Wahpehda Wabasha II, Red Leaf II

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Chief Wahpehda Wabasha (Wáȟpe šá), II

Also Known As: "a.k.a. La Feuille", "The Leaf", "Red Leaf", "One-eyed Wapasha", "The Falling Leaf", "Brule' Chief", "Chief Wapasha I"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Cass Lake
Death: 1839 (61-70)
Prairie du Chien, Crawford County, Wisconsin, United States (Smallpox epidemic)
Place of Burial: Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Chief Delonaise Atetaŋkawamduška Wáȟpe Šá and Claire Equaywid Ahdik Songab
Husband of Ojibwa woman and Tisanti Wabasha
Father of Thomas George Wabasha; Chief Joseph Wabasha III and James Wanduta "Mahpiyahepiya" Wabasha
Brother of Omaniknay Mrs. Temp Claire; Mary Etoukasah-wee Lapoint; Techomehgood Ah-Dik Songab Okicheta Bottineau; Pewanejeet Charlo/Chano; Ahdickons Little Reindeer and 1 other
Half brother of Marguerite Utinawasis Songab Okivhita; Techomehgood Ah-Dik Songab Okicheta Bottineau; Red Bear Miscomaquah; Ahdikons; Aceguemanche and 1 other

Occupation: Dakota Sioux Chief
Managed by: James Robert Dow
Last Updated:

About Wahpehda Wabasha II, Red Leaf II

The brother of Marguerite Utinawasis Songab Okivhita and Techomehgood Ah-Dik Songab Okicheta Bottineau

Direct Lineal Brother and near identical twin visually of Chief Kaŋgidaŋ Mdokečiŋhaŋ, Little Crow I, and brother of Techomehgood Ah-Dik Songab Okicheta Bottineau. Marguerite is recorded with Wapasha at Little Crow Band in Kaposia, MN.

HEAD CHIEF OF THE ASSINIBOINE

Red Leaf did go to Washington just the once, with the Red Cloud Agency delegation in May-June 1872. The Red Cloud and Red Leaf families were one in the same.

https://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http%3A%2F%2Fimg.groundspeak.c...


Wapasha I born Abt. 1720 and died on the 5 January 1806

Wapasha I was the son of a Dakota chief and a Chippewa princess. Born in approximately 1720, he was the eldest of two sons. Despite his Chippewa blood, Wapasha I led the Sioux in several battles with his mothers tribe. One such incident marks the first recorded reference of his name by the white men.

After a band of Sioux warriors slew several Chippewa, a tribe which had been promised protection by the French, Wapasha and those with him on the raid offered to submit to French justice in order to keep peace with the incoming military forces of the Europeans. On March 9, 1740, the action was recorded by the commander of the French garrison at Mackinac, Michigan. No retribution was taken against the Sioux.

After military defeats at the hands of the British in the middle 1700s, the French began to withdraw from lands they had formerly held in the Mississippi River valley. The French had enjoyed the loyalty of the Indians, who aided them in their defeat with the British. After the French defeat, the English were both suspicious and fearful of the Indians. As a result, there were no English trappers and traders bargaining with the Sioux. The Sioux had developed a dependency on such trade. They had become more accustomed to hunting with rifles than bows and arrows. Fur traded with French trappers brought provisions and ammunition and the Dakota found it difficult to survive without this commerce.

Perhaps also fearing a war with the British, Wapasha I convened a council in 1763 to find a way to bring the British back to this area. Several incidents that took place during the French and Indian War made English trappers apprehensive about returning to the Mississippi River valley. One such incident took place in 1761. A Dakota named Ixkatapay had shot an English trader called Pagonta (Mallard Duck) by the Indians. The two had quarreled earlier, and Pagonta was reportedly killed while sitting in his cabin smoking. To appease the British, it was decided Ixkatapay would be turned over to them for the killing. Wapasha I led the party, composed of 100 men, to the English headquarters in Quebec.

Wapashas enthusiasm for peace with the English was shared by the tribe, but evidently this did not extend to submitting one of their own to the justice of the British. By the time Wapasha had reached Green Bay, Wisconsin, there were only six of the original 100 left, Wapasha and five braves. The others had drifted off in small groups. One of these deserting bands had taken Ixkatapay with them and returned to their homelands.

Wapasha I and the remaining five continued to Quebec and offered themselves as surrogates for Ixkatapay in the English court. He explained the plight of his people and their desire for peace, and asked the British to return to the area. Taken with his courage, the British awarded the Dakota chief seven military medals, hanging one around his neck in a ceremony at the fort. Trappers and traders soon returned to the area.

During the American Revolution, the Sioux fought on the side of the British. Wapasha led his warriors against the Sauk and Fox forces which had sided with the rebelling colonists. In British military communiqus, he is referred to as General Wapasha. His aid in the British cause during the revolution was not forgotten. When he traveled to Montreal on one of his many visits to the British army commanders there, he was always greeted with the salute of a cannon.

Wapasha I died of neck cancer January 5, 1806, at a camp on the Root River in Houston County, Minnesota. He was probably somewhere in his 80s when he died, ending a public career that spanned 66 years.

Below is a photograph of Redleaf Wabasha b:1720 Cass Lake, Cass, Minnesota and died 5 January 1806 at Root River, Houston, Minnesota. the son of Snow Mountain Wabasha 1682. Readleaf was the father of Chief One Eye WABASHA 1773-1836 and Angelique WABASHA souix name Noh-Ki-A-Keu

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=== GEDCOM Note ===

Souix chief from Winona, MN according to "Recollections of Antoine Grignon"

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Wahpehda Wabasha II, Red Leaf II's Timeline

1773
1773
Cass Lake
1813
1813
Minnesota, United States
1816
1816
MN, United States
1824
October 1824
Winona, Minnesota, USA
1839
1839
Age 66
Prairie du Chien, Crawford County, Wisconsin, United States
????
Minnesota, Minnesota
????
Winona, Winona County, Minnesota, United States