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  2. Potawatomi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potawatomi

    The Potawatomi captured every British frontier garrison but the one at Detroit. [5] The Potawatomi nation continued to grow and expanded westward from Detroit, most notably in the development of the St. Joseph villages adjacent to the Miami in southwestern Michigan. The Wisconsin communities continued and moved south along the Lake Michigan ...

  3. Forest County Potawatomi Community - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forest_County_Potawatomi...

    The Forest County Potawatomi Community (Potawatomi: Ksenyaniyek) [2] [3] is a federally recognized tribe of Potawatomi people with approximately 1,400 members as of 2010. [1] The community is based on the Forest County Potawatomi Indian Reservation , which consists of numerous non-contiguous plots of land in southern Forest County and northern ...

  4. Black Earth, Wisconsin (Potawatomi village) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Earth,_Wisconsin...

    Black Earth (Potawatomi: Ma-Kah-Da-We-Kah-Mich-Cock) was a village inhabited by Potawatomi, Odawa, and Ojibwe people [1] that was located in the present-day Town of Carlton, Kewaunee County, Wisconsin. Inhabited by Native Americans for several hundred years, [2] Black Earth was one of Wisconsin's Potawatomi communities that continued to exist ...

  5. Germantown, Wisconsin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germantown,_Wisconsin

    According to Wisconsin First Nations (a Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction resource), Germantown is located on Potawatomi treaty land. [19] The village also falls within the lands of the Peoria , Menominee , Miami , and Sioux Indigenous peoples, as shown by Canadian not-for-profit organization Native Land Digital .

  6. Big Indian Farms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Indian_Farms

    Big Indian Farms is a remote clearing in the Chequamegon Forest west of Medford, Wisconsin where as many as 130 Potawatomi and others lived from around 1896 to 1908. In this isolated spot they were able to practice and preserve their ancestors' culture better than if they had lived under the direct influence of the Bureau of Indian Affairs on a reservation.

  7. Prairie Band Potawatomi Nation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prairie_Band_Potawatomi_Nation

    Independently of the Council of Three Fires, the Prairie Band were also signatories to the 1832 Treaty of Tippecanoe (7 Stat. 378) as the Potawatomi Tribe of Indians of the Prairie. In the 1830s, Chief Shab-eh-nay , the leader of tribal residents on 1,300 acres (530 ha) of land in Illinois, went to visit members of his family who had been ...

  8. Early white settlers were witness to early Sheboygan County ...

    www.aol.com/early-white-settlers-were-witness...

    Native Americans, according to The Wisconsin Archaeological Atlas, were mainly from Potawatomi and Menominee tribes who had a complex of some 28 villages and 15 camp sites in the county. There ...

  9. Hales Corners, Wisconsin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hales_Corners,_Wisconsin

    They were the dominant tribe in southeast Wisconsin with large villages. Like the Europeans that arrived later, they planted crops, but theirs were beans, squash, and corn. By engaging in the fur trade, the Potawatomi learned to speak French and English, and they eventually intermarried with the Europeans. During the 1830s and 1840s, more ...