"You'll never get ahead if you don't take care of what you have." - Doris Waddell, RIP

The late Ralph E. Williams with "Heidi" - morris mn

The late Ralph E. Williams with "Heidi" - morris mn
Click on the image to read Williams family reflections w/ emphasis on UMM.

Sunday, August 20, 2023

Conflict with Natives never came here

I heard as a child that the Morris area never had any permanent Native American settlements. We might joke that even then, people thought of better places to be than in Morris! Today we have the "magnet" of the Alexandria lakes area to siphon people from here. We may have lost our annual Prairie Pioneer Days celebration because of that siphon or magnet. 
Historically we depend on the start of the new school year to "jump-start" Morris. For a time, my church of First Lutheran went through summer with one Sunday service - as we acknowledged the slowdown - then went back to two. But I could see the writing on the wall. So sure enough my church capitulated to the long-term pattern of decline and went to one service permanently. 
We must admit that we cannot assume that things get better with the start or school. 
I am prepared at any time to leave for Faith Lutheran - if they'll have me - if First Lutheran shows signs of complete collapse which is possible. It is Sunday morning as I write this. We'll see how things go today. 
So Native Americans never spent much time hanging out in these parts. Yet they are a fundamental part of our local campus history and thus of our overall community history. Fortunately the great Indian war of Minnesota in 1862 didn't extend to here. In fact, I don't think there were any European civilization inroads until 1866. Am I right on that? The Civil War was over. The Indians had to move aside for the Europeans who were flooding in. 
You can debate "Manifest Destiny" but it was truly inevitable. The Indians with their loose concept of property were never going to have a chance. 
We like to romanticize Indian culture today. The movies certainly embrace this. UMM has hosted an annual "Powwow" that showcases the ornamental and ritualistic Indian culture. I haven't been to the Powwow in many years. One year I insisted that my parents attend. I think they found it to be a little loud! 
All the feathers and colors must have had spiritual significance. The Indians like showing us all this now. In the mid-19th Century, the mood was different. The Natives began resenting how the European culture and values were bulldozing them. The Minnesota conflict was major. It coincided with the U.S. Civil War. Morris once had a dentist who wrote a pretty celebrated book about the Minnesota Indian war. It is at our public library: "Birch Coulee." 
It was out in Montana where the conflict came to a head. The military engagement is one of the most studied of world history. Just think of all the books. Scholars have delved into the weeds from every conceivable angle. "Sitting Bull" became a household name. And my, look at the bigger-than-life Custer. His posthumous fame owed itself in large part to his widow working feverishly the rest of her life to build it up. My, she certainly succeeded. 
 
"Reno and Benteen"
Custer's subordinates at the Little Bighorn, "Reno and Benteen," came close to being household names too. Custer's company was completely annihilated. Separate units did survive as did Reno and Benteen. But the unit that assembled for the so-called "Last Stand" was completely doomed down to the last man. 
Sitting Bull
Over time we came to see Custer and his men as so undaunted. I'm sorry to tell you this but it's myth. In the end the soldiers simply tried to flee. Custer himself may have taken his own life or had a comrade do it for him. The soldiers knew that if the Natives got ahold of them, terrible things would be done to them. Custer's body was found with an arrow thrust up his male parts. Yes, the Indians wanted to be left alone. Their encampment along the Little Bighorn River was more of a "last stand" than what Custer's unit did. It was all downhill for the Indians after the battle. 
 
