A Minnesota state park built on a notorious site of the U.S.-Dakota War of 1862 would be closed and transferred to the Dakota under a proposed state law.
The 1,300-acre Upper Sioux Agency State Park, composed of rolling prairies and wetlands at the confluence of the Yellow Medicine and Minnesota rivers, would be returned to the Upper Sioux Community that was forced out after the war. It would mark the first time in decades that the state of Minnesota relinquished a state park.
"There are points in time where we have the opportunity to do the right thing," said state Rep. Zach Stephenson, DFL-Coon Rapids. "And this is the right thing, to return this land at this time."
The park was the site of the Upper Sioux Agency, a government-run complex responsible for paying the band of Dakota the money, food and supplies owed to them under the treaties that gave the United States much of what is now Minnesota.
Those payments were rarely made as promised, Kevin Jensvold, chairman of the Upper Sioux Community, told a House committee in March. When the Dakota tried to buy food and supplies from traders at the agency on credit, they were refused, even as they approached starvation, Jensvold said.
At the Lower Sioux Agency, 40 miles downstream on the Minnesota River, trader Andrew Myrick infamously told a federal agent that he would not sell on credit, saying, "So far as I am concerned, if they are hungry let them eat grass or their own dung," according to an account from the Minnesota Historical Society.
The desperate Dakota attacked the Lower Sioux Agency, and the war began. Myrick's body would later be found with grass stuffed into his mouth. Much of the Upper Sioux Agency was also destroyed.
The war largely ended near the Upper Sioux Agency at the Battle of Wood Lake. More than 600 settlers and soldiers were killed along with an estimated 100 Dakota warriors. The government hanged 38 Dakota men after they had surrendered, the largest mass execution in the nation's history.