SBM.06a Sketch of White Earth Mission in 1875

ST. BENEDICT'S MISSION, WHITE EARTH RESERVATION, MN SAINT BENEDICT'S MONASTERY (CONVENT), ST. JOSEPH, MN The various American Indian bands living in Canada and the Northwest Territory fought among themselves and the white settlers as Indian hunting grounds continued to be lost. The Dakotas...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: L. Bergman, Louisville, KY
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: 1875
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cdm15734.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/SBM/id/74
Description
Summary:ST. BENEDICT'S MISSION, WHITE EARTH RESERVATION, MN SAINT BENEDICT'S MONASTERY (CONVENT), ST. JOSEPH, MN The various American Indian bands living in Canada and the Northwest Territory fought among themselves and the white settlers as Indian hunting grounds continued to be lost. The Dakotas finally settled farther west and the Ojibwe* made land treaties with the U.S. government which reserved land around specific lakes in northern Minnesota for them. However, in 1867, the U.S. government ordered the Ojibwe to give up their scattered settlements and gather in one large reservation at White Earth. The reservation was then divided into agencies with government officials placed in charge. The bishop of the Northwest Territory sent Father Ignatius Tomazin to serve the Catholics at White Earth. Father Tomazin was a missionary from Yugoslavia who had worked among the Ojibwe for some years in the Crow Wing area and was known for his zeal in protecting their rights. While he was courageous in protesting the evils of discrimination practiced by the government agents, he perhaps lacked patience and diplomacy in his confrontations. As a result, Father Tomazin was forced off the reservation and transferred to Red Lake. In 1878, Abbot Rupert Seidenbusch, OSB, who had been appointed bishop of the newly-formed Northern Vicariate, asked St. John's Abbey to provide a priest and St. Benedict's Convent to provide teachers for White Earth. Fathers Aloysius Hermanutz and Joseph Buh from St. John's and Sisters Philomena Ketten and Lioba Braun from St. Benedict's were sent to meet the challenges of White Earth. Six days after they arrived, the sisters opened a day school for 15 pupils (12 girls and 3 boys), which increased to a total of 40 during the following week. * The American Indian band in northern Minnesota prefer the name Anishinabe ("Anishinaabeg" meaning "First People") while the French settlers called them Ojibwe (the more familiar name used in these records) and the government referred to them as Chippewa. ________ SBMA ...