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  1. Little Turtle (Miami-Illinois: Mihšihkinaahkwa) (c.1747 — July 14, 1812) was a Sagamore (chief) of the Miami people, who became one of the most famous Native American military leaders.

  2. Mar 22, 2024 · Little Turtle (born c. 1752, near Fort Wayne, Indiana—died July 14, 1812, Fort Wayne, Indiana, U.S.) was an American Indian, chief of the Miami, who achieved fame during the turbulent period when the U.S. Congress launched a punitive campaign against the Indians who were raiding settlers in the Northwest Territory.

  3. Little Turtle. Title Sagamore of the Miami. Date of Birth - Death 1752 - 1812. Born in 1752, Little Turtle grew up in Miami villages along the Eel River near the town of Kekionga, modern Fort Wayne, Indiana. The Miamis established prominence through the matrilineal line.

  4. Chief Little Turtle was the pride of Miami Indians. His contributions have also made him one of the most famous military leaders of the Native Americans. His greatest fight was against the U.S. Congress. His contribution to the Old Northwest.

  5. (1752–1812). A chief of the Miami people, Little Turtle led Native American resistance to white settlement in the Ohio River valley. He achieved fame with two crushing defeats of U.S. forces in the early 1790s. Little Turtle was born near Fort Wayne, Indiana, about 1752. He was the son of the Miami chief Acquenacke and a Mohican mother. His ...

  6. Little Turtle was a distinguished war chief of the Miami tribe of Native Americans in the Great Lakes region in the late eighteenth century. He was one of the most successful woodland military commanders of his time and led an intertribal force to victory against two American frontier armies in 1790 and 1791.

  7. Jul 15, 2019 · Treaty of Greenville. Wayne’s victory over the Western Confederacy at the Battle of Fallen Timbers ended the Northwest Indian War, also called Little Turtles War. Nearly a year later, Potawatomi leaders, including Chief Topinabee, signed the Treaty of Greenville on Aug. 3, 1795.

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