The Wild Frontier (38 page)

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Authors: William M. Osborn

BOOK: The Wild Frontier
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On July 17, there were Indian raids all along the Platte River. An unknown number of people were killed.
70
On July 19, Indians attacked a wagon train at Walnut Creek. Ten were killed, and 2 more were scalped but lived. In August more than 50 people were killed in raids, 10 of whom were tortured to death. The trail was closed for nearly 6 weeks, and supplies were short. Evans asked Curtis for more troops, but Curtis could not spare them. He did authorize formation of the Third Colorado Volunteer Cavalry Regiment, the troops Chivington would lead to the Sand Creek Massacre. They enlisted for 100 days.
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A little more than 2 weeks later, Evans issued a proclamation “calling on all friendly Indians to quit the company of those at war and report to designated military posts, ‘places of safety’ where they would be fed and protected.” Few Indians responded.
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He then issued a second proclamation on August 10, authorizing whites “to seek out and kill on sight all hostile Indians, defined as anyone who had not come in for protection.” In addition, the public “could take or destroy all property of the hostiles.”
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Black Kettle and other Cheyenne peace chiefs sent a letter to 2 Indian agents stating that the Cheyenne council had met and would make peace if the government would also make peace with the Kiowa, Comanche, Arapaho, Apache, and Sioux. He offered to exchange 7 Cheyenne prisoners for Indian prisoners held by the government in Denver. The letter was delivered to Major Edward Wynkoop, commander at Fort Lyon.

