Council Bluffs History | Preserve Council Bluffs (2024)

A series of treaties with the United States government resulted in the removal of the Potawatomi and other tribes from the Great Lakes region to lands even further west. In 1837, an estimated 2,500 Potawatomi came to western Iowa where they separated into five camps. One of which settled along Indian Creek in the area of North Broadway in what is now Council Bluffs.

Their leader was Billy Caldwell, the son of an Irish Colonel in the British army and a Mohawk woman, the daughter of Rising Sun. He spoke several dialects and negotiated the treaties on behalf of the Native Americans. The camp was called “Caldwell’s Village”. Due to his efforts, a Jesuit mission was established on the hill above Pierce Street by Fathers Pierre-Jean Desmet and Felix Verrydet, and Brother Andrew Mazzelli in an unused blockhouse, or fort, and four other buildings. St. Joseph Mission included the first church and school in the area. Billy Caldwell died of cholera in 1841 and was buried in the cemetery behind the mission. When Franklin Avenue was cut through, the graves were moved to the “old Catholic cemetery”. The marker, which read simply “Indians”, was made of wood and cannot be located today. By 1848, most of the Potawatomi were moved to a reservation in Kansas.

Council Bluffs History | Preserve Council Bluffs (2024)
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