Person:Blackfish Shawnee (1)

Chief Blackfish _____
b.Abt 1729
  • HChief Blackfish _____Abt 1729 - 1779
  • WWatmeme _____1730 - 1797
m. Bef 1745
  1. Chinwa Blackfish1745 -
  2. Young Blackfish1750 - Aft 1794
  3. Pimegeezhigoqua BlackfishAbt 1759 -
  4. William Jackson FishAbt 1760 - 1833
  5. Black FishAbt 1760 -
  6. Chelatha BlackfishAbt 1761 -
  7. Lemateshe Blackfish1765 - 1800
  8. Benjamin Kelly
Facts and Events
Name Chief Blackfish _____
Alt Name Cot-ta-wa-ma-go _____
Alt Name Mkah-day-way-may-qua _____
Gender Male
Birth? Abt 1729
Marriage Bef 1745 to Watmeme _____
Death[1][2] 29 May 1779 Chillicothe, Greene, Ohio, United StatesChillicothe was not necessarily the Chillicothe of today, but the Shawnee village of Chillicothe. Kentuckians under Colonel John Bowman raided Shawnee village.
Nationality[1] Chillicothe Shawnee
Reference Number? Q880234?


the text in this section is copied from an article in Wikipedia

Blackfish (c. 1729–1779) ( or ), was a Native American leader, war chief of the Chillicothe division of the Shawnee tribe.

Blackfish was a Native American leader, war chief of the Chillicothe division of the Shawnee tribe.

Little is known about him, since he only appears in written historical records during the last three years of his life, primarily because of his interactions with the famous American frontiersmen Daniel Boone and Simon Kenton. When the Shawnees were defeated by Virginia in Dunmore's War in 1774, the resulting peace treaty made the Ohio River the boundary between western Virginia (what is now Kentucky and West Virginia) and American Indian lands in the Ohio Country. Although this treaty was agreed to by Shawnee leaders such as Cornstalk, Blackfish and a number of other leaders refused to acknowledge the loss of their traditional hunting grounds in Kentucky. Violence along the border escalated with the outbreak of the American Revolutionary War in 1775. As a result, the Chillicothe Shawnees moved their town on the Scioto River further west to the Little Miami River, near what is now Xenia, Ohio. Encouraged and supplied by British officials in Detroit, Blackfish and others launched raids against American settlers in Kentucky, hoping to drive them out of the region. In revenge for the murder of Cornstalk by American militiamen in November 1777, Blackfish set out on an unexpected winter raid in Kentucky, capturing American frontiersman Daniel Boone and a number of others on the Licking River on February 7, 1778. Boone, respected by the Shawnees for his extraordinary hunting skills, was taken back to Chillicothe and adopted into the tribe. The traditional tale is that Boone was adopted by Blackfish himself, although historian John Sugden suggests that Boone was probably adopted by another family. Boone escaped in June 1778 when he learned that Blackfish was launching a siege of the Kentucky settlement of Boonesborough, which commenced in September of that year. The siege of Boonesborough was unsuccessful, and the Kentuckians, led by Colonel John Bowman, counterattacked Chillicothe the following spring. This raid was also unsuccessful, but Blackfish was shot in the leg, a wound which became infected and was eventually fatal. - from Wikipedia article

This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Chief Blackfish. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Cozzens, Peter. Tecumseh and the Prophet: The Shawnee Brothers Who Defied a Nation. (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2020).
  2. .
  3.   Descendants of Chief BLACK FISH (1725-1779) by Karen (Johnson) Fish