RV Campground
Woodland Lake Camp and RV Resort, Stratford, Ontario, Canada Woodland LakeCamp & RV Resort Home- Recreation - Facilities - Events - Directions - Lot map - Attractions/Links - RV's for Sale - Rates - Packages - Reservation - News - Contactus - Campers Corner - RealEstate Enjoy our fountain Exceptionalvacations for Families with RV's, Motorhomes and tents. Our parkoffers new, outstanding facilities, sky blue spring fed lake with sandybeach, acres of hardwood forest with hiking trails. Located within 55 min from Kitchener/Waterlooand London. Only 25 min West of Stratford. Less than 2 hours from Toronto. A quiet and relaxingatmosphere, planned recreational activities, spacious, secluded campsitesin a secure environment will make your stay a most pleasant one. We accommodate RV's, Big Rigs forthe day or season. Use our facilities for a familyevent or an adventure day. Open from MAY 1 till THANKSGIVING We also welcomegroup camping and day visitors for picnic and swimming. We are proud to be one of thehighest rated Campground in Southern Ontario. For more information please emailus at wlcinfo@woodlandlake.com Contact us in your preferred way. We are committed to improve our services to you and appreciateyour comments or your feedback very much. Thank you for visiting our web page WOODLAND LAKE CAMP & RVRESORT 6710 Line 46, RR#1, Bornholm, Ontario, N0K 1A0 Canada Phone: Fax: (519) 347-2315 (519) 347-2664 Email: wlcinfo@woodlandlake.com Toll free: 1-877-WLC-PARK (c) 1998 Woodland Lake Camp, All rightsreserved Motor Home | Motor Home magazine. The | motor home. Start with | Motor Home | Motor Home | motor homes onpurchased chassis | Motor Home or RV | motor home chat forum. | Motor Home If you're | Motor home mania hits | Motor Homes Manufacturer/Dealer Services | Motor Homes Registering & | Motor Home | motor home super store | motor home strip club | Motor Home RV Rental | Motor Home Drivers Special | Motor Home With a | MOTOR HOME DEALER Spitzer's | Motor Home | Rent RVBraitman Motorhome Hire Holland 2005 - 2006, Netherlands, Europe Motorhome Rental, RV Rental, Campervan Rental, Motorhome Hire, RV Hire, Campervan Hire, Camper Rental, Camper Hire, 4WD Rental - Motorhomes Worldwide Braitman Motorhome Hire Holland - Europe 2005 - 2006 Rates Click here for Vehicles Click here for 2005 Winter Special Click here for 2005 Rates Click here for 2006 Rates Click here for Terms and Conditions Click here for 4 berth Winter Special Rate Click here for 6 berth Winter Special Rate Please select your preferred currency Australian Dollars USA Dollars European Euros British Sterling New Zealand Dollars Canadian Dollars Danish Kroner South African Rand Germany 2006, Football World Cup 9th June – 9th July 2006 - Official website: www.fifa.com We are now taking bookings for the World Cup. Motorhomes available for the entire tournament. Bookings are filling fast. Many vehicles already fully booked! Book now to avoid disappointment DEPOTS Amsterdam - Athens - Barcelona - Brindisi - Brussels - Calais - Copenhagen - Dusseldorf - Dubrovnik - Florence - Frankfurt - Geneva - Gothenburg - Hamburg - Helsinki - Lisbon - London - Luxemburg - Madrid - Milan - Munich - Nice - Oslo - Ostead - Paris - Rome - Stockholm- Trieste - Venice - Vienna - Zurich WINTER SPECIAL!! 2 and 3 Month Winter Rentals at Unbelievably LOW PRICES!! Price in Australian Dollars From just $11 per person per day! The leaders in Motorhome, Car and Canal Boat Holidays, have a special exclusive limited offer for 01 OCT 2005 to 30 APR 2006 and 01 OCT 2006 to 30 APR 2007 VW Westfalia California - 4 berth For 2 months the cost is $3,525 , or 3 months for $4,918 inclusive VAT etc ! FORD Westfalia Nugget - 4 berth For 2 months the cost is $3,770 , or 3 months for $5,246 inclusive VAT etc ! FORD Rimor - 5 - 6 berth For 2 months the cost is $4,508 - for 3 months for $6,148 inclusive VAT etc ! THIS IS A LIMITED OFFER SO BOOK EARLY! PLUS Get 10 % discount on 2006 rentals after 01 May 06! & Get 2.5 % discount on 2007 rentals ! Must Book and Pay Deposit by 30 December 2005 and remaining balance by 30 January 2006, Extra's like insurance, awnings etc are excluded from this offer Click here to make a Reservation or request a Quote FREE T SHIRT WITH EVERY WINTER SPECIAL BOOKING Prices start from $11 per person per day (based on 6 people in Rimor 6 berth for 3 months / 91 days) which includes your transport and accommodation. Ideal for couples or families. The above offer only applies to people who pick up their vehicle from Amsterdam on or after 01 October 2005 and it must be returned to Amsterdam no later than 30 April 2006. Any 2 or 3 month period between these dates qualifies for the Winter Special price. All specials and are of a limited nature and subject to change without notice and currency fluctuations. Travel throughout Holland, Netherlands and Europe on your Self Drive Holiday with Motorhomes Worldwide. Choose from the following locations to drop off on your Campervan RV Motorhome Rental Vacation: Amsterdam - Athens - Barcelona - Brindisi - Brussels - Calais - Copenhagen - Dusseldorf - Dubrovnik - Florence - Frankfurt - Geneva - Gothenburg - Hamburg - Helsinki - Lisbon - London - Luxemburg - Madrid - Milan - Nice - Oslo - Ostead - Paris - Rome - Stockholm - Trieste - Venice - Vienna - Zurich 2005 Standard Rates Click here to make a Reservation or request a Quote Rates per day in Australian Dollars SEASON PERIOD VW California / Ford Nugget Ford Rimor 5 - 6 Berth LOW SEASON 01 JAN - 30 APR 2005 01 OCT 2005 - 30 APR 2006 7 to 27 days $123 $156 28+ days $93 $120 MID SEASON 01 MAY - 31 MAY 2005 01 SEP - 30 SEP 2005 7 to 27 days $134 $172 28+ days $123 $162 HIGH SEASON 01 JUN - 31 AUG 2005 7 to 27 days $151 $205 28+ days $139 $189 Minimum Rental Period: 7 Days Except between 01 June - 31 August 14 Days All prices are subject to Value Added Tax (VAT) The VAT is 19% in Netherlands. Click here for one way fees and extra's costs Rates, additional charges and conditions are subject to change, and to currency fluctuation, without notice - Errors and Omissions Excepted 010804 Click here to make a Reservation or request a Quote Get 10 % discount on 2006 rentals after 01 May 06! & Get 2.5 % discount on 2007 rentals ! Must Book and Pay Deposit by 30 December 2005 and remaining balance by 30 January 2006, Extra's like insurance, awnings etc are excluded from this offer DEPOTS Amsterdam - Athens - Barcelona - Brindisi - Brussels - Calais - Copenhagen - Dusseldorf - Dubrovnik - Florence - Frankfurt - Geneva - Gothenburg - Hamburg - Helsinki - Lisbon - London - Luxemburg - Madrid - Milan - Munich - Nice - Oslo - Ostead - Paris - Rome - Stockholm- Trieste - Venice - Vienna - Zurich 2006 Standard Rates Click here to make a Reservation or request a Quote Rates per day in Australian Dollars SEASON PERIOD VW California 4 Berth Ford Nugget 4 Berth Ford Rimor 5 - 6 Berth LOW SEASON 01 JAN - 30 APR 2006 7 to 27 days $123 $123 $156 28+ days $93 $93 $120 SHOULDER SEASON 01 OCT 2006 - 30 APR 2007 7 to 27 days $131 $139 $164 28+ days $98 $111 $131 MID SEASON 01 MAY - 31 MAY 2006 01 SEP - 30 SEP 2006 7 to 27 days $139 $151 $180 28+ days $128 $139 $164 HIGH SEASON 01 JUN - 31 AUG 2006 7 to 27 days $161 $177 $213 28+ days $148 $162 $197 Minimum Rental Period: 7 Days Except between 01 June - 31 August 14 Days All prices are subject to Value Added Tax (VAT) The VAT is 19% in Netherlands. Click here for one way fees and extra's costs Rates, additional charges and conditions are subject to change, and to currency fluctuation, without notice - Errors and Omissions Excepted 250705cm Click here to make a Reservation or request a Quote Terms and Conditions Following costs shown below are in Australian Dollars Rates: Minimum rental period: 7 days. Include full maintenance, oil and equipment. Exclude fuel and propane. Exclude 19 % VAT Tax No refunds can be made if the campervan is returned earlier than contracted for No refunds can be made for parts of days Rentals are by the calendar day, parts of days count as whole days Driving License and Age: A valid driving license must be held at least one year. Minimum age: 19 years. Maximum age: 75 years Driving license and passport must be presented at time of rental. Insurance: Rates include third party liability coverage of $1,639,344 - per event. Rates include collision damage coverage with a deductible of $1,475 - per event. This deductible may be waived by the purchase of CDW insurance at $20 - per day With the purchase of purchase of CDW-Plus insurance at $30 - per day - Breaking of windows and damage to the roof of the camper, and Tyre damage is covered. (this is not covered by purchase of CDW insurance) Drop Off Charges One-Way Rentals: Pick up of the camper must always be downtown Amsterdam. Cost of taxi from the Airport to the depot is approx $82 . For a one way rental - the total rental period needs to be at least 14 days. Costs shown below are in Australian Dollars Athens $2,705 Florence $2,295 Luxembourg $492 Ostend $328 Barcelona $1,598 Frankfurt $492 Madrid $2,049 Paris $574 Brindisi $1,885 Geneva $1,148 Manchester $2,623 Rome $1,639 Brussels $344 Gothenburg $1,393 Marseille $1,352 Stockholm $1,885 Calais $574 Hamburg $533 Milan $1,230 Trieste $1,885 Copenhagen $820 Helsinki $3,033 Munich $861 Venice $1,311 Dusseldorf $328 Lisbon $2,623 Nice $1,230 Vienna $1,393 Dubrovnik $4,918 London $1,230 Oslo $1,475 Zurich $984 Drop Off in other places is $2.46 per kilometre. Please contact us for exact rates. The exact time and location of the drop off will be arranged on pick up of the camper ! Extras: Extra's Costs shown below are in Australian Dollars Price per rental period for a: Ford Nugget VW California Ford Rimor Tomtom go Navigation system incl benelux Standard $82 $82 Set of Maps of Europe Standard $33 $33 Bike Rack $41 $41 $41 Chemical Toilet Standard $41 Standard Awning Standard $82 Standard Folding Tables and Lawn Chairs Standard Standard Standard Sleeping Bags and Pillows Standard Standard Standard Kitchen Utensils etc. Standard Standard Standard Childrens Seat (up to 3 years) $41 $41 $41 Delivery and Pick-up: Upon collecting your camper you will be presented with a Preparation fee for filling the fuel and propane tank of your camper ( plus toilet chemiclas), the exact amount depends