When Black Hawk crossed back into Illinois with his band, it lit a fuse. Panic spread fast. Settlers ran. Militias formed. War was coming whether or not anyone wanted it.
Keokuk didn’t join him, even though a lot of his
people expected it. Black Hawk was a war leader with a following, and tradition
said you stood with your own. Keokuk saw it differently. He warned his band that
this was a fight they couldn’t win. The Americans had too many soldiers and
guns.
Hs decision to keep his band out of the war split
the Sauk Nation. Some followed Black Hawk, but most stayed with Keokuk. It
wasn’t a popular call, but it held.
While the fighting moved north and west, Keokuk
stayed put. He worked with U.S. officials, kept his people from getting pulled
in, and did what he could to keep things from getting worse.
When it was over, Black Hawk’s band was shattered.
Keokuk’s people were still there.
That didn’t mean they won. The Americans still
took their land, but they weren’t wiped out in a lost war.











