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Monday, November 14, 2016

Susan Simmons Winans. The Last Known Survivor of the Chicago Fort Dearborn Massacre.


In historical writing and analysis, PRESENTISM introduces present-day ideas and perspectives into depictions or interpretations of the past. Presentism is a form of cultural bias that creates a distorted understanding of the subject matter. Reading modern notions of morality into the past is committing the error of presentism. Historical accounts are written by people and can be slanted, so I try my hardest to present fact-based and well-researched articles.

Facts don't require one's approval or acceptance.

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FOR HISTORICAL CLARITY
When I write about the INDIGENOUS PEOPLE, I follow this historical terminology:
  • The use of old commonly used terms, disrespectful today, i.e., REDMAN or REDMEN, SAVAGES, and HALF-BREED are explained in this article.
Writing about AFRICAN-AMERICAN history, I follow these race terms:
  • "NEGRO" was the term used until the mid-1960s.
  • "BLACK" started being used in the mid-1960s.
  • "AFRICAN-AMERICAN" [Afro-American] began usage in the late 1980s.

— PLEASE PRACTICE HISTORICISM 
THE INTERPRETATION OF THE PAST IN ITS OWN CONTEXT.
 


"ONE STILL SURVIVES"
Chicago Tribune, Sunday, December 27, 1896

Woman Present at the Chicago Massacre Yet Lives
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SUSAN WINANS HER NAME
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Chicago Historical Society Authenticates Her Story
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NARRATIVE OF HER ESCAPE
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Hidden Beneath Her Mother's Skirts During the Butchery
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EXAMPLE OF MATERNAL DEVOTION
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Birth: February 18, 1812, Camp Fort Dearborn, Cook County, Illinois
Death: April 27, 1900, Santa Ana, Orange County, California

Mrs. Susan Simmons Winans, a survivor of Chicago's Fort Dearborn Massacre, is still living and is located in Santa Ana. California, by the Chicago Historical Society

It has been supposed that the last person on that awful occasion had been dead for more than thirty years, and local historians had agreed upon the supposition as a fact. However, Edward G. Mason, President of the Chicago Historical Society, has just discovered that there still lives an old lady with unimpaired faculties who carries not only the distinction of being the sole survivor of that slaughter by the Potawatomi but also that of being the oldest living person born on the site of Chicago. 

Mrs. Winans, as a baby 6 months old, was held at the breast of her mother, who wrapped her in the folds of her mantle and, bending low in the body of the covered wagon, saved her infant from a maddened warrior's tomahawk, whose blade had already struck the life from ten innocents. Mrs. Winans's mother, Susan Millhouse Simmons, who saved her child's life by her heroism and presence of mind on the day of the massacre, carried her safely through many succeeding scenes of almost equal terror. At one time, she ran the gantlet at the command of the Indians, carrying her babe wrapped in a blanket with her and bending low as she ran down the armed line so that none of the blows aimed might fail upon the nursling. She reached the goal that marked the hostile array's extremity and fell there bruised and bleeding, but with her babe untouched. The child still lives and has sent a greeting to the members of the Chicago Historical Society within the week. 

What President Mason Says. 
"This discovery that there is living today a person who passed through the Chicago massacre is the most interesting and surprising thing which has happened in a local historical way since my connection with the Chicago society," said President Edward G. Mason yesterday. "There is absolutely no question about the truth of the story. Mrs. Winans herself does not tell it except when asked. The story of her existence came to us through a relative of her family, and I have personally investigated the matter. I have found out beyond a doubt that Mrs. Winans was present as an infant at the Chicago massacre and that she is the oldest person born upon the site of this city. We have just opened, as you know, the new building of the Chicago Historical Society, and I used the knowledge which has just come to me that Mrs. Winans was still living to send her a dispatch asking her to send us a greeting as we were taking possession of our new building. In response, she sent us this greeting: Mrs. Winans sends greetings to the Chicago Historical Society and thanks to the members for their kind courtesy in remembering an old lady of this far Western State."

"We have secured a picture of Mrs. Winans and will have an enlarged painting made at once to be framed and placed in a position of honor in the halls of our society building." 

How Mrs. Winans was Discovered. 
The knowledge that there is still living a survivor of the massacre came to the Historical Society members in a curious way. The fact that Mrs. Winans never lived In Chicago after the day when the Indians led her mother and herself away as captives account to a large degree for her existence being unknown here. The story had been told to some people living at a distance, but they did not realize the interest the recital holds for Chicago people. It never came to the ears of anyone living in Chicago who recognized its significance from the point of view of local interest. 