Wynkoop had strong feelings about Indians, and later admitted he “belonged to the exterminators.” Wynkoop believed Indians were universally treacherous and had “nothing but instincts of a wild beast.” He announced that as barriers to civilization, they “had no rights that we were bound to respect.”
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Wynkoop took 127 troops and went to Black Kettle. He was met by
800 warriors with arrows at the ready. He noticed many of them had rifles and pistols as well. Black Kettle agreed to talk. Wynkoop proposed taking any delegation of chiefs they chose to talk peace with Evans and said he would do his best to procure peace for them. He suggested that the chiefs take their families to Fort Lyon, where they could wait “in safety” for the chiefs’ return from the meeting with the governor in Denver. The next day the Cheyenne released 4 young female prisoners, stating the other 3 had been sold to the Sioux. They said they would go the 400 miles to Denver to see Evans to make peace.
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Just as soon as he arrived in Denver with the chiefs, Wynkoop immediately went to the Evans home. The governor couldn’t see him. The next morning, Governor Evans came to Wynkoop’s room and said he would not meet with the chiefs because they had declared war, and, more important, the Colorado Third had been formed to kill Indians, “and they must kill Indians.” Wynkoop convinced the reluctant Evans to meet the chiefs. Colonel Chivington, as commander of the military district, wired the developments to General Curtis. Curtis replied, “I want no peace until the Indians suffer more.”
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The meeting between Evans and the chiefs at Camp Weld on September 28, 1864, was tense. Black Kettle reminded the governor of the first proclamation he made, which promised that Cheyenne and Arapaho who went to Fort Lyon would receive protection. Black Kettle was not told it might no longer be applicable. Evans accused Black Kettle of being allied with the Sioux, who were at war with the settlers. Black Kettle and other chiefs denied that they had joined forces with the Sioux.
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At the end, Chivington, who had said nothing up to then, announced, “My rule of fighting white men or Indians is to fight them until they lay down their arms and submit to military authority. You [Indians] are nearer to Major Wynkoop [at Fort Lyon] than anyone else, and you can go with him when you get ready to do that.”
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The Indians were pleased with the meeting. They thought they had ended the war and had made peace, but Evans and Chivington thought not. The next day Evans wrote to Sam Colley, the Indian agent for the Cheyenne and Arapaho, that he had not made peace with them, and that they must make peace with the military authorities. His annual report to the commissioner of Indian affairs characterized most of the Indians as hostile. They would have to be conquered by force. In a return message, the commissioner criticized Evans. He had the duty to encourage peace, he said, and a spirit of conciliation should have been shown.
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Wynkoop reported the situation to his commanding officer, Major General Samuel R. Curtis. Among other things, he suggested that “if peace terms were to be offered to the Indians, he could guarantee their fidelity by having all the Indian villages located near the fort where they would be subject to his control.”
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When Wynkoop’s report was received, Curtis was away from Fort Riley, so his aide, Major B. S. Henning, read it and wired Chivington on the day of the meeting with Black Kettle that Wynkoop had somehow acted against policy. Henning relieved Wynkoop of command of Fort Lyon and put Major Scott J. Anthony in charge. No Indians were to be allowed in the vicinity of the fort for any reason. Anthony arrived and took command.
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(Wynkoop learned after the battle that he had been relieved because he “left his district without orders to escort the chiefs to Governor Evans in Denver instead of to Curtis.”)
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The Arapaho, 652 strong, made a camp near Fort Lyon. Anthony demanded to know why they were there. The Arapaho told him that although other tribes were at war, they came to the fort to show they wanted peace, to be where the public wouldn’t be frightened of them and where they wouldn’t be harmed by travelers or soldiers. Anthony was surprised because Henning had told him the Indians near the fort were hostile. Anthony told the Arapaho they could stay if they would surrender their weapons and stolen stock. They agreed. Anthony noticed they were hungry and gave them food, contrary to his orders. Ten days later, he changed his mind. He returned their weapons and recommended they kill game to live on.
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He wrote to General Curtis, “I told them … that no war would be waged against them until your pleasure was heard.”
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Shortly, Black Kettle and about 70 Cheyenne arrived. Anthony said he didn’t have instructions to make peace with them, but he would let them know at once if and when he got such instructions. He said the Cheyenne should camp on Sand Creek, which was 40 miles away. Wynkoop had told them Anthony was now in charge and would treat the Cheyenne the same as he had done, and Anthony encouraged the Indians to believe this. But Anthony was acting with duplicity. Two weeks after arriving at the fort, he reported to Curtis that he intended to wait until he got reinforcements, then he would take to the field against all Indians. He specifically mentioned Black Kettle’s Cheyenne village at Sand Creek. Chivington had decided to attack them also.
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Five days before the Sand Creek Massacre, on November 29, 1864, Chivington had supper with trader James Combs. Chivington inquired about the Indians. Were they well fed? Where were they located? Were
they armed? Chivington then stated the purpose of his mission. He told Combs, “Scalps are what we are after.”
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As Combs was leaving, he heard Chivington say to his officers, “Well, I long to be wading in gore.”
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Chivington wanted to take the Cheyenne at Sand Creek by surprise and made elaborate preparations. He did not tell General Curtis about the planned attack on Sand Creek.
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The night before the troops were to leave for Sand Creek, several officers and some civilians objected to what was about to happen because of the promises that had been made to the Cheyenne. They included Lieutenant James Cannon, Lieutenant W. P. Minton, Lieutenant C. M. Cossitt, Captain Silas S. Soule, and Lieutenant Joseph Cramer, who protested first to Anthony and then to Chivington that under the circumstances the attack would be murder. Chivington exploded. Cheyenne were evil and “damn any man who is in sympathy with them.” As he left the room, he remarked loudly that Cramer should get out of the service. A last effort to call off the attack was made by Lieutenants Cossitt, Minton, and Maynard, Indian agent Sam Colley, and some other civilians. Chivington said again, “Damn any man who is in sympathy with an Indian.”
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There were about 750 men in the attack, including Anthony with 125 from the Colorado First.
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They were drunk, according to Carl Waldman and James Wilson.
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An elderly guide named Jim Beckwourth, a black trapper, became so stiff and cold he couldn’t continue. Robert Bent, the half-Cheyenne son of William Bent, the founder of the first American settlement in Colorado, was ordered to take Beckwourth’s place. Bent had 3 sisters and a brother in the camp at Sand Creek. Near daybreak, Bent suggested he might run off. Chivington tapped his revolver, looked at Bent, and said, “I haven’t had an Indian to eat in a long time. If you fool with me, and don’t lead us to that camp, I’ll have you for breakfast.”
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When they reached the village, Chivington first ordered 2 groups to run off the Indian horses. He addressed the troops, telling them to remove their coats so they could fight better, and in effect told them to take no prisoners. In the Indian camp, the 700 galloping horses awakened the Indians. Black Kettle hoisted an American flag that had been given to him by a commissioner of Indian affairs with the advice that it would protect the Cheyenne when approached by soldiers. He also raised a small white flag. He told his people not to be afraid because the camp was under the protection of the American flag.
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Then the troops opened fire, beginning the Sand Creek Massacre. The
Colorado Third Hundred Dazers, led by Chivington, dismounted and began firing right through Anthony’s men. Chivington shouted, “Remember the murdered women and children on the Platte.”
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Anthony’s troops fled to a creek to avoid the gunfire from the Third. All control was lost and never regained.
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Cheyenne chief White Antelope was a noted warrior who fought Comanche and Kiowa in the 1830s. He was one of the few Dog Soldiers (an Indian military society) to counsel peace with the settlers.
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As the Sand Creek Massacre began, White Antelope ran toward the soldiers wearing his presidential medal and shouting in English for them to stop killing his people. Black Kettle called for him to run away. White Antelope halted in the creek, folded his arms, and chanted his death song:

