(d) Although the drive to pacify the territories north of the Ohio River reflected popular sentiment, it was also a matter of money. The financially strapped federal government had little income apart from land—that is, Indian land—that could profitably be sold to emigrants. As one land speculator put it: If the government could ‘take the effectual measu[res] to bring the natives to Submission, . . . She [US] may fairly calculate on a rapid sale of her lands, by which She may Sink many millions of her National Debt.’”
(e) “But with no standing army [of United States; in 1791], the few American soldiers north of the Ohio were spread far too thin to deter Indian attacks. Washington finally directed Gen Arthur St Clair, the governor of the Northwest Territory, to raise a force to chastise the tribes that had rejected the lopsided treaties that the United States proposed. * * * Meanwhile, Mr Calloway says, ‘St Clair’s ponderous, noisy, tree-felling army, with its camp followers, bellowing oxen, and lumbering wagons, would have been hard to miss.’ The target of the campaign was a cluster of Indian towns known as Kekionga * * * The Americans planned to ravage the towns * * * The climactic battle—on Nov 4, 1791—was a debacle.”
(i) ponderous (adj):
"1: of very great weight
2: unwieldy or clumsy because of weight and size"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ponderous
(ii) Kekionga
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kekionga
(capital of the Miami tribe)
Compare Miami
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miami
(in Florida; It was named for the nearby Miami River, derived from Mayaimi [different spelling from that for Miami tribe, in separate Native American languages--but same in English], the historic name of Lake Okeechobee)
(f) “The Indians’ triumph was short-lived. In May 1792, Congress gave the president the power to raise troops and send them into combat without a formal declaration of war. The next year, a new and better-trained army under Gen. “Mad Anthony” Wayne delivered a decisive defeat to the weakened Native American confederacy. On the ruins of Kekionga, they built a military base that would eventually become the city of Fort Wayne, Ind.”
Fort Wayne, Indiana
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Wayne,_Indiana
("Under the direction of American Revolutionary War statesman Anthony Wayne, the United States Army built Fort Wayne last in a series of forts near the Miami tribe village of Kekionga in 1794.[15] Named in Wayne's honor") |