they generally
traded only with the inhabitants of the Arkansas Post and its territory.
In this sense, the Quapaws complied with Spanish regulations, which
put the commandant in charge of dealing with the Indians who lived
in his district. Such dealings included trade.
The Quapaws provided
furs and pelts, meat, and tallow, but demand for these products
in Arkansas was greater than the Quapaws were able to meet. The
Quapaws were only interested in providing for themselves and then
exchanging whatever was left for European products, especially alcohol.
Therefore, Arkansas traders dealt not only with Quapaws, but also
with other Native American peoples, and with French and Spanish
trappers who lived in the forests.-19-
According to a document
of this period, the Arkansas forests could produce "an enormous
amount of animal and deer skins."-20-
As stated above, the demand for Arkansas game products compelled
traders to expand their dealings with other Indian nations, especially
the Osages. This resulted in rivalry between the Arkansas Post and
the younger settlement of St. Louis. According to the Spanish organization
of Louisiana, Osage trade was supposed to be channeled through St.
Louis. However, Arkansas merchants had been dealing with the Osages
from the French times and were not willing to renounce this relationship
during the Spanish years, despite Spanish regulations. The fact
that the Osages often hunted in Arkansas territory made it difficult
for Spanish authorities to enforce this policy and to prevent trade
between the French and Spanish populations of Arkansas and the Osages.
Even the Arkansas commandant, Alexander de Clouet, asked to be allowed
to trade with the Osages. His request was denied by Governor Antonio
de Ulloa, who sent him instructions to advise the Osages to hunt
in the territory of the St. Louis district.-21-
The French and Spanish
inhabitants of Arkansas also tried to have trade relations with
the Indians under "English jurisdiction," who lived on
the eastern side of the Mississippi, to whom they gave presents
at Spanish forts. Spanish authorities tolerated and even encouraged
these activities. If caught by the English authorities, their goods
would be confiscated. The British traders and authorities behaved
in a similar way vis-à-vis the other side of the river. Documents
of the era report that in 1767 the English were trying to attract
the Osages by giving them presents and promises of good trading
products, and that the English had given the Osages a flag.-22-
The Spaniards tried to get the Osage to relinquish the foreign flag.
The rivalry with the
British also prevented a real implementation of Governor Antonio
de Ulloa's instructions not to supply the Native Americans with
firearms. He claimed that they had had little contact with the Europeans,
and were not so dependent on firearms. These instructions, though,
were not realistic, because if the Osage Indians did not get what
they wanted from the Spanish, they would get it from the British.
Therefore, the Spanish authorities were unable to prevent the Indians
from having access to firearms.-23-
Ulloa´s attempt to prevent the Indians
from having firearms was warranted, especially in the case of the
Osages, who tended to resort to violence. Incidents between the
Osages and the Quapaws, and between the Osages and other Indian
nations living in neighboring areas were very frequent during the
18th Century. Documents usually report that the Osages were the
offenders.
Osage behavior upset the lives of the French
and Spanish inhabitants of Arkansas and Missouri. Violent incidents
affected not only the development of trade but, furthermore, the
French and Spanish inability to solve the problem made evident to
both the Native Americans and the Europeans the limits of their
authority in the territory. Sometimes the Osage Indians even threatened
the security of the European inhabitants. These threats, however,
never posed any real danger to the French and Spanish settlement.
The Osages, although troublesome, never attacked French and then
Spanish settlements, nor did they play any significant role in the
French and Indian War or in the American Revolution. Their activities
were limited to harassing other Native American peoples and stealing
or, at worst, killing isolated individuals, be they Indian or European.
In contrast, the Quapaws
had a peaceful attitude towards the French and their Spanish successors.
According to the last French Governor of Louisiana, Kérlerec,
"this Arkansas Nation is the only one who never spilled French
blood."-24-
The Osages were enemies of almost all the
neighboring Indian nations, even the feared Commanches. In fact,
the Osage were a real problem. The impact of their violent, predatory
behavior on the Indian nations in Louisiana and even Texas gave
rise to many complaints by post commandants to the Louisiana Governor.
