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Sak and Fox

The Sauks or Sacs (Asakiwaki in their own language) are a group of Native Americans whose original territory may have been along the St. Lawrence River. Pressure from other tribes drove them to Michigan around Saginaw Bay from whence they were driven by the Hurons armed with French weapons. They then occupied territory in parts of what is now Illinois and Wisconsin. Their closely allied tribe, the Fox, were noted for their hostility towards the French and fought two Fox Wars. After the second war, the Sac sheltered the remaining Fox in their camp and were subject to French attack themselves. The Sac continued moving west to Iowa and Kansas. The refusal of a band of Sac under the chief Black Hawk in 1832 to accept the continued theft of native lands (in western Illinois, this time) led to their reduction in importance at the military hands of General Edmund Gaines in the Blackhawk War. The Sac later moved into reservations in Oklahoma where they merged with the Fox as the Sac and Fox Nation.***
See also: The Sauk (Sac) and Fox (Mesquakie) Nation

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The Sac and Fox Indians (Civilization of the American Indian Series, Vol 48)
by: William Thomas Hagan
December, 1988

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Sacred Bundles of the Sac and Fox Indians
by: M.R. Harrington
June, 2014

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Sac and Fox Indians (Junior Library of American Indians)
by: Melissa McDaniel
June, 1995

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Jim Thorpe: Sac and Fox Athlete (North American Indians of Achievement)
by: Bob Bernotas
September, 1992

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The Sac and Fox (Indians of North America)
by: Theresa Lacey, Nancy Bonvillain, Frank W. Porter
December, 1995

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Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan, 1855-1868 : including some Swan Creek and Black River of the Sac & Fox Agency for the years 1857, 1858, and 1865
by: Raymond C. Lantz
1993

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***This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sauk"


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