Global Information Lookup Global Information

Antonga Black Hawk information


Antonga Black Hawk
Bornc. 1830
Alta California, First Mexican Republic (near present-day Spring Lake, Utah)
DiedSeptember 26, 1870 (aged around 40)
Spring Lake Villa, Utah Territory

Antonga, or Black Hawk (born c. 1830; died September 26, 1870), was a nineteenth-century war chief of the Timpanogos Tribe in what is the present-day state of Utah. He led the Timpanogos against Mormon settlers and gained alliances with Paiute and Navajo bands in the territory against them during what became known as the Black Hawk War in Utah (1865–1872). Although Black Hawk made peace in 1867, other bands continued raiding until the US intervened with about 200 troops in 1872. Black Hawk died in 1870 from a gunshot wound he received while trying to rescue a fallen warrior, White Horse, at Gravely Ford Richfield, Utah, June 10, 1866. The wound never healed and complications set in.

The names "Black Hawk" and "Antonga" by which he was known are not Ute Indian names. "Black Hawk" was a name that Brigham Young, in jest, called the Ute leader. Young's term became the name by which he is now most commonly known. There were some three or more Indians the whites referred to as Black Hawk in Utah history. It is reminiscent of Chief Black Hawk of the Sauk and Fox Indian (Mesquaki) tribes and the Black Hawk War of 1832 in Illinois, where the Mormons had migrated from.[citation needed]

To the Mexicans he was known as "Antonga", also not a Ute name. The Timpanogos had long established trade relations with the Mexicans. Utah's Black Hawk was the son of Chief Sanpitch; in the Dominguez Escalante Journal: Their Expedition Through Colorado Utah Arizona and New Mexico in 1776, Escalante describes having come in contact with aboriginal peoples who were Snake-Shoshoni who called themselves "Timpanogostzis", an Aztecan-Shoshonian word meaning "People of the Rock water carriers" (referring to rock salt), whose leader was Turunianchi. Turunianchi had a son named Munch.

Munch was the father of Sanpitch, Wakara, Arropeen, Tabby, Ammon, Sowiette, and Grospeen, who occupied a land that is now known as Utah. Dominguez named Mount Timpanogos, Timpanogos River (Provo River), Timpanogos Lake (Utah Lake) and Timpanogos Valley (Utah Valley) in honor of these people, an honor that remains to this day. Government maps that predate Mormon settlement support this fact. Then in 1824, explorer Etienne Provost entered what is now Utah and reported having come in contact with a Snake-Shoshone tribe (Timpanogos) living along the Timpanogos River (Provo River) and Timpanogos Lake. Provo City derives its name from this early explorer.

and 14 Related for: Antonga Black Hawk information

Request time (Page generated in 0.8515 seconds.)

Antonga Black Hawk

Last Update:

Antonga, or Black Hawk (born c. 1830; died September 26, 1870), was a nineteenth-century war chief of the Timpanogos Tribe in what is the present-day state...

Word Count : 1236

Black Hawk

Last Update:

American lacrosse player Black Hawk (Sauk leader) (1767–1838), Sauk and Fox leader Antonga Black Hawk (c. 1830–1870), Ute leader Black Hawk, Colorado, a home...

Word Count : 682

Battle Creek massacre

Last Update:

and men who had been attacked grew up to be Antonga Black Hawk, a Timpanogos leader in the Black Hawk War. Around February 1849, Dimick B. Huntington...

Word Count : 1394

Utah Territorial Militia

Last Update:

Utah's Black Hawk War 1865–1872 when over 2,500 troops were dispatched against Indians led by Antonga Black Hawk.[citation needed] (Antonga Black Hawk was...

Word Count : 1162

History of Utah

Last Update:

Beginning in 1865, Utah's Black Hawk War developed into the deadliest conflict in the territory's history. Chief Antonga Black Hawk died in 1870, but fights...

Word Count : 5313

Utah

Last Update:

Beginning in 1865, Utah's Black Hawk War developed into the deadliest conflict in the territory's history. Chief Antonga Black Hawk died in 1870, but fights...

Word Count : 17845

Ute Wars

Last Update:

(1849–1855) Battle at Fort Utah (1850) Walker War (1853–1854) Tintic War (1856) Black Hawk War (1865–1872) White River War (1879) Pinhook Draw fight (15-16 June...

Word Count : 203

Native American people and Mormonism

Last Update:

" Violence between Mormon adherents and Native Americans include the Black Hawk War, Ute Wars, Wakara's (Walker's) War, and Posey War. During the 1850...

Word Count : 7973

Wild Bill Hickman

Last Update:

take the women and children captive. General Daniel H. Wells had Antonga Black Hawk lead a segment of the militia, including Hickman, up Rock Canyon to...

Word Count : 1291

List of Indian massacres in North America

Last Update:

California Press. ISBN 9780520276468. Himmel 1999, p. 50 Jung, Patrick J. The Black Hawk War of 1832. p. 111, Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press, 2007...

Word Count : 6567

Julius Stickoffer

Last Update:

against the Ute, Paiute and Navajo tribes under led the Ute chieftain Antonga Black Hawk. On November 11, 1868, he and members of the 8th U.S. Cavalry battled...

Word Count : 667

Sevier River

Last Update:

Apache and Navajo, a period now known as the Black Hawk War after Timpanogos chief Antonga Black Hawk. Livestock grazing had decimated the local grasses...

Word Count : 5938

Seuvarits Utes

Last Update:

Wisconsin). They were considered to be a major force in Timpanogos Chief Antonga Black Hawk's bands of raiders. Their allies during the war included Timpanogos...

Word Count : 1838

Battle at Fort Utah

Last Update:

sought shelter in Fort Utah before the battle, including Antonga, whom the Mormons called "Black Hawk.": 72  The Nauvoo Legion was sent from Salt Lake City...

Word Count : 3466

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net