They attacked both Indians and whites from their villages on the
Missouri and upper Arkansas Rivers, protected by their remoteness
and their comparatively large numbers. Harassment of frontier peoples
was commonplace activity among the Osages.
The aggressiveness
of the Osages made them enemies of the Caddoes, Panis, Illinois,
Quapaws, Chicasaws and the Choctaws, to name a few. The Osages even
fought the fierce Commanche, considered by many Indian nations as
the most feared Indian tribe.-25- In fact,
the only friends that the Osages seemed to have were their neighbors,
the Missouri Indians. The Osages were also known for being very
mobile and traveling long distances.-26-
Their use of horses greatly increased the areas of their incursions.
Spanish complaints of horse theft were numerous.
Hunters, Indian or white, who trespassed
on Osage territory were dealt with aggressively by the Osages, who
already had a reputation for violence. This may, at times, have
been due to a lack of understanding of their perceptions regarding
the defense of their hunting grounds. At other times, Osage Indians
killed individuals with no provocation.
The Osage Indians
seem not to have been understood by either the French, the Spanish
or the Americans. During his travels in 1719, Frenchman Sieur Bénard
de La Harpe remarked, "Although they are friends of the French,
this is a treacherous nation, and it is best to be on guard against
them." According to Jean Beaurain, "The Osages are allies
of the nomadic and sedentary nations of the upper Red River, and
at war with the Canecy and the Paducas, and with some Panis Indians."
According to Claude Charles Du Tisné, who met the Osages
in 1719, "They are astute, treacherous, and prone to breaking
their word. The Spanish and their American successors considered
the Osages as "treacherous" and "disloyal,"
and a real obstacle for their policy in the Louisiana interior.
Commandant Pedro Piernas even suggested that they be exterminated,
and the same idea was also voiced by Athanase de Meziéres,
although previously he had stated that the Osage disorders were
caused by undesirable elements from the Arkansas woods.-27-
The Americans declared them outside the protection of the U.S. Government.-28-
Current studies on
the Osage offer explanations of their behavior. Historian Abraham
Nasatir shares contemporary opinion regarding the Osage aggressiveness.
For the anthropologist James E. Christianson, the Osages fought
against so many Indian nations in order to preserve and expand their
territories. Another anthropologist, Carl H. Chapman, holds that
the Osage political system, particularly the "Mourning War"
religious ceremony, was the reason behind their violence. According
to Chapman, Osage political organization was based on a hereditary
chieftancy and patrilineal clans. The power of the chief was very
limited. The main institution of tribal government was a council
made up of men initiated into the different tribal levels. Warriors
who wanted to become members of the council had to earn war honors,
and one of the main ways to get them was through the "Mourning
War" ceremony. The Osages believed that the dead needed company
for their voyage to the great beyond, and that the best travelling
companion was the scalp of an enemy. This was taken from the first
enemy encountered through the "Mourning War" ceremony.
"Mourning war" ceremonies were performed quite often,
giving rise to fear, enmity, and mistrust towards the Osage people.-29-
The Chapman theory sheds some light on the
crimes of the Osage nation, but does not explain the theft and damage
to the property of other Indians, the French and the Spanish. Obviously,
attacks on distant settlements in Texas, or the even more distant
cities of New Mexico, were not the objects of the ceremony. Perhaps
the explanation of the violence of the Osages is a combination of
all the above theories. Furthermore, horse and slave theft was a
lucrative activity. The large Osage population and their relatively
inaccessible villages, together with the weakness of some of their
neighbors, enabled the Osages to lead a violent way of life.
On the other hand, the Quapaws, although
they had enemies (the Osages and others, including the Chickasaws
and Chocktaws), maintained good relations with a large number of
tribes, such as the Pawnees, also enemies of the Osages, with whom
the Quapaws had trade relations, along with the Caddos and Tunicas.
Several tribes, such as the Abenakees and the Peorias crossed the
Mississippi to settle on the Spanish side of the river. Some of
the ceremonies in which English flags were replaced by Spanish flags
were attended by Quapaw Indians.
