Otter Tail Lake Band of Chippewas

History
Historically, the Otter Tail Chippewas have lived in the Otter Tail Lake region of Minnesota, since at least the early 16th century. Prophecy played an important role in their daily affairs. They combatted the Dakota People who may have lived in that region before them. Dakota People did not cooperate with the prophecy weary Chippewas and eagerly formed an alliance with both the English and French who supplied them with guns. Those guns were why the Dakota People were capable of preventing the Chippewas from completly subjugating them. After the whites reached treaty agreements with the Otter Tail Chippewas who are really the Pillager Chippewas and Pembina Chippewas, land cessions followed and a large Reservation was set aside for both the Otter Tail Chippewa and Gull Lake Chippewas.

White historians are not being honest about those two Reservations. They were really Chippewa Reservations. Below is a map of the Otter Tail Chippewa Reservation and the Gull Lake Chippewa Reservation. The Otter Tail Chippewa Reservation has the number 269, while the Gull Lake Chippewas Reservation has the number 268. After the United States broke treaty promises, a new Gull Lake Chippewa Reservation was created. You'll notice it borders the old Gull Lake Reservation on the north.



Brief Timeline
October 18, 1848: Treaty is signed between the Otter Tail Chippewas who are also known as the Menominee. It established a large Reservation for them which was adjacent to the Gull Lake Chippewas Reservation which was created on October 13, 1846. Otter Tail Lake is located on the northwest side of the old Reservation.

May 12, 1854: A treaty was supposedly signed by Otter Tail Chippewa leaders which created a Reservation for them in Wisconsin. Today, it is known as the Menominee Reservation of Wisconsin. The United States probably promised the Otter Tail Chippewas the Wisconsin Reservation to prevent them from migrating west. They kept their promise.

February 11, 1856: A portion of the Otter Tail Chippewas Wisconsin Reservation was set aside for the Stockbridge Chippewas and Munsee.

1862: These Chippewas participated in the 1862 Minnesota Indian War. They were probably led by chief Hole in the Day. They continued to honor the treaty which established their Reservation in 1848.

March 19, 1867: A treaty is signed which added land to the Leech Lake Reservation created on May 7, 1864. Today, it is known as White Earth Reservation. Many of the Otter Tail Chippewas relocated to White Earth Reservation.

February 7, 1872: F.A. Walker wrote a letter to the Department of the Interior in which he estimated that 375 Otter Tail Pillager Chippewas continued to live in Otter Tail County, Minnesota. According to Walker, the Otter Tail Chippewas refused to relocate to White Earth Reservation. Walker requested from the Department of the Interior, for $51,000 to provide neccesities to Leech Lake Reservation, Red Lake Reservation, and White Earth Reservation. A steamboat for Leech Lake, a mill for White Earth, a road for Red Lake, money for agency buildings, and money for logs at the mill. However, the bulk of the money ($20,000) was for removing the Otter Tail Pillager Chippewas out of Otter Tail County. Indians and whites were yet fighting each other then, in Otter Tail County, Minnesota.

1906: It was reported that the Otter Tail Chippewas made up 726 of White Earth Reservations population of 5,122. They never ceded the Reservation created for them on October 18, 1848. These Pillager Chippewas, always lived around the Otter Tail Lake region. So did many Little Shell Pembina Chippewas.

Brief History
Otter Tail Chippewas are a mixture of Minnesota Chippewas and Chippewas from Wisconsin, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, and Michigan. Many originally lived within the 5 million acre Chippewa Reservation located primarily in Iowa. The Otter Tail Chippewas are really a group of Pillager Chippewas. They are more closely related to the Chippewas of Leech Lake Reservation. Many are also of Little Shell Pembina Chippewa origins. Wahpeton, North Dakota and Red River, are 40 miles to the west. Chief Sitting Bull told the whites he was born and raised among the Red River Chippewas (the Metis). That location is very near Otter Tail Lake.

Reservations
Leech Lake Reservation of Minnesota

Menominee Reservation of Wisconsin

Otter Tail Chippewa Reservation of Minnesota created on October 18, 1848, that was never ceded

White Earth Reservation of Minnesota