Cheif Mahaska (1784-1834) was a chief of the
Native American Iowa tribe. His son, also named Mahaska, was
better known as Francis White Cloud. Mahaska was born into
the Iowa tribe. He became chief at an early age after killing
several enemy Sioux to avenge his father's death by
them.
Later Mahaska killed a French trader in an
argument; he was arrested and imprisoned in St. Louis,
Missouri. After he escaped, he led a raid against the
Osage.
Afterward, he decided that his father's
death was finally avenged. Mahaska lay down his arms and
adopted the lifestyle of the European-American settlers,
building a log home and farming. He refused to let his braves
avenge the death of an Iowa chief named Crane at the hands of
Omaha Indians in 1833. When several Iowa killed six Omaha
warriors, Mahaska assisted in their arrest.
The next year one of the Iowa escaped from
Fort Leavenworth and killed Mahaska by shooting him in the
back as he sat by his campfire. He was buried along the
Nodaway River in Edna Township, Cass County, Iowa. Mahaska
became a symbol to settlers of the virtues of his native
lifestyle, and of the possibility of peace between natives and
settlers. Mahaska County was named for him.
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