on the type of camper rented and on the type of fuel required by the camper. This amount is approx $164 . You do not need to return the camper with a full tank. So if your flight is at a very early hour you do not need to worry about finding a fuel station and opening hours of that station. Just drop off the camper and thats it ! Collection of your Vehicle: The depot is located approximately 5 min walk from Amsterdam Central Railway Station, which is 10 minutes by train from Amsterdam Airport. Trains to and from Amsterdam Airport to / from Central station go every 10 minutes. The depot is located approximately 700 meters from The City Centre. Distance from airport to depot and approx taxi fare: 20km - $82 Depot Hours: The depot is open MONDAY - THURSDAY 0900hrs - 1700hrs FRIDAY 0900hrs - 1600hrs SATURDAY 1000hrs - 1400hrs SUNDAY and NATIONAL HOLIDAYS CLOSED Vehicles can only be collected during the above business hours. Some Questions and Answers: Can vehicle be taken to Eastern Europe: Yes Can the vehicle be taken to the UK / Ireland / Greece by ferry: Yes Do you offer long term discounts: Yes Do all your vehicles have seatbelts: Yes Do any vehicles have airconditioning: No Do you have CD player: No, Cassette What is current cost to rent a child's seat: $41 can be paid at time of pick up Return Formalities: The vehicle must be returned on the date and before the time shown on the rental agreement. The vehicle must be returned in a reasonably clean condition with chemical toilet and waste tanks emptied. An additional charge may be made for cleaning if the above condition is not met. There is no refund for early return of the vehicle. Cancellation Conditions: Cancellation fees take effect on receipt of your booking request by Us. Cancellation Fees Outside 31 days prior to pickup $574 plus 20% rental costs 30 days or less prior to pickup 100% of rental NO REFUNDS FOR EARLY RETURN OF VEHICLE Amendment fees for each amendment $30 / $60 once final documents issued Full Terms and Conditions are available from us VEHICLES Two vehicles types are offered at an all-inclusive price which includes unlimited kms, all equipment, insurance and tax. Please note all vehicles are Manual transmisson. The only extras are fuel and refundable security deposit or CDW.Both vehicles have the economical diesel engines. VW California 4 berth Ford Nugget 4 berth Ford Rimor 5 - 6 berth For flexibility, freedom and value for money it is really hard to beat Motorhome, RV, Campervan or Motorcaravan hire or rental. Our friendly and experienced team are here to assist and provide valuable free advice, plus the most competitive quotes. We offer the widest selection and we have a best value and best price guarantee. The VW California (Westfalia) / Ford Nugget (Westfalia) VW California Westfalia Click here for more pictures Ford Nugget Westfalia Click here for more pictures Sleeps up to 4 adults, VW Westfalia California - 4 berth For 2 months the cost is $3,525 , or 3 months for $4,918 inclusive VAT etc ! FORD Westfalia Nugget - 4 berth For 2 months the cost is $3,770 , or 3 months for $5,246 inclusive VAT etc ! Your camper is a comfortable and reliable Volkswagen-based unit (factory built) with a 2500cc diesel engine (California) or a Ford-based unit (factory built) with a 2000cc turbo diesel engine (Nugget). The camper handles well and is compact and easily parked. Inside is everything necessary to accomodate a party of up to 4 adults. It is a small car to drive but big enough to live in. A bench seat converts into one double bed, another double bed is in the pop up roof, which you raise at night. There is no shower and no toilet, but you have a 2 -burner gas cooker, fridge, sink with pump and watertank, table, storage room, stationary heater, radio/CD player, plus all the pots and pans, cutlery and everything else you'll need for your camper holiday. We supply no linen but we do have a sleeping bag and a pillow for each member of the party. 1.Bed/Seat 2. Storage 3. Fridge 4. Kitchen with two-burner stove and sink 5. Swivel Seats 6. Table The Ford Rimor (5 - 6 Berth) Sleeps up to 6 adults and has 2 Burner Stove, Sink, Fridge, Storage, Shower and Toilet facilities etc. For 2 months use costs $4,508 - for 3 months the cost is $6,148 inclusive VAT etc ! We have the Ford Rimor diesel camper, a European sized American style camper. Economical with fuel (1Litre/per 8km) and quite quick with a 2500 cc engine. Vehicle comes with awning plus outside table and chairs. There is no air conditioning but vehicle does have a cigarette lighter. A motorhome of approximately 19ft in length. 5.50 Metres Long, 2.10 Metres Wide, 2.95 Metres High. Bed sizes are 2.00 x 1.35 metres and 2.00 x 1.45 metres. The vehicles have shower and toilet and sleep either 5 to 6 persons. All campers and motorhomes are manual and have a stationary heater, radio/ CD player, fridge, 2 burner cooker, sink with water pump and water tank (100 litres). All vehicles are supplied with kitchen and dining utensils etc.They also come with an awning, free external table and chairs. Electricity voltage is 12V unless plugged in at a camp site. Bed linen, Towels are not supplied, however we provide a sleeping bag and pillow, pillow cover for each person. 5 Berth Layout 1. Bed / Seat 2. Storage 4. Kitchen with two-burner stove, fridge and sink 6. Table 7. Shower and Toilet Specifications are to be used as a guide only: We reserve the right to provide vehicles of a similar make, size and quality Top of page Home - About - Canal Boat Hire - Car Hire - Car Leasing - Motorhome Hire - Specials Airfares - River Cruises - Motorbike Hire - Newsletters - Search - Travel Links - RV Links Click here to add us to your Favourites 2/1 Balmoral St (P.O.Box 1518), Frankston, Victoria, 3199, Australia within Australia phone: (03) 8781 1100 or 1300 880035 Fax: (03) 8781 1109 International callers phone: +61 3 8781 1100 Fax: +61 3 8781 1109 Email: enquiry@motorhomesworldwide.com www.motorhomesworldwide.com Licence Number 30534 Travel Compensation Fund Number 00710 - ABN 30 005 561 786 Member of the following TCF Travel Compensaton Fund ASTA American Society of Travel Agents CATO Council of Australian Tour Operators AFTA Australian Federation of Travel Agents RVRA Recreational Vehicle Rental Association Motorhomes Worldwide is a motorhome rental reservation service offering competitiveprices and great service on motorhome rental with leading motorhome rental companies.We cover a large range of countries throughout the world including: Motorhome Rental Africa Motorhome Rental Alaska Motorhome Rental Argentina Motorhome Rental Australia Motorhome Rental Canada Motorhome Rental Chile Motorhome Rental Corsica Motorhome Rental Cuba Motorhome Rental Denmark Motorhome Rental England Motorhome Rental Finland Motorhome Rental France Motorhome Rental Germany Motorhome Rental Great Britain Motorhome Rental Holland Motorhome Rental Hungary Motorhome Rental Ireland Motorhome Rental Italy Motorhome Rental Namibia Motorhome Rental New Zealand Motorhome Rental Norway Motorhome Rental Portugal Motorhome Rental Scotland Motorhome Rental South Africa Motorhome Rental South America Motorhome Rental Spain Motorhome Rental Sweden Motorhome Rental Thailand Motorhome Rental UK - United Kingdom Motorhome Rental USA - America Sitemap: Home RV Rental Country Index RV Rental Specials Africa Alaska Argentina Australia Canada Chile Corsica Cuba Denmark England Finland France Germany Great Britain Holland Hungary Ireland Italy Namibia New Zealand Norway Portugal Scotland South Africa South America Spain Sweden Thailand UK - Britain USA - America Motorhomes Worldwide is a campervan rental reservation service offering the following leading campervan hire and campervan rental companies worldwide: 4WD Hire Service Andean Roads Apollo Around Australia Asia RV Thailand Autocaravan Express Autorent Hertz Braitmans Britz 4WD Rentals Bobo Campers Calypso Camper Tours Italy Car Away Cruise America Cruise Canada Cruisin'Tasmania Rentals Cubamar Viajes Drive and Go DRM El Monte Euromotorhome Freedom Gaibu Global Gypsies 4WD Safaris Go West Holiday Rent Kamp Easi Kea Campers Kiwi Autohomes Lakoauto McRent Maui Motorhome Rentals Motorhomes Ireland Moturis Neergards Camping Omtinc Owasco Pacific Horizon Road Bear Set Camping Cars Skippy Winnebago Touring Cars Finland United Vivanti Westcoast Mountain Campers Motor Home | Motor Home RV Rental | Motor Home Shelters Colors | Motor Homes Manufacturer/Dealer Services | motor homes and relocatable | motor home covers feature | vacation vehicle With great | vacation vehicle Hertz Trois | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | vacation vehicle. See Gas | vacation vehicle car rental | vacation vehicle car rental | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | vacation vehicle trois soleils.com | vacation vehicle Save Time, | RV Trader RV InsiderFind a Campground in your area on RV Trader Online Contents Home Search Browse Place An Ad · modify your ad · renew your ad Find a Dealer Buyer's Guide Subscribe Help My RV Trader RV Insider Resources Financial Services NADA RV Values Insurance Products for the RV Lifestyle RV Transport Warranties RV Donation Generators RV Lots and Properties for Sale Campgrounds/Resorts RV Rentals Loan Calculator RV Links Escrow Dealers Sign Up Now! Demo Login Password Forgot your password? Click here . There are 755 RV Campgrounds and Resorts available tosearch today. Click on a state or enter a zip code to find a RV Campground or Resort near you. Canadian visitors please use the dropdown boxes. Update your flash to view our dynamic map or use the dropdown below Shady Oaks RV Park Countryside Campground Hunger House OR State: Select a State Alabama Alaska Alberta Arizona Arkansas British Columbia British Virgin Isles British West Indies California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Dutch West Indies Florida French West Indies Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Manitoba Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Netherlans Antilles Nevada New Brunswick New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York Newfoundland North Carolina North Dakota Northwest Terri Nova Scotia Nunavut Ohio Oklahoma Ontario Oregon Pennsylvania Prince Edward Is Puerto Rico Quebec