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About Red Bear Miscomaquah
Chief of The Red Bear Band of Pembina Chippewa Indians
Mis-co-muk-quoh Red Bear is brother of Utinawassis Margaret Grant and Machequayaince
Utinawassis Margaret Grant, Machequayaince, and Techomegood were the matriarchs of The Dakota Nation, The O'Jibway Nation, and The Cree Iron Confederacy as the family of Chief Delonaise Atetaŋkawamduška Wáȟpe Šá and Chief A-ke-gui-ov Equay-say-way, Mamaangĕzide. His stepbrother Red Bear Miscomaquah, Chief Noka Nokay Kadwabida Broken Tooth, and Chief Alexis Bobtail Piche skinned the white men who abused them. A man Charles Chartier once took their money and sold them. Briefly, this incited Chief Kaŋgidaŋ Mdokečiŋhaŋ, Little Crow I to start a war to rescue them. Modern history has ignored the story of the family of the three Starwoman sisters manipulated by greedy European businessmen to obtain access to their trading routes including The NW Trading Company, XY Trading Company, and Hudson Bay Trading Company.
Reservation to Red Bear, Chief of Chippewas. Letter from the Secretary of the Interior, relative to a reservation made to Red Bear, Chief of the Chippewas, by provisions of the ninth article of the treaty of October 2, 1863. [https://digitalcommons.law.ou.edu/indianserialset/2291/]
Assistant to Principle Chief of the Red Lake Nation, adopted as his son, Pembina Indian Joseph Montreuil
sources: Louis Riel Institute
2nd (Sub)-Chief of Pembina Chippewa Nation, sat on Council of Chief Gay Tay Menomin Old Wild Rice son Pembina Sub-Chief Joseph Montreuil was signer of 1863 Old Crossing Treaty with step brother Pembina Sub-Chief Red Bear II Te’bish koo ge zhik Waishkey
LEADERSHIP OF THE PEMBINA CHIPPEWA NATION
The Wazhazha Mdewakanton of the O'Jibway Nation is ceremonial. The O'Jibway Nation traces back 2000 years as a collection of Nations who unified and worked collectively to establish trade, and family unity, among the Haudenosaunee, Anishinaabemowin, and Algonquin descendants of the Great Lakes. Ojibwa, also spelled Ojibwe or Ojibway, also called Chippewa, self-name Anishinaabe, Algonquian-speaking North American Indian tribe who lived in what are now Ontario and Manitoba, Can., and Minnesota and North Dakota, U.S., from Lake Huron westward onto the Plains. These matrilineal-patrilineal lines merge with one family.
26. Private User *Red Bear Band Leadership
25. GICHI AY'AA OGIMAA MA'LINGAAN ALBERT DENNIS LAMBERT *Red Bear Band Leadership
24. Elmer Patrice Brunelle *Red Bear Band Leadership
23. Patrice Francis Brunelle *Red Bear Band Leadership
22. A branch deviates to Little Shell VII Louis Delorme of Little Shell Pembina Chippewa, to Private of Little Shell Pembina Chippewa Tribe.
22. Little Shell III, Ayabiwewidang “Sits and Speaks ” (1872-1903) --->Turtle Mountain Branch Separation and leadership went to Chief Joseph Kaishpa "The Elevated One" Gourneau
21. John Baptiste Brunelle --->Pembina Chippewa Tribe Separation and leadership went to Patrice Francis Brunelle *Red Bear Band Leadership
20. Red Bear II Te’bish koo ge zhik Waishkey *Red Bear Band Leadership
19. Little Shell II Way-ke-ge-ke-shig (1813-1872)
18. Joseph Montreuil *Red Bear Band Leadership
17. Chief Makadeshib Black Duck (1811-1813)
17. Joseph Lenau, Tabasnawa Little Shell II (1790-1804)
16. Red Bear Miscomaquah *Red Bear Band Leadership
16. Chief Little Shell I, Standing Firm
15. Chief Gay Tay Menomin Old Wild Rice
14. Chief Kaŋgidaŋ Mdokečiŋhaŋ, Little Crow I
13. Chief Delonaise Atetaŋkawamduška Wáȟpe Šá
12. Waubojeeg
10. Chief Ka-che-ne-zuh-yauk Kahdewahbeday Broken Tooth
9. https://www.geni.com/people/Chief-Ojibwaince-Bajasswa-Biauswah-II/6000000082327519872'''
6. Wajawadajkoa
5. Wajki Weshki
3. Mitiguakosh
1. Chief Gijigossekot Great Thunderbird
O'Jibway Nation Ogimaakwe: Machequayaince daughter of Wazhazha Mdewakanton Dakota Grand Chief Chief Delonaise Atetaŋkawamduška Wáȟpe Šá; sister of Red Bear Miscomaquah, son of Bajasswa II, The Dry One
Red Bear Miscomaquah's Timeline
1800 |
1800
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Pembina Chippewa Tribe, Canada
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1803 |
1803
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Pembina Dakota, Minnesota, United States
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1829 |
1829
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1890 |
1890
Age 90
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Red Bear Band of Pembina Chippewa Indians, Pembina, Pembina County, ND, United States
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