Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Friday, November 1, 2024
Sunday, November 1, 1874. The Battle of Sunset Pass
Friday, October 11, 2024
Wednesday, October 11, 1724. Fort Drummer attacked.
Saturday, September 28, 2024
Monday, September 28, 1874. The Battle of Palo Duro Canyon.
Outnumbered roops under Ranald Mackenzie attacked Cheyenne, Kiowa and Comanche at Palo Duro Canyon bringing about a legendary and significant Army victory in the Red River War and essentially bringing it to a close.
Casualties on both sides were overall light, but the loss of horses and supplies was devastating to the Native side.
Mackenzie is forgotten in the popular memory, although he certainly is not amongst students of the post Civil War Indian Wars. He was an extremely effective but died a bad death at age 48, which may be part of the reason that he's forgotten.
Last edition:
Friday, September 25, 1874. The Act of September 1874.
Thursday, September 12, 2024
Saturday, September 12, 1874. Battle of Buffalo Wallow
Scouts William Dixon, Amos Chapman and soldiers Sergeant Z. T. Woodall, Co. I; Peter Rath, Co. A; John Harrington, Co. H.; George W. Smith, Co. M, 6th Cavalry fought some of the Kiowa and Comanche from the Lyman fight that encountered them on their way to rejoin their families on the Washita.
The battle went on all day, with the soldiers and scouts taking refuge against the must larger native party in a buffalo wallow. During the night, scout Billy Dixon went for help on foot which arrived the next day. Two of the soldiers died in the encounter. Their survival had a lot to do with effective marksmanship.
The troops Dixon brought for relief were engaged in a battle that day as well, at the Sweetwater Creek and Dry Force of the Washita River. The encounter between the 8th Cavalry and the Native Americans was brief and two Native Americans were killed and six wounded.
Dixon would receive the Medal of Honor for his actions in retrieving a wounded soldier during the fight, and going for help. It'd later be revoked given as he was a civilian, but subsequently restored. He'd go on to marry in the early 1890s and have seven children. He made his home in those years near Adobe Walls, the site of his most famous battle. He died in 1913.
Last edition:
Friday, September 11, 1874. The fate of the German family.
Wednesday, September 11, 2024
Friday, September 11, 1874. The fate of the German family.
Cheyennes lead by Chief Medicine Water attacked John German and his family, which had camped on the stagecoach route on the Smoke Hill River in Kansas.
German, his wife Liddia, son Stephen, and daughters Rebecca Jane and Joanna Cleveland were killed. Daughters Catherine Elizabeth, 17 years of age, Sophia Louisa, 12 years of age, Julia Arminda, 7 years of age, and Nancy Addie, 5 years of age were taken captive.
Julia and Nancy were traded to Grey Beard's band and liberated on November 8, 1874 in an Army raid. Catherine and Sophia were released in March 1874 when Chief Stone Calf and most of the Southern Cheyenne surrendered at Fort Leavenworth, in Kansas.
All four girls married eventually and remained in Kansas.
Last edition:
Wednesday, September 9, 1874. The start of the Battle of Upper Washita.
Friday, July 26, 2024
Tuesday, July 26, 1774. First armed move in Lord Dunmore's War.
British/Virginian forces under Angus McDonald crossed the Ohio River to attack the Shawnee villages of Wakatomika.
Sunday, July 23, 1774. A meeting in Savannah.
Thursday, July 25, 2024
Reconsidering Wounded Knee Medals of Honor.
This isn't the first time this has been done. Earlier it was done as the criteria for receiving the medal changed and many pre World War One medals were downgraded.
Friday, July 12, 2024
Sunday, July 12, 1874. The Lost Valley Fight.
On this day in 1874, a mixed company of Texas Rangers and U.S. troops numbering 35, and led by Maj. John B. Jones encountered as many as 100 Kiowas led by Lone Wolf and Mamanti at Lost Valley, 12 miles north of Jacksboro, Texas. Two Rangers were killed in the exchange which is known as the Lost Valley Fight.
German novelist Fritz Reuter, compared to Dickens, but in the Plattdeutsch German dialect, died at age 63. His health had been impaired due to imprisonment in his youth for being involved in the mid century German revolutionary movements.
Last edition:
Wednesday, July 8, 1874. March West.
Thursday, July 4, 2024
Saturday, July 4, 1874. The Bates Battle.
Bates chose to attack down the slope of the hill he was on, described above, with thirty troopers and twenty Shoshones. At the same time, Lt. Young, meanwhile, attached down the valley from above it on the watercourse, in an apparent effort to cut the village off and achieve a flanking movement.
The fighting was fierce and the Arapaho were surprised. They put up a good account, however, and were even able to at least partially get mounted. Chief Black Coal was wounded in the fighting and lost several fingers when shot while mounted. The Arapaho defended the draw and the attack, quite frankly, rapidly lost the element of surprise and became a close quarters melee.
Bates then withdrew.
Bates' command suffered four dead and five or six wounded, including Lt. Young. His estimates for Arapaho losses were 25 Arapaho dead, but as he abandoned the field of battle, that can't be really verified. Estimates for total Arapaho casualties were 10 to 125. They definitely sustained some losses and, as noted, Chief Black Coal was wounded in the battle.