          Nothing lives long

          Except the earth and the mountains

and waited to die. Bullets hit his chest, he fell, and the troops scalped him and cut off his ears and nose. Chief Left Hand said he would not fight his friends, the white men, and was killed. Others made no effort to fight or flee. Many walked toward the soldiers with raised hands, but all were killed. Every soldier was engaged except the troops of Captain Soule, who had pledged the Indians safety. He ordered his men not to fire. About 100 Indians fled for a mile along the creek bed to where the banks had gulleys and ravines. They dug in there with knives and bare hands. Soldiers fired at them from both banks. Soldiers then went into the banks and killed the wounded and the women and children who had not been hurt. The killing went on for almost 4 hours, then the troops left.
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There were many additional atrocities. A dismounted soldier standing near Chivington tried to scalp a dead woman. A naked 3-year-old was walking in the sand trying to reach the Indians ahead of him. A soldier shot at him and missed, another missed, but a third killed him. Five women crouched under a bank for shelter. When they were discovered, they showed the soldiers they were females, begged for mercy, but all were killed anyhow. An Indian woman with a broken leg was lying on the bank. A soldier came up with drawn saber, she raised her arm for protection, he broke it with his saber, she rolled over, raising her other arm, and he broke it as well. Some other women huddled in a hole for protection. They sent a girl about 6 out with a white flag. She was killed. A 5-year-old girl tried to hide in the sand. Two soldiers found her, killed her, and pulled her out by the arm. Several babies were killed along with their mothers in their mothers’ arms.
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An old woman wandered around blinded because her entire scalp had been taken and the skin of her forehead had fallen over her eyes. Several soldiers quarreled over who should scalp a body. They all took part of the scalp. Soldiers took turns “profaning the body of a comely young squaw” who was dead. Fingers were cut off to get Indian rings. One soldier carried a heart impaled on a stick. Soldiers collected male genitals. The breasts of Indian women were sliced off; one was worn as a cap, another stretched over the bow of a saddle. A little boy was buried alive in a trench. A major blew off the top of the boy’s head with a pistol. Three adult females and 5 children were being conducted down a road by soldiers when Lieutenant Harry Richmond of the Third appeared and killed and scalped all 8 while they were screaming for mercy. The soldiers shrank back, apparently disapproving.
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One soldier wrote, “They were scalped, their brains knocked out. The men used their knives, ripped open women, clubbed little children, knocked them in the head with their guns, beat their brains out, [and] mutilated their bodies in every sense of the word.”
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More than 100 Indians were killed.
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Robert Bent stayed at the site of the massacre for a time. He said that 163 were killed, of which 110 were women and children.
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Wilson estimated the Indian dead at between 105 and 200,
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and West believed there were around 150 dead.
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Many estimates were higher, including Chivington’s of 400 to 500.
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Probably there were fewer than 70 armed warriors in the camp. They held off the 700 soldiers long enough to permit most of the Indians, about 500, to escape, including Black Kettle.
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Afterward, Major Anthony wrote to his brother praising the bravery of the Indians, but adding that “we, of course, took no prisoners.”
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Nine soldiers were killed outright, and 4 more died later.
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