To Banish Forever: A Secret Society, the Ho-Chunk, and Ethnic Cleansing in Minnesota
By Cathy Coats
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About this ebook
In 1863, after the end of the US–Dakota War, a group of men in Mankato, Minnesota, formed a secret society. At the beginning of every meeting, members of the Knights of the Forest recited its ritual pledge, including these words: "I sincerely hope this meeting may be profitable to each one of us, and that we may go forth from this Lodge stronger and braver in the determination to banish forever from our beautiful State every Indian who now desecrates our soil."
The Ho-Chunk people, who had not participated in the war, occupied a reservation about two miles south of Mankato on some of the state’s richest agricultural lands. The Knights—determined to claim these lands for their own profit—advocated for the removal of the Ho-Chunk, who had already been forced to move three times before settling in Blue Earth County of south-central Minnesota. Exploiting the fears of white people living in the area at the end of the brutal war, the Knights sent armed men to surround the Ho-Chunk reservation, threatening to shoot anyone who crossed the line. Within just a few years, the Ho-Chunk had been kicked off their land and removed to reservations outside of the state.
This is the story of the Knights, the Ho-Chunk, and the ethnic cleansing of southern Minnesota.
Cathy Coats
Cathy Coats is the metadata specialist at the University of Minnesota Libraries. She previously worked at the James W. Miller Learning Resources Center at St. Cloud State University.
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To Banish Forever - Cathy Coats
TO BANISH
FOREVER
A Secret Society, the Ho-Chunk,
and Ethnic Cleansing in Minnesota
CATHY COATS
Logo: Minnesota Historical Society PressText copyright © 2024 by Cathy Coats. Other materials copyright © 2024 by the Minnesota Historical Society. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For information, write to the Minnesota Historical Society Press, 345 Kellogg Blvd. W., St. Paul, MN 55102-1906.
mnhspress.org
The Minnesota Historical Society Press is a member of the Association of University Presses.
Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
♾ The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48–1984.
International Standard Book Number
ISBN: 978-1-68134-255-9 (paper)
ISBN: 978-1-68134-256-6 (e-book)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2023945531
THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO MATTHEW H. NORTHRUP, Miskogiizhik (1970–2023). Matthew was among my first readers and advisors for this project. He was a longtime friend and my classmate in graduate school. He was a scholar, historian, educator, veteran, father, brother, son, cousin, nephew, and friend. He taught me and many other Minnesotans about Indigenous culture and history, inspiring future generations with his knowledge. I will forever treasure the stories and wisdom he shared with me when I last visited him. I hope Matthew’s influence on this work is an honor to his legacy.
CONTENTS
An Acknowledgment of Land, People, and Institutions
1Introduction: Hidden History Preserved
2The People of the Big Voice
3The Takeover of Ho-Chunk Homelands
4Ho-Chunk Removals in Minnesota Territory
5The Theft of Minnesota and the Call for Extermination
6Mankato Men and the Secret Society Tradition
Charles A. Chapman
The Porter Family
The Barney Brothers
John F. Meagher
7The Knights of the Forest
8The Banishment of the Ho-Chunk from Minnesota
9Ethnic Cleansing and the Forgotten Legacy
Acknowledgments
Appendixes
ASenate and House of Representatives of the State of Minnesota, Joint Resolution Relative to the Sioux and Winnebago Reservations, 1858
BThe Knights of the Forest: A Secret History,
Mankato Review , April 27, 1886
CRitual,
The Initiation Rites and Oath of the Knights of the Forest
DRemoval of the Winnebago Indians,
Petition to the President of the United States and to the Secretary of the Interior, January 21, 1863
Notes
Bibliography
Index
AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF LAND, PEOPLE, AND INSTITUTIONS
Ho-Chunk people still live in the State of Minnesota, parts of which have always been their homelands. The call to banish forever
an entire group of human beings from this state is now replaced with the everlasting We are still here!