Rhode Island Saskatchewan South Carolina South Dakota Spanish West Indies Tennessee Texas US Virgin Isles Utah Vermont Virgin Islands Virginia Washington West Indies West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Yukon Territory OR Zip/Postal: Located within: Any Distance 25 miles 50 miles 75 miles 100 miles | Search | Place an Ad | Find a Dealer | Resources | Site Map | | Contact Us | About Us | Help | Privacy Policy | Fraud Prevention Tips | Visitor Agreement | Security Center | 2006, Trader Publishing Company All Rights Reserved. This document is strictly for informational, non-commercial purposes. Aero | ATV | Auto | Auto | -- Boats | Collector Car | Cycle | Equipment | Merchandise | RV | Truck | TraderOnline || Apartments | Homes | Jobs | Lodging | Parenthood | Vacation Rentals AutoExtra.com | AutoMart.com BoatTraderOnline.com | Boats.com | YachtWorld.com | Soundings | Nor'easter | PassageMaker HarmonHomes.com | Homes.com | NUMBER1EXPERT.com | DistinctHomes.com Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | vacation vehicle rental operations, | Vacation Vehicle | vacation vehicle motor home | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | vacation vehicle rental operations, | Vacation Vehicle | vacation vehicle youre looking | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | RV ParksRio RV Parks Campgrounds, Resorts, Rentals, Instant Phones, Birding & Golf in Brownsville Texas = 0) { location.href="bbf.htm"; }else if (here.indexOf("riograndedeltaaudubon.org") = 0) { location.href="RGDA.htm"; } FREE heated pool & spa, Mexico day trips, cable TV, Golf Driving Range, planned activities, maps, and modem room. This RV Park in Brownsville, Texas offers Laundry, 50 Amps, pull thru, patios, Game Room, Activity Center & Rentals. Explore from Rio the Brownsville, Texas resort area hot spot for birding, golfing, Zoo, fishing, history, tennis, swimming, beaches, wi fi hotspot, shopping & dining both South Padre Island and Mexico. Visit a top value RV Park to see & do Padre Island, Harlingen, McAllen, and Mission. Enjoy adventure traveling to Rio "On the Border by the Sea" stopping at Corpus Christi, San Antonio, Austin, Houston, Laredo, & Galveston, Texas. Mexican Culture & Heritage, with a rich history and friendly people, are easy, safe, and enjoyable to visit just minutes away. Rio RV Park Brownsville, Texas FREE heated swimming pool & spa - hot tub, Mexico day trips, cable TV, Golf Driving Range, planned activities maps, and modem room. The campground offers Laundry, 50 AMPS, pull thru, patios, High Speed Wireless Internet Wi Fi, Exercise Equipment Gym, Game Room, Activity Center & Rentals. Explore from Rio the Brownsville, Tx. resort area of the Rio Grande Valley - RGV for birding, golfing, Zoo, fishing, history, tennis, swimming, beaches - 20 minutes, shopping & dining , pet friendly hot spots in Brownsville & South Padre Island -g SPI, Texas plus Mexico. Visit a top value RV Park to See & Do South Padre Island, Harlingen, McAllen, and Mission. Enjoy adventure traveling to Rio On the Border by the Sea with possible stops in Corpus Christi, San Antonio, Austin, Houston, Laredo, & Galveston, Texas. Mexican Culture & Heritage offers a rich history with friendly people and is easy, safe, and enjoyable to discover minutes away. Brownsville has a lower crime rate than 70% of the USA. All this while staying in one of our rv lots or sites, park model rentals, mobile home lots, and rentals. Speed in loading and printing is increased without the photos. We can e-mail any photos direct or you can down load Inlarged photos direct. Please send us your comments about our web site. Pool & Spa Beach cookout Sunrise Discounts Best Climate ..... and ..... Southernmost Tip Tour our web site for ways to have fun meeting friendly people having a good vacation or winter stay. Web Site Map and Index below Christmas - Rio Game Room Facilities Activities RV Site & Facility Photos Rentals News Letters Calendars Communication Station Places to See Mexico Bird Watching Bargains Golf FAQ Things to Do Reservations and Rates Wi-Fi Wireless Internet Wi Fi - Phone Price & Info Mobile Homes Lots & Sales Roads to Rio Weather Testimonials Workkamping Travel Links Promotions New! Park Layout with clickable RV Site and Facility Photos New! Free Long Distance USA and Canada Internet Summer Discounts! 50% Off Daily & Weekly Wi Fi and Instant Phones through October Modem Connections in an A/C private Room - 24/7 New! Live High Speed Computer 24/7 for E-Mail & Surfing Special! Golf Discount 20% at selected courses Cable TV 70 Channels Click for channel listings - Free Birding and Nature Guide Service Instant phones on selected sites Personal Postal Boxes 24/7 2004 - Free New! RV and Mobile Home Sales Hurricane Hit chart for Florida and Texas Plus! Information Package of maps and guides upon arrival. - Free New! Low Crime see city comparisons. New! Travel Guard Insurance - Safeguard trip investment. New! Travel Insurance - Trip Cancellation Protection New! Specific guaranteed site reservation for one or more months. Mexico Matamoros & Progreso, Mexico Shopping & Dining Guided Car Pool Day Trip - Free Special! Daily Day-Trips Matamoros roundtrip $12 per person - Contact park Mexico Travel Information - Free New! Gas Prices are lower just accross the border. Regular $2.17 and Diesel $1.81 click for details. Laughing Bird - Featured Entertainers Click HERE to see and hear our on stage candellight dinner show. More Entertainer Shows & images - Activities & Entertainers Web Site Index or Bottom of This Page Larger Photo Rio's Jennie & President Jimmy Carter Larger Photo L/R Lee, Brad, President Carter and Roslynn find Brownsville's Bird Red-crowned Parrot. See News Article President Jimmy Carter visited Rio RV Park Rio Delivers Satisfaction See Newsletter for details of 1. Pre-trip planning 2. Trip Benefits come with your rent like no other park. Schlitterbaumn complimentary ticket(s) with three plus night stays until Sept. 15, 2005 Gladys Porter Zoo complimentary adult tickets with three plus night stays as long as they last. Activities Calendars 2005 September | October | November | December 2006 January | February | March Newsletters Dial Up-Background Graphics November 2005 December 2005 January 2006 High Speed-Printable Graphics November 2005 December 2005 January 2006 PDF November 2005 December 2005 January 2006 Daily Park Bingo | Breakfast | Mixer | Pot Luck | Orientation Evening | Church | Cribbage | Shuffleboard | Crafts | Computer | Spanish | Blood Pressure | Day Trips to Matamoros &Progreso | Golf Dinner Dances 50's | Valentines | Dinners German - October Fest | Thanksgiving | Christmas | Mexican | St. Patricks | Texas BBQ Entertainers Beach Parties | Four Wheel Trips | Taste Of Matamoros Day Trips & Tours Brownsville Attractions Historic Tours Downtown | Fort Brown | County Court House | Market Square | Depot | E Madison St. | Fifth Street | Palm Blvd | St Charles Street Mexico Matamoros | Progreso Birding Audubon Sabal Palm Sanctuary | Laguna Atascosa NWR | Santa Ana NWR | Los Ebanos Preserve | Bird & Photography Guiding | El Cielo & El Salto April 2005 Discounts Good Sam, Texas Saver Card, AAA, CAA, Buckroo Bucks, Happy Camper, Enjoy America, Coachman Facilities Activity Center G ame Room | Lanudry | Restrooms | G ym & Exercise | Modem & Telephone Room | Play Ground | Kitchen RV Sites | Tent Sites | Nature Trail | Storage | Postal Boxes | Mobile Homes | Wi Fi | Cable TV | Instant Phones on site | Full Service Office - Registration Rentals Mobile Home 1 | Mobile Home 29 | Park Model 224 | Mobile Home Lots See some existing manufactured houses and available open home lots. Manufactured Houses and RVs for Sale Mobile Homes (Three), Pace Arrow Motor Home, Foretravel Diesel Pusher Places to See Brownsville Attractions Gladys Porter Zoo | CAF - Air Museum | History History Brownsville Museum | Stillman House | Heritage Museum | Fort Brown | Palo Alto National Park | Civil War - Palmetto Hill | Matamoros Cemetery | Brownsville Cemetery | See History Day Trips Mexico Matamoros | Progreso Nature Audubon Sabal Palm Sanctuary | Laguna Atascosa NWR | Santa Ana NWR | Los Ebanos Preserve | Bird Guiding Theater Camile Playhouse Roads to Rio Brownsville Entry RoadMap to Rio San Antonio | Galveston | Corpus Christi | Austin | Houston | Laredo Things to Do (Festivals, Events, and organize your own activity) Bike Festival Rio Grande Valley Livestock Show -March 12 - 20 2005 Brownsville International Birding Festival Sand Castle Days CAF Air Fiesta - Show 2005 World Championship Shrimp Cook-OFF - 11th Annual Charro Days Shrimp Festival Elvis Festival Taste of Brownsville Fun Fly Fiesta! Taste Of Matamoros Kite Festival - Tails Over South Padre Island Taste of SPI Ladies Kingfish Tournament Texas International Fishing Tournament Los Fresnos Rodeo Texas Senior Open Golf Tournament Fishing | Bird Watching | Golf Free Golf Driving Range | Brownsville Golf Center | Golfing area courses prices and yardage | Rancho Viejo Golf | South Padre Island Golf Club | El Saucito Golf & Tennis Shopping | Dining | Volunteering | Exercising | Swimming | Site Seeing | Biking | Walking Community Concerns Crime | Weather | News | Air Quality & Cost of Living | Workkamping TERMS OF USE Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | vacation vehicle. These deals | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | Winnebago. Using the Internet,Winnebago Winnebago History © (revised 9.30.00) [Note: This is a single part of what will be, by myclassification, about 240 compact tribal histories (contact to 1900). Itis limited to the lower 48 states of the U.S. but also includes thoseFirstNations from Canada and Mexico that had important roles ( Huron ,Assiniboine, etc.). This history's content and style are representative. The normal processat this point is to circulate an almost finished product among a peergroup for comment and criticism. At the end of this History you willfind links to those Nations referred to in the History of theWinnebago. Using the Internet, this can be more inclusive. Feel free to comment orsuggest corrections via e-mail. Working together we can end some of thehistorical misinformation about Native Americans. You will find the egoat this end to be of standard