Removal and Beyond
The story of Ohio’s Indigenous people continued long after the early 1800s.
Image: Across the continent, “Westward the course of empire takes its way.” F. F. Palmer (1868). Library of Congress, no known restrictions on publication.
Each tribe that lived in Ohio followed a different path of forced removal. A wider tidal wave of removal pushed tribes like the Shawnee, Delaware, and Wyandotte from east to west.
Forced to leave their homes and farms, the treks from one settlement to another were long and arduous. They faced an uncertain future, but the threat of white settlers was motivation enough to leave.1Weslager, The Delaware, 360. Removal was directly caused by white settlers who wanted to take Indigenous lands for themselves. Despite their histories of hundreds of years of removal, the Wyandotte, Shawnee, and Delaware continue to survive today.
Below are the individual stories of Wayne County’s main tribes:
Removal from Ohio
1795-1843
Forcefully removed from their settlements in Ohio, the Shawnee, Wyandotte, and Delaware started new villages further west. They hoped to remain, and while the US government tried to get them to adopt European agricultural styles, the Wyandotte, Shawnee, and Delaware fought to preserve their traditions.2Weslager, The Delaware, 337.
Although the government provided some protections and payments for Indigenous people, they could not stop the tidal wave of white settlers, who were now spilling out of Ohio.3Weslager, The Delaware Indians, 350. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 was especially instrumental in forcing Ohio’s Indigenous groups onto lands west of the Mississippi River.4Weslager, The Delaware Indians, 371. Removal was not a pleasant experience. One Wyandot Chief, Chief Warpole, described how removal felt by saying:
“…the disposition of white folks is to crowd; and if we try to get away from them by going where they tell us, they will still crowd up until they crowd us all out; unless we could fly up and live in the air, and feed on nothing, there would soon be left no place for us.”
Chief Warpole of the Wyandotte Nation, from James Wheeler’s Missionary Memoir.
As these tribes moved westward, their populations fell. They had to rely on lower-quality farmland, and having to travel for so long was too much for some.5 Bowes, Land too Good for Indians, 3-4; Stockwell, The Other Trail of Tears, 172; 216; Weslager, The Delaware Indians, 363.
Kansas and Oklahoma
1850s-1870s
As these tribes were pushed into Kansas and Oklahoma, they were promised that they would no longer have to move. Negotiators such as Lewis Cass, the governor of the Michigan Territory, saw removal as more humane, but it also provided lands for white settlers.6Hixson, American Settler Colonialism, 115-118. However, in the 1850s and 1860s, trouble mounted. With the Gold Rush and pressure from railway companies who wanted to expand rail lines, Wyandot, Shawnee, and Delaware groups in Kansas were forced to take much smaller plots of land.7Stockwell, The Other Trail of Tears, 223. Despite this, Ohio’s former Indigenous inhabitants gave their service to the United States. For example, 80% of able-bodied Delaware men volunteered for the Union.8 Delaware Tribe of Indians, 2022.
At the same time, when Kansas opened for white settlement in 1855, the Delaware, Shawnee, and Wyandotte found themselves caught in the middle of the violent Bleeding Kansas conflict and white settlers trespassed on their lands.9Bowes, Land too Good for Indians, 222.
In 1863, President Lincoln began to push for the removal of Indigenous people from Kansas, and by the end of the Civil War, these groups moved onto parts of Cherokee lands in Oklahoma.10Stockwell, The Other Trail of Tears, 224. On these small plots of land, cultures from Ohio clashed with other removed cultures from the Great Plains.11Hixson, American Settler Colonialism, 118. During and after the Civil War, removal to reservations became the United States’ formally adopted policy, and the United States pushed a policy of individual plots of land, rather than tribal lands.12Weslager, The Delaware Indians, 409-410.
By the late 1800s, white Americans began to believe that Indigenous people no longer existed. However, this was not the case. Records show that dozens of Shawnee, Wyandotte, and Delaware children attended the Carlisle Indian School, which was designed to eliminate Indigenous cultures and assimilate young people.13Hixson, American Settler Colonialism, 141. Not only did these schools attempt to erase Indigenous cultures, but they also abused and neglected the children in their care. However, these Indigenous cultures endured, and continue to this day.
In the 1930s, Congress passed the 1934 Indian Reorganization Act and the 1936 Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act. Both of these laws encouraged tribal self-government instead of assimilation to American cultures. After these acts, tribal nations could write new tribal constitutions. However, some nations struggled to be recognized as federally-recognized tribal nations.14 Delaware Tribe of Indians, 2022.