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The last battle between two Indian tribes in Iowa was fought in 1854 on Avery Hill between the Winnebago and the Sioux. Some eighteen Sioux warriors, under the leadership of Coustawa (Big Tree), surprised the tribe of Winnebago but were driven back after the death of Coustawa.
The first official white settlement in Iowa began in June 1833, in the Black Hawk Purchase. Most of Iowas first white settlers came from Ohio, Pennsylvania, New York, Indiana, Kentucky, and Virginia. The great majority of newcomers came in family units.
History of the Ioway The Iowa Nation was probably indigenous to the Great Lakes ares and part of the Winnebago Nation. At some point a portion moved southward, where they separated again. The portion which stayed closest to the Mississippi River became the Iowa; the remainder became the Otoe and Missouria.
In early historical times the tribes resident in Iowa were the Ioway (northern, central and eastern Iowa) and the Sioux (northwest Iowa). In the eighteenth century, the Sauk and Mesquakie were driven out of their ancestral homelands in eastern Wisconsin by the Ojibwa, with the assistance of the French.
The process saw debates on local issues like banking and race and the all-consuming national divide over slavery. It pitted Iowans unwavering support for river-to-river borders against Congressional interests in shaping the future of the free states of the trans-Mississippi west.
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Dubuque is Iowas oldest city and is among the oldest settlements west of the Mississippi River. The first permanent settler to the area was French-Canadian fur trader Julien Dubuque. When he arrived in 1785, the Mesquakie (Fox) Indians occupied the region which included an abundant amount of lead mines.
In the summer of 1673, French explorers Louis Joliet and Father Jacques Marquette traveled down the Mississippi River past the land that was to become the state of Iowa. The two explorers, along with their five crewmen, stepped ashore near where the Iowa river flowed into the Mississippi.
Today, the Meskwaki own sovereign lands in central Iowa; the Sac and Fox tribes have reservations in Kansas and Nebraska, and in Oklahoma.

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