Shawnee Indian Mission Shawnee Indians, along with many other eastern tribes, were moved to present-day Kansas in the 1820s and 1830s. In 1830 Chief Fish, leader of the Shawnees, requested a missionary and Reverend Thomas Johnson, a Methodist minister, was appointed to the Shawnees. Rev. Johnson was born in Virginia and later moved to Missouri. He was proslavery and in fact, a slave owner. Johnson proposed that a school be built to serve many tribes. A site was chosen just west of the Missouri border, where the Santa Fe, California and Oregon Trails passed through the Shawnee lands. The school opened as a day school with one initial building, now the West building, at the present Johnson County location in October 1839. At the height of its activity, the mission was an establishment of more than with 16 buildings, including the three large brick structures, which still stand, and an enrollment of nearly 150 Native American boys and girls from the ages of 5 to 23. Native children from 22 different tribes were sent to this school to learn basic academics, including English, manual arts, and agriculture. The East building served as the main chapel, boy's classroom, and boy's dormitory in the attic. The North building was the main location for the girl's classrooms and bedrooms. In 1854 Kansas Territory was established. Andrew Reeder, newly appointed territorial governor, had his offices at the mission. The first territorial legislature met at the mission, with Johnson serving as President of the legislature. It was during this legislative session that the so-called "bogus laws" were passed to perpetuate slavery in Kansas. In 1858 Reverend Thomas Johnson turned the school over to his oldest son, Alexander, who ran the mission until it closed in 1862. The Mission closed during the era of “
Bleeding Kansas” and the “border wars” and served as a Union Soldiers encampment during the Battle of Westport until 1864. The site was private property until it was secured by the Kansas State Historical Society in 1927 as a state site, and was deemed a National Historic Landmark in 1968.
The Shawnee The "Fish" Shawnee tribe had been removed from its traditional
Ohio home to the
unorganized territories set aside for Native Americans (in the future state of
Kansas) under the terms of the
Treaty of St. Louis (1825). The mission was initially built on land near the American Shawnee Indian Tribe reserve in Turner by
Reverend Thomas Johnson. He hoped to convert the recently relocated tribe to Christianity. During the 1830s, some of the Shawnees' most venerated men, including Tenskwatawa, "the
Shawnee Prophet", frequently visited the mission. The Prophet was the younger brother of
Tecumseh, who had led a war against the United States earlier in the century. Tenskwatawa led the Shawnee in Tecumseh's absence at the
Battle of Tippecanoe in 1811. Following defeat in this battle, Tenskwatawa took his men to the British
Canadian colonies. He was placed under virtual house arrest for years following the end of the
War of 1812. Tenskwatawa was eventually allowed to return to the Shawnee to help them remove from Ohio to Kansas; he died in 1836 at his village (the present site of
Kansas City, Kansas).
New mission The mission was located at its original site from 1830 to 1839. In 1839, the mission was moved and built at its present-day
Johnson County location, and an
Indian boarding school was opened there. From 1839 until its closure in 1862, the Shawnee Mission served as a manual training school for Native Americans, principally from the Shawnee and
Delaware (Lenape) tribes. The Shawnee Mission also served briefly as the second capital of the
Kansas Territory. The capital was moved to the mission on July 16, 1855, after pro-slavery delegates to the Territorial Legislature voted to depart the
first Territorial Capitol of Kansas at
Pawnee. It served as the territorial capital until August 8, when the seat of government became
Lecompton. While the capital was located at Shawnee Mission, the legislature promulgated the controversial pro-
slavery laws that sparked
Bleeding Kansas violence. During the
American Civil War, the site served as a camp for Union soldiers. == Administration ==