The Dakota people are the original inhabitants of the land that is now known as
Minnesota, specifically centered around the modern day
Twin Cities,
Mille Lacs Lake, and
Minnesota River Valley. The name "Minnesota" comes from the Dakota "Mni Sota," which was used as the name for the Minnesota River and means "cloudy water," which was then used by settlers as the name for the entire state. The Minnesota River has a strong cultural significance for the Dakota people as the place where it joins the
Mississippi River, in
Saint Paul, Minnesota, is known as
Bdóte, which the Dakota people consider to be the place they were created. The first official contact between the Dakota and the United States Government was the 1805 Pike's Treaty, in which the U.S. was able to establish a military fortress,
Fort Snelling, and the land that became the
Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area. This meant the loss of the area around Bdóte, and so the heart of the Dakota land. Many treaties were later signed with the U.S., sequestering the Dakota people into smaller plots of land with each successive treaty, culminating in the conflict known as the
U.S.-Dakota War.
U.S.-Dakota War of 1862 The U.S. Dakota war was incited when U.S. officials refused to provide promised food items and goods, leading to widespread starvation and death within the Dakota reservations, particularly along the Minnesota River. The Dakota were ultimately defeated by the white Minnesotans, and noncombatants were then placed in a
concentration camp near Fort Snelling, on Wita Tanka. After trials were held against those Dakota people who participated in the war, President
Abraham Lincoln ordered the execution of 38 Dakota men in
Mankato, the largest mass execution in U.S. history. Following this, the remainder of the Dakota in the Fort Snelling camp were ordered into exile outside of the state of Minnesota. == Formation ==