When the Fort Dearborn massacre monument was erected by Mr. George Pullman, the address upon the occasion of the unveiling was delivered by Edward G. Mason. A crowd had gathered at the scene of the massacre, at Eighteenth Street and the lake, and attracted by the gathering was Dr. N. Simmons of Lawrence, Kansas, who was In Chicago at the time. He heard Mr. Mason's recital of the facts of the massacre and his graphic description of its details. As he listened, Dr. Simmons remembered that a member of his family, though not closely related, was a corporal in Capt. Heald's company had been killed at the fight upon the scene where he was standing. Dr. Simmons went to his Lawrence, Kansas home to examine the family matter with the Fort Dearborn massacre. He found that the corporal's daughter, Mrs. Susan Simmons Winans, was still living. Dr. Simmons obtained all the facts in the case with their proof and sent them to the President of the Chicago Historical Society, who verified them to the last detail. The story is one of almost unparalleled heroism on the part of a woman and is of much romantic interest. 

Was at the Massacre.
John Simmons and Susan Millhouse were married in 1808. The husband enlisted In Capt. Whistler's company, First United States Infantry, afterward commanded by Capt. Nathan Heald was assigned for duty to Fort Dearborn on March 4, 1810, and he was soon made a noncommissioned officer. A daughter was born February 12, 1812, within the limits of Fort Dearborn's stockade, to Corporal Simmons's wife. This child passed through the perils that overlooked the garrison in Susan's arms.
In telling the story, Dr. Simmons has put it down primarily as it fails from the lips of this survivor of the massacre, who heard it repeatedly from her mother. It seems that Corporal Simmons realized, perhaps more than some of the others, the dangers that lay ahead of the garrison of the evacuation. He had an incentive, indeed, to perform a soldier's part. In his protection were his wife and two children, one boy. David was born a year after marriage. During the day before the evacuation, Capt. Wells, with his twenty friendly warriors of the Miami tribe, arrived, and Corporal Simmons heard Black Partridge declare to the Captain that the Indians intended to attack the whites. Corporal Simmons informed his wife that Capt. Heald had given the order to destroy the whiskey and ammunition, and he believed that when the Indians discovered this, they would not hesitate to murder the garrison. 

Died in His Family's Defense.  
The children and the women, or the greater part of them, as has been known, were placed in the wagons. Corporal Simmons kissed his wife and children goodbye and took his place with the guard. He told Mrs. Simmons to remain close by the children in the wagon and requested his commanding officer to give him a position as near the wagon as he could so that he could be so placed that he could defend his family to the last. The story of the fight and the massacre has been told many times. Everyone knows of the death of the brave Capt. Wells, of the cowardly and treacherous conduct of the Miamis and the slaughter of all but twenty-three of the fighting white men. The romantic escape with the aid of friendly Indians of Capt. and Mrs. Heald and Lieut. And Mrs. Helm has been narrated time and again. But It has remained to this latter day for the story of the heroism of Mrs. Simmons and the saving of her child to be made known.  

When the attack was made, Corporal John Simmons stood almost at the base of the great cottonwood tree, a portion of the trunk now in the possession of the Historical Society. He was fighting to protect the wagon containing his wife and children. He finally fell but rose again with an effort, clubbed his gun, brained one of an assaulting party of braves, and fell dead. 

How the Child Escaped
No sooner had Mrs. Simmons seen her husband fall beneath the bows of the savages surrounding him than she realized that all in the wagon were at the mercy of the infuriated victors. A young Indian, tomahawk in hand, climbed into the now unguarded vehicle. In utter disregard of the tears and Importunities of Mrs. Simmons and the other women, he struck his weapon into the head of all the older children within, killing them instantly. When the infuriated Indian sank the blade of his tomahawk into the first child, Mrs. Simmons pressed her baby to her breast and leaned over, secreting it in the folds of her dress. After killing the other children, one of whom was the little boy. David Simmons, the Pottawatomie, staled his hand and leaped from the wagon. Three children, besides those in the wagon, were murdered at the same time. 

The Cruelty of the Indians. 
No sooner had the savages completed the destruction of the wagon train than most of them ran to aid in the capture of Capt. Heald, who, with his party, was now surrounded by an overwhelming force from which there was no escape. After the surrender, as it is known, five of the disarmed soldiers were killed. Mrs. Simmons, with the other prisoners, was compelled by the savages to witness the butchery. She discovered that the delight of the Indians was much enhanced when they succeeded in wringing manifestations of pain and anger from their prisoners. Therefore, she summoned all her fortitude to prevent any expression of the anguish weighing on her soul. Her resolution was soon put to a crucial test. The Indians collected all of the murdered children and laid them in a row with their faces upward. Two burly braves then took the mother, still clasping her infant in her arms, and led her slowly past the children, expecting that if her boy was one of the numbers of the dead, she would make some demonstration at the sight. She soon saw her murdered child, but she made no sign. Never once during that the yielding to the desire of the Indians to make her reveal her sorrow. 

