|
NAME: Esens
aka Little Shell (#2)
NOTE:
There were 3
generations Chiefs named Little
Shell
|
|
If YOU have Additional
Information,
Photographic Images,
or Documentation..Consider
sharing
here with others in our
family.
Please,
send us an E-MAIL |
|
BIRTH: c1770-1800
|
|
MOTHER:
|
|
FATHER: Little Shell #1
aka Esens
|
|
SIBLINGS:
|
|
MARRIAGE:
|
|
SPOUSE: |
|
CHILDREN: Madeline |
|
LIFE
EVENTS: Recieved the Medal
shown right, on his Son's Chest.
|
|
DEATH:
Approx. 1853
|
|
BURIAL: |
|
RELATED
LINKS:
Little Shell Tribe of Chippewa Indians of Montana
Box 1384
1807 3rd St NW Ste 35A
Great Falls, MT 59403
NOTE: This tribe requires
Blood Quantum for Membership,
as well as descent. Yet, All 3 Little Shell honored Mixed-Bloods.
I can never figure out how anyone can tell their Ancestors
"these people are too white to be your children...."
That does not seem to honor the Ancestors.
Ayla
http://www.nativeregistry.com
|
|
CLUES:
=====================================
1804: April
30: Alexander Henry the
Younger
(1764-1814)
writes in Pembina River Post: I gave the Indians liquor to decamp
and hunt all summer. As a result,
Grande Gueule stabbed Capot Rouge;
Le Boeuf stabbed his young wife in
the
arm; Little Shell almost beat
his old mother's brains out with a club;
and there was terrible fighting
among them.
I sowed garden seeds. The Indian women are
also planting crops at
Pembina.
=====================================
Michel
MONET BELHUMEUR (male), b: 1802, NWT,
bt: Sept 7, 1806 at
Montreal, Que; died: , Leroy, ND;
spouse(s)
#1 Josephte
SAUTEUSE WOMAN,
#2 Suzanne Josephte
BRUYERE,
#3 never married Reine
LAGIMODIERE
NOTE:
Josephte and Suzanne were first
cousins.
Josephte was the daughter of Chief LITTLE SHELL l,
and the
sister of Chief (Little Clam) LITTLE SHELL ll.
Josette had died before
Apr 5, 1839 at the hands of the
Sioux. Suzanne's father, Jean-Baptiste
BRUYERE was
either the brother or brother-in-law of Chief LITTLE
SHELL.
|

|
HIS SON:
Chief Esens (Thomas Little Shell). Photo taken c.
1892
I believe this photo is Little Shell #3 who
died in 1901,
much later than the man documented on this page.

The peace medal on his chest has
the likeness of Abraham Lincoln on it.
This medal then must have passed from our
Little Shell #2 to this man, Thomas Little Shell, his Son
Century-old
problems
The
problems began in 1892 when an Indian agent came to the tribe’s home,
North Dakota’s Turtle Mountain Reservation. Chief Thomas Little Shell
was away
in Montana with 112 other families on a hunting trip. In their absence,
tribal
rolls were cut and a million acres of the tribe’s land was sold for
$90,000.
When he returned, Little Shell refused to take part in the deal, said
Ed
Lavenger, an elder with the Little Shell Tribe who lives in Billings.
“He was
protesting the dropping of so many names from the rolls,” Lavenger
said. “It
was all or none.” With
no land, the tribe scattered. In 1896, 600 of the landless Indians were
captured by soldiers, put into boxcars and dropped off at the Canadian
border.
That winter, they walked back, living in squalid shacks in “Moccassin
Flats”
areas outside of towns along the Hi-Line and the eastern front of the
Rocky
Mountains, Lavenger said. “We are a scattered tribe. We weren’t claimed
by
the whites. We weren’t claimed by the full bloods.” (source)
Note:
But now they have a blood
quantum
requirement, does that make
sense?
|
|