size. Thanks for stopping by. I look forward to your comments... Lee Sultzman. WinnebagoLocation The Winnebago do not remember a time when they did not live at Red Bankson the south shore of Green Bay. Their occupation of Wisconsin is veryancient, perhaps thousands of years. Although they have no memories ofmound-building, they may well be descendents of the earlier Mississippian,Hopewell, and Adena cultures. Their homeland lay between Green Bay andLake Winnebago in northeast Wisconsin but they dominated the area fromUpper Michigan south to present-day Milwaukee extending west to theMississippi. Beginning in the 1640s, thousands of Algonquin refugees fromthe Beaver Wars (1630-1701) invaded Wisconsin from the east, and theresulting wars and epidemics brought the resident tribes, Winnebago and Menominee , to the point of near extinction. The Winnebago who survivedremained near Green Bay but were forced to share their homeland with othertribes. After the French and Great Lakes Algonquin victory over the Iroquois in1701, many of the refugee tribes left Wisconsin allowing the Winnebago toreclaim some of their homeland - especially after the near-annihilation ofthe Fox during the Fox Wars (1712-16 and 1728-37). The Winnebago spreadsouth afterwards along the Wisconsin and Rock Rivers into southernWisconsin eventually claiming a portion of northwestern Illinois. Americansettlement of Wisconsin began after 1825, and the Winnebago rapidly lostterritory. By 1840 the Winnebago had ceded their Wisconsin land and agreedto move to northeast Iowa. Despite this many Winnebago remained inWisconsin defying efforts to remove them. During the next 50 years, thethe Winnebago were shifted around like a piece of unwanted baggage. In1848 the Winnebago were sent north to the Crow Wing River in Minnesota.Eight years later, they were moved south to Blue Earth county, Minnesotawhere they remained until after the Sioux uprising in 1862. Although theWinnebago had no part in this, the government deported them to SouthDakota and placed with the Nakota (Yankton Sioux). At this point, the Winnebago began to rebel. Many left the reservation andreturned to Iowa, Minnesota or Wisconsin. The others fled down theMissouri to the Omaha Reservation in Nebraska. In 1865 the governmentaccepted this and created a separate Winnebago Reservation (40,000 acres)in northeast Nebraska. During their many moves, many Winnebago never leftWisconsin. In addition, some had managed to stay in northeast Iowa andsouthern Minnesota when the main group was moved. Raided by the Lakota andpressured to allot their reservation, many Winnebago left Nebraska duringthe 1870s and 80s and went home to Wisconsin. The government would sendthem back, but the Winnebago just kept going, and the government finallygave up and purchased land in Wisconsin for the Winnebago. As a result,there are two separate Winnebago tribes today: the Wisconsin Winnebagowith 4,400 acres (333 acres tribally owned) scattered in small holdingsacross ten counties; and the Nebraska Winnebago who still have 27,500acres from their 1865 reservation, 3,100 belongs to the tribe. Population Estimates of the Winnebago's pre-contact population are usually about8,000, but it probably was much higher. On Nicollet's second visit to theWinnebago in 1639, he estimated they had 5,000 warriors suggesting apopulation of 20,000. This higher figure would explain the pre-contactdominance of the region by the Winnebago. It is also more in line withWinnebago's own tradition which says that, due to over-population, severallarge groups of their people (Otoe, Missouri, and Iowa) left shortlybefore Nicollet's visit. Whatever their original number, the sudden dropin their population during the next 30 years was one of the most worstexperienced by any tribe. When the French returned to Wisconsin in 1665,wars and epidemic had reduced the Winnebago to fewer than 500. From the point of near-extinction, the Winnebago began a slow recovery. In1736 the French said there were about 700, but afterwards they grewrapidly through intermarriage with neighboring Algonquin. While othernative populations declined, the Winnebago actually increased. ZebulonPike made the first American estimate in 1806 - about 2,000, but heprobably was too low. In 1825 American Indian agents in Wisconsin gave5,800, and even after a smallpox epidemic in 1835 killed 25%, this onlydropped to 4,500. The first accurate count in 1842 was 2,200 Winnebagoliving in Iowa near Fort Atkinson. The trouble was no one knew how manyWinnebago were still in Wisconsin. Four years later, the government saidthere were 22 Winnebago bands totaling 4,400 people. By 1848 the figurewas back to 2,500. There were 1,756 "official" Winnebago in Minnesota in1856 - 1,200 of whom were finally settled in Nebraska in 1865. The Wisconsin Winnebago (Ho-Chunk Nation) at first actually avoided seekingfederal recognition and delayed this until 1963. Tribal headquarters are atBlack River Falls with an enrollment close to 5,000. Taken together, thereare currently more than 12,000 Winnebago which makes them one of the largertribes in the United States. Names Like many other tribes, the Winnebago's name is not what they calledthemselves. It comes from a Fox word "Ouinipegouek" meaning "people of thestinking water." No insult was intended. Instead, the name referred toalgae-rich waters of the Fox River and Lake Winnebago where the Winnebagooriginally lived. The French translated this as "stinking people" andshortened it to Puan. In its English form, it became Stinkard. For obviousreasons, the Winnebago have never been overly fond of this name. They callthemselves Hochungra (Hochungara, Hotcangara, Ochangra) "people of the bigspeech" - perhaps better rendered as "people of the parent speech"referring to their role as "grandfathers," the original people from whichother Siouan-speaking tribes sprang. Dissatisfied with their Algonquinname, the Wisconsin Winnebago recently changed their official name toHocak Nation (pronounced Hochunk). Other names include: Aweatsiwaenhronon(Huron), Banabeouik, Bay Indians, Hatihshirunu (Huron), Hotanka (Dakota),Mipegoe, Nipegon, Ochungaraw (Otoe, Iowa, Omaha, and Missouri), andOtonkah (Dakota). Language Siouan - Chiwere. Besides the Dakota (Sioux) at the west end of LakeSuperior, the Winnebago were the only Siouan-speaking people of the GreatLakes. Their language is identical to that of the Iowa, Otoe, and Missouriwho acknowledge that they separated from the Winnebago shortly beforecontact. Although the Sioux (Dakota, Nakota, and Lakota) have provided thename for the Siouan language group, it appears likely that Winnebago mayhave been the more important branch. It is closer to the Dhegiha dialectof the Osage, Quapaw, Omaha, Kansa, and Ponca (who call the Winnebagograndfathers or elder brothers). There also appears to be a closerrelationship of Winnebago to the Mandan from North Dakota and the Siouanspeaking tribes in the southeast United States. Siouan-speakers in NorthAmerica originally were located along a diagonal line extending roughlyfrom North Dakota to South Carolina. The Winnebago position in Wisconsinwas near the midpoint which lends weight to their claim as the"grandfather tribe." Villages Only a few names have survived, all of which were in Wisconsinexcept as noted: Butte des Mortes, Prairie la Crose, Red Banks, Sarrochau, Spotted Arm'sVillage, Tokaunee, Village du Puant (IN), Wuckan, and Yellow Thunder. Culture Mention Sioux, and visions of war bonnets, horses, buffalo, and tepeesflood the mind. However, this would be a poor description of theWinnebago. Although the Winnebago spoke a Siouan language, they were verymuch a woodland tribe whose lifestyle and dress closely resembled theirAlgonquin neighbors in the upper Great Lakes. Like other Siouan-speakingpeoples, the Winnebago were taller than other natives (for that matter,taller than most Europeans). Nicollet in 1634 described them as brave butlacking in humility ...almost to the point of arrogance. Their clothingwas fringed buckskin, which the Winnebago frequently decorated withbeautiful designs created from porcupine quills, feathers and beads - askill for which they are still renown. Men originally wore their hair intwo long braids, but in time this changed to the scalplock and roachheaddress favored by the Algonquin. Body tattooing was common to bothsexes. In the process of rebuilding their population after 1670, the Winnebagofrequently intermarried with Algonquin. So much so, it has been suggestedthey lost their original traditions and replaced them with Algonquin.Intermarriage certainly happened, and as a result, the purest Winnebagobloodline may actually be the Iowa and Otoe-Missouri. However, prior tocontact the Winnebago resembled the Algonquin in so many ways, there wasnot that much to change. The Winnebago were one of the northernmostagricultural tribes. In spite of a limited growing season, the Winnebagosuccessfully grew three types of corn together with beans, squash, andtobacco. They supplemented this with fishing and hunting, includingbuffalo from the prairies of southern Wisconsin. Using dugout canoes(rather than the lighter birchbark variety used by the Ojibwe and Ottawa),they also gathered wild rice from the nearby lakes during the fall. TheWinnebago used pottery for cooking and food storage, and copper implementswere fairly common since it was easily available from the south shore ofLake Superior. The Winnebago also resembled the Algonquin in that they were patrilinealwith descent and clan membership determined by the father. Winnebago clansserved both ceremonial and social functions, but in distinctive Siouancharacteristic, were grouped into two major divisions, or moieties: anUpper (Sky) with four clans; and a Lower (Earth) having eight. Of these,the Thunderbird and Bear clans were the most important with the hereditaryhead chief of the Winnebago almost always chosen from the Thunderbirdclan. Clan membership was more important among the Winnebago than bandaffiliation, and a Winnebago chief governed with the help of a councilcomposed of the principal members of each clan. Despite intermarriage withAlgonquin, it would appear the Winnebago made few changes to theirtraditional social or political structures. Of course, they never surrendered