Ohio History Journal

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FRIENDS AND THE SHAWNEE INDIANS AT

FRIENDS AND THE SHAWNEE INDIANS AT

WAPAKONETA

 

By HARLOW LINDLEY

 

About the beginning of the last century two bands of

Shawnee Indians are known to have been settled on lands in the

vicinity of the present town of Wapakoneta, Ohio. In the year

1809, these Indians began to receive attention from the Friends

of Ohio Yearly Meeting. In order to assist them in adopting

civilized modes of living they built for them a saw and grist mill

on their lands; and some of the Friends seem to have resided,

a part of the time at least, with them, helping them in the man-

agement of these mills, and instructing them in the construction

of houses, the cultivation of the soil and other operations leading

to a settled mode of life.

In the year 1817, the United States Government, in a treaty

with the Shawnee Indians, "in consideration of their faithful

services in the late war agreed to grant [these Indians and a few

Senecas further east in Logan County] by patent, in fee-simple,"1

165 square miles, or 105,600 acres of land. By the same treaty

an annuity of $2000 was to be paid to the Shawnees at Wapa-

koneta.

Upon the organization of Indiana Yearly Meeting of Friends

in 1821, a Committee of Men and Women Friends on Indian Con-

cerns, was appointed "to cooperate with Friends of Ohio and

Baltimore Yearly Meetings in carrying the plan into effect" which

had been received from Ohio Yearly Meeting, but it was pointed

out that the committee thus appointed, had "no power to make

requisitions of a pecuniary nature on the members of this Yearly

Meeting."

The report of this Committee to the Yearly Meeting in 1822

mentions the purchase from the federal government of a tract of

 

1 All quotations are from the annual Yearly Meeting Minutes.

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