Made to Run the Gantlet. 
When the Indians divided up their prisoners, it fell to the lot of Mrs. Simmons to go to Green Bay, and her captors crossed the Chicago River and started for their home. During that journey, Mrs. Simmons was compelled to gather fuel, build fires, and prepare food for her captors. She walked and carried her babe the entire distance, something over 200 miles. More than a week was employed in making the journey. Swift runners heralded the approach of the party to the members of the tribe in camp, and the women and children sallied forth to meet the returned warriors. Upon the announcement of the death of their friends, they commenced a fusillade of insults, spitting on the prisoners, pulling their hair, kicking them, and tormenting them in every way possible. The prisoners were marched to one end of a double line of savages composed of young and old, male and female, and were compelled to run the gantlet, receiving blows from clubs in the hands of those who formed the lines. Mrs. Simmons hoped that her sex and the infant she held in her arms would exempt her from the ordeal, but in response to the universal clamor, she was led to the starting point. She looked for a moment in horror at the long line of savages armed with implements of torture and eager for the punishment to begin. She lost heart for a moment, but her courage came back as she thought of her child, which she dared not leave for fear that it would be killed, and wrapping it closely in a blanket and folding it in her strong arms, and bending forward to protect it from the cruel blows, she ran rapidly down the line, reaching the end, bruised and bleeding, but with the babe unharmed. 

First Act of Kindness. 
Immediately after passing the gantlet, Mrs. Simmons was astonished to receive an act of kindness. An elderly squaw took her by the arm and led her into a wigwam where her wounds and bruises were washed, and she was permitted to lie down and rest. In the autumn, the warriors of Green Bay, with their prisoners, marched again to Fort Dearborn, passed the massacre scene, skirted Lake Michigan's end, and made their way to Mackinac. Mrs. Simmons and her child suffered terribly on this journey. Winter had come on, and she was thinly clad as she had used a large part of her clothing to form a covering for her child, who perhaps owes today her health at an advanced age to the care exercised by the mother during that time of privation and peril. When they reached Green Bay, the Indians attempted, by various devices, to offer to take the child away from its mother under the pretext of friendship. They declared they would relieve her of the burden and rear Susan as one of their children. These offers were unconditionally refused. One chief who had been denied the child many times at length seized it by the arm and attempted to drag it from its mother, at the same time brandishing a tomahawk over her head and threatening to kill her instantly unless she gave up her child. She defied him, saying: "You may kill me, but in no other way can you get my child. This was the last effort made to take the child from her, though she maintained a vigilant watch upon it while she remained a prisoner. The Indians paid no further attention to the infant except to demand that the mother bathe it several times daily in order, as they said, to wash the white blood out of its veins. 

Next Taken to Detroit. 
From Mackinac, Mrs. Simmons was sent in midwinter to Detroit, a distance of over 300 miles.
sidebar
The distance between Green Bay and Detroit is about 300 miles by land. However, the Indians who lived in this area did not have roads to travel on. They would have traveled through forests, swamps, and rivers, which would have made the journey much longer and more difficult.

Knowing that the government authorities might ransom her and her child kept up the mother's strength and courage. The weather was almost unendurable, and the party's food often contained only acorns and nuts found under the snow. The child, Susan, now a year old, had much increased in weight, yet with her diminished strength, the mother carried it constantly on the march and generally held it in her arms while performing the camp drudgery for the Indians. When Detroit was reached, that post was in possession of the British and Indians, the latter having practical control. At the departure of Gen. Proctor, the British commander, the Indians butchered part of the prisoners in cold blood. 

From Detroit, Mrs. Simmons and her child were taken to Fort Meigs, which was then in command of Gen. Harrison. She was set at liberty and learned that a supply train had just arrived from Cincinnati and would immediately return under a strong escort. The train was to pass on its return within a few miles of her old Miami County, Ohio home. That was 200 miles away. The streams were swollen, the swamps were covered with water, the roads were deep in mud and slush, and the weather was chilly. But the contrast of this journey with the recent experience made it seem like a pleasure trip. She was now among friends and soon with her child warmly wrapped in blankets, sheltered in a comfortable government wagon, and on her way home. She arrived at the blockhouse safely only to find that her trials were not over. Within a short time after reaching home, her only sister and her sister's husband were killed by the Indians while working in the field. Four little children were witnesses of the murders. The Indians were at that time on the warpath in Ohio, and it seemed to Mrs. Simmons as if she had gone from one danger to another as great. The body of Mrs. Simmons' sister was brought into the blockhouse on the anniversary of the killing of her own husband and son under the cottonwood trees in Chicago. 