their distinctive Siouan language, butit was not uncommon for a Winnebago to speak several languages besides hisown (Algonquin, French, and English). Originally a farming people, theWinnebago lived in large semi-permanent villages. Unlike the Algonquin,they followed the Siouan pattern and did not usually separate to small,scattered hunting camps during winter - a possible link to the earlierMississippian Culture. The Algonquin influence, however, revealed itselfin the eight types of lodge (round or oval) the Winnebago are known tohave used during the historic period. This included the tepee fortemporary shelter on buffalo hunts. Burials varied according to clan withthe dead either buried or placed on a platform. Some things, however,never changed. They were always allies of the Menominee, but throughouttheir long history, the Winnebago remained enemies of the Illinois. History For as long as anyone can remember, the Winnebago lived in the vicinity ofGreen Bay in northeastern Wisconsin. The most powerful tribe in theregion, they dominated the western shore of Lake Michigan from UpperMichigan to southern Wisconsin. As part of major climatic change in NorthAmerica sometime around 1400, three closely related tribes - Ojibwe,Potawatomi, and Ottawa - began moving west along the shore of Lake Hurontowards the point where Lakes Superior, Huron, and Michigan meet. TheOttawa stopped at Manitoulin Island, but the Ojibwe occupied the northshore of Lake Huron including Upper Michigan near Sault Ste. Marie. About1500 the Potawatomi crossed over the Strait at Mackinac into northern partof the Lower Michigan peninsula. The invasion drove the original tribes ofthe region south and west. Among the victims were the Menominee andpossibly the Cheyenne, Sutai, and Arapaho. The Menominee were forced southwhere they became tributary and allies of the Winnebago. The Cheyenne andArapaho, however, were set adrift to the west until they reached the GreatPlains. The Winnebago were obviously powerful enough for the moment to prevent theOjibwe from moving further south, but the loss of territory and and agrowing population must have stressed the resources available to them.From subsequent events, it appears that the Winnebago tried to solve thisby moving into southern Wisconsin creating confrontations with the tribesof the Illinois Confederation. With no place to expand, the Winnebagobegan to separate. Sometime around 1570, the Iowa, Missouri, and Otoe leftthe Winnebago near Green Bay and moved west. Passing down the WisconsinRiver, they crossed the Mississippi and settled in Iowa before separatinginto individual tribes. Weakened by this defection, the remainingWinnebago concentrated into large villages near Green Bay to defend theirhomeland against the Ojibwe from the north or Illinois in the south. It was in this state of siege that the Winnebago felt the first effects ofEuropeans in North America. The French had begun their fur trade along theSt. Lawrence River in 1603 and, during 1609, had helped the Algonkin,Huron and Montagnais defeat the Iroquois and drive them south. Followingthe Ottawa River west, Étienne Brulé reached the Huron villages in 1611and Sault Ste. Marie in 1623. But for the most part, the French stopped atthe Huron villages on the south end of Lake Huron and allowed nativetraders to conduct the fur trade beyond that point. The Ottawa and Huronsoon linked with the Ojibwe in upper Michigan and then made attempts toopen trade with the Winnebago to south. The French first learned about theWinnebago from the Ottawa in 1620, and what they heard was not especiallygood. Knowing that the Ottawa were closely related to and trading withtheir Ojibwe enemies, the Winnebago were suspicious and refused to allowOttawa and Huron traders to proceed further west. The matter smoldered for several years, while the Winnebago felt theirfirst taste of the steel weapons the Ojibwe were receiving from the Frenchin exchange for their furs. Trying to break the impasse, the Ottawafinally sent envoys to the Winnebago to arrange trade. Revealing a talentfor treachery, the Winnebago killed and ate the Ottawa representatives.While the Ottawa and Huron prepared for war, the French in 1634 sent JeanNicolet west to the Winnebago on what appeared to be a suicide mission.When Nicollet landed at Red Banks on the south shore of Green Bay, he wasthe first European the Winnebago had ever seen which probably saved hislife. Nicollet ultimately succeeded in arranging a truce between theWinnebago, Huron, and Ottawa which allowed trade. The fragile arrangementlasted for some time afterwards allowing Nicollet to make a second visitto the Winnebago villages at La Baye (Green Bay) in 1639. Twenty-six yearswould pass before another Frenchman would visit Green Bay. The Winnebago were almost destroyed in the meantime. The Beaver Warsstarted in 1628 when the Iroquois , having defeated the Mahican for controlof the Dutch fur trade, began a war to reclaim their territory on theupper St. Lawrence River from the Algonkin. Montagnais , and Huron. Thefighting quickly spread west to other tribes. Having exhausted the beaverin their homelands, Ottawa, Neutral , and Tionontati warriors equipped withfirearms and steel weapons invaded lower Michigan to seize huntingterritory from the Algonquin living there. The first refugees from thesewars to arrive in Wisconsin were a group of Potawatomi who attempted tosettle near Green Bay in 1641. Showing no mercy, the Winnebago immediatelyattacked and by 1642 had driven them north into upper Michigan. Unfortunately, this was only the beginning. The remaining Potawatomi soon joined the early arrivals followed by other tribes from lower Michigan. As all of these refugee tribes united against them, disagreements arose among the Winnebago over how to deal with the situation resulting in fighting among themselves. In the end most Winnebago decided on war and to concentrate on the Fox. Disaster was immediate. Crossing Lake Winnebago in canoes to attack the Fox, the Winnebago were caught in a storm and 500 warriors were drowned. The three largest Winnebago bands then drew together into a single village - a traditional defensive measure in times of war, but it proved to be a death trap. 12,000 people in a confinedspace was the perfect conditions for the epidemics which accompanied the refugees to Wisconsin, and they struck the Winnebago with devastating effect. Smallpox has been blamed, but the Winnebago say the disease turned their people yellow suggesting it was something else. The Winnebago emerged from this with less than 1,500 warriors and 4,500people. They were also starving since war and epidemic had made itimpossible to harvest their crops. As mentioned, the hostility between theIllinois and Winnebago must have existed for many years before therefugees began to arrive. Perhaps motivated by a need to form an allianceagainst the newcomers who were also overrunning their territory, or evenpity for an old enemy fallen on hard times, the Illinois sent 500 warriorsand food to help the Winnebago. This proved a serious mistake. TheWinnebago welcomed and held a feast for them, but in the midst of thedancing and celebration, they secretly cut the Illinois' bowstrings. Thenthey fell upon their benefactors and killed all of them to appease thespirits of Winnebago warriors killed earlier by the Illinois. It took the Illinois some time to learn what had happened. In themeantime, the Winnebago had anticipated retaliation and retreated to anisland in the middle of a lake where they built a fort. A sensibleprecaution, since it was impossible for the Illinois to bring their heavydugout canoes overland with them to attack the Winnebago. The Illinoisproved patient and waited a year to take revenge. When the lake froze thatwinter, a large Illinois war party crossed over the ice to attack thevillage only to find the Winnebago were absent on their winter hunt. Aftera six-day pursuit, they caught up with the Winnebago and, during theslaughter which followed, almost annihilated them. Few Winnebago escapedto find refuge with the Menominee. About 150 Winnebago prisoners weretaken back as slaves to the Illinois villages and, after several years ofhard usage, released to return to Wisconsin. Less than 500 Winnebagosurvived to provide a future for their people, but theirnear-extermination was the second serious mistake made by the Illinois.Despite the circumstances which had caused it, the Winnebago never forgaveor forgot what had happened. In the east the Beaver Wars had grown in intensity and threatened theFrench fur trade. The climax came in the early spring of 1649 when theIroquois overran and destroyed the Huron. Other French allies fell victimduring the next few years while the Iroquois moved into the Ottawa Valleycutting French access to the western Great Lakes. The Iroquois theninvaded lower Michigan during the 1650s expelling the remaining Algonquin.20,000 refugees fled west to Wisconsin producing a tide which thedecimated Menominee and Winnebago could not resist. Even the Illinois wereforced to surrender territory in southern Wisconsin. So far as is known,the Winnebago made only one attempt at resistance during this period whenthey managed to keep the Mascouten from locating near Green Bay in 1655.However, this success proved temporary and made the Winnebago hated by therefugees. Within three years the Mascouten had allied with the Kickapoo and Miami and settled where they pleased. Only Iroquois attacks in thearea during 1660 forced them inland to a safer location at the Fox Portage. The Iroquois victory over the Huron in 1649 had virtually destroyed theFrench trade, but they managed to continue on a limited basis by invitingtribes to bring their furs to Montreal. This was only possible for large,heavily-armed canoe fleets able to fight their way past the Iroquois onthe Ottawa River. Having become dependent on French trade goods, only theOttawa and Huron were willing to try, and supported by Ojibwe warriors,they fought their way to and from Montreal. In this manner, French tradegoods continued to reach the western Great Lakes in limited amounts, butit also brought Iroquois war parties west to Wisconsin to stop the tradeat its source. The French had made a separate peace with the Iroquois