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The OjibweIn 1659, long before ever setting eyes on Lake Mille Lacs, Daniel DuLuth negotiated peace between the frequently warring Dakota and Ojibwe people in the area. They would go on to share the bounty of the forests of Eastern Minnesota and Western Wisconsin in peace for many decades afterwards. The Ojibwe, thought to originally have come from what is now the Atlantic Coast of Canada, had been migrating steadily westward and had just arrived around the southern shore of Lake Superior at that time. In the 1730s, this unsteady peace between the Dakota and Ojibwe came to a bloody end, and violence and killings repeatedly broke out between the two groups. Sandy Lake would be the Ojibwe's first settlement in Dakota territory, and from there they would move further into the territory, taking Leech Lake, Red Lake, Gull Lake, and finally, Lake Mille Lacs sometime between 1745 and 1750 in a bloody three day battle. It is thought that many Dakota had already begun to migrate from the Mille Lacs area in a southerly direction, with many of them located in Anoka at this point, so the Dakota population that was overtaken was likely already depleted. The Ojibwe now living at Lake Mille Lacs supported themselves by hunting deer, bear, moose, water fowl and small game. They also went fishing on Mille Lacs, and also ate wild rice, maple syrup, berries and cultivated edible plants. |

Threshing Wild Rice