Mrs. Winans Subsequent Movements. 
Susan Simmons, the child who had passed through all these privations under the care of her mother, grew to womanhood in Ohio. There she met Moses Winans, whom she subsequently married. Mrs. Winans moved with her husband to Springville, Lynn County, Indiana 1853. With them went the aged Mrs. Simmons, who died on February 27, 1857. Mr. and Mrs. Winans subsequently moved to California, and there Mrs. Winans is still living in the home of one of her daughters. Six of her children live in Orange County, California, and three in Iowa. Mrs. Simmons is 85 (in 1896) but does not look much over 50. Her handwriting is firm, and all her faculties are unimpaired. 

Her friends attempted to entice her to come to Chicago at the time of the World's Fair, but she could not bring herself to undertake the journey.

Within the span of this woman's life has occurred everything in the history of Chicago since the year 1812. Her life was spared through trials, dangers, and tortures that would have broken down all else but the courage of a mother's love.

Chicago Tribune, Sunday, December 27, 1896
Edited by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.



Death of Noted Chicago Woman in Santa Ana, California. April 27, 1900. 
Mrs. Susan Simmons Winans of this city died early this morning after an illness over several months. She was the first white child born in the city of Chicago. She was the sole survivor of the Fort Dearborn massacre in 1812, during which her older brother and father fell before the descending tomahawk of the Potawatomi. 

The deceased was the daughter of Corp. John Simmons of Capt. Whistler's company, the First United States Infantry, was six months old at the time of his tragic death. Immediately after the Fort Dearborn massacre, Mrs. Simmons found her way back to her old home in Miami County, OH, where she lived until Susan grew to womanhood and was married to John Winans, after which he removed to Illinois and then to California. Mrs. Winans has been a widow for many years and has made her home with her widowed daughter, Mrs. L. K. Glenn, in this city, at the corner of Parton and Hickey streets. She was 88 years of age.
Los Angeles Times April 28, 1900.   

FAMILY: 
 Parents:
  Corp. John Simmons (1790 - 1812)
  Susan D. Millhouse Simmons (1777 - 1857)

 Spouse:
  Moses Pryor Winans (1808 - 1871)

 Children:
  Hiram Webster Winans (1830 - 1914)
  John Winans (1832 - 1869)
  William Brown Winans (1833 - 1917)
  Amy Winans Cornell (1833 - 1929)
  Esther Jane Winans Goodlove (1836 - 1864)
  David C Winans (1843 - 1921)
  Lewis Winans (1844 - 1891)
  Lydia Katherine Winans Glenn (1849 - 1926)

 Sibling:
  David Simmons (1810 - 1812)

7 comments:

  1. History is so much more riveting than fiction so often. Thank you for sharing this link, Neil.

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  2. What an amazing story! The courage of a mother's love. That is what I get from this piece of history. Thank you for sharing the link.

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  3. My family survived the massacre at Fort Dearborn as well. I seen that you said she was the sole survive. John Kinzie and his family was saved by black partridge and his brother. John was my great great great grandfather. I have documentation of them surviving

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    Replies
    1. There is no reference to "sole survivor." In 1896, the article is about the last survivor who later died in 1900.

      Headline from the Chicago Sunday Tribune, December 27, 1896:

      Susan Simmons Winans. The Last Known Survivor of the Chicago Fort Dearborn Massacre.

      "ONE STILL SURVIVES."

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  4. Thank you for sharing this amazing story of survival, fortitude and bravery in the face of unimaginable horror. I know this story well because these women are my ancestors. The mother, Susannah Millhouse Simmons was the sister of my 4th great grandmother, making this heroine my 5th great aunt. Her daughter Susan, the first known white child born in what would later become Chicago, is my 1st cousin 5 times removed.

    There is more to this story because the suffering for the mother Susannah didn't end with her homecoming. Susannah and Susan returned to their home in Miami County, Ohio, in April 1813 after their harrowing captivity. Only four months later, on August 18, 1813, Susannah's sister Barbara (Millhouse) Dilbone and brother-in-law Henry Dilbone were attacked and killed by Indians in what Ohio history refers to as The Dilbone Massacre. With their young children looking on, Barbara was killed instantly, tomahawked through the head and scalped. Her husband Henry was shot through the chest, dying two days later.

    Frontier justice prevailed and those responsible were dealt with by well-known locals, including a colorful character known as William "Rowdy" Richardson, who made sure that the culprits responsible would never be seen or heard from again.

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    Replies
    1. Nancy, what other information do you have regarding Susan and her husband John? He is a direct relative on my mothers side of her family. The Simmons and Clark's and Brainards are all tied to him in my lineage.

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