Nomadic life
The Great Plains Indians had survived by following herds of bison that migrated from place to place. These Indians needed homes that could be quickly taken down and rebuilt again. So they lived in tent-like structures called "teepees" made of buffalo skins. 
Our campus on the edge of Morris had an original purpose of helping the Natives. The conventional wisdom is that it did not go well. The intentions were good, I guess. 
It is questionable if we really ought to romanticize Indian culture. It is tempting to do this when you're at the UMM "Powwow." But what did all the accoutrements accomplish? I recall the famous CBS News commentator Andy Rooney in effect saying "balderdash" to the romanticized image. He said the Indians' religion was meaningless. 
I personally like the simplicity behind the Indians' spiritual concepts. They acknowledge, and are in awe of, "the creator." I could drink to that. I attend a church named for Martin Luther, one of the worst anti-Semites in world history. Why in hell do we countenance that? 
I got drawn into the subject of Custer and the Little Bighorn by the movie "Son of the Morning Star." It was well made and historically accurate. I don't think it did well commercially. Down deep it was depressing. Civil War movies leave us with the satisfaction that all of the violence eradicated slavery. As for the Little Bighorn, the Indians won the battle but lost the war. 
Sitting Bull monument
Had Custer shown simple good judgment and restraint, not attacking with such a limited force, all those volumes of historical analysis would never have been produced. Custer could have waited for General Terry. He did not. 
Isn't it obvious? I mean, that Custer was impulsive because of wanting to re-capture the fame he had coming out of the Civil War? 
His poor men: many were young Irish immigrants who joined military service because of a lack of options. Irish people were being discriminated against. Hard to fathom today. History can be strange. That is because we can be so human an animal. 
The other day I was in one of my moods for writing poetry or song lyrics. Actually all of my "poetry" can be sung. So I wrote some verse inspired by the Battle of the Little Bighorn. I call it "Reno and Benteen." I recycled the melody I wrote in connection to the great baseball pitcher Vida Blue recently. 
The large majority of my lyrics will never be recorded. From time to time I do have a song recorded, but it has been a while. Maybe I can afford it better now that banks are paying more interest on savings again!
 
"Reno and Benteen"
by Brian Williams
 
It was summer way out West
Our nation was a fledging one at best
Could the Indians find their place?
Or would they have to brace
For hate?

So the Civil War was done
No more was heard the thundering of guns
But the soldiers donned in blue
Had work they had to do
Get through

From Fort Lincoln they did ride
They looked around at barren countryside
They were sent to pave the way
For settlers come what may
So pray

And with Reno and Benteen
They tried to make their mission swift and clean
They were able men of war
But could they slam the door
Once more

General Custer
There was Custer at the top
Impatient and pugnacious to a fault
He was searching for the fame
That helped him make his name
It's plain

All the soldiers were just pawns
So typical, it's how a war is fought
How they'd like to just survive
And go on living life
No fight

But it's how the world turns
Our human conflict bubbles and it churns
We seek heroes through it all
And some will take the fall
Tough call

No one really wants to die
So look beyond the legends by and by
Even Custer had to fear
His death when it was near
So clear

With his long and flowing hair
He may have looked so sharp and debonair
And his image was in tow
But was it just a show
You know?

He stepped right into the trap
That Sitting Bull had woven with such craft
It was now up to the braves
To simply win the day
Make hay

It was Custer who was vain
Who thought he could prevail in any game
Make the Indians come to heel
He just could not get real
No deal

How did Custer meet his end?
We wonder if he let his courage bend
If he ended his own life
With pistol or with knife
He might

In the end the soldiers died
'Cause there was simply nowhere they could hide
All the Indians were too much
Determined and so tough
With guns!

Look up Reno and Benteen
Two men who saw so many soldiers bleed
Did they have a clear-eyed view
As loyal soldiers do?
What's true?

We were left with mixed accounts
In war the truth will sometimes bounce about
If you lived through Vietnam
You saw a total con
So wrong

So with Reno and Benteen
We ought to keep their reputations clean
Just remember fog of war
And how it leaves us torn
Forlorn

Even though the Natives won
Their way of life would surely soon be done
They would soon capitulate
The future did not wait
Just fate

So with Custer in the ground
His widow worked to bring him more renown
But with Reno and Benteen
What truth is there to seize
Or tease?

There was history left behind
So many clues for sleuths to go and find
Yes it was so long ago
We simply try to probe
To know

There's the icon Crazy Horse
His battle cry would resonate of course
But his win was just one day
There simply was no way
To stay

All the West would grow and grow
With progress that would be a steady flow
While the past is just dispensed
The future won't relent
No end

1 comment:

  1. There are many things about this post that are inaccurate. Let's just start with the idea that the boarding schools at Morris for helping Natives. That may have been the stated reason behind the establishment and operation of such schools but anyone who prides themselves even just a little on seeing beneath thinly veiled "official" explanations should be able to discern this was definitely not a benevolent effort. See for example today's New York Times article or any number of books and articles on the subject, some of which come from UMM faculty. ‘War Against the Children’ https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2023/08/30/us/native-american-boarding-schools.html?smid=nytcore-android-share

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