Aracoma "Sky" Baker

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Aracoma "Sky" Baker (Cornstalk)

Also Known As: "Little Corn Blossom"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Ohio, United States
Death: 1780 (36-37)
Aracoma's Village, now, Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States (Killed)
Place of Burial: Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States
Immediate Family:

Daughter of Helizikinopo
Wife of Boling Baker
Mother of Little Black Bear Baker; Snow Lily Baker; Running Deer Baker; Waulalisippi “Laughing Water” Baker; Blue Feather Baker and 1 other
Sister of Kaweeshee "Greenbrier" Cornstalk; Catherine Cornstalk; Walker Pomethea "Robert" Cornstalk; Chenusaw T. J., Cornstalk; Elizabeth Cornstalk and 3 others

Occupation: "Indian Princess"
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Aracoma "Sky" Baker

https://loganwv.us/battle-of-the-island/

"Princess" Aracoma Sky Cornstalk

  • parents: Keigh-tugh-quah, Chief Cornstalk (1710-1777) & Heliziknopo
  • Birth: 1740 in Shawnee Nation,Ohio
  • Death: 1780 in Logan County,West Virginia

one of America's most romatic legends, the story of Princess Aracoma and British Soldier, Boling Baker. The story grew in Logan County, West Virginia around the authentic details of an incident in the history of the region more than 200 years ago. The story asserts that Princess Aracoma and a British Soldier, Boling Baker, moved into this valley sometime close to the year 1760 and lived in peace on the island (today's City of Logan) until 1780.

notes

From Princess Aracoma Cornstalk Baker Memorial Cemetery

The above was assembled from treaty signings and other affairs where the name is recorded as "son of or daughter of Cornstalk"

After the Battle of Point Pleasant and the death of Chief Cornstalk in 1774, the Shawnees in West Virginia were under the command of Aracoma. Aracoma is credited with settling the conflict between the native population and the settlers through her marriage to a white man, Boling Baker. Aracoma brought peace to the people and lived among them until her death in 1780.

An Indian raid on the frontier settlement which had been made on the Bluestone River in the western part of Virginia in 1780, which led to a pursuit of the savages and culminated in a battle with the Indians on a site which lay within the present bounds of the city of Logan, and in which Princess Aracoma, the daughter of the doughty Indian chief, Cornstalk, received fatal wounds, and before her death, delivered to General William Madison the leader of the pursuing white troops, the following warning: (text of Aracoma's speech)

"My name is Aracoma, (meaning a corn blossom) and I am the last of a mighty race. My father was a great chief and a friend of your people. He was murdered in cold blood by the white when he came to them as a friend to give them warning. I am the wife of a paleface who came across the great waters to make war on my people, but came to us and was made one of us. A great plague many moons ago carried off my children and they lie buried just above the bend in the river.
Bury me with them with my face toward the setting sun that I may see my people on their march to the happy hunting grounds. For your kindness I warn you to make haste in returning to your homes for my tribe is still powerful and will return to avenge my death."

Aracoma lingered far into the night with her death struggle, but before morning dawned her spirit had taken its eternal flight. That afternoon the white buried Aracoma, amid tears that fell for a savage that displayed courage to the last, and who was willing to forgive her slayers through the compassionate heart that flourished in a noble body and a soul with comely face, and a body of physical beauty.

The fragments of this true, historical narrative has been obtained and here compiled for the glorification and to the sacred memory of Aracoma, an Indian Princess who never knew civilization, but who loved her people with passionate ardor and who ruled with the utmost tenderness and compassion. Princess Aracoma has long since been laid to rest, but the memory linger on.

  • * * * *

In 1915, when the Abdoney building was being constructed on the 100 block of Stratton Street, Logan WV, the workmen uncovered a grave that was eight feet deep, considerably deeper than the other Shawnee graves in the county. In it was a skeleton of a young woman and a necklace of buckhorn beads. The string had rotted away, but the necklace was still arranged around the neck. The odd and haunting irony was that the skeleton was buried at the bend of the Guyandotte, almost exactly where the old and half forgotten traditions claimed was the final resting place of Aracoma.


  • Change Date: 6 JAN 2007 at 23:10:03 Aaracoma Father: Chief "Keigh-tugh-quah" CORNSTALK b: 1720 in Wynepuechisika Village,Western Pennsylvania Mother: HELIZIKINOPO b: 1715 in Pennsylvania Marriage 1 Bolin (Andrew W. Sr. And Mary Agnes Bolling) BAKER b: 4 MAY 1738 in Ashe County,North Carolina Married: 1762 1 Sources:  1. Title: GEDCOM File : woltzbowers.ged Date: 31 MAR 2006 Marriage 1 Bolin (Andrew W. Sr. And Mary Agnes Bolling) BAKER b: 4 MAY 1738 in Ashe County,North Carolina Married: 1762
  • http://mornstarz.blogspot.com/2008/04/2-1-1.html
    • Chief Corn Stalk [aka Wneypuechsika, Keightughquah -which signified a blade or stalk of maize; - - b about 1710 in Greenbrier County,Western PA d 11 Nov 1777 murdered by whites married (1) Helizikinopo by 1730 -Shawnee [likely a Mekoche], b abt 1715 PA d aft 1756 OH sister of Big Snake ---children-- Chenusaw, Wolf, Walker, Newa, Aracoma (Baker), Greenbrier (Kennison), Cornstalk Jr, Mary (Swift-Adkins), Ellinipsico, Elizabeth (Petella), Esther (Sowards), Oceana-all Shawnee
  • Shawnee Heritage II  By Don Greene.  Page 254
  • Shawnee Heritage IX By Don Greene.  
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Aracoma "Sky" Baker's Timeline

1743
1743
Ohio, United States
1761
1761
Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States
1763
1763
Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States
1765
1765
Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States
1767
1767
Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States
1769
1769
Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States
1771
1771
Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States
1780
1780
Age 37
Aracoma's Village, now, Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States
????
Princess Aracoma Cornstalk Baker Memorial, Logan, Logan County, West Virginia, United States