Sac and Fox Heritage Exhibit - two copies available for touring
Produced by Sac and Fox Cultural Preservation officers in three states and designed by Greg Olson, Exhibits Specialist at the Missouri State Archives.
- 8 feet high, 10 feet wide curved rectangle
- Lighting included. Mounts above the exhibit
- Lightweight, sturdy frame
- Ships in two sturdy boxes
- Easy set-up and take-down
- Posters available from MHC
- MHC can help arrange programming with Sac and Fox representatives
- Available to museums, libraries, visitor centers, any public venue.
- No charge
- Contact Michael Bouman, Executive Director, MHC

Lead curator Sandra Massey with designer Greg Olson
The Sac and Fox are closely related people whose origins trace back to the St.
Lawrence River Valley in the time of French settlement of Canada. They speak
similar dialects of the Algonquin language. As Europeans moved into Sac and Fox
homelands in the Northeast, the Sac and Fox reestablished themselves in woodland
areas of present-day Michigan and Wisconsin. By the era of the Lewis and Clark
Expedition (1804-1806), the Sac and Fox hunted extensively in northeast Missouri
and traded in St. Louis. Their homeland was centered on a large farming community
named Saukenuk, where the Rock River meets the Mississippi in northwestern Illinois.
The exhibit focuses on one Sac and Fox legend that explains their sacred relationship
to all creation. The legend tells of twelve boys who journey into the unknown
lands and strike a bargain with two spirits they meet on the road. On behalf
of the Sac and Fox people and their survival, each boy sacrifices himself to
be transformed into a sacred presence in the natural world. The exhibit focuses
on this story because it links modern Sac and Fox people with ancient but continuing
beliefs.
The Sac and Fox were abruptly dispossessed of their homeland in 1804 when William
Henry Harrison, acting on behalf of the United States, tricked several tribal
emissaries into a land sale they were not authorized to negotiate. In the twenty-five
years that followed, U.S. settlers moved into the homeland, and the Sac and Fox
were pressured to leave. One leader, Black Hawk, stood for resistance. Another,
Keokuk, stood for accommodation. Tensions mounted to a point of a small military
expedition in 1832 to confront and evict Black Hawk’s followers. The single
fire fight that ensued was inflated by government propagandists into a “war.” The “Black
Hawk War” made a public celebrity of Black Hawk, who was taken to meet President
Andrew Jackson, and whose Autobiography remains in print today as a primary source
of insights to a way of life facing great change.
Regarding cultural pressures on the Sac and Fox way of life, Massey said, “Some
of our way of life may be gone but the change is primarily external --- we no
longer live in bark houses, furnish them with reeds, go on great buffalo hunts,
dress in a way that distinguishes us from other tribes and peoples (at least
not every day), and now we can’t bury the same way we used to. But the internal,
the heart and soul of who we are and how we acknowledge that and our Creator
and ancestors, has changed little.”
The Sac and Fox now exist as three individual tribal governments. The Meskwaki
established a permanent settlement near Tama, Iowa and are the Sac and Fox Tribe
of the Mississippi in Iowa. The Nemaha tribal government is located in Reserve,
Kansas and the tribe is the Sac and Fox Nation of the Missouri in Kansas and
Nebraska. The Thakiwa tribal headquarters are in Stroud, Oklahoma and they are
the Sac and Fox Nation of Oklahoma. The historic preservation representatives
of the three groups formed a confederacy to make joint decisions regarding their
shared history.
The Sac and Fox exhibit is part of a larger project undertaken by the Missouri
Humanities Council to increase knowledge of Missouri’s Native American history.
In Lexington, Missouri, the Lexington Historical Museum is developing a permanent
exhibit on the Osage people in cooperation with Osage tribal representatives
and the Osage Tribal Museum. Greg Leech, who designs exhibits for Missouri State
Historic Sites, is designing the Osage exhibit. In Marble Hill, The Bollinger
County Museum of Natural History is readying a permanent exhibit on Missouri’s
Shawnee and Delaware people, who settled part of southeast Missouri in the late
18th century and who lived on land granted them by the Spanish crown. Delilah
Tayloe, Director of the Arts Council of Southeast Missouri, is the designer of
that exhibit, with advice from Shawnee and Delaware tribal representatives.
Osage Heritage Exhibit
Coming early in 2008.
updated Jan 8, 2008