Bates was upset with the results of the engagement and placed the blame largely on the Shoshone, whom he felt were too noisy in the assault in the Indian fashion. He also felt that they had not carried out his flanking instructions properly, although it was noted that the Shoshone interpreter had a hard time translating Bates English as he spoke so rapidly. Adding to his problems, moreover, the soldiers fired nearly all 80 of their carried .45-70 rifle cartridges during the engagement and were not able to resupply during the battle as the mules were unable to bring ammunition up. This meant that even if they had not disengaged for other reasons, they were at the point where a lock of ammunition would have hampered any further efforts on their part in any event (and of course they would have been attacking uphill).
After the battle the Arapaho returned to the Red Cloud Agency. Seeing how things were going after Little Big Horn, they came onto the Wind River Reservation in 1877 for the winter on what was supposed to be a temporary basis, and they remain there today. They were hoping for their own reservation in Wyoming, but they never received it. Black Coal went on the reservation with him, and portraits of him show him missing two fingers on his right hand. His people soon served on the Reservation as its policemen. He himself lived until 1893.
Alfred E. Bates, who had entered the Army as a private at the start of the Civil War at age 20. Enlisting in the Michigan state forces, he soon attracted the attention of a politician who secured for him an enrollment at West Point, where he graduated in the Class of 1865. He missed service in the Civil War but soon went on to service on the plains. His name appears on two Wyoming geographic localities. He rose to the rank of Major General and became Paymaster of the Army, dying in 1909 of a stroke.
[b]1874 The 2nd Cavalry engaged Sioux/Cheyenne at Bad Water.[/b]
Thursday, June 27, 2024
Saturday, June 27, 1874. The Second Battle of Adobe Walls
On this day, 28 buffalo hunters at the abandoned trading post of Adobe Walls, Texas, fought the Comanche, who numbered around 700. Fortified behind the post's walls, and armed with powerful large caliber buffalo hunting rifles, they successfully defended their party, with buffalo hunter Billy Dixon killing an Indian combatant at the amazing range of 1,538 yards. Four of the hunters were killed in the engagement, and approximately 30 Comanche.
Last prior edition:
Sunday, June 14, 1874. Calling for an Indian War.
Tuesday, June 25, 2024
Thursday, June 25, 1874. Leaving for Adobe Walls.
A party of buffalo hunters left Dodge City, bound for the abandoned trading post of Adobe Walls in Texas.
Rose O'Neill, creator of Kewpies, was born.
Last prior edition:
Saturday, June 20, 1874. Life Savers
Friday, June 14, 2024
Sunday, June 14, 1874. Calling for an Indian War.
The American people need the country the Indians now occupy; many of our people are out of employment; the masses need some new excitement….The depression prevails on every side. An Indian war would do no harm, for it must come sooner or later.
Bismarck Tribune, June 14, 1874
Last prior edition:
Blog Mirror: May 15, 1874: Harvard and McGill Invent American Football
Monday, October 9, 2023
A thought about not thinking things through on Indigenous Person's Day.
Wyoming politician Bob Ide is saying he's going to sponsor a bill to take the Federal domain into state hands, requiring, as if Wyoming can require the Federal Government to do anything, the fulfillment of a promise that the Federal Government never made at the time Wyoming became a state.
In fact, the opposite was true. Wyoming promised not to seek any more Federal land than it was getting.
But a promise was made regarding those lands. . . to the Cheyenne, Arapahoe and Sioux tribes. . . that being that they could keep them for hunting grounds.
And a larger reservation than they currently have was originally given to the Shoshone.
In her campaign to displace Liz Cheney, Harriet Hageman emphasized the hardworking nature of her family and forebearors, and has been a standard-bearer of conservative and populist values in her brief time in Congress. She's from, she related, a fourth generation ranching family.
But most families that have been in agriculture in Wyoming that long, outside the descendants of British remission men, are remote beneficiaries of a gigantic government system which used Federal agents, in the form of the U.S. Army and Federal Indian Agents, to dispossess the occupants of that land, sometimes by force, and remove them to where they did not want to go, so that the land could be transferred free or cheaply to European Americans. Those original European American occupants, we might note, in the case of homesteaders, were not the wealthy and were perfectly willing to take advantage of a government program.
My point?
Well I don't mean to be one of those who are going to engage in hagiography of any one group of American people, Natives nor European Americans, but on this day it might be worth remembering something.
The "pull up by the bootstraps" argument that the middle class, or lower upper class, so frequently states, or imagines about themselves, fails pretty readily upon close examination. Almost every class of American with longstanding roots in the country that have been here for quite some time benefitted from a government program, whether that be homesteading, Indian removal by the Army, the mining law of 1872, the Taylor grazing act (which saved ranching in the West), the GI Bill, and so on.
That is, in fact, the American System. Not the Darwinian laissez-faire economics that libertarians so often proclaim.
I'm not demanding reparations, or that injustices committed to people of the past be retroactively lamented. Indeed, that's pointless. What I’m suggesting instead is that justice be done for those now living, and that as part of that we admit when we are vicariously beneficiaries of some Federal program in the past, as I am.
And as part of that, I'm also suggesting that we don't engage in myths or hagiographies about our own predecessors. Nobody carved a civilization out of an empty wilderness, unless we go back in North America 15,000 years. Nobody promised that Wyoming could have the public domain. None of us are as independent or virtuous as we pretend, if we pretend that we are, and nobody's ancestors were hearty bands of go it alone giants.
Shoot, even Columbus, if you prefer to ponder him on this day, was on a state funded mission.
Sunday, August 27, 2023
Today In Wyoming's History: Battle of the Rosebud Battlefield, Montana.
Battle of the Rosebud Battlefield, Montana.
The battlefield today is nearly untouched.