President Abraham Lincoln's cursive handwriting was steady and measured. He spelled out the English version of each name — in quotation marks — when he ordered the execution of 39 Dakota men for their role in the U.S.-Dakota War that began 155 years ago this month.
"Ta-te-mi-ma," translated as Round Wind, was the ninth name Lincoln listed in his handwritten letter from the executive mansion in Washington to Brigadier Gen. Henry Sibley in St. Paul. That chilling letter, dated Dec. 6, 1862, lives online at the Minnesota Historical Society's website: usdakotawar.org/history/aftermath/trials-hanging.
Twenty days after Lincoln wrote those 39 names, 4,000 spectators and soldiers surrounded a scaffolding on the day after Christmas in Mankato. The condemned men grasped hands as a single ax blow cut a rope, dropping the platform and sending 38 men to their deaths in the largest mass execution in U.S. history.
Round Wind was not among them.
"The night before the execution a dispatch was received from the President countermanding the order for his execution," said Dr. Thomas Williamson, a medical doctor and missionary.
Round Wind's conversion to Christianity, his age (about 65) and the sketchy testimony of two young German boys at his murder trial were among the factors saving his life on that deadly day. Williamson and another influential missionary, the Rev. Stephen Riggs, likely helped Round Wind escape the gallows.
"I never believed him guilty," said Williamson, whose brother-in-law spoke with Round Wind after war broke out "and yet was not molested by him."
A week after the war erupted in western Minnesota, Williamson said Round Wind found a 5-year-old girl settler in a deserted home, starving to death. Round Wind "took her home and had her carefully nursed till she got well," the missionary said.