Kickapoo people
The Kickapoo are Native American tribes.
There are three recognized tribes remaining in the U.S. - the Kickapoo of Kansas, the Kickapoo of Oklahoma, and the Kickapoo Traditional Tribe of Texas. There is a further group in Coahuila, Mexico. There is also a large group in Arizona currently seeking federal recognition. Around 3,000 people claim to be tribe members.
The tribe originated in the Michigan-Ohio area and share a common origin with the Sauk and Fox tribes. Conflict between Kickapoos and Iroquois from the 1640s forced the tribe west into Wisconsin. In the 1700s the tribe moved again, by 1770 they had resettled in the Wabash Valley and the general area towards central Illinois.
After pressure from colonists, the tribe moved west, resisting by retreating rather than assimilating or fighting. They ceded their land east of the Mississippi River by treaty and reached Missouri around 1820; some of the tribe remained in Illinois and were forced out by the US military in 1834. They absorbed many Potowatomi Indians tribe during the move. Many moved on from Missouri in the 1830s, and split, heading south and west into Kansas and Texas. The US government moved them several times more, sending the tribe in Missouri to a reservation in Kansas in the late 1830s. A large group moved into northern Mexico around 1850, joining with smaller groups already residing in the state of Coahuila; more Kickapoo followed them into Mexico in 1857 and 1863. When some attempted to return from Mexico they were sent to Oklahoma.
The Traditional Tribe of Texas was not recognized until 1983, having previously been part of the group living in Coahuila. Today, this tribe owns and operate a casino on their reservation just south of Eagle Pass, Texas. Their website is www.kickapooluckyeaglecasino.com. This casino hosted the 25th Anniversary Tejano Music Awards on March 19, 2005.
The Kickapoo speak an Algonquian language closely related to that of the Sauk and Meskwaki.
Also: Lake Kickapoo, USS Kickapoo