Another difference between the two tribes
was their mobility. The Quapaws were the much more sedentary of
the two. They traveled generally to hunt, to visit other friendly
tribes, or specifically to carry out attacks against bands of Osages
which, according to Spanish documents from the time, were punitive
in nature. The Osages moved often throughout neighboring territories,
sometimes covering large distances. The Osages many times reached
as far as the district of Natchitoches, in Texas, in order to steal
horses. Many complaints were recorded by the commandants of Illinois,
Arkansas and Nachitoches regarding Osage activities.
Sometimes the Quapaws
would launch attacks against the Osages, attacks that, according
to Spanish documents, were punitive in nature. The local authorities
usually tolerated them or even supported them, giving the Quapaws
arms. For example, the commandant of the Arkansas Post, Francisco
Desmazallieres, suggested allowing the Quapaws, or Arkansas Indians,
to attack the Osages.-30- This same attitude
was held by other post commandants, such as Francois Desmazellieres,
and previously, José de Orieta. Both reported in their correspondence
with the governor that the Chief of the Quapaws, Cosenompoint, had
asked for permission to attack the Osages in response to harassment,
and requested gunpowder, bullets, a suit of clothes, and a cask
of liquor.-31-
Nonetheless, the commandant
of Natchitoches, Athansase de Meziéres, attributed Osage
violence to other causes. According to him, the Osage had not always
been violent, that it was on account of the undesirable elements
who hunted without a permit in the district of Arkansas and from
whom the Osage obtained firearms to attack Natchitoches for the
purpose of stealing horses and mules, along with women and children.
Osage harassment caused the tribes in the Natchitoches district
(Commanches, Taovayas and Sacs, Tawakonis, Tonkawas and Kichais)
to move towards Texas, where they robbed and harassed Spanish establishments.
As Osage incursions continued, De Mezieres decided to advise the
use of force against them. The governor responded by ordering that
all peaceful means of coercion possible should be used first.-32-
Relations were not
always poor between the Osages and the Quapaws. In March 1771, Major
Orieta was visited by an Osage chief, his wife and four children.
He gave them a flag of the King of Spain, explaining that it was
the flag of the commandant over all their lands. During the visit,
the Osage and the Quapaws made peace.-33-
The peace did not last very long, as subsequent correspondence shows
that skirmishes over Osage thefts and attacks continued between
the two tribes. For example, the new commandant in Arkansas, Fernando
de Leyba, reported that he had dissuaded the Quapaws from avenging
the Osage attacks. Finally, he sent Chief Guatanika to New Orleans
to meet with the governor.-34- De Leyba
not only ended up allowing the Quapaw to attack, but also rewarding
them with products for their friendship and respect.-35-
In contrast to the
Osage, there were few complaints regarding the Quapaws and these
generally referred to their trading with the English or to disorderly
conduct by Native Americans under the influence of alcohol. Trade
in liquor was a major problem in Arkansas. Alcohol was supplied
by the Europeans, French and Spanish authorities alike, as well
as by legal and illegal merchants. The Indians were also given liquor
by the English on the other side of the river, and English traders
often entered Arkansas territory to sell alcohol to the Indians.-36-
Although the Spanish authorities wanted to ban the sale and distribution
of liquor to the Indians, they themselves included it in official
presents, since it was something the Indians expected and asked
for.-37- Alcohol was an important part
of trade in Louisiana and one of the most pernicious elements in
European-Indian relations during the 18th Century.
This brief overview
of the major topics in French and Spanish relations with the Osages
and the Quapaws leads to the following conclusions: While the sparse
European population in the Mississippi Valley did not pose a threat
to the Indian peoples, the changes brought about by their presence,
their colonial rivalries, and their products, changed the lives
of the Indians in many different ways. European products had an
enormous impact on Indian life, and the Indians became increasingly
dependent on them for their daily lives. They increasingly relied
on European products for security, especially on firearms that were
crucial to inter-tribal relations.-38-
Without them, their rivals could occupy their lands and take over
their hunting grounds. Since the French and later the Spanish needed
the Indians as allies for their own security, there was a mutual
dependence between the colonizers and the colonized. In addition
to the firearms, the most pernicious product introduced by the Europeans
was alcohol. The Quapaws, who lived near the French and Spanish
and had daily dealings with them, appear to have been affected more
by alcohol than other Indian nations, such as the Osages. The many
attempts by the Spanish authorities to ban, or at least limit and
control the access of Indians to alcohol, were a total failure.