in1645, but this collapsed in 1658. Six years of raids and harassmentfollowed before the French got serious and sent a regiment of soldiers toQuebec to deal with the Iroquois. Their attacks on Iroquois homelandproduced an alliance between the British and Iroquois and marked thebeginning of the British-French struggle for control of North America. Meanwhile, the French resumed travel to the western Great Lakes. In 1665fur trader Nicholas Perrot, Jesuit Claude-Jean Allouez, and four otherFrenchmen accompanied a large Huron-Ottawa trading party (400 warriors) onits return journey. After fighting their way past the Iroquois along theOttawa River, they reached Green Bay. What they found was a disaster: war,disease, and starvation. Allouez mentioned sadly that only 500 remained ofonce-numerous Winnebago described by Nicollet. French attacks on theIroquois homeland produced a lasting peace in 1667. For the first time, italso extended to French allies and trading partners, including those inthe western Great Lakes. This allowed the French to resume their furtrade, but they first needed to bring some order to the area and end thewarfare. Using the threat of withholding trade, they began mediatingintertribal disputes, a role which eventually evolved into therelationship of Onontio (the French governor of Canada) and his "Indianchildren." Although the French fur trade had been at the root of the Beaver Warswhich almost destroyed the Winnebago, it also saved them from extinction.As peace was restored, the Winnebago accepted the Algonquin refugees inWisconsin and began to intermarry with them adapting parts of theirculture in the process. The exception, of course, being that there wasnothing the French could do to end the Winnebago's hatred of the Illinois.The peace lasted thirteen years, until the Beaver Wars renewed to thesouth in 1680 between the Iroquois and Illinois. The Winnebago must havetaken a certain pleasure during the next two years while Seneca warparties struck the Illinois with genocidal effect. During 1684, however,the Iroquois failed to take Fort St. Louis on the upper Illinois Riverafter which the tide turned. The French strengthened their forts, providedfirearms to their allies, and organized an alliance to fight the Iroquois. The alliance took the offensive in 1687, and by 1690 the Iroquois were onthe defensive and retreating towards their New York homeland. The warfare(coinciding with the King William's War (1688-97) between Britain andFrance) continued until a peace was signed in 1701 which left the Frenchand their allies in control of the Great Lakes. Still recovering theirpopulation, Winnebago participation in this victory was minimal but thebenefits enormous. With the Iroquois defeated, refugees began leavingWisconsin for new homes to the south and east. This relieved theovercrowding and competition for resources, and after 60-years, theWinnebago regained most of their homeland. Meantime, the French fur tradehad continued unrestricted and by the 1690s had produced a glut of fur onthe European market. The resulting price drop motivated the Frenchmonarchy to finally listen to protests from Jesuit missionaries about thecorruption the fur trade was creating among Native Americans. In 1696licenses were revoked and trade suspended in the western Great Lakes. Since the French alliance was based on trade, it was a terrible decision.Even while they were going down in defeat, the Iroquois sensed the Frenchvulnerability and began to offer French allies access to British tradersat Albany. Suspecting the French would make their own peace with theIroquois, the alliance began to unravel, and the French had greatdifficulty getting their allies to agree to the peace signed with theIroquois in 1701. Urgent appeals sent to Paris from Canada asking for aresumption of trade in the Great Lakes brought limited relief in 1701 whenAntoine Cadillac was allowed to build Fort Pontchartrain at Detroit totrade with the Great Lakes tribes. Cadillac quickly invited just aboutevery tribe in the region to move to Detroit, and the result wasovercrowding and warfare between former allies. Rather than solving theproblem, it further strained what remained of the French alliance andduring 1712 erupted into the First Fox War (1712-16). Following confrontations with neighboring tribes, the Fox, Kickapoo, andMascouten attacked the French at Fort Pontchartrain. In midst of thesiege, Ottawa, Huron, and Potawatomi warriors arrived to save the Frenchand killed most of the Fox. The survivors retreated west to southernWisconsin from where they continued to war on the French and their allies.Although the Winnebago had helped the Fox drive the Kaskaskia (part of thehated Illinois) from southern Wisconsin in 1700, they had never leftWisconsin. When the war between the French and Fox moved west, theWinnebago remained neutral. The French used Potawatomi allies to defeatthe Kickapoo and Mascouten taking them out of the war, but an expeditionagainst a Fox fort in southern Wisconsin ended in frustration. Afterwards,the French offered peace, and the Fox accepted. The fighting stopped, butneither side, trusted the other. Unfortunately, it did not end the fighting between the Fox and Peoria(Illinois) after the Peoria refused to return Fox prisoners captured atDetroit in 1712. French attempts to mediate failed, and the war spread asthe Mascouten and Kickapoo joined the Fox against the Peoria. By 1724 theFox had added the Winnebago and Dakota to their side, and the French beganto suspect the Fox were forming an alliance against them. With theIllinois getting the worst of it, the French decided to intervene in 1726and sent an expedition against the Fox. Like their previous efforts tosubdue a tribe they considered a troublemaker, this accomplished nothing,and the French decided to exterminate the Fox. However, they first tookthe precaution of isolating the Fox from their allies. The Dakota droppedout, and then the Winnebago. With the outbreak of the Second Fox War (1728-37), the Winnebago switchedto the French. During the winter of 1729, a combined Winnebago, Menominee,Ojibwe war party attacked a Fox hunting party killing at least 80 warriorsand capturing some 70 women and children. The French, in the meantime, hadreoccupied their old fort at La Baye to prosecute the war against the Fox.Concerned about Fox retaliation, the Winnebago moved close to Green Bayand built a fort on an island in the Fox River. The Fox found them but thefort was too strong for direct attack, so they laid siege. To appease theFox, the Winnebago seized two Menominee who had married into their tribeand killed them. The headless bodies were thrown outside the fort with theexplanation that the Winnebago had killed them because they were part ofthe war party which had attacked the Fox. This did not satisfy the Fox whocontinued the siege. The French finally arrived from Green Bay with 34Menominee warriors to help the Winnebago, but when the Menominee learnedwhat had happened, it was all the French could do to stop them, with Foxwarriors just outside the gate, from killing every Winnebago in sight. The Fox eventually abandoned the siege, after which the Winnebago madeamends with the Menominee who had always been their allies. The warcontinued during which the Mascouten and Kickapoo ended their alliancewith the Fox after a fatal argument over French prisoners. Without allies,the Fox decided in 1730 to leave Wisconsin and flee east to the Iroquois.Caught in the open in northern Illinois, they were almost annihilated bythe French and their allies. The few remaining Fox found refuge with theSauk living near Green Bay, but the French were determined to finish theFox and dispatched an expedition in 1734 to demand the Sauk surrender theFox. This was refused, and in the battle which followed, the Frenchcommander was killed. In the confusion, the Sauk and Fox escaped and fledwest of the Mississippi into Iowa. Another French expedition against themfailed in 1736, and at a conference held in Montreal during the spring of1737, the Winnebago and Menominee asked the French to show mercy to theFox while the Potawatomi and Ottawa made the same request on behalf of theSauk. The French reluctantly agreed and made peace. The departure of the Fox andSauk from Wisconsin provided the Winnebago an opportunity to expand theirrange to the south and west. Although some Winnebago remained in thevicinity of Green Bay after 1741, most moved their villages inland. Sincethe animal populations near Green Bay had never recovered from the stressplaced on them by the refugees during the 1600s, the Winnebago had beenforced to make longer and longer trips inland to feed themselves and findthe furs they needed for trade with the French. Although the Dakota andOjibwe were at war with each other over hunting territory in westernWisconsin, neither objected to Winnebago hunters in the area. TheMenominee enjoyed the same immunity, but in their case, the Fox and Saukwere a serious threat. The Winnebago were able to establish a friendlyrelationship with the Fox and Sauk after 1737, but the Menominee could not. Little fighting occurred in the western Great Lakes during the KingGeorge's War (1744-48), but Winnebago warriors travelled east to Montrealwith the Ottawa, Menominee, Saulteur and Mississauga Ojibwe, Illinois,Potawatomi, and Huron to defend Quebec from the British. The capture ofthe French fortress at Louisbourgh in 1745 allowed a British blockade ofthe St. Lawrence which cut the supply of French trade goods. The effectwas immediate, and the French quickly lost control of their allies in thethe Great Lakes. Nowhere was this more apparent than with the increasinglybeleaguered Illinois. In 1746 while the Winnebago and Menominee werefighting the Missouri west of the Mississippi, the Mascouten, Potawatomi,Menominee, and Ojibwe joined to force the Peoria from their laststrongholds in southern Wisconsin. Without the leverage of their tradegoods, the French were powerless to protect the Illinois, and the otherAlgonquin continued to attack them. Between 1751 and 1754, the Mascouten,Kickapoo, and Potawatomi took more territory from the Peoria - this timein northern Illinois. With the start of the French and Indian War (1755-63), the Winnebago onceagain went east to fight