I recognize that the work of this book and its research is taking place on the homelands of Dakota, Ojibwe, and Ho-Chunk people that were in part colonized by my own great-great-grandparents, who immigrated from five European countries and Canada. The national and local archives, libraries, and museums holding the source material for this work are located on Indigenous lands and contain items that belong to Indigenous people. Some government and nonprofit institutions supporting this work still retain control over Indigenous human remains or their cultural objects. The government actors in this history—the States of Minnesota and Wisconsin, as well as the city of Mankato and Blue Earth County—together hold millions of acres of land that were taken from Indigenous people through coercive and fraudulent treaties whose terms the US government did not fulfill. I support the work of Land Back, a movement in North America that seeks to reclaim Indigenous authority over territories that tribal nations claim by treaty.
1INTRODUCTION: HIDDEN HISTORY PRESERVED
On May 3, 1968, leaders at Mankato State College held a ceremony to open a time capsule that had lain inside the cornerstone of the university’s historic Old Main Building for a century. The capsule had not rested undisturbed: in 1922 the box survived a fire that leveled Old Main. Its contents, transferred to a new container, were sealed again in the rebuilt structure and preserved for the gaze of the future. At the ceremonial opening, the College Reporter listed its contents in vague categories: business cards, newspapers, and miscellaneous items. The newspaper did not mention the Knights of the Forest’s Ritual,
a four-page pamphlet detailing initiation rites into the secret society and an oath, included with the other documents of 1860s Minnesota.
Mankato citizens had first sealed the time capsule inside the cornerstone of the Old Main Building at the Mankato Normal School on June 22, 1869, during a large dedication ceremony featuring fraternal organizations. Fraternal organizations, which brought men together to pursue common social or political goals and foster business ties, were important institutions in nineteenth-century communities. A procession had traveled down Front Street, the main street in Mankato. At the parade’s end, the crowd of twelve to fifteen hundred people waited to observe a musical performance, a reading of the contents of the time capsule box, and the laying of the cornerstone according to the impressive ceremonies of the Odd Fellows, conducted by Noble Grand [Sheldon] F. Barney.
Cornerstone time capsule ceremonies with fraternal organizations were a common occurrence in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, especially for publicly funded buildings. Many public buildings in Minnesota have contained cornerstone time capsules, including buildings at St. Cloud State University, the Minnesota State Capitol, and the Grand Army of the Republic Hall in Litchfield.¹
During the 1968 centennial, university leaders considered whether to put the articles into another corner stone or into the archives of the college.
After some debate, they resealed them in another building’s cornerstone. But in 1973, after the university sold Old Main and all the other lower campus buildings, the Mankato State College Archives retrieved the box and added it to the collection. Finally, in 2004, the university archives publicly listed online the original 1869 items from the Old Main cornerstone. Among them was a document titled Ritual,
containing the initiation rite of the Knights of the Forest. This short-lived but influential secret society existed in Mankato and surrounding communities during the early months of 1863, immediately following the US–Dakota War and the execution of thirty-eight Dakota soldiers in Mankato. Its Ritual
contains the script for its opening ceremonies and initiation rites. The text of the group’s membership oath promised to bind the men together as brothers in common interest
so they could go forth stronger and braver in the determination to banish forever from our beautiful State every Indian who now desecrates our soil.
