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Events
leading to the
Battle of the Washita began with the
Sand Creek
Massacre of 1864. On November 29, troops under the command of
Colonel J.M. Chivington attacked and destroyed the
Cheyenne
camp of
Chief Black Kettle and Chief White Antelope on
Sand Creek,
40 miles from Fort Lyon,
Colorado
Territory.
Black
Kettle's band flew an American flag and a white flag, and
considered themselves at peace and under military protection. The
terrible slaughter caused a massive public outcry. In response, a
federal Peace Commission was created to convert Plains
Indians from their nomadic way of life and settle them on
reservations.
On the Southern
Plains, the work of the Commission culminated in the Medicine Lodge
Treaty of October 1867. Under treaty terms the
Arapahos,
Cheyennes,
Comanches,
Kiowas,
and Plains
Apaches were assigned to reservations in the
Indian
Territory. There they were supposed to receive permanent homes,
farms, agricultural implements, and annuities of food, blankets, and
clothing. The treaty was doomed to failure. Many tribal officials
refused to sign. Some who did sign had no authority to compel their
people to comply with such an agreement. War parties, mostly young men
violently opposed to reservation life, continued to raid white
settlements in
Kansas.
Major General Philip H. Sheridan, in command of the Department of
the
Missouri,
adopted a policy that "punishment must follow crime." In retaliation
for the
Kansas
raids, he planned to mount a winter campaign when
Indian horses would be weak and unfit for all but the most limited
service. The
Indians' only protection in winter was the isolation afforded by
brutal weather.
Black
Kettle and
Arapaho
Chief Big Mouth went to
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