for the French. They helped to defeat Braddock atFort Duquesne and also fought at Oswego and in the French campaign innorthern New York in 1757. They paid a terrible price when Great Lakeswarriors contracted smallpox at Fort William Henry and brought it backwith them to their villages that winter. Smallpox swept through the GreatLakes and Ohio Valley taking most the western tribes out of the war.Meanwhile, a British blockade was having the same effect it had in 1746 instopping French trade goods. Dissatisfaction resulted, and during thewinter of 1758, an Menominee uprising at Green Bay killed 22 Frenchsoldiers. After the capture of Quebec by the British in September, 1759.France had lost the war in North America. Montreal surrendered thefollowing year, and British soldiers occupied Green Bay in 1761. The breakdown of French authority in the region had brought the Winnebago,Menominee, Potawatomi, and Winnebago at Green Bay to the verge of war withthe Michilimackinac Ojibwe in 1761, but the British assumed the old Frenchrole of mediator and provider of trade goods. In preventing the outbreakof serious warfare, the British won the trust and loyalty of the Winnebagoand Menominee. With the start of the Pontiac Rebellion in 1763, theWinnebago (also the Menominee, Sauk, Fox, Iowa and Arbre Croche Ottawa)sent wampum belts to the British as a token of their loyalty. Pontiac'srevolt quickly collapsed, and discredited among his own people aftersigning a peace with the British in 1766, he abandoned his village nearDetroit and moved to northern Illinois where he still had a loyalfollowing. In 1769 he was murdered by the nephew of a Peoria chief duringa visit to Cahokia (just east of St. Louis). Almost all of tribes of theold French alliance united in a war against the Illinois and almostexterminated them. The Peoria made their last stand at Starved Rock thatyear from which fewer than 200 reached safety at the French settlement ofKaskaskia. After a long wait, the Winnebago finally had their revengeagainst the Illinois. The victors then occupied much of the Illinoisterritory - the Winnebago's share was a portion of northwest Illinoisvalued because of its lead deposits. During the next 50 years, the Winnebago would ally with the British byfighting both the Spanish and Americans during the Revolutionary War(1775-83) and The Americans during the War of 1812 (1812-14). Earlyfighting in the west during the Revolutionary War was mostly confined toOhio and Kentucky and did not involve the Winnebago. George Rogers Clark'scapture of the Illinois country in 1778 created alarm. and the Britishmoved to reconcile disputes between the Great Lakes tribes and to use themagainst the Americans. To this end, they settled the lingering hostilitybetween the Green Bay tribes and the Michilimackinac Ojibwe as well asother disputes between the Ojibwe, Fox, and Sauk. and the Potawatomi andMiami. This allowed the Winnebago (also Fox, Sauk, Potawatomi, Dakota, andMenominee) in 1780 to join an unsuccessful British effort to capture St.Louis from the Spanish (Spain had joined the war against Britain) andretake Illinois from the Americans. The Revolutionary War "officially"ended in 1783 with the Treaty of Paris, but in the Ohio Valley, theBritish continued to occupy Detroit and their other forts on Americanterritory until the United States paid its treaty obligations to Britishloyalists. In the meantime, the British encouraged the formation of a westernalliance to keep the Americans out of Ohio. They succeeded until theBattle of Fallen Timbers in 1794. The Winnebago in Wisconsin were too faraway to participate in this effort, but the British dominated the tribesand trade of the Upper Great Lakes until the 1830s. Intertribal warfareduring the 1770s and 80s had hindered the fur trade, and at the request ofMontreal fur traders, the British met with the tribes of upper Great Lakesat Michilimackinac in October, 1786. The treaty signed there produced 20years of peace with the exception of the war between the Dakota and Ojibwewhich continued until the 1850s. This, however, was not a problem for theWinnebago who were friendly with both parties and free to hunt in the warzone between them. They also maintained a friendship with the Fox and Saukliving along the Mississippi in eastern Iowa and western Illinois, and itcan be said that during this period the Winnebago lived in peace with veryfew enemies. However, their ties to the Fox and Sauk and those leaddeposits in northwest Illinois would soon bring this to an end. The United States purchase of the Louisiana Territory from France in 1803changed the Winnebago's homeland from being at the edge to the center ofAmerican territory. Before this, the Winnebago had known the Americans asa distant enemy. Aside from their foray into the Illinois with the Britishin 1780, the Winnebago had never really met an American. This changed whenZebulon Pike's expedition explored the upper Mississippi in 1805. Hismeeting with the Winnebago near Prairie du Chien was peaceful, but theWinnebago soon had reason to worry. During 1804 William Henry Harrisonentertained a visiting Fox and Sauk delegation at St. Louis and, aftergetting them drunk, succeeded in convincing them to sign away theirtribe's lands east of the Mississippi in exchange for a few presents. Nextcame Fort Madison, the first American fort on the upper Mississippi, builtin southeast Iowa in 1809 and garrisoned with 50 soldiers. The Fox and Sauk refused to acknowledge the 1804 treaty and instantlybecame hostile to the Americans. The Winnebago were also concerned becauseof the lead deposits in their lands in northwest Illinois. In 1788 the Foxhad allowed Julien Dubuque, a French-Canadian from Michilimackinac, toopen a lead mine near the site of the Iowa city which now bears his name.Dubuque obtained a Spanish land grant to the site in 1796 and becamewealthy from fur trading and lead mining. When he died in 1810, St.Louiscreditors and land speculators attempted to seize his holdings, but theFox and Sauk prevented this by burning Dubuque's buildings to the ground.The threat of American takeover was no longer a distant threat in Ohio,and the Winnebago listened with great interest in 1809 to the religion ofTenskwatawa, the Shawnee Prophet and the call for unity and no furtherland cessions by his brother Tecumseh. Within a short time, the Winnebagowere one of the most militant members of Tecumseh's alliance against theAmericans. The Winnebago began making regular visits to Prophetstown (Tippecanoe) inIndiana during 1810 and even established a permanent village (Village duPuant) nearby. Tecumseh went south in the fall of 1811 to enlist thesouthern tribes against the Americans, During his absence, the Potawatomiattacked American settlements in Illinois starting a frontier war. WilliamHenry Harrison, the governor of the Indiana Territory, organized an armyand in November marched on Prophetstown. Tenskwatawa ignored his brother'sinstructions to avoid any confrontation with the Americans while he wasabsent and ordered his warriors to attack. The Winnebago lost heavily atthe Battle of Tippecanoe, but the military defeat was not nearly asimportant as the damage done to Tensquatawa's reputation as a prophet.Angry Winnebago warriors held him prisoner for two weeks and almost killedhim. When Tecumseh returned in January, 1812, his alliance was inshambles, but he able to rebuild and soon regained the allegiance of theWinnebago. With the outbreak of the War of 1812 (1812-14) in June, theWinnebago threw their support to Tecumseh and the British. With the Fox, Sauk, and Potawatomi, the Winnebago besieged Fort Madisonand forced its abandonment in 1813. Winnebago warriors also fought as partof Tecumseh's forces at Maumee Rapids and River Raisin in Ohio andMichigan. After Tecumseh was killed at the Battle of the Thames (October,1813), the Winnebago joined 500 warriors from the upper Great Lakes tohelp the British defeat the American attempt to retake FortMichilimackinac in August, 1814. The War of 1812 ended in a stalematebetween the British and Americans, but for the tribes of the Great Lakesand Ohio Valley it was total defeat. The Winnebago made peace with theAmericans at St. Louis in June, 1816. Their first treaty with the UnitedStates did not involve land cessions and called upon both sides to forgiveand forget injuries suffered during the war. The Winnebago kept their partof the agreement but remained hostile. They allowed Americans to travelthrough their territory from Mississippi to the Fox portage but chargedtolls. After the War of 1812, settlement began to advance up the Mississippi fromSt. Louis, but warfare in Iowa and Minnesota between the Dakota, Ojibwe,Fox, and Sauk slowed its progress. The government in 1825 attempted to endthe fighting at a grand council held with the area's tribes at Prairie duChien. Attended by the Ojibwe, Fox, Sauk, Menominee, Iowa, Sioux,Winnebago, Ottawa, and Potawatomi, the resulting treaty attempted to endintertribal warfare by establishing boundaries between them. It alsocreated a 40-mile wide buffer zone between the Dakota, Fox and Sauk innortheast Iowa. Called the Neutral Ground, the Americans hoped to relocatethe Winnebago there since they were friendly with both sides, but theWinnebago did not share the Americans optimism for this arrangement. Sinceits purpose was to facilitate settlement, the treaty made almost noprovision to protect native lands from white encroachment. It had onlylimited success in preventing warfare, but settlement afterwards movednorth at an accelerated pace. During the next 15 years the Winnebago would be forced to surrender mostof their homeland. The first target was the lead deposits in northwestIllinois, and in what can be described as the first (and last) "leadrush," Americans rushed in to stake their claims. Government agentsdescribed these people as "lawless" but did nothing to preventencroachment. Less than two years after the Treaty of Prairie du Chien,the Winnebago were forced into war to defend their lands. The resistance,known as the Winnebago War (1827), was led by the Winnebago Prophet WhiteCloud and the war chief Red Bird. Fighting began in the summer of 1827when a barge ascending the Mississippi near Prairie du Chien was firedupon. Other attacks killed some settlers along the lower Wisconsin Riverand struck the lead mines near Galena, Illinois. Soldiers were rushednorth from Jefferson Barracks at St. Louis, and by August it was over.Faced with a war they could not win, Red Bird and White Cloud surrenderedthemselves to be hanged to save their people. Red Bird died in prison, butWhite Cloud was pardoned by the president and released. Meanwhile, in atreaty signed a Green Bay in August, 1828, the Winnebago (also Ojibwe,Potawatomi, and Ottawa) ceded northern Illinois for $540,000. With the lead mining district secured, the next victims were the Fox andSauk in western Illinois. As a condition of peace in 1816, the UnitedStates had finally gotten their reluctant acceptance of that dubioustreaty signed at St. Louis in 1804 ceding all of their lands east of theMississippi. The bait was that the Fox and Sauk could stay until theAmericans needed the land. Most likely. neither the Fox, Sauk nor theAmerican representatives realized how soon this would be. Illinois becamea state in 1818 and within ten years was pressing for removal. Blackhawk'sSauk at Rock Island refused to move, but after the Menominee and Dakotamurdered 15 Fox chiefs enroute to a meeting with the Americans at Prairiedu Chien, war seemed eminent. Blackhawk brought his people west into Iowato protect the Fox and Sauk villages there from Dakota attacks which nevercame. When he started back to Illinois, the Americans refused to allow himto recross the Mississippi. Throughout the winter of 1831-32, the old war chief sat in eastern Iowaand fumed. In his anger, he listened to arguments from his friend Neapopeand the Winnebago Prophet (White Cloud) convincing him the British andother tribes were ready to join him against the Americans. In the springhe defiantly crossed the river into Illinois touching off the BlackhawkWar (1832). The help did not materialize. Only a few Potawatomi and WhiteCloud's small following among the Winnebago joined the revolt. Pursued bythe army and Illinois militia, Blackhawk retreated towards Wisconsinhoping to reach safety with either the Winnebago or Ojibwe. Most Winnebagowanted nothing to do with him and refused to help. Finally realizing this,Blackhawk turned west to try to return to Iowa. He never made it. Trappedbetween an American army and gunboat at the mouth of the Bad Axe River,the Sauk were slaughtered before surrendering. Menominee and Dakotawarriors killed many of those who managed to elude capture by theAmericans. A marked man, Blackhawk escaped before the battle and fled north. He wascaptured by the Winnebago of Chief Spoon Decorah (Choukeka), a friend ofthe Americans, who delivered him to the Indian Agent at Prairie du Chien.Despite this, the general feeling among the Americans was that theWinnebago had cooperated with Blackhawk. By the harsh terms of the treatynegotiated by General Winfield Scott at Fort Armstrong in September, 1832,the Winnebago ceded their lands east of the Mississippi and agreed to moveto Neutral Ground in northeast Iowa. They were to receive $270,000($10,000/year for 27 years) and were required to surrender several oftheir tribesmen accused of murdering whites during the war. Settlementmoved into southern Wisconsin afterwards, but the Winnebago remained intheir old lands, primarily because of hostility among the Fox and Sauk forthe Winnebago's failure to help them during the Blackhawk War. One out of four Winnebago died during a smallpox epidemic in 1836, whichmay have been a not-so-subtle hint for them to leave Wisconsin. A secondtreaty signed at Washington, D.C. in 1837 confirmed the Winnebago cessionof Wisconsin and reduced the size of the Neutral Ground, but the Winnebagodid not leave until 1840 when General Henry Atkinson refused to make theirannuities except at the Turkey River Subagency (Decorah, Iowa). By 1842approximately 2,200 Winnebago had settled in villages near the agencywhich was guarded by cavalry stationed nearby at Fort Atkinson, anecessary precaution since the threat of attack by the Fox and Sauk wasvery real. During the winter of 1839, they had killed 40 members of aWinnebago hunting party west of Wapsipinicon River. The following year,Fox and Sauk decided to attack the Winnebago villages near the agency butwere only prevented by a unusually heavy snowfall that winter. Meanwhile,more than 1,000 Winnebago had remained in their homeland giving FortAtkinson's cavalry the added problem of keeping the Iowa Winnebago fromgoing back to Wisconsin. With Iowa statehood in 1846, it was time for the Winnebago to be movedagain. In a 1845 treaty, the Winnebago exchanged their Iowa lands for the800,000 acre Long Prairie (Crow Wing River) reserve in Minnesota and$190,000. The move ended the threat of the Fox and Sauk, but placed theWinnebago as a buffer between the Dakota and Ojibwe. Some Winnebagomanaged to remain in northeast Iowa for more than a century, but the maingroup was moved during 1848 and 1849. The new location was unsatisfactoryfrom the beginning. Not only was there poor soil and a short growingseason, but the Ojibwe used the agency as a way-station to attack theDakota. In a treaty signed in 1856, the government allowed the Winnebagoto exchange the Long Prairie reserve from another farther south inMinnesota at Blue Earth. As their population declined, the Winnebagosurrendered a part of this in 1859 as excess lands. All went well until the Dakota uprising erupted in the Minnesota RiverValley during 1862 killing over 400 whites. The Winnebago had no part inthis, but in the aftermath, Minnesota was no longer safe. The Winnebagowere forcibly gathered together and deported by steamboat down theMississippi and then up the Missouri to the Crow Creek reservation inSouth Dakota with the Yankton (Sioux). Some got to leave the steamboat atHannibal, Missouri and travel by train to St. Joseph where they were putback on a boat for the rest of their journey up the Missouri. Evenallowing that the Civil War was in progress, conditions were terrible atthe South Dakota reservation. Many Winnebago slipped away to return toMinnesota and Wisconsin. Finally, the remaining 1,200 left enmass and fleddown the Missouri to ask the Omaha in eastern Nebraska for a refuge. The government finally accepted their self-relocation and in 1865purchased 40,000 acres from the Omaha to provide the Winnebago with theirown reservation. Life in Nebraska was far from easy, and exposed to Lakota(Sioux) raids, many of the Nebraska Winnebago volunteered as army scoutsagainst Lakota during 1868. While Winnebago were serving as scouts, theIndian Bureau - in its wisdom - conceived a plan of relocating theWinnebago to North Dakota as a buffer between the Lakota and the Mandan,Hidatsa, and Arikara. For some reason, the Winnebago declined. Meanwhile,the Winnebago in Wisconsin were routinely being arrested and returned toNebraska. Within a month, they were usually back in Wisconsin. After tenyears of this game, the government gave up after 1875, purchased homesteadlands for the Winnebago, and let them stay in Wisconsin. During the 1880s,over half of the Nebraska Winnebago went home to Wisconsin where they haveremained ever since scattered across ten counties. The other Winnebagoremained in Nebraska although 1/3 of their original 40,000 acrereservation was eventually lost to whites through allotment after 1887. First Nations referred to in this Winnebago History: Iroquois Kickapoo Mascouten Menominee Montagnais Neutral Shawnee Tionontati I look forward to your comments... Lee Sultzman. Histories Site FirstNations Index Vacation Vehicle | Vacation Vehicle | RV Rental There are | rv Rental Rates Rental | RV rentals, truck campers, | RV Rental | RV Rental vacation in | RV Rental & Sales | RV Rental > Camper | RV Rental Quote Request | RV Rentals Canada .... | RV Rental There are | RV Rental | RV rentals. Motorhome Vacations | RV Rental Country Index | RV Rental | RV rental and car | RV Rental | RV Rental to fill | RV Rentals | Reserve | |
Home Recreation Vehicle recreation vehicle. Stay at Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicles Your automobile Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Frequently Asked Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle and Mobile Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Service Technician Recreation Vehicle Service Technician recreation vehicle? 13. Is recreation vehicle laws as Recreation Vehicles Vicki Long Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicle Rental Association Recreation Vehicle Industry Association Recreation Vehicle Service Technician Recreation Vehicle Service Technician Recreation Vehicle Service Technician Recreation Vehicle Service Technician Recreation Vehicle recreation vehicles. National estimates Recreation Vehicle Recreation Vehicles (Draft)" (PDF, Recreation Vehicle Recreation vehicle service technicians Recreation Vehicle Rental Association Recreation Vehicles and Campgrounds RV Trader RV Insider RV Institute Ehlert Online RV vacation is more RV in the News.................................................. RV RVing - RV Maintenance RV - wrv.com About RV Ads Place RV rves the right to RVing RV Owners Solo rvice contact us cambridge rve Popups, SPAM or rview Coverage Areas Testimonials RV links to begin RV Trade Show: Whats RV refrigerators and a RVB Dealer Directory RV RV Site Rates Cabin Rv On The Go rvice and advice you RVing FAQ Forum Rules rvations Here! Please visit RV MAIN SYNOPSIS CREDITS RV SHOW GENERALINFORMATION RVSHOW RV-List Subscription Form . Mobile Home | Site Mobile Homes of Mississippi Mobile Home Mobile Home Google Mobile Mobile Home Mobile Home Contractor 1) mobile home and modular Mobile Home Ringtones Wallpaper Mobile Homes Normally Cost Mobile Home Why Tesco mobile homes increased significantly Mobile Home Mobile homes, on the Mobile Home Safety Act Mobile Home Google Mobile Mobile Home mobile home parks " Mobile Home Ringtones Wallpaper Mobile Homes Car Hire Mobile Home Mobile Home mobile home, but you Mobile Home) Manufacturing This Mobile Home Park, Florida Mobile Home mobile home. [Before we mobile homes or other Mobile Homes Hillcrest (0) Mobile Home Mobile Home Mobile Home Mobile Home Mobile Home Mobile Homes SURVEY OF Mobile Home Park, Bayou Motor Homes has Sold Motor Home |