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Kaskaskia
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The '''Kaskaskia''' were one of the several cognate tribes that made up the
Illiniwek Confederation. Their first contact with Europeans reportedly occurred near present-day
Green Bay, Wisconsin in
1667 at a
Jesuit mission station. The Illiniwek are reported to have asked the
France French to send a missionary to them in their home country.
In
1673,
Jesuit Father
Jacques Marquette and
French-Canadian explorer
Louis Jolliet undertook the journey and became the first Europeans to meet the Illiniwek (and the Kaskaskia in particular) in their own land near present-day
Des Moines, Iowa. The land controlled by the Confederation was approximately the same as present-day
Illinois.
The fate of the Kaskaskia, and the rest of the Illiniwek/Illinois, was irrevocably tied up with that of France. Until their dissolution in France, French Jesuits built missions and ministered to Kaskaskia. When the
Seven Years' War (called the
French and Indian War in
North America) ended, the Kaskaskia and other Illiniwek tribes were greatly in decline. The original population estimate reported by early French explorers varied from 6 to 20,000+. But at the conclusion of the French and Indian War, the number was a fraction of the original.
The causes of decline are many and varied (See the work of Emily Blasingham,
Indiana University system Indiana University, published in ''
Ethnohistory'' journal). The Illiniwek made war with their French allies against the most formidable native nations: to the east, the
Iroquois; to the northwest, the
Sioux and the
Fox (Native American) Fox; to the south, the
Chickasaw and
Cherokee; to the west, the
Osage Nation. Add to combat losses the inevitable losses to European diseases. In 1796, a Peoria warrior killed Pontiac, which brought down upon the Kaskaskia and other Illinois tribes, the wrath of the Great Lakes tribes. The Ottawa, Sauk, Fox, Miami, Kickapoo and Potawatomi devastated the Illiniwek and occupied their old tribal range along the Illinois River.
The remnant of the Kaskaskia live in
Oklahoma under the banner of the
Peoria tribe Confederated Peoria Tribe of Oklahoma. It is believed that not a single full-blooded Illinois Indian lives today.
The term "Kaskaskia" lives on in Illinois. The
Kaskaskia River, whose headwaters are near
Champaign, Illinois Champaign in central Illinois, and whose mouth is near
Chester, Illinois, still carries the name of this native nation who once settled throughout its estuarial plain.
Kaskaskia College is located in
Centralia, Illinois, in
Marion County, Illinois Marion County. The city of
DuQuoin, Illinois, carries the name of
Jean Baptiste DuQuoin (sometimes DuQuoigne), a notable Kaskaskia chieftain of their later history.
Kaskaskia, Illinois was the first capital of Illinois. Also the
Kaskaskia Baptist Association
located in
Patoka, Illinois carries this name. The
USS Kaskaskia (AO-27) also carries the name.
External links
-
Kaskaskia entry in the
Catholic Encyclopedia
-
USS Kaskaskia
Category:Native American tribes
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