Bajasswa II, The Dry One

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Sandy Lake Ojibwe Chief Chief Biauswah II Bayaaswaa "The Dry One" Utinawasis Son-gabo-ki-che-ta (Bajasswa Thomme Qui Faitsecher)

Birthdate:
Death: before 1825
Immediate Family:

Son of Matchiwaijan Bayaaswaa
Husband of Rising Dawn; Claire Equaywid Ahdik Songab and Julia "Tchikitchiwanokwe" Sayer
Father of Chief Ka-che-ne-zuh-yauk Kahdewahbeday Broken Tooth; Red Bear Miscomaquah; Ahdikons; Aceguemanche; Chief Noka Nokay Kadwabida Broken Tooth and 1 other
Brother of Red Lake Nation Grand Chief Maydwaygwanoonind I Mādwāgwănōnĭnd I "Who is Heard Spoken To" Tuttle, Isaac H. Tuttle

Occupation: O'Jibway Nation Grand Chief, White Earth Reservation Chief
Managed by: Laureen Taylor
Last Updated:

About Bajasswa II, The Dry One

References

Warren, William W. (1985) [1851]. History of the Ojibway People. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press (Borealis Books). ISBN 978-0-87351-162-9.

"O'Jibway Nation Grand Chief Bajasswa Bayaaswaa "Dry-one" Biauswah II (Great Jossakid), Wazhazha Mdewakanton". Geni.com. Retrieved October 26, 2021

Bayaaswaa (recorded variously in English as Biauswah, Bajasswa, Byianswa or Biaswah) was the principal Chief of the Sandy Lake Ojibwa, whose village was located at either terminus of the Savanna Portage (Sandy Lake & opposite the mouth of the East Savanna River) in Minnesota.

According to William Whipple Warren, based on oral history regarding Bayaaswaa, as a child Bayaaswaa was captured by the Fox and his father Bayaaswaa (I) traded his life for his son's. Bayaaswaa and few other survivors went to Fond du Lac, and the Fond du Lac Band drove the Fox out of northern Wisconsin.

The oral history, Warren continues, recalled a major battle with the Dakota at the mouth of the Crow Wing River. Sixty Ojibwa led by Bayaaswaa engaged three hundred Dakota who they said had destroyed their village at Sandy Lake. Supposedly, the battle lasted for three days. The Ojibwa established their village at Sandy Lake, establishing the Sandy Lake Band, and then ventured to Red Lake and Pembina.[1] Other oral history accounts, however, suggest the Cree aided the Ojibwa against the Dakota. According to Richard Alan Nelson, Bayaaswaa was a jiisakiiwinini (Shaking-tent Seer) and lived to the age of 109.

Bayaaswaa's son Gaa-dawaabide ("Broken Tooth") later became Chief of the Sandy Lake Band.[2]

Biauswah Lake in Itasca County, Minnesota, is named after him, as is the Biauswah Bridge, a bridge for the Minnesota State Highway 23 over the Saint Louis River out of the Fond du Lac neighbourhood of Duluth, Minnesota.

https://chequamegonhistory.wordpress.com/2013/04/14/maangozids-fami...

Stepfather of Machequayaince through marriage to mother Claire "Equaywid" Adik Songabo.

–this is the younger Bayaaswaa, the boy whose father traded his life for his when he was kidnapped by the Meskwaki (Fox) (see post from March 30, 2013). Bayaaswaa grew to be a famous chief at Sandy Lake who was instrumental in the 18th-century Ojibwe expansion into Minnesota. Google says “the man who makes dry.” The Ojibwe People’s Dictionary lists bayaaswaad as a word for the animate transitive verb “dry.”

https://chequamegonhistory.wordpress.com/2013/04/14/maangozids-fami...

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