The organization’s goal was to provoke the removal of the Ho-Chunk Nation from its reservation in Blue Earth County and open the reservation to white ownership.²
Students from Mankato State Normal School in front of Old Main, 1884. Minnesota State University, Mankato
It is quite likely that numerous members of the Knights of the Forest attended the 1869 cornerstone ceremony. Newspaper accounts published decades later allege that many of the area’s prominent men were among the group’s members; Asa Barney, John F. Meagher, and Charles A. Chapman disclosed their membership, and John J. Porter Jr.’s was featured in his obituary. Other likely members include Asa Barney’s brother Sheldon, who presided over the cornerstone ceremony, and John J. Porter Jr.’s father, John J. Porter Sr., who was a vocal advocate for Ho-Chunk removal.³
As Mankato’s leading citizens locked away the initiation rites and oath in the time capsule that day, marking it as a piece of the city’s history worthy of preservation, they also locked away its compelling evidence of Minnesota’s unexamined history of hate. No other copies of the document are known to exist. Scholars have recently begun to uncover more details of the ethnic cleansing and genocide of Indigenous people throughout the United States in the nineteenth century. Studies of paramilitary groups, along with research on nineteenth-century secret societies, have shown us that American frontiersmen organized locally on behalf of the nation’s expansionist agenda, known as Manifest Destiny, and were often the main drivers of ethnic cleansing. These narratives challenge the idea of the government
as a sole actor of dispossession. Minnesota’s history is no different. Until recently, very few Minnesota historians have presented the history of state removal efforts as ethnic cleansing that was encouraged, organized, and enacted by white settler-colonists.⁴
The initiation ritual of the Knights of the Forest and the oath its members swore were dedicated to a general anti-Indian sentiment and political allegiance, but all firsthand descriptions of the existence and participation in the group center show that it focused exclusively on the nearby Ho-Chunk reservation. These Mankato men were not concerned with the removal of Dakota people from nearby Brown County, which was already assured. The Knights of the Forest organized after the Dakota hangings, after the government had already taken most of the Dakota people in Minnesota to a concentration camp at Fort Snelling. Even before the Ho-Chunk were moved to the reservation on the Blue Earth River in 1855, most white settlers in Blue Earth County had vigorously opposed the reservation and had advocated, agitated, and organized for Ho-Chunk removal from Minnesota. Furthermore, the group existed only until the federal government forced the Ho-Chunk to leave the state. The men in Mankato took advantage of the postwar racialized rhetoric and settlers’ hysteria to push the federal government into finally exiling the Ho-Chunk along with the Dakota.⁵
Following the US–Dakota War in the fall of 1862 and winter of 1863, a statewide call for extermination of all Indians
by white settlers and the threat of postwar mob violence in Mankato was a constant issue for federal and state authorities. Masses of men held secret meetings
and traveled from New Ulm, St. Peter, and all over Brown County to Mankato, threatening to attack Dakota prisoners. The execution in December publicly enacted and seemed to satisfy the desire for revenge among New Ulm and Brown County settlers who had fought battles with Dakota men close to their homes. But the men of Blue Earth County, who had not experienced conflicts with the Ho-Chunk near their homes, still had the reservation in their midst. Therefore, in January 1863, they organized a campaign for the ethnic cleansing of southern Minnesota.⁶
Bird’s-eye view of the city of Mankato, Minnesota, in 1870. Library of Congress
Ho-Chunk cessions, removals, and reservations, 1832–present. Map by Cole Sutton
The Knights’ impact on the Ho-Chunk people went beyond their forced removal from Minnesota, however. The Knights of the Forest identified itself as a secret society, but it advanced the agenda typical of a hate group, perpetuating a culture of ethnic violence. Like other hate groups, its members used political power, intimidation, and racial intolerance to promote their cause, but they cloaked themselves in the rhetoric of noble defense. Because of the group’s emphasis on secrecy, telling this story requires careful reading of fragmentary evidence. Reasonable suppositions, buttressed with context provided by other secret societies, allow a glimpse of the organization’s efforts, members, and effects.
Ho-Chunk people had already attempted a variety of diplomatic tactics before government officials obtained the last of their homelands, so they had a long history of broken treaties with the United States before their arrival in Blue Earth County. The American pattern of deception, colonization, conflict, anti-Indian sentiment, coercion, confinement, and removal was old news to them by the time the US–Dakota War commenced in 1862. Although decades of repeated military roundups had forced