![]() ![]() ![]() The people of Hannahville have been federally recognized since 1936. In 1913, Congress acknowledged the Hannahville Potawatomi and purchased 3.400 acres of land in scattered parcels and added another 39 acres in 1942. According to church records, the people were very fond of Marksman wife, Hannah and named their community after her. During this time he has been credited with finding a parcel of land and moving the Potawatomi people to the current location. It was at this time they settled along the Big Cedar River.Ĭhurch records report that Marksman was sent to the area as an assistant, rather than the presiding Missionary. In 1853 some these people began returning to Michigan. They lived with the Menominee in Northern Wisconsin, and the Ojibway and Ottawa people in Canada. The people of Hannahville are descendents of those who refused to leave Michigan in 1834 during the great Indian Removal. The original settlement is thought to have been along the mouth of the Big Cedar River, on Lake Michigan. Little information is available through the Missionary records as the presiding elders or missionary failed to keep detailed records of the Mission. The Hannahville Indian Reservation is a Potawatomi Reservation and according to records the current location was founded in 1884 under the direction of Methodist Missionary, Peter Marksman. ![]()
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