Career
At this time he and his band were forcibly removed to a reservation in Miami County, Kansas by the United States. Government under authority of the Indian Removal Acting signed into law by Andrew Jackson in 1830. The Indian Removal Acting made the voluntary Indian emigrations outlined in the Treaty of Fort Meigs of 1817 and the Treaty of Chicago of 1821 mandatory and militarily enforced. At the time of the Treaty of Chicago, Baw Beese led a band of Indians estimated to be over 150 members.
The Baw Beese band of natives had their maize fields, hunting, fishing, and meeting grounds within Hillsdale County, Michigan.
Other chiefs of the Baw Beese family lived in surrounding counties in Michigan, Ohio, and Indiana. As a chief, Baw Beese was reported as holding to a strict code of justice.
Winona"s husband had pledged his rifle to Mr Aaron B. Goodwin of Fremont, Indiana for the use of a keg. The Indians had the keg filled at Nichol"s store in Jamestown, but Mr Nichol"s ended up taking everything they had.
The brave sold his squaw"s pony to raise the money to retrieve the rifle.
Winona owned the pony outright, either as a gift from her father or having bought it with her own money. She killed him in anger for selling what was hers. She was held by the tribe until her husband"s nearest relative arrived in a few hours to execute her in the like manner she had killed—with a stab to the heart.
The bodies were not buried until after the white men were out of sight.
This precaution was in vain however because the bodies were taken from the graves by Doctor B.F. Sheldon for dissecting only a few days later. The story of Baw Beese and Winona has developed into local legend.
Often it is mentioned that a girl"s skeleton was found on the banks of the Baw Beese Lake with a cross with her name or other identification. The final days of Baw Beese are disputed.
According to one account, he died in exile in the pine forests near Georgian Bay, Canada having left the reservation.
Other accounts report his death by Sioux or natural death at a very old age on the Kansas reservation. Baw Beese never signed a treaty with the United States, although he did abide by the Treaty of Detroit of 1807. The line between present day Lenawee and Hillsdale counties was the boundary between the settlers and natives.
Because of that treaty, he welcomed the white settlers to Hillsdale County but treated them as tenants.
The 1817 Treaty of Fort Meigs ceded the southern half of Hillsdale County including the primary gathering locations of the Baw Beese family at Bird Lake and Squawfield, however, Baw Beese does not appear to have participated in this treaty. Neither did any of the other chiefs with whom Baw Beese associated.
The closest name one finds to Baw Beese on a treaty with the Potawatomies is Paw-pee on an 1834 document. There is little reason to believe this is Baw Beese.
Baw Beese is often associated with the chiefs Maine-te-au, Ne-au-to-beer-shaw called "Leather Nose", and Wap-ka-zeek, names not listed on this document.
Baw Beese Lake in Hillsdale, Michigan
Chief Baw Beese Chapter of the North Country Trail.