A document of the times asks that no alcohol be taken to Arkansas
and adds that the Indians only wanted to trade for alcohol and that
they were in a sorry state.-39-
While the European presence and products
changed the lives of the Osage and Quapaw peoples to a certain extent,
they did not keep them from generally maintaining their traditional
way of life. The Quapaws basically submitted to French and Spanish
policy, playing the role assigned to them, while the Osages reacted
more independently. They took what interested them -trade- from
the French and Spanish, but refused to change the violent way of
life that brought them into conflict with many Indian peoples, as
well as with the French and Spanish.
The Osages were able
to maintain a more independent stance because of their numbers and
the relative inaccessibility of their villages. The Quapaws were
more dependent because they were fewer in number and had a French
and, later, a Spanish outpost near their villages. Also, the Quapaws
did work for the Spanish. They served as guides and helped defend
them against other Native Americans and the English. The defensive
role of the Quapaws became more important for the Spanisrds during
the years of the American Revolution. As Spain assisted the Americans,
her territories became a target for the English in the right bank
of the Mississipi. In fact the Arkansas Post was attacked by Colbert
and his Chickasaw allies. Altough the Quapaws arrived to the Post
when the attack had been repealed, a small number of Quapaws who
were at the Post during the attack fought side to side with the
Spaniards. Moreovern the Quaoaw warriors who arrived later, offered
the Post commander to persecute the British-Chicasaw attackers.-40-
The 18th Century, therefore, saw a number
of changes in the lives of the Native American peoples, particularly
with the advent of horses, firearms and liquor. They received European
products that improved their quality of life, such as textiles,
tools, utensils and many others, but which also increased their
dependency. The Indians traded furs, horses and captive Indians
for these products (the latter with other Indian peoples). While
the Quapaws hunted only to meet their own needs and to engage in
comparatively minor trade, the Osages contributed to trade in Louisiana
in a large way. The Osages were so committed to trade, in fact,
that they stepped up their activities to get more furs and even
hunted beaver, an animal sacred to them.
Perhaps the greatest
difference between the Osage and the Quapaw attitudes towards the
French and Spanish was that, while Osage violence threatened the
peace in several districts, the Quapaws were a safeguard for the
Arkansas Post. The Saint Louis and Arkansas commandants came to
fear for the safety of their establishments at times when the Osages
took on an especially violent stance. On one occasion, the Arkansas
commandant, Fernando de Leyba, reported to the governor that if
the Osages attacked the post he could count on the Quapaws to defend
it.-41- The Quapaws were characterized
by the French, during France´s dominion of Arkansas, and then
by the Spanish inhabitants of the Arkansas post during the Spanish
years as "their saviors."-42-
Osage behavior came to be considered so threatening that some urged
their extermination.-43- The New Orleans
authorities did not authorize the cruel measure, but they did tolerate
and even sponsor punitive expeditions against them by other tribes.
In general, however, instructions were fairly similar throughout
the four decades of Spanish rule in Louisiana: treat the Indians
peacefully and resort to presents and trade in dealing with them.

Footnotes
-1-
For a study of the effect of European contact on the Native American
peoples in Arkansas see Williard H. Rollins, "Living in a Graveyard:
Native Americans in Colonial Arkansas," in Jeannie Whayne,
comp., Cultural Encounters in the Early South. Indians and Europeans
in Arkansas, The University of Arkansas Press, Fayetteville,
1995. Pp. 38-60. Rollins stresses the decimation of the Mississippi
Native Americans during the sixteenth century due to epidemics and
years of severe drought, Ibid, 41. For a bibliographic review of
Hernando de Soto´s expedition , the first contact between
the Mississippi Valley Native American peoples living in the Arkansas
territories and the Europeans, see David Sloan, "The Expedition
of Hernando de Soto: A Post-mortem Report" in Jeannie Whayne,
comp. , Cultural Encounters, pp 3-37.
-2-
John Joseph Mathews, Wah'Kon-Tah: The Osages and the White Man,
Road. Norman, Oklahoma, 1960 1961; Gilbert C. Din and Abraham
P. Nasatir, The Imperial Osages. Spanish-Indian Diplomacy in
the Mississippi Valley. Norman, University of Oklahoma Press,
1983. W. David Baird, The Quapaw Indians. A History of the Downstream
People. Norman, University of Oklahoma Press, 1980
-3-
Governor Kerlerec´s description is translated in Abraham Nasatir,
translator and editor, Before Lewis and Clark St.Louis, 1952,
pag. 51-52.
-4-
Pierre Margry, ed., Découvertes et établissements
des français dans l'ouest et dans le sud de l'Amerique septentrionale
(1614'1764) Paris: Maisonneuve, 1876-86, Vol. 2, p.181.
-5-
According to most authors, the Quapaws and the Osages appear to
have been newcomers to Arkansas lands when the French explored and
established their settlements in Arkansas. See Charles Hudson´s
introduction to Jeannie Whayne´s Cultural Encounters,
p. xiii.
-6-
Baird, Ibid., p.23.
-7-
Captain Desmazelliers, "Denombrement du Post des Arkansas
et de la Nation Sauvage de ce nom," August 3, 1777, AGI,
PC, leg. 107.
-8-
Luis de Unzaga y Amezaga, "Noticia General de lo que Produce
la Provincia de la Luisiana," October 26, 1771, AGI, PC,
leg. 1, doc. 110.
-9-
For a study of the Spanish population in Louisiana see Antonio Acosta,
La población de la Luisiana Española (1763-1803),
Madrid, 1976.
-10-
Letters from the commander of the Arkansas Post, De Clouet to Mon
General (Alejandro O'Reilly), Arkansas, December 9, 1769; Letter
from De Clouet to O'Reilly, November 14, 1770; Letter from the Arkansas
Indians Great Chief to Mon Père Unzaga, September 12, 1770;
Letter from Governor Unzaga to Causenoneon, Great Chief of the Arkansas
Nation, New Orleans, June 30, 1772, AGI, PC.
-11-
John Preston Moore, "Anglo-Spanish Rivalry on the Louisiana
Frontier, 1763-68," in John Francis McDermott, The Spanish
in the Mississippi Valley, 1762-1804, University of Illinois
Pres, 1974. 72-86.
-12-
De Clouet to Ulloa, May 6, 1768; also May 10 and July 10, all these
documents in AGI, PC, leg. 107.
-13-
Riu to Ulloa, St. Louis, November 12, 1767, AGI, PC, leg. 109.
-14-
De Clouet to Mon General, Arkansas, July 22, 1768: Fernando
de Leyba to Unzaga, Arkansas, June 6, 1771, both documents in AGI,
PC, leg. 107.
-15-
Chapman, "The Indomitable Osage," in McDermott, The
Spanish in the Mississippi Valley.
-16-
-17-
De Clouet to Mon Commandant, August 21, 1769;
Leyba to Unzaga, June 6, 1771: summary of an undated letter (circa
1770) from Desmazelleires. All these documents are in AGI, PC, leg.
13.
-18-
Din and Nasatir, Imperial Osages, pag. 254.
-19-
De Clouet a Mon Comandant, Augst 21 of 1769; Leiva to Unzaga, June
6 , 1771, summary of the undated letter from Desmazellieres (1770).
All theses documents are in AGI, PC, leg. 13.
-20-
Memoire sur l'état de la colonie de la Luisiane, written
in 1764 by the French officer Luis de Villemond to the Secretary
of State of Spain, Marquis of Grimaldi, Archivo Histórico
Nacional, Estado, leg. 33882, exp. n. 12, doc. 9.
-21-
De Clouet to Ulloa, Arkansas, February 27, 1768, AGI, PC, leg. 107;
also De Clouet to the Governor, Arkansas, July 144, 1769 and September
1, 1769. Ulloa´s response to De Clouet was dated July 5, 1768.
De Clouet´s reports about Osage disorders and Osage trade
are in AGI, PC, leg. 107.
-22-
Francisco Riu to Antonio de Ulloa, St. Louis, November 12, 1767,
AGI, PC, leg. 109.
-23-
Din and Nasatir, Imperial Osages, pag. 59.
-24-
Pierre Margry, Découvertes et Etablisement des Francais
dans L'Amerique Septentrionale , 1614-1765, Vol I, pag. 573.
Paris, Imprimerie Jouaust et Signeau, 1876-1888.
-25-
Letter from Governor Esteban Miró to the Commandant of Arkansas
Post, Balthasar Dubreuil, New Orleans, July 5, 1787, AGI, PC, leg.
4A.
-26-
Reuben G. Thwaites, Early Western Travels, 1748-1846., Cleveland,
1905, pag. 246.
-27-
Letter from Governor Miró to the Arkansas Post Commandant
Dubreuil, New Orleans, July 5, 1787, AGI, PC, leg. 4A.
-28-
Din and Nasatir, Imperial Osages. 1983:34-36.
-29-
Mezieres to Unzaga, Narchitoches, February 10, 1773, AGI, PC, leg.
2357.
-30-
Letter from Francisco Desmazellieres to the Governor, Arkansas,
May 15, 1777, AGI, PC, Leg. 107.
-31-
Desmazelliers to the Governor, Arkansas, October 6, 1770. AGI, PC,
leg. 107.
-32-
Din and Nasatir, Imperial Osages, pag. 78.
-33-
Luis de Unzaga, Arkansas, March 11, 1771, AGI, PC, leg. 107.
-34-
Leyba to Unzaga, Arkansas, letters of July 5 and 11, 1771, both
in AGI, PC, leg. 197.
-35-
Fernando de Leyba to Unzaga, Arkansas, April 27, 1772, AGI, PC,
leg. 111.
-36-
De Clouet to Mon Commandant, August 1, 1769; Leyba to Unzaga, June
6, 1771, Valliere to Miró, October 1, 1789, AGI, PC, leg.
15
-37-
De Clouet to Mon General, July 26, 1768; also the letter of October
6, 1768; De Clouet to Monsieur le Commandant, February 14, 1769;
Ulloa to De Clouet, June 5, 1768, AGI, PC, leg. 107; Dubreuil Document
"Distribución de los regalos hechos a los indios
de este partido" (Distribution of presents to Indians in
this district"," Arkansas, April 17, 1784, AGI, PC, leg.
107.
-38-
The list of presents received annually by the Quapaw Indians from
the King included the following: rifles, gunpowder, bullets, needles,
blankets, knives, scissors, hatchets, fabrics, salt and other objects
of use. And there were also decorative items such as red ribbon,
red paint, little bells, combs, stockings and luxurious clothing,
such as special jackets. "Certificado de regalos para los
Indios" (Certificate of presents for the Indians) May 19,
1775, AGI, PC, leg. 107.
-39-
Governor Esteban Miró to Valliere, New Orleans, July 19,
1787, AGI, PC, leg. 4B. For the effect of alcohol on the Quapaws
see Carmen Gonzalez L.-B. "Noticias de los Quapaws,"
20-26.
-40-
"Relación de gastos hechos durante el ataque de Colbert
a este puesto y fuerte el 17 de abril de 1738," attached document
to Dubreuil´s letter to Governor Miró, Arkansas, April
17, 1784; also Miró to Dubreuil, November 15, 1784; Alejo
Pastor´s Certificate, January 28, 1784, all documents in AGI,
PC, leg. 107.
-41-
Fernando de Leyba to Unzaga, Arkansas, April 30, 1773, AGI, PC,
leg. 107.
-42-
Leyba to Unzaga, Arkansas, January 4, 1772, AGI, PC, leg. 107.
-43-
An example of the opinion of the Spanish authorities is Governor
Carondelet's letter to Trudeau, dated May 5, 1793 in New Orleans,
AGI, PC. leg. 124. With regard to the United States Government,
after several failed attempts at putting a stop to Osage incursions,
they were declared outside the protection of the Government of the
United States by the American Governor of Louisiana, Meriwether
Lewis. President Thomas Jefferson suggested not only encouraging
other tribes to attack the Osages, but also that they be given arms
for such purpose. Letter from President Thomas Jefferson to Governor
Meriwether Lewis of August 21, 1808, at James R. Christianson: "A
Study of Osage History Prior to 1876" Ph. D. Dissertation,
Univ. of Kansas, 1978, p. 26.
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