Inscription
Indian Dave was one of the last Chippewas to hunt, fish and trap in the old manner in the Tuscola County area. Dave was born around 1803 and given the name Ish-Don-Quit. According to legend, in 1819 he attended the gathering at the Saginaw River where 114 Chippewa chiefs and braves signed the Treaty of Saginaw. The treaty ceded about 6,000,000 acres of land in central eastern Michigan to the United States. Indian Dave fascinated youngsters with his tales and native customs. A mural portrait honoring him has hung in a Vassar bank for decades.
[Back]: The earliest recorded inhabitants of Tuscola County were Sauk Indians. But Chippewas occupied the area by the time of the first permanent white settlement in 1836. Exactly when Indian Dave settled here is not known. However, in 1866, in order to resolve the Vassar/Caro county-seat dispute, he and Peter Bush transported the county records to Caro by canoe. Dave was an expert at making bows and arrows, which he often sold for his livelihood. When he died in 1909, he was believed to be 106 years old. He is buried nearby in Wisner Cemetery.
Location
Sources
More markers in Tuscola
Watrousville United Methodist Church
Caro, MI
Circuit riders, who traveled through local villages, served the Watrousville United Methodist Church when it was established in 1856.
Trinity Episcopal Church
Caro, MI
This skillfully designed board and batten Gothic Revival church, first served local Episcopalians in 1880.
Tuscola County Advertiser
Caro, MI
The Tuscola County Advertiser began publishing on August 21, 1868.
Tuscola County Courthouse
Caro, MI
Peter DeWitt Bush (1818-1913), the second permanent resident of the village of Caro, donated this site for the county courthouse square...
Gagetown
Gagetown, MI
Brothers Joseph and James Gage immigrated from Canada in 1860.
