Drake University football players: Gibson Holliday (center); Charles “Chuck” Delmege (right); Lester Jones (left).
Photo from the Des
Moines Register. December 23, 1927.
Photo from the Des
Moines Register. December 23, 1927.
Members (left to
right): Marvin Johnson (trombone); L. Fredericks (banjo); L. Gunderson
(cornet); R. Sielers (saxaphone); T. De Mare (percussionist); N. Connovar
(saxaphone); and A. Flurie (piano).
Photo
from the Sioux City Journal. July 24, 1927.
Sogonapothanji was a Meskwaki (Fox) war chief in what is now eastern Iowa. His name meant “He Slew Three Sioux,” and it wasn’t a metaphor. It was a record.Among the Meskwaki, names like this marked what a man had done, not what he hoped to be remembered for. Sogonapothanji’s reputation came from direct conflict with the Dakota (Sioux), longtime enemies in a region where raids and counter-raids were part of daily reality. Survival depended on speed, strength, and nerve. Leaders proved themselves in action.
Pashepaho, sometimes written as Pah-e-pa-ho, was a civil chief of the Sauk Nation in the early 1800s.
In Letters and Notes, George Catlin described Pashepaho as "grave and deliberate." He was one of five Sauk delegates who signed the 1804 treaty at St. Louis, which gave away most of the tribal lands, including Saukenuk.
He showed up to speak for his people while land disappeared and choices narrowed, knowing restraint was the only tool he had left—and using it, anyway.
He
sided with Black Hawk’s British Band during the War of 1812, then sided with
Keokuk’s peace faction during the